VPNs are often sold as a “privacy silver bullet,” but that framing causes more confusion.

A VPN does not make you anonymous.

It does not stop cookies, logins, browser fingerprinting, or payment-based identification.

What a VPN actually does is much narrower and more technical:

  1. It encrypts your internet traffic in transit
  2. It prevents your ISP or local network from seeing which destinations you connect to
  3. It makes websites see the VPN server’s IP instead of your real one
  4. That’s privacy at the network level, not identity hiding.

I wrote a detailed blogpost. Check it out.

  • FarceOfWill@infosec.pub
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    11 hours ago

    Ill always use a vpn as theres no other way to stop advertisers seeing your local host ip.

    Its not sufficient to stop them tracking, by miles, but its necessary.

        • CallMeAnAI@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          Practically speaking, not really. And at that point the state has a warrant and been in your home or someone highly technical in your home is there and there isn’t really shit you can do except block physical access to everything.

          The odds that someone is intercepting and mitm your TLS/SSL behind your edge is absurdly low.

          • DudeImMacGyver@kbin.earth
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            7 hours ago

            Yeah, no, you are extremely mistaken: Home routers are routinely compromised.

            I’m not even talking about your government snooping on you but that’s not unheard of either.