One of the most dangerous types of apps is free VPNs, which maliciously target users. Top10VPN tested the 100 most popular free Android VPN apps in the Google Play Store, and unsurprisingly, few of them are legitimate.
The publication even offered an entire spreadsheet with every app tested and what version of the app it ran, so you can check what you’re using on your phone and delete the free VPN if it’s on your device. It even shows how many people have the app installed, and the numbers are truly staggering.
In total, these apps have a staggering 2.5 billion worldwide installs between them, so there are tons of users with these unscrupulous apps on their devices.
To test the free VPN apps, Top10VPN installed them on entry-level Samsung smartphones that had been stripped of all but the most basic stock apps. This allowed them to conduct a clean test and ensure that the free VPN apps were actually causing the issues.
There are almost no instances of a free VPN actually being legitimate, and when the offerings of a so-called free VPN sound too good to be true, they usually are.
VPNs require a huge network of servers to route traffic through, and this costs a lot of money. Free VPNs don’t offer this type of network out of the kindness of their hearts. Instead, they harvest your location, device information and other data to serve you ads. That’s the best-case scenario that free VPNs offer. The much more unpleasant result is malware and stolen login credentials or private information.
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Some interesting takeaways from Top10VPN’s test include the fact that more than 10% of the apps “suffered encryption failures, ranging from total exposure of internet activity to leaking details of websites visited.” Almost 90% of the apps “suffered some kind of leak, including 17 VPNs leaking more than DNS request data.”
Those are some of the best situations you can have with these popular free VPN apps. The most scary bit of data is that “almost one in five (19%) of VPN apps tested were flagged as malware by anti-virus scanners.”
In the end, if you’re using a free VPN, you’re rolling the dice. You should delete the app and get one of the best VPNs, which will offer all the features you need with much more security. If you do insist on using a free one, make sure to choose one of the best free VPN options on the market.
More from Tom’s Guide
- Android banking trojan uses fake Google Play updates to take over your phone
- Massive Ticketmaster data breach reportedly hits over 500 million customers
- Hackers have leaked the criminal records of millions of Americans online
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Dave LeClair is the Senior News Editor for Tom’s Guide, keeping his finger on the pulse of all things technology. He loves taking the complicated happenings in the tech world and explaining why they matter. Whether Apple is announcing the next big thing in the mobile space or a small startup advancing generative AI, Dave will apply his experience to help you figure out what’s happening and why it’s relevant to your life.