![]() If you've ever spent an age scrutinizing a VPN's small print and support site looking for a sign of a hint of a clue about its privacy policy, you'll appreciate how rare it is to get that much information crammed into a couple of sentences. We have no information that could associate specific activities to specific users.' 'We strictly do not log or monitor, online browsing activities, connection logs, VPN IPs assigned, original IP addresses, browsing history, outgoing traffic, connection times, data you have accessed and/or DNS queries generated by your end. Ivacy has an excellent privacy policy which spells out everything it records, and everything it doesn't, in refreshingly clear detail. ![]() Ivacy has a strict no logs policy (Image credit: Ivacy) Privacy and logging Optional extras include dedicated IPs (US, UK, Australia, Canada, Germany, Hong Kong, Singapore) for a very reasonable $1.99 a month ( NordVPN asks an extra $5.83, or $70 a year), and port forwarding support for $1 a month. Even if you only use Ivacy for 18 months, you'll more than get your money's worth. Spend $72 upfront at Ivacy and that's it for five years. To put that in perspective, sign up for a one-year HMA plan and you'll pay $60 immediately, then another $60 a year and a day later – making $120. Monthly billing is fair at $9.95, and this falls to $3.99 for the annual plan, with the five-year subscription hitting a rock-bottom $1.19 a month. The paid products are very reasonably priced. It was also relatively slow in our tests at around 35Mbps – but there are no bandwidth limits, and that alone makes it worth a look. It's basic, as you'd expect: you can't choose a location, and there are none of the advanced features, not even WireGuard. Ivacy has a free plan, but it's very basic (Image credit: Ivacy) Ivacy pricing If the service isn't working as it should, 24/7 support via email, ticket and live chat is on hand to point you in the right direction. Protocol support includes L2TP, OpenVPN, IKEv2 and WireGuard (the latter is finally available on iOS and Mac, as well as Windows and Android), plus split tunneling allows you to choose which traffic you route through the VPN tunnel, and the feature list goes on. Ivacy has torrent support in some locations (we tried using P2P on three sample servers and it worked just fine), there’s malware blocking, no logging, the service supports up to 10 simultaneous connections, plus the apps include a kill switch to protect your privacy if the VPN connection drops. A wide range covers you on Windows, Mac, Android, iOS and Linux, there are extensions for Chrome, Edge and Firefox browsers, and the support site has instructions for manually setting up the service on routers, Kodi, consoles and more. There are Windows, Mac, Android, iOS and Linux apps, with browser extensions and more besides (Image credit: Ivacy)
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