8 Ways Free VPN Services Make Money from Users

8 Ways Free VPN Services Make Money from Users
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These are the 8 freeways where VPN services are making a good amount of money from users

Even while we all enjoy free things, some of us may frequently wonder "why" or "how" they come to be free. It's a fair question given that everyone needs money to pay bills. Providers of free VPN services are similar. So, just how do free VPN services generate revenue? To know how VPN services exploit the term "free" to generate revenue, continue reading below to know more about the 8 ways free VPN services make money from users.

  1. Free VPN Service Providers May Collect and Sell Your Data

Free can occasionally be a small white lie with a catch. The catch is frequently found in the providers selling your data in the case of free VPN services. To gain money, they might sell your e-commerce destinations, any information about additional platforms or websites you have registered, and your email details.

  1. By Implementing Numerous Target Ads

To persuade consumers to subscribe to their services, third parties pay VPN providers to place their advertisements on their servers. Ads are implemented by the VPN service provider for a little fee, and third parties are compensated by making an irresistible offer to you. This also relates to the VPN provider selling your information to outside parties so that they can precisely target you with advertisements based on your online searches and account creations.

  1. From their Paid Subscription Service

The majority of free VPN services offer both a free trial period and a premium membership service in addition to their free service. This is excellent marketing because it gives you a taste of what their services can help you access and achieve, but it leaves you wanting more. Some free VPN services impose their own limitations and geographic restrictions to prevent you from accessing too much for free.

  1. Allows Cookies to Track Your Traffic Online

Everyone enjoys cookies, right? I wish we were discussing the cookies that are kept in a cookie jar on the highest shelf, out of the reach of children until they are old enough to understand how entertaining and risky climbing kitchen cabinets is. No, these cookies are made to preserve and store fragments of your online information. Just enough to monitor your browsing habits and online movements so that websites may either recognize you when you return or can "customize" your experience based on your preferences.

  1. By Setting Geo-Restricted Blocks and Limits

By deliberately preventing you from accessing some geo-restricted barriers and firewalls where their paid subscription service would provide access, "free" VPN service providers are using another excellent marketing strategy. This is done to get you to subscribe to their paid service. VPNs promote themselves as privacy guardians and a legitimate means of getting access to material that isn't typically available where your server is located. They refer to it as "geo-restrictions."

  1. By Using Your Server as a Gateway or an Exit Node

The VPN service can nevertheless monitor your activities to make sure you are not engaging in any unlawful conduct, even though VPNs can be free and advertise complete privacy of your personal information and online traffic browsing. Free VPN services might be selling you access to your server and network so that all kinds of data, including that from illicit activities, can be tracked as it passes through and leaves your server.

  1. Infect Your Device with Malware

The security of your computer, tablet, or smartphone may be compromised, which is arguably the most surprising method some free VPNs generate money. The worst free VPNs can covertly put software, such as spyware or ransomware, onto your device, which could have disastrous results. One VPN provider, Hola, at least, utilized malware to turn the machines of its free users into exit nodes or VPN servers.

  1. They Set Limits on Purpose

Keep in mind the free VPNs that provide paid services as well. The good ones will be upfront and admit that they're only providing a small number of free services in the hopes that you'll eventually subscribe for a fee. On the other side, some don't give you any warning at all. They deliberately restrict your data and bandwidth while also blocking peer-to-peer connections, including torrents, to convince you to subscribe to their premium service.

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