Your IP:
Your Location:
Your Status:
VeePN Blog Blog
  • en
    EN
    • Deutsch Deutsch
    • Español Español
    • Français Français
    • العربية العربية
    • Indonesia Indonesia
    • Italiano Italiano
    • 한국어 한국어
    • Nederlands Nederlands
    • Polski Polski
    • Português Português
    • Türkçe Türkçe
    • 简体中文 简体中文
    • ไทย ไทย
    • Tiếng Việt Tiếng Việt
    • Čeština Čeština
    • فارسی فارسی
    • Română Română
    • Filipino Filipino
    • 日本語 日本語
  • VPN Apps
    • Desktop / Mobile
    • Windows
    • MacOS
    • Linux
    • iOS
    • Android
    • Devises
    • Smart TV
    • Fire TV
    • Android TV
    • Apple TV
    • Router
    • Gaming
    • Xbox
    • PlayStation
    • Extension
    • Chrome
    • Firefox
    • Edge
    See All Apps
  • VeePN Antivirus
  • Features
    • VPN Servers
    • Double VPN
    • No Log VPN
    • Kill Switch
    • NetGuard
    • Online SMS
    • Extra Features
    • VPN for Services
    See All Features
  • What Is a VPN?
    • Remove Blocks
    • Stream Content
    • VPN for Gaming
    • Stream Media
    • Stream Music
    • VPN for Netflix
    • VPN for ChatGPT
    • Protect Your Data
    • Internet Privacy
    • Anonymous IP
    • Conceal Identity
    • Prevent Tracking
    • Save Money
    • Anonymous Email
    • Browse Safely
    • Online Security
    • VPN Encryption
    • What Is My IP?
    • DNS Leak Test
    • Hide Your IP
    • Link Checker
    • File Checker
    • Service Status Checker
    How Does a VPN Work?
  • Pricing
  • Help
  • en
    EN
    • Deutsch Deutsch
    • Español Español
    • Français Français
    • العربية العربية
    • Indonesia Indonesia
    • Italiano Italiano
    • 한국어 한국어
    • Nederlands Nederlands
    • Polski Polski
    • Português Português
    • Türkçe Türkçe
    • 简体中文 简体中文
    • ไทย ไทย
    • Tiếng Việt Tiếng Việt
    • Čeština Čeština
    • فارسی فارسی
    • Română Română
    • Filipino Filipino
    • 日本語 日本語
Get VeePN
  • icon
    Digital privacy
  • icon
    All about VPN
  • icon
    Big brother
  • icon
    Good to know
  • icon
    Entertainment
  • icon
    Cybersecurity
  • icon
    Cryptocurrency

Online Security and Privacy News

Are VPNs Legal in UK
Are VPNs Legal in UK
All about VPN 6 min read

Are VPNs Legal in UK? What You Should Know Right Now

Yes. You can go on using this privacy tool. VPNs are legal in the UK. IF you are just a common user, you are still able to use virtual private networks for privacy, safer browsing, work, and everyday security. The recent fuss around it came out from the Online Safety Act, strong age verification rules, and also public debate. The latter was around children using VPNs to get around those checks. But that is not the same thing as a full ban you could think of. So far, using a VPN is legal. What matters more in this connection is what you do while being connected. A VPN protects all your web traffic, but it definitely does not turn any illegal activity into something lawful. IN this article, we’ll walk through what changed, why many people got confused, and how to use a VPN in a sensible and legal way in the UK.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
Latest news
All about VPN 11 min read

SSTP VPN: the Windows-friendly Tunnel That Slips Through Tough Networks

If you’ve ever tried to connect a VPN connection from a hotel, office, or campus network and everything gets blocked, you’ve probably met the problem SSTP was built for. SSTP VPN is often described as “the one that works when others don’t” because it rides on the same path as normal secure web browsing. In this guide, we’ll explain what SSTP is, show where it fits among other VPN protocols, and call out the downsides that people usually discover only after something breaks. We’ll also show how VeePN can help you get a more reliable, safer setup without wrestling with tricky configs.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
All about VPN 6 min read

