Hardware vs. software VPNs: What’s best for your privacy?
Understanding the differences between VPN options, and why going decentralized is the best choice for privacy
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When choosing a VPN setup, many people don’t realize there are two distinct paths: hardware VPNs and software VPNs. Both can encrypt your internet traffic, but they offer vastly different levels of control, complexity, and privacy protection.
In a world of growing surveillance and data leaks, knowing which VPN solution truly keeps your identity and metadata safe matters. This article breaks down the pros, cons, and privacy implications of each, and why a decentralized option like NymVPN offers a more resilient approach.
What is a VPN?

Hardware vs. software VPNs: FAQs
Yes, but stacking them doesn’t always improve privacy. You may just route encrypted traffic through another layer. If either leaks metadata, the benefit is reduced.
Not necessarily. Security depends on configuration, updates, and the trustworthiness of the VPN provider or firmware. NymVPN removes the need to trust a central entity.
Currently, NymVPN is designed for individual devices, but decentralized routing enables flexible support in future embedded systems.
One that doesn’t rely on centralized servers and doesn’t log metadata, like NymVPN. Most commercial VPNs fail on both counts
No. Like most VPNs, they encrypt traffic but don’t obfuscate timing, routing, or IP metadata. Learn how metadata can still be used to track you.
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Benjamin Nemeroff
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