I’ve never completely understood this, but I think the answer would probably be “no,” although I’m not sure. Usually when I leave the house I turn off wifi and just use mobile data (this is a habit from my pre-VPN days), although I guess I should probably just keep it on since using strange Wi-Fi with a VPN is ok (unless someone at Starbucks is using the evil twin router trick . . . ?). I was generally under the impression that mobile data is harder to interfere with than Wi-Fi, but I could well be wrong and my notions out of date. So, if need be, please set me straight. 🙂
Do you want a random third party looking at all of your mail before you pick it up? Even if they can’t open the envelope, having somebody else write down every message that comes in who it’s from and who it’s too and how frequent it is, that creep me out.
If you’re uncomfortable with a third party looking at your mail, it’s very reasonable to not one third party’s looking at your internet traffic. It’s the same thing.
A commercial VPN provider is just another random third party.
You get to choose them. You can research them. They don’t have a geographic monopoly on your internet connection. That gives you more control, and then more incentives to do the right thing
If you pay for your VPN using crypto, then they can’t tie it to your name, when they’re reselling the traffic it’s harder to tie it to an identity
https://www.privacyguides.org/en/basics/vpn-overview/
Surely that only works if you have personally mined the crypto yourself.
And if you only use that wallet for paying for the same VPN service.
Crypto isn’t anonymous, the ledger of all transactions (IE the Blockchain) can be read by anyone.
Monero solves this problem. Monero is the digital cash we were promised in cyberpunk. Not a open ledger, fungible money.
https://www.getmonero.org/resources/moneropedia/fungibility.html
And Mullvad takes monero directly!
That, unlike your ISP, isn’t obligated by law to log the connections you make (‘data retention’). Depending on the jurisdictions.