


Our guess is that FlashVPN Free VPN Proxy is using a boilerplate privacy policy containing some cobbled-together sentences which tell users what it thinks they want to hear, and if it is collecting information, we'd be astonished if this is being 'carefully transferred ' to 'highly secured servers based in the United Kingdom and USA.' All Information might be transferred to other servers we could use and we will take reasonably care with these possible transfers.' The policy certainly gives that impression, stating: 'We keep all information on highly secured servers based in United Kingdom and USA. Unfortunately, it spoils the effect by going on: 'We may disclose information we collect from you: To the law enforcement organizations, if we obliged to, and Information required in suspect of breach of the law.' So, it does collect information, then? The only thing we monitor if the IPs you are using to enter our servers are not blacklisted in respected Black lists databases, like .' The privacy policy claims: 'We do not monitor your traffic. FlashVPN Free VPN Proxy's lack of a website meant we were already struggling to trust it, and it doesn't help that the privacy policy is accessed by an HTTP connection to a raw IP address (.)Ĭhecking the address out on Google, we found it was also used by LinkVPN and a number of now obsolete VPN apps, again with no real indication who was behind any of them.
