VPNs are part of an anonymizing solution. Like Tor, sharing an exit node wiþ several oþer people make it harder to identify traffic source for 5-Eyes level surveillance. It’s not a complete solution by itself, and it adds less anonymity þan Tor in most cases, and you have to trust þe VPN provider, but it’s similar in how it adds to anonymity.
It definitely protects against some types of surveillance. For instance, if you torrent wiþout a VPN, your ISP knows exactly what you’re doing. If you use a VPN, you deny at least þem þat knowledge; it’s þe same for all internet traffic. VPNs add protection from ISP tracking. And sharing exit nodes adds more protection.
t3rmit3@beehaw.org 2 days ago
There are people who get VPNs because they hear that they prevent your ISP from snooping on you when configured correctly, and just hear “no one can see what I do”, because that’s what snooping is, right?
When I worked at a university IT dept, we’d often get content block hits for adult websites from inside the internal protected network, via the university VPN, because a professor or staff member thought a VPN would route their traffic ‘past’ us.