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WARNING! These VPNs might be leaking your email messages

WARNING! These VPNs might be leaking your email messages

UPDATE: ExpressVPN have commented on the situation, read the comments below.

Online privacy is like a game of dominoes – as soon as one service falls, others are immediately compromised.

Yesterday we reiterated the Wall Street Journal report on Google’s issues with email privacy. Simply put, it has come to light that some third-party app developers for the Gmail platform can access private inboxes to mine data. The article says it is even considered common practice for human employees to read private communications to improve algorithms, fix bugs, etc. Scary stuff, to be sure!

Email exchanges between VPN providers and clients may include names, transactions details, etc…

Well, today we’d like to share our concerns about the ominous link between this story and the VPN market. After the original story broke, we decided to look at some DNS reports and see whether any of our favorite VPN’s were using Gmail as their email service. Obviously, a significant number of them do, or we wouldn’t be writing about it.

Google has tried to mitigate their data privacy issues, but they have not denied that some third-party developers have access to your emails. This is a hard blow for those VPN providers who use Gmail to communicate with you. How can they claim your privacy is safe if even Google says that’s not true?

By the way, all of the above also applies to (among others) Microsoft and Yahoo.

So here are some Top VPN service providers, whose data protection game needs some serious work:

VPN email leak

So here’s the biggest surprise on this list of culprits – ExpressVPN. This is one of the biggest, safest, and all-around best VPN services on the market. We had it ranked #1! It boggles the mind that a company with this many resources and such an expensive product has failed to make sure they use a secure email service. TorGuard, with its thousands of servers around the globe, may even be bigger. We’re less disappointed with PrivateVPN – while its reputation has had no blemishes before now, they are understandably not as well-equipped to cover all their bases.

The VPN security of these popular services is also in question:

vpns that might be leaking email data

Of particular note is VPN Unlimited, whose email service is Yandex. That is, potentially, a whole new can of worms due to the relationship between big business in Russia and the government.

Why is this important?

One of the primary functions Virtual Private Networks have is protecting their users’ data privacy and personal identity. The top VPN services do this extremely well – they have powerful encryption, private DNS, they work hard to plug all kinds of data leaks, and they try to keep their interactions with users as anonymous as possible.

Journalists, political activists, simple torrent users – people from all walks of life trust VPNs with their secrets. Some of these secrets could even be life-threatening in the wrong hands. Even short of that, email exchanges between VPN providers and clients may include names, transaction details, and other things you’d rather keep out of sight! In that context, the idea of these communications being read by third parties is very troubling indeed.

Let’s be clear – we’re not here to sell torches or pitchforks. Sensitive though this issue may be, for all we know its impact can be trivial. It’s also not the VPN providers’ fault that Google has some nasty skeletons in their closet. Having said that, if you are using any of the affected VPNs – do yourself a favor and ask some hard questions!

These VPNs are safe to use

Despite all of the above, the other side of this dirty-looking coin is still shiny. So, let us balance the grim findings with a list of top VPN service providers that you can use without risking email leaks to third parties. We have checked dozens of VPNs and here’s what we have for you:

NordVPN - secure VPN

NordVPN

CyberGhost - secure VPN

CyberGhost

VyprVPN - secure VPN

VyprVPN

PIA - secure VPN

Private Internet Access

Proton VPN - secure VPN

Proton VPN

15 comments
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  1. SlimyCheetah68
    SlimyCheetah68 May 11, 2019 at 5AM

    When big names like ExpressVPN fall in suspicious lists like these, all one can say is that there is nowhere safe in this world. Everything is compromised and your data is never safe and private. If you are on the web, you are out there for sure!



  2. r3al1ty
    r3al1ty March 31, 2019 at 12PM

    As I understand, Culprit ere are not VPN providers but email service providers. VPN are suffering collateral damage as clients of these email providers.



  3. Nogovan
    Nogovan February 16, 2019 at 3PM

    While I was looking for VPN, I found this article very interesting. The comments and replies also are very educating. So far, I have known what to use but definitely not the ones leaking my email messages. Thanks



  4. Gombo T
    Gombo T February 9, 2019 at 9AM

    Well that’s a shock I had heard only good stuff about ExpressVPN, I’ve read the comments and their response and to me they still sounds legit and safe. Thanks for the article though.



  5. Eleuterio Colombo
    Eleuterio Colombo December 9, 2018 at 2PM

    I’m shocked that ExpressVPN isn’t using a secure email provider for it’s clients! I’ve read several of the comments here and there seems to be some doubt of whether this article is accurate. I’m sure there will be a lot of people moving to some of the other VPNs you’ve listed, like Nord & CyberGhost, if not at least asking some questions of their current providers.


      1. Kevin Marlowe
        Kevin Marlowe December 11, 2018 at 1PM

        Hi Eleuterio,




  6. Kevin Marlowe
    Kevin Marlowe July 20, 2018 at 10AM

    Let’s clarify further:



  7. VPNA
    VPNA July 13, 2018 at 8PM

    This article is nothing more than sensationalist link/click bait. I’m glad Express corrected many of the fallacies and inaccuracies.



  8. ZenMate VPN
    ZenMate VPN July 13, 2018 at 3PM

    At ZenMate, we are currently closely observing the development around the Gmail case in light of the report published by the Wall Street Journal earlier this month. As of now, we did not find any existing proof or evidence that the emails we have received or sent via the ZenDesk platform connected with a corporate business Google account got in any way compromised, leaked or shared with an uncertified third party.



  9. rfk934
    rfk934 July 13, 2018 at 1PM

    i’ve used TorGuard for a month or so and i’m happy with the performance. tried some of those ‘good vpns’ as well and the download speeds sucked a**. so whatever



  10. hitler
    hitler July 12, 2018 at 1PM

    no decent person ever used gmail..



  11. Niels
    Niels July 12, 2018 at 1PM

    I still dont really get how vpns leak email messages or what they have to do with this whole Gmail issue. So what can i do if my vpn uses Gmail?


      1. Kevin Marlowe
        Kevin Marlowe July 13, 2018 at 2PM

        Hi Niels,




  12. ExpressVPN
    ExpressVPN July 12, 2018 at 9AM

    This article is completely inaccurate, and there is no risk of any ExpressVPN customer data being compromised in the manner described.


      1. Kevin Marlowe
        Kevin Marlowe July 13, 2018 at 8AM

        First of all, thank you for the detailed comment. As we try to make it clear in our article, we appreciate ExpressVPN and recognize the level of quality you guys have achieved. The fact that you responded so quickly only proves that!



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