Check if the VPN you are using is secure

Virtual Provider Networks (VPNs) are used for a variety of purposes. These usually include protecting the privacy of the Internet by improving the security of the Internet connection, bypassing censorship and any restrictions, or for purely business purposes.

If you use a VPN regardless of the purpose you need, you may want to be sure that your actual IP address can leak.VPN leak

The reason for this is simple: The IP address leads directly to you. So a court decision on the virtual network provider is enough to reveal very private information such as the country and region you are connecting to.

Let's see if your VPN is leaking your IP address

The way we will see below is strongly recommended for every time you connect to a virtual network, so to make sure that your connection does not leak information about your real IP address. And in order not to do it constantly, make it happen at least the first time you log in, and then you can do it again occasionally.

There are many websites that you can use for this purpose, and the good news is that all you need to do is open the web to find out if your VPN is leaking information it shouldn't.

We will report three different websites to control leakage of IP.

Note: It is recommended that you disable any script blockers you use to run your tests, as they may block scripts that n the DNS.

Let's look at the 3 pages:

https://ipleak.net

https://www.dnsleaktest.com

and

http://dnsleak.com

If you see different IP addresses or regions, they report the IPv4 IP address, and the IPv6 IP address. Then there is a chance that third-party websites or other services can see both IP addresses.

In the tests we used Opera's "VPN" (better to be called a proxy) and Tor anonymous network on a Linux system.

We noticed that the anonymity in the Opera browser was not so absolute since the ipleak.net website, although it immediately displayed a different IPv4 IP than that of my actual connection, continued to search (it looks like a black marker under “No forwarded IP detected…. ”vpn-opera

On the same page using the anonymous Tor network, we had absolute results as you will see in the picture below.vpn-tor

The second leak detection service dnsleaktest.com does not have as much expertise as the first, or if it has them they do not appear in the results. That is, it doesn't seem to check if there are leaks via WebRTC, if the proxy is secure, etc.

Although this service has a button that says "Extended Test" it does not display the results of the first one.

dnsleaktest

As for the third page, although it looks like it does not show any results, or at least it did not show up in the system that we tested:

dnsleak

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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