

It supports Windows, Mac, Android, and iOS. When it comes to VPN apps, TunnelBear is a bit on the thin side. TunnelBear supports 5 simultaneous device connections.

The vulnerabilities, which were found, were fixed, as can be testified by testing and no WebRTC leaks or DNS leaks were found. The results were not perfect, and any company which would come out clear will appear suspicious. While this is in line with a lot of other VPN companies, TunnelBear went a step further with an independent audit on the servers, code, and the system as a whole. Operational data is collected, this includes the OS version, the TunnelBear app version, and if you have been active in the month and bandwidth used. They don’t collect IP addresses that connect to servers, DNS queries, information about any sites or services that are accessed. The company details everything they collect in terms of user data, and all that it doesn’t. The privacy policy is one of the most comprehensive out of many VPN’s on the market, so any questions of Is TunnelBear safe? Are quickly answered. This is because of the restrictions with the iPhone operating system, and not lacking in the TunnelBear app. The TunnelBear Mac iOS encryption used IKEv2/ IPSec. Encryption is top level with AES 256-bit OpenVPN for use on Windows, Mac, and Android. While the feature set is maybe lacking, the privacy side of things is very different. On a yearly basis, it works out affordable, yet the monthly price doesn’t place it much different to market leaders.

Payment options are still very limited to credit cards and Bitcoin. I hope this helps clarify expected behaviour a little further.One thing that is good to see is they now include a 30-day money-back guarantee, which used to be lacking. Seeing ALL DNS queries as being encrypted. Should compare your WireShark results, at which point you should be If you are concerned about all traffic and all DNS requests beingĮncrypted, you should be using the full desktop app Itself because whatever Chrome does is outside of the our extension's It doesn't (and can't) encrypt DNS requests made by Chrome browser Little more and they've clarified this for me further. Sorry if I wasn't clear in my explanation. But they have a workaround, which is to install the full version of their VPN program. It's because the extension sandbox in Google Chrome doesn't allow them to override DNS resolutions. Indeed, domain queries were going out unencrypted which is why I could see them in Wireshark when using the TunnelBear browser extension alone. I have found the answer after speaking with TunnelBear support and got their confirmation.