Are VPNs Legal in Japan? What You Need to Know Before You Connect

Let’s clear this up first. If you use a VPN in Japan, you are not breaking the law just because the app is turned on. A virtual private network is generally legal in Japan, and Japan still has a fairly open internet environment with few obstacles to access and no general blocking of websites. That is why people use a VPN service there for normal reasons. They want a safer Internet connection on hotel Wi-Fi, more online privacy, or access to the accounts and services they already use at home. Japan’s privacy framework also puts real weight on protecting personal information, which is one reason privacy tools still make sense in everyday life. But there is one line you should not blur. A VPN can protect your data. It cannot turn an illegal act into a legal one. If something breaks Japanese law, it stays illegal with or without a VPN. That is the part many people miss when they skim this topic too quickly.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
What is Unified Threat Management
What is Unified Threat Management
Cybersecurity 7 min read

What is Unified Threat Management and Why it Still Beats Juggling Tools

If you’ve ever asked what Unified Threat Management is, you’re probably trying to make security feel less like duct-taping ten different apps together. In plain terms, Unified Threat Management is a “many defenses in one box” approach. Instead of buying and managing multiple security tools separately, you run one stack that covers the basics from a single place. In this article, we’ll break down how a Unified Threat Management solution works, what it usually includes, where it fits next to cloud options, and how to avoid common mistakes. You’ll also know how a VPN like VeePN can help users protect their connection and reduce everyday risks.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
Watering Hole Attack
Watering Hole Attack
Cybersecurity 5 min read

Watering Hole Attack: How Trusted Sites Turn Into Traps

A watering hole attack works because it does not look scary at first. You open a site you know, maybe one you use all the time, and that is exactly where the problem starts. No fake email. No obvious scam page. Just a normal website that has been quietly turned into a trap. The term watering hole attack comes from the idea of a predator waiting at a place where others naturally gather. Online, that “place” is usually one of the legitimate websites a specific group tends to visit. It could be a news page, an industry blog, a forum, or a portal tied to work. In this guide, we’ll break down how a watering hole attack works, why it is still a significant threat, what real cases showed, and how to protect against watering hole risks without making your life harder. Near the end, we’ll also show where VeePN fits in.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
UPS Scam Email
UPS Scam Email
Cybersecurity 7 min read

UPS Scam Email: Don’t Let a “Delivery Problem” Empty Your Wallet

A UPS scam email usually hits when you’re busy, tired, or actually waiting on a delivery. It’s an email claiming there’s an issue with your UPS package, your package delivery, or your UPS account. The goal is simple: push us into immediate action before we think. This guide breaks down the most common UPS scams, shows what they look like in real life, and gives clear steps to avoid fraud. We’ll also share how to verify things through the official UPS website, how to contact UPS directly, and how tools like VeePN can support better online safety later in the article.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
Promo
Make an informed decision
Keep your personal data private. Protect yourself with VeePN
Get VeePN Now
30-day money-back guarantee
Synthetic Identity Theft
Synthetic Identity Theft
Cybersecurity 6 min read

Synthetic Identity Theft: the Fake-person Scam That Can Still Hurt Real People

Most people hear identity theft and imagine a criminal taking over one real person’s life. Synthetic identity theft is different. Here, the fraudster mixes a real piece of data, often a Social Security number, with invented details like a fake name, a new date of birth, or a made-up address to create synthetic identities that look real enough to pass basic checks. That fake profile can then open accounts, build a credit history, and later commit fraud for financial gain. This is one reason the problem keeps growing. TransUnion said US lenders faced more than $3.3 billion in exposure tied to suspected synthetic identities for the year ending 2024. And in March 2026, American Banker reported that cheap AI toolkits, stolen data, and fake documents were already being used to beat some bank identity verification checks in minutes. We’ll break down how this scam works, why it is harder to spot than traditional identity theft, the red flags to watch for, and the practical steps that help protect your money, your credit report, and your personal data. We’ll also show where VeePN fits in near the end.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
SIM Swap Attack
SIM Swap Attack
Cybersecurity 6 min read

SIM Swap Attack: How Scammers Steal Your Number and Your Accounts

A SIM swap attack is one of those scams that sounds technical, but the damage is painfully simple. A criminal hacks into your phone number and starts to receive your text messages and phone calls. Then, they use the access you have to hack into your financial accounts, email, and social media accounts. The frightening fact is that the attacker does not usually require your phone at all! They simply need a sufficient amount of personal information, a plausible story, and a weakness at your carrier in most situations. We’ll walk through how it works, what signs to watch for, and how a VPN like VeePN can help reduce the fallout.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
Securing Your Online Transactions: Choose Safe Online Payment Methods
Securing Your Online Transactions: Choose Safe Online Payment Methods
Cybersecurity 9 min read

