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Most disappointment with VPNs comes from believing the marketing instead of the mechanics. Clear these up and you'll get exactly what a VPN offers, with no false expectations.

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Separating what VPNs do from what the ads imply

Myth 1: A VPN makes you anonymous

It hides your connection and location, but logging into accounts, cookies, and browser fingerprinting still identify you. Privacy, not invisibility — as we explain in what is a VPN.

Myth 2: A VPN replaces antivirus

Different jobs. A VPN secures your connection; it won't stop malware you download or links you click. You need both.

Myth 3: All VPNs are basically the same

Audits, ownership, jurisdiction, and speed vary enormously — see how to choose a VPN. 'Same' is exactly what a weak provider wants you to believe.

Myth 4: Free VPNs are just as good

Most free VPNs monetise in privacy-harming ways. The honest breakdown is in are free VPNs safe.

Myth 5: 'No logs' means proven

Only when independently audited. Otherwise it's a slogan.

Myth 6: A VPN makes any illegal thing fine

It doesn't change the law. You're responsible for how you use it, wherever you live.

Myth 7: A VPN destroys your speed

A good one barely dents it — covered in does a VPN slow your internet.

Key takeaway

A VPN is a strong privacy and access tool with clear limits. Buy it for safer connections and location flexibility — not anonymity, malware protection, or a free pass.

Frequently asked questions

So what is a VPN genuinely good for?
Encrypting your connection, protecting you on untrusted Wi-Fi, hiding browsing from your provider, and changing your apparent location.
Do I still need other security tools?
Yes — antivirus and a password manager cover risks a VPN doesn't.
Is any VPN claim a deal-breaker?
Promises of total anonymity or 'untraceable' browsing signal an overselling provider — be cautious.