Google One expands VPN service to all subscribers, adds dark web monitoring

DragonSlayer101

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Staff
In a nutshell: Online privacy is becoming increasingly important with each passing year, and a reliable, no-log VPN service can go a long way in offering some much-needed peace of mind. Data breaches have also become commonplace, resulting in massive amounts of private information ending up on the dark web. With a VPN service and dark web monitoring, Google promises to make it slightly easier for people to preserve their privacy and security online.

On Wednesday, Google announced two new security features as part of its Google One cloud storage service. The first is the expansion of its VPN service, which will now be available to all Google One subscribers at no extra cost. It was previously only available to those on the 2TB plan and higher.

While the 2TB plan costs $99.99 per month, the new policy means that the VPN service will now also be available to those on the basic 100GB plan that's priced at just $1.99 per month. It will be available on all platforms, including Android, iOS, Windows and Mac.

The rollout started Wednesday and will continue over the next few weeks. When complete, the service will be available in 22 countries, including the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, France, Germany, Japan, Mexico, South Korea, Switzerland, and more.

According to Google, its VPN service offers enhanced protection to all users, irrespective of what apps or browsers they use. It also protects users from potential hackers and cybercriminals by masking their IP addresses. "Without a VPN, the sites and apps you visit could use your IP address to track your activity or determine your location," said Google.

The other security feature announced as part of the Google One suite is an innovative one, and something that the company claims will help people better protect their data online. Called 'Dark Web Report,' the feature promises to scrape the dark web for users' personal info, like their name, address, email, phone number and Social Security number.

The feature will, however, be turned off by default, meaning users will have to manually enable it. "When you enable dark web report, you provide and select the information you'd like to keep an eye on within your monitoring profile," explained Google. If the company finds any matching information, it will notify the user and provide guidance on how they might protect that information.

As an example of how this might work, Google said that if it finds a user's Social Security number on the dark web, it might suggest that they report it to the government as stolen. In addition, the company will also offer users guidance on how to protect their credit.

To assure users of their privacy, Google added that any data shared with the company for monitoring purposes will be handled according to its privacy policy. Users will also be able to delete any info from their profile or stop monitoring any time they want.

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Considering the size and wide spread use of Google, the basic service should be free of charge.
Considering the price they are asking for Google Cloud, it is more than welcome this feature is no longer restricted to only 2TB users.
Google is certainly not a charity - unlimited, fast VPN is never free + considering this is getting a part of 100 GB plan as well, it is pretty much a bargain.

I am using different VPN, but when Google arrives as a part of my plan, in my country, I will most likely switch in an instant.
 
Since google is using and profiting off your data, they don't want anyone else having access to it. Well unless they pay google for it.
Was thinking the same thing... How ironic... A company that is worth billions in just doing exactly what their so called VPN now offers to block. LOL.
 
2TB of VPN service for $100 a month? You can get unlimited service for about $35 a year. For another $35 to $50 a year you can have anti-malware and dark web monitoring. If anyone is actually dumb enough to pay Google for this, they deserve to get scammed.
 
Of course Google wants to offer VPN to as many users as possible, so that all the "anonymity" the VPN is providing will not apply to Google's data collection, which sees all the traffic before it goes through the VPN.

re: "a reliable, no-log VPN service" - I seriously doubt this is a no-log service today and see no possibility it could remain that way under US government pressure if its use becomes widespread.
 
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