This was posted 7 months 22 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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[iOS] GamingVPN Lifetime Subscription $0 (Was $199.99) @ Apple App Store

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TODAY ONLY: Get the lifetime premium version (normally $199.99) for free! Download the app and select the lifetime $0.00 option to redeem.

You are a few taps away from being online anywhere in the world. Gaming, surfing or streaming at 200mb+ speeds!
Gaming VPN is a premium VPN service created and used by professional gamers. GamingVPN enables uninterrupted gameplay by providing solutions to connection problems.
Play your favorite games, like PUBG, MineCraft, Call of Duty, Palworld and more on a fast network without clogging up your personal wifi. You are a seconds away from being online anywhere in the world. Gaming, surfing or streaming at 200mb+ speeds.
Browse privately with ultra-secure iPad/iPhone VPN protection.
What is Gaming VPN?
• Unlimited time, Unlimited data, Unlimited bandwidth
• Free VPN supported by Ads
• No Log is saved from any users
• Protect your security and privacy
• Trustworthy and secure connection
• Private. Your browsing is private and stays private. You will still need to delete your history, if thats what you're into. ;)
• IKEV2 Connection Protocol
• 4096 bit Encryption for the most security
• Global VPN network at lightning-fast speeds

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closed Comments

  • +2

    OzB Post
    Not a lot of love over there for this one - even from the OP!

  • How do you select the $0 option, I can’t seem to select anything other than the default trial $99 a year?

    • Tap on lifetime option, it will change to $0

      • +1

        Thanks. I didn’t even notice the small ring around the ‘selected’ option. I just saw the option in the centre as popped out compared to the other options and thought that’s what was selected

  • Thankyu

  • Thanks!!!

  • +2

    Tho keep in mind that using these 'free' VPN can be pretty risky, because your routing all your traffic through them, and they could use SSL bumping to analyse SSL encrypted traffic.

    • +1

      How is this different to a paid service? If you have any evidence?

      • If its free you are the product?

          • @kyogui: We’ve all been conditioned to think that way 😅

          • +4

            @kyogui: That's not my view towards any free deals.

            The main ongoing cost for a VPN service will be networking and electricity, both of which will incresase as new users join the service.

            Now those paid VPN like NordVPN or Mulvad, they should be able to pay for this cost because of the monthly revenue they receive. However, you aren't wrong to assume that they too can be monitoring the traffic and selling the data. However they have a lesser incentive to do so because the minute people find out they are selling your information, the majority of those paying customers will stop paying.

            Free VPN services have a higher incentive to sell your data because how else are they going to pay their bills. BUT not all VPN do it, some might have another source of revenue that pays for their costs. So when we are picking a VPN service, we should consider how are they generating the revenue to pay for their servers.

            Now personally, I still got the lifetime subscription because I still see some uses for it especially if I am able to whitlist certain application (like streaming services) then I don't personally see any harm in terms of data security.

        • This is the wrong site to say that on :D We're all about free and close-to-free around here!

          • +1

            @aklchp: Yeah true, but we should still be weary of what we are signing up for.

      • Before using a vpn you should at least know the security protocols and encryption provided. Otherwise you are exposing yourself to a man in the middle.
        I wouldnt use a vpn unless i saw it on the following
        https://thatoneprivacysite.xyz/

        Facebook has been in the news recently for using a man in the middle scenario to decypt snapchat posts from a vpn they provided
        https://techcrunch.com/2024/03/26/facebook-secret-project-sn…

        • except he hasn't updated his VPN list in a while - "(Data last updated on 20/07/19)"

          • @beatthatflight: Doh! My mistake!
            I would have changed over to Proton around that time and have just been happy enough to pay the annual subscription fee rather than shop around for alternatives.

    • +1

      I get the point of security, but too many people take this too seriously and are paranoid.

      Can someone please answer me this:

      • What data of yours that is routed through the VPN is so sensitive and private that you can't let it ever be exposed? Are you doing banking stuff over the VPN? Are you sending nudes over Snapchat and afraid to get sniffed? If yes, would NOT routing the traffic through VPN be 100% secure?

      • Ignore the VPN for a second. How do we know our ISP isn't sniffing our data? How do we know the servers we end up at on Facebook/Google/Snapshat aren't collecting our data in some ways, or leaking our data through some other means, or that they have good security mechanisms implemented to protect against data exfiltration etc?

      • What's so important about you that you have to protect and hide everything?

      • I can answer you that:

        1. Someone needs to know what you're visiting, so they can deliver it to you, SSL helps but it doesn't hide everything. The most secure way to browse is with two VPNs, one knows you, the other knows the site you're visiting, but neither have the full picture. This might sound like overkill but Apple does it for you on all your their devices at no extra cost, if you are fortunate enough to have their devices and an iCloud subscription (look up iCloud Private Relay if you're interested), it's part of their "privacy is a fundamental human right" policy.

        2. By default (no VPN or custom DNS) your ISP can deduce a lot of what you're doing, but it's unlikely that they care about us in particular, it's more for overall stats and traffic management.

        3. I'm sure like most kiwis, you and I close the door when using the toilet. We're not doing anything wrong, it's a very natural behaviour we all share, yet we still want our privacy. Privacy has nothing to do with hiding wrongdoing, it's just a natural desire we have, and for most people online life is just as important as in-person life.

          1. Doesn't really answer my question. What "data" of yours is so sensitive that you need to protect it using such measures? And iCloud Private Relay is basically Tor but with 2 hops, while Tor allows multiple hops. Guess what, Tor isn't safe either, you can still analyze patterns starting from one end of the node and exiting out the other end and deduce what has happened.

          2. Except you don't know what they do with your data. You have no way of knowing 100% what they do with it. Many enterprise companies have been on the news because they screwed up, or that they fail to deliver what they promised to the consumers. You use a password manager like Lastpass and think you're safe? Nah, they got hacked and multiple data breaches. Oh you think Boeing aircrafts are safe to fly on? Nope, not at all. Oh you invested your crypto using FTX because they are huge and trustworthy? Nope. Of course companies will say they don't sell your data or don't do this or that. But how do you know for sure? Do you work for them? Unless you self-host everything, you can't trust anyone. And just because something is "open source", doesn't mean it's trustworthy either.

          3. If I'm out in the public, then sure I will. But that's because I don't want some uneducated random creep come into the same toilet that I'm already using.

          If all you're doing is browse Cheapies, a bit of social media and stream TV shows or whatever, then implementing VPN among other things just to achieve "privacy" is a bit overkill. If you're using VPN to bypass region-locked TV shows on Netflix or whatever, then sure that makes sense. But for the average user, their data isn't important. Nobody is really that important.

          • @NovaAlpha: Read this on 9Gag today and thought it's quite funny and thought it's relevant to this comment I made a few days ago.

            https://9gag.com/gag/aPA603w

            Why is it relevant? Well, McAfee was known back in the days as one of the popular or well-known antivirus software. People go on and on about security and antivirus this and that and a lot of people even think installing 2 or more antivirus apps and various other products like anti-keyloggers, anti-crypto mining scripts, etc etc, will keep them safe.

            My point is, your data isn't important and if you know what you're doing, you don't need most of these things. VPN is fine to get, but if you're getting it for the sake of protecting your data, then you think too highly of yourself in terms of how important you are. Likewise, if you think having an antivirus is important to keep you safe from everything bad online, then you're too naiive. But hey, McAfee was big and so we trust them right?

  • Also its not free all the time, its usually $199 so they are making money somehow

  • Missed it. It's not free anymore :(

  • Doesn’t work anymore noe is 399.99

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