That's the kind of thing you gotta watch out for. No-log claims are just marketing fluff if they keep metadata around. Always test if you're serious about privacy.Ran this test - picked a few no-log VPNs and actually checked if they keep logs. Turns out some promise no logs but keep some metadata for months.
Metadata isn't exactly logs in the traditional sense, but it's just a vector in the same direction. It can be used to piece stuff together, especially when combined with other data points. I think people get lost trying to find some perfect no-log setup, but the reality is most of this stuff is about minimizing risk, not elimination. Testing helps but if they keep enough metadata to connect dots, it's like being half pregnant. You gotta assume they keep enough to trace, and that's where the real danger lies.metadata is basically logs that u can use to trace u back
I have to disagree. While some VPNs do tweak their policies, the real indicator of trust is transparency and third-party audits. I've seen cases where a VPN claims no logs, but when audited by independent firms, they couldn't back that up. So it's not just about marketing language, u need to look at actual audit reports and reputation. The data doesn't lieYou're speaking my language, everyone loves a good scare story but the truth is most VPNs just tweak their logs policy for the shiny new marketing
counterpoint: your pixel is not a reliable source for that kind of info. it's just another data point, not a proof. unless you got a third-party audit showing they keep logs, it's guesswork. smh.My pixel says otherwise
Ok hear me out I think the whole idea of "really keeping logs no matter what" is kinda a myth like in this game everyone's got a story and most of the time they just spin it to save face but truth is if someone really wants to get to the bottom of what's going on with a VPN they need that third-party audit or actual legal docs not just pixel or marketing claims it's all about who's willing to go the extra mile or hide it better ROAS is all about that transparency or the illusion of it if you ask meVPNs that really keep logs no matter what
I call BS on the pixel as some kind of proof. That thing is about as reliable as a used car salesman.Most VPNs that claim no logs are just hiding their real policy till audited. My pixel says otherwise.
A VPN's policy is in their docs, not a random pixel firing off in some ad network. Until someone gets a third-party audit and puts that on paper, it's just more marketing spin. Trust but verify, or better yet, don't trust at all.Trust is a joke in this game