Why Privacy Actually Matters
Your every click, search, and message is permanently recorded, packaged, and sold. Governments and corporations now know more about you than your closest friends: your location history, political views, health concerns, sexual orientation, financial status, and even when you’re most vulnerable. This isn’t conspiracy — it’s the default business model of the modern internet.
Mass surveillance has become effortless and invisible. ISPs log your unencrypted traffic, cloud providers scan your files, and advertisers build psychological profiles accurate enough to predict (and manipulate) your behavior. In 2025, data breaches expose billions of records yearly, while authoritarian regimes use the same infrastructure to silence journalists, activists, and minorities. Even “free” apps quietly upload your contacts, microphone audio, and camera access for “analytics.”
Without privacy, there is no true freedom. You self-censor, avoid researching sensitive topics (medical conditions, political ideas, personal crises), and gradually conform to what you think is being watched. A society where everyone is observed but no one is safe quickly becomes a society where no one dares to be different.
A VPN is no longer a luxury for paranoid techies — it’s the bare minimum to reclaim the basic human right to think and communicate privately in a world that profits from exposing you. At €2.99/month with no logs and no tricks, strong privacy is finally cheaper than surrendering your life to the highest bidder.