Securing Your Online Transactions: Choose Safe Online Payment Methods

We all love the convenience of whipping out a credit card and shopping online with just a few clicks. But did you know there comes along with that convenience, a bunch of big risks that you have to be on the lookout? Whether it is a premeditated phishing scam or an intruder who steals your credit card details, conducting transactions over the Internet may expose your personal information to scams and theft. That is why it should be a priority of all e-commerce shoppers to secure your online payments. Read and know the safest ways of paying online today, and a help tool to have a secure info.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
Remote Access Trojan
Remote Access Trojan
Cybersecurity 5 min read

Remote Access Trojan: How It Gets in and Takes Control

A Remote Access Trojan is a type of malware that gives attackers hidden remote access to your device. Once it lands on an infected computer or infected machine, it can remotely control files, apps, accounts, and even connected hardware. That is what makes a Remote Access Trojan RAT so dangerous. It can help criminals steal passwords, spy on user behavior, access sensitive data, and use a compromised system for further attacks. In some cases, RATs are also used to launch Distributed Denial of Service attacks or spread to other infected devices. In this guide, we’ll explain how this threat works, what signs to watch for, and what to do if you suspect one. We’ll also show how VeePN can help reduce the risk.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
RedLine Stealer
RedLine Stealer
Cybersecurity 8 min read

RedLine Stealer: How This Infostealer Steals Your Data and What to Do Next

You do not always notice RedLine Stealer right away. That is the problem. It usually does not lock your screen or announce itself like ransomware. Instead, it works quietly in the background, grabs what it wants, and sends it off to criminals before you realize something is wrong. That makes RedLine Stealer malware especially nasty for ordinary users. One fake installer, one sketchy download, one convincing email, and suddenly your login credentials, browser cookies, credit card information, crypto wallets, and other sensitive information may already be gone. Near the end, we’ll also show where a VPN like VeePN can help lower the risk around these kinds of infections.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
Prompt Injection Attack
Prompt Injection Attack
Cybersecurity 5 min read

Prompt Injection Attack: How Hidden Instructions Can Hijack AI Tools

A prompt injection attack is one of the biggest security problems in modern AI apps. OWASP now lists it as LLM01:2025 Prompt Injection, which tells you this is not some niche lab issue anymore. The basic problem is simple: many AI tools process system instructions, developer instructions, and user input together, and the model does not always keep those boundaries straight. That is what creates the prompt injection vulnerability. In plain English, an attacker tries to feed the model a malicious prompt that changes its behavior. That can push the tool to ignore rules, leak sensitive data, follow hidden instructions, or take actions it should never take. We’ll explain the two main types of prompt injection, show how this injection attack differs from classic code injection, and finish with the security habits that actually help.

VeePN Research Lab
Updated: Jun 1
12345...Next82
Want to read more like this?
Get the latest news and tips from VeePN.
We won’t spam, and you will always be able to unsubscribe.
VeePN
Products
  • Windows PC VPN
  • VPN for macOS
  • Linux VPN
  • iOS VPN
  • Android VPN
  • Chrome
  • Firefox
  • Edge
  • Free VPN
General
  • What Is a VPN?
  • VPN Download
  • Features
  • Pricing
  • Student Discount
  • VPN Servers
  • Blog
Help
  • Support Center
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Warrant Canary
Benefits
  • Access Content
  • Internet Privacy
  • Online Security
  • Anonymous IP
  • VPN for Gaming
  • Prevent Tracking
  • VPN for Streaming
  • Netflix VPN
Tools
  • What Is My IP?
  • Hide Your IP
  • DNS Leak Test
  • Online SMS
Countries
  • US VPN
  • UK VPN
  • Canada VPN
  • Turkey VPN
Earn Money
  • Affiliates
visa
mastercard
bitcoin
paypal
american express

© 2026 Services provided by VeePN Corp., Panama. Authorized reseller: LARAUN LIMITED (Evropis, 4, Flat/Office 3 Strovolos 2064, Nicosia, Cyprus)