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VPNs Explained: What They Do (and What They Don’t)

VPN ads are everywhere, promising safety, privacy, and access to everything — usually with a countdown timer and a scary hacker graphic. A VPN is a genuinely useful tool, but it’s not the magic shield the marketing suggests. In plain terms: a VPN (virtual private network) routes your internet traffic through an encrypted tunnel to a server elsewhere, hiding your activity from your network and masking your location. Here’s what that actually does for you — and what it doesn’t.

What a VPN actually does

Normally, your internet provider (and the Wi-Fi you’re on) can see which sites you connect to, and websites see your real location via your IP address. A VPN puts an encrypted tunnel between you and a VPN server, so two useful things happen: your network can no longer see what you’re doing, and websites see the VPN server’s location instead of yours. That’s the whole core idea — everything else follows from it. If terms like “IP address” or “encryption” are fuzzy, our plain-English tech glossary covers them.

What it’s genuinely good for

  • Public Wi-Fi. On airport or café networks, a VPN stops others on that network from snooping on your traffic.
  • Privacy from your provider. It hides your browsing from your ISP or network admin.
  • Changing your apparent location. Useful for accessing your home services while travelling, or content limited by region.

What a VPN does NOT do

This is where the ads oversell. A VPN does not make you anonymous — you’re still logged into accounts that know who you are, and the VPN company itself can potentially see your traffic. It does not protect you from scams or viruses: if you click a phishing link or enter your password on a fake site, a VPN won’t save you — that’s what spotting phishing and two-factor authentication are for. And on a site using HTTPS (most sites today), your data is already encrypted in transit.

If you do use one

Choose a reputable paid provider over a “free” one — free VPNs often make money by logging and selling your data, which defeats the purpose. Look for a clear no-logs policy and a company with a solid track record. Treat a VPN as one privacy tool among several, not a complete security solution. For most people, the highest-value safety steps are still unique passwords, 2FA, and not clicking dodgy links.

FAQ

Do I really need a VPN?

It depends. A VPN is genuinely useful on public Wi-Fi, for privacy from your provider, or to change your apparent location. For everyday browsing on trusted networks and HTTPS sites, many people don’t strictly need one.

Does a VPN make me anonymous?

No. You’re still identifiable through accounts you log into, and the VPN provider can potentially see your traffic. A VPN improves privacy from your network and masks your location, but it isn’t true anonymity.

Are free VPNs safe?

Often not. Many free VPNs make money by logging and selling your browsing data — the opposite of what you want. A reputable paid provider with a no-logs policy is the safer choice.

A VPN is one tool in a bigger security picture. For more plain-English explainers, start with our cornerstone tech words glossary, or browse more Tech guides.

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