
Beyond that, it’s very easy to use – and Opera is a great browser with some brilliant features in its own right. So, using Opera’s VPN won’t cost you a single cent. That's pretty rare for any free VPN – most free services will cut your bandwidth down to a couple of gigabytes, making them less useful for streaming video or heavy downloading. Secondly, it’s free to use and offers unlimited bandwidth.


Firstly, it’s built into the Opera browser, so you only need to download and install the browser, then enable the VPN to switch on the service. Opera's claim of more new users, however, was not confirmed by browser activity tracking, including the numbers posted daily by Irish analytics company StatCounter.There are two good reasons. By repealing the rules - which had not taken effect - Congress allowed broadband providers to sell recorded customer data, including browsing history, location, even what apps had been used, without customer consent. House of Representatives followed the Senate to overturn privacy rules that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) passed last year. VPNs have been a hot topic since March 28, when the U.S. "The usage statistics for the past few days show that users are becoming even more conscious about their potential privacy issues when online." "We integrated a free, no-log VPN directly into the browser to bring everyone, not just savvy users, a simple tool for protecting their privacy," Krystian Kolondra, the head of engineering for the desktop version of Opera, said in a statement. As support, it offered a graph illustrating a 109% increase in new U.S. has more than doubled since Congress decided to repeal certain internet privacy protections last Tuesday," claimed the company in a statement. "The average number of daily new Opera users in the U.S.
