{"id":11957,"date":"2025-11-12T06:48:13","date_gmt":"2025-11-12T06:48:13","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/proxpn.com\/?p=11957"},"modified":"2025-11-12T06:48:13","modified_gmt":"2025-11-12T06:48:13","slug":"vpns-and-blockchain-networks-work-together-to-block-online-surveillance","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/proxpn.com\/et\/blog\/vpns-and-blockchain-networks-work-together-to-block-online-surveillance\/","title":{"rendered":"VPNs and Blockchain Networks Work Together to Block Online Surveillance"},"content":{"rendered":"
You’re handling crypto trades on public Wi-Fi \u2013 and your VPN encrypts the connection, blocking hackers from seeing what you’re doing. At the same time, your transactions run through a blockchain that no government or company controls. Such dual protection is now becoming the standard for anyone who takes privacy seriously.<\/span><\/p>\n But the reality is that hackers launch more than 2,200 cyberattacks every single day. So, that’s one attack every 39 seconds \u2013 and 95% of these breaches happen because someone made a simple mistake. The old ways of protecting ourselves online just don’t work anymore, and now we need to keep up with that, and that’s where VPNs and blockchain come in \u2013 two things that actually make each other stronger.<\/span><\/p>\n The VPN market hit $77 billion in 2025, which is more than 1.9 billion people, and around one-third of internet users now use VPNs on a daily basis. Sure, some people still use them to watch shows from other countries, but that’s not what\u2019s pushing such growth.<\/span><\/p>\n People finally understand that ISPs track everything they do online, governments collect browsing data, and companies build detailed profiles to predict what you’ll buy next. A VPN makes an encrypted tunnel that hides all this activity. Your ISP sees encrypted data going to a VPN server \u2013 and nothing else. So, they can’t really tell if you’re checking email, trading crypto, or reading the news.<\/span><\/p>\n But VPNs have limits, though. They protect your connection, but once your data reaches its destination, you’re back in the regular internet system \u2013 and you’re still trusting companies with your information. Also, you’re still operating within centralized networks that governments can shut down or monitor.<\/span><\/p>\n Well, that’s the gap blockchain fills.<\/span><\/p>\n Blockchain completely changes how we handle all these transactions. So, instead of one company controlling everything, thousands of independent computers verify each transaction. No single government can shut it down, and no company can change the records.<\/span><\/p>\n Take Solana as a perfect example \u2013 it can process 65,000 transactions per second, which is faster than Visa’s peak capacity of 24,000. But the real kicker is that each transaction is less than $0.0025.<\/span><\/p>\n SOL<\/span> runs on more than 1,000 validation nodes spread across the globe. So, even if a government blocks VPN servers (which happens in China and Russia), they can’t stop blockchain transactions \u2013 the network just routes around the blockage. In January 2025, SOL handled $45 billion in transactions without a single outage.<\/span><\/p>\n The gaming field shows another use case. Players use VPNs to avoid ISP throttling that ruins their gaming experience. So, they use <\/span>Solana<\/span><\/a> to play their favorite casino games, which handles everything without the lag that kills other blockchains.<\/span><\/p>\n The speed is also very important, and SOL confirms transactions in 400 milliseconds, which is faster than the blink of an eye. Especially important during gaming sessions, since you can get the security of blockchain without the painful waiting times that plagued casinos using early assets such as Bitcoin.<\/span><\/p>\n Regular VPNs have a fatal flaw \u2013 they’re centralized. NordVPN, ExpressVPN, Surfshark \u2013 they all route your traffic through servers they control. So, if the company gets hacked, receives a government order, or decides to sell your data, your privacy vanishes.<\/span><\/p>\n Decentralized VPNs fix this by using blockchain tech, and instead of company-owned servers, your traffic bounces through thousands of independent nodes. Regular people share their internet bandwidth and earn crypto in return.<\/span><\/p>\n Well, how it really works is that blockchain smart contracts automatically handle payments between users and node operators. No company holds your payment info, and no central authority tracks which nodes you use. If governments try to shut it down, they’d need to locate and stop thousands of individual computers at the same time \u2013 and that\u2019s basically impossible.<\/span><\/p>\n1.9 Billion People Now Use VPNs \u2013 But Not Only for Netflix<\/b><\/h2>\n
Blockchain Networks \u2013 When You Can’t Trust Anyone<\/b><\/h2>\n
Decentralized VPNs Combine Both Techs<\/b><\/h2>\n
Real People Using This Combo Right Now<\/b><\/h2>\n