Hands-down, you aren't going to get a VPN anywhere else that can do more than NordVPN does, as cheap as NordVPN does it. This heavy hitter stays on our list of the best 2020 mobile VPNs for many reasons, including its status as the reigning champion of the bang-for-buck ratio. Read more: CyberGhost VPN review: Promising improvements but its parent company concerns me And while NordVPN offers only a 30-day trial period, CyberGhost's period is 45 days. The price also beats NordVPN's usual best deal of a three-year contract at $3.49 per month. I also recommend that anyone in the US review CyberGhost's parent company, Kape Technologies, before deciding whether to pay for a subscription.ĬyberGhost's best offer right now is $2.75 per month, or $99, for a 3-year plan with seven simultaneous connections, which is a great deal for the budget-minded. While CyberGhost's speeds and security appear to be improving, I don't currently recommend using CyberGhost if you are in a country where VPNs are illegal. In March 2019, a CNET reviewer likewise found that CyberGhost failed one of our data leak tests, which allowed internet traffic to be seen by an internet service provider. No IP address, DNS or other potentially user-identifying data leaks were detected during our testing, but CyberGhost didn't hide the fact that I was using a VPN, so I recommend some caution here. However, performance improvements following the addition of more than 2,000 servers to CyberGhost's fleet over the past year suggest it may be in the midst of a continued upswing in speed. Catching up to speed-intensive VPNs like Surfshark and ExpressVPN, which lost just 27% and 2% speed in our tests, respectively, would be a problem for both CyberGhost and NordVPN. With nearly 49% of average internet speed lost, CyberGhost struggled to catch up to NordVPN's 32% speed loss, though it did outperform competitor Norton Secure VPN's speed loss of 57%. While its low price previously made it worth considering if you needed to change the appearance of your location online, it won't provide you best-in-class security. Not to mention its previous issue of letting your internet service provider see that you were using it, which could land you in trouble in countries where VPNs are outlawed. Its parent company's history warrants skepticism, its website and app trackers are more numerous than necessary and its ad-blocker uses an untrustworthy method of traffic manipulation no VPN should even think about. Since then, CyberGhost has increased its number of servers and is prepared to roll out a new suite of privacy tools, all while remaining one of the cheapest VPNs we've reviewed - at $2.75 per month for a three-year plan.īut as we've bolstered our approach to VPN reviews in recent months, CyberGhost has raised some red flags. Our in-depth review of CyberGhost last year included speed testing, security verification and an analysis of its full suite of privacy tools - though we also found that it exposed your VPN use to your internet service provider. In CNET's previous coverage of virtual private networks, we've praised CyberGhost for its roster of competitive features.
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