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Yesterday the Nevada Gaming Control Board provided its monthly revenue report, showing the state’s casinos collectively realized $1.012 billion in revenue in February, a small dip of 0.62 percent year-over-year.most popular casinos

The slight revenue decline in February followed a larger decrease of a little more than 3 percent in January when revenue totaled just over $984M. Like a poker player feeling satisfaction after reaching an otherwise arbitrary milestone chip-wise, crossing the ten-figure threshold helped encourage positive reactions to the report.

“All things considered, whenever we record a billion dollars in gaming win we are very pleased, although for this month that still resulted in a very small decrease statewide,” said Michael Lawton, senior analyst with the Nevada Gaming Control Board, as reported in the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

The win amount for casinos in downtown Las Vegas were up 9 percent for the month, while those on the Strip were down just under 2 percent when compared to a year ago.Lawton highlighted a lower baccarat win as having affected the overall revenue total.

“Baccarat was off 25.5 percent or $45.2 million due to volumes being down 18 percent on a hold of 12.77 percent vs.14.05 percent last year,” he explained, adding as well how baccarat revenue has been down seven of the last eight months despite volumes being down approximately 1 percent over that period.Meanwhile Nevada sportsbooks took in more this February when compared to a year ago, winning $35.8 million in February, a big 235 percent jump from the year before. Both basketball betting and a better outcome on the Super Bowl helped the books this time around.
As usual U.S. lawmakers in various states were weighing in on gambling-related legislation this week.

You might have heard about West Virginia’s online gambling bill having become law after passing through both houses and not being vetoed by the governor. Read more about that development in “West Virginia Legalizes Online Poker.”

In Indiana lawmakers removed mobile sports betting from a gambling bill this week among other revisions concerning licenses and operators. The new bill which passed through a Senate committee only allows sports betting at casinos, racinos, and satellite facilities, reports the Indianapolis Business Journal. A House committee is now taking up that bill as it makes it way through the legislative process.

Meanwhile over in Tennessee prospects appear less sanguine for a sports betting bill. While the bill has bipartisan support, opposition is being expressed from both sides of the aisle as well, according to the Tennessean. While a House committee continues to argue over it, a Senate committee has delayed looking at it all to this point.

Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments

If you missed your chance to see Styx at Pala Casino, Spa & Resort last weekend, you can catch them this weekend at The Show.The band has put out 16 studio albums since forming in Chicago in the ’70s and some of its top hits include “Babe,” “Lady,” “Come Sail Away,” “Blue Collar Man,” “The Best Of Times,” “Too Much Time on My Hands” and “Mr. Roboto.”most popular casinos

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Comic, actor and TV host Howie Mandel will do a show at the Indio casino.Mandel is not only the host of the revived “Deal or No Deal” show on CNBC, but he also serves as a judge for reality TV competition “America’s Got Talent.”

He also pranked unsuspecting “marks” in the NBC show “Howie Do It,” which ran for several months in 2009; was the host of an NBC game show called “Take It All,” which ran for several episodes in 2012; and was executive producer for TBS game show “Deal with It” that ran from 2013-2014. And before that he was known for starring on beloved TV series “St. Elsewhere.”
Morongo will host Grammy Award-winning R&B star Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds this week.Babyface has produced quite a few popular R&B songs over his musical career, including “Every Time I Close My Eyes” with Mariah Carey, “When Can I See You” and “How Come, How Long” featuring Steve Wonder.

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Step back in time to the scene of the late ’70s and early ’80s power pop and punk collide as Elvis Costello and the Imposters and Blondie come to Pechanga Resort Casino.Some of Costello’s popular songs include “She,” “Alison,” “Watching The Detectives” and “Veronica” while Blondie’s top hits are “Heart of Glass,” “Call Me,” “Maria” and “One Way or Another.”

The tour also stops at FivePoint Amphitheatre in Irvine on Aug. 4 and the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles on Aug. 5.Who better to take you on a journey through ’90s and early ’00s boy band and pop music than Lance Bass?

Bass, once a part of boy band NSYNC, will host the “Pop 2000 Tour” at the Coachella casino, which will feature an assortment of recognizable names from that era, including Aaron Carter, Ryan Cabrera, Tyler Hilton and O-Town. The show is limited to guests 21 and older.

Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments

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Making a deposit to an online casino can be a challenge at times. Fortunately for players there are a number of useful eWallets that can be used for sending money to and from Internet casinos. Neteller, Skrill, Moneybookers, Euteller and PayPal are some of the most popular casino deposit methods available to players in 2019.

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Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments

A year after two new casinos opened in Atlantic City, the seaside resort’s gambling and sports betting revenue is up nearly 8%, and its top casino had its best month ever.Figures released Wednesday by the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement show the casinos took in $323 million, an increase of 7.8% from July 2018.month recommend casino

That’s when the city’s two newest casinos, Hard Rock and Ocean, were in their first full month of operation. July’s figures were the first true apples-to-apples comparison in a year of how the Atlantic City casino market had been doing.

But perhaps the biggest news of the month was a record-setting performance from the Borgata, which has long been Atlantic City’s top casino. It took in nearly $88 million in casino and sports betting revenue, the most it ever had won in a single month. That’s an increase of nearly 15% from a year earlier.

It came during the first full month of operation of a $12 million sports betting and entertainment project the casino opened.

“Playing lucky in table games, complemented by healthy July volumes, led to Borgata enjoying an all-time record in total gaming revenue,” Marcus Glover, the casino’s president and chief operating officer, said in an emailed statement.The Ocean Casino Resort took in $20.1 million from gamblers in July, up 18% from a year earlier, when it was in its first month of operation.

“We are very pleased with the continued profitability and growth of the property,” said Michael Donovan, Ocean’s senior vice president and chief marketing officer.

July, he said, marked the best month in the casino’s history for gross and net slot revenue and hotel occupancy, including the two-plus years it operated as Revel.

The figures illustrate the recovery Atlantic City’s casino industry has undergone in recent years. Just three years ago, the Hard Rock’s predecessor, the Trump Taj Mahal, shut down, marking the fifth of the 12 Atlantic City casinos that operated in 2014 to go out of business.

The reopenings of Taj Mahal as Hard Rock and Revel as Ocean have restored several thousand jobs and boosted casino revenue, even as profits collectively fall for the resort, which now has more competitors than it did just a few years ago.But the numbers also indicate potential problems for the three Atlantic City casinos owned by Caesars Entertainment, which was recently acquired by Eldorado Resorts, the owner of the Tropicana. The newly combined company owns four Atlantic City casinos, including the three Caesars properties — Caesars, Bally’s and Harrah’s — and there has been speculation the company may seek to divest itself of one or more of its New Jersey properties.

Hard Rock has seized the No. 2 spot in the Atlantic City market. It took in $40.7 million in July, an increase of nearly 25% from its first month a year ago.

The Golden Nugget won $34.5 million in July, up 17.4%; Tropicana won nearly $33 million, which was down 11% from a year ago; and Harrah’s, which has fallen to the No. 4 spot after being second to Borgata for years, won just under $30 million, down 5% from a year ago.

Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments

USA TODAY 10Best readers have gambled for you in Las Vegas to find the best casinos in the city.recommend casino

The Readers’ Choice Awards winners for Best Las Vegas Casino have been announced, with some surprising off-the-Strip finds in the top 10 spots.

A panel of experts on Las Vegas casinos partnered with 10Best editors to pick the initial 20 nominees, and the top 10 winners were determined by a popular vote, which took place over 28 days.

The 10Best Readers’ Choice Awards also recognized other leading casinos and casino amenities across the U.S., including Best Casino Restaurant, Best Casino Hotel and Best Players Club.

Scroll through the gallery above to find out more about the 10Best Readers’ Choice Awards winners for Best Las Vegas Casino. 10Best Readers’ Choice Awards: Best Las Vegas Casino 2019

The D Las Vegas
The STRAT Hotel, Casino & SkyPod
Golden Nugget Las Vegas Hotel and Casino
Wynn Las Vegas and Encore Resort
The Venetian & The Palazzo
The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas
Caesars Palace Las Vegas Hotel & Casino
Red Rock Casino Resort & Spa
Bellagio Las Vegas
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Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments
Everyone knows that only the bride is supposed to wear white to a wedding, but apparently, one mother-in-law didn’t know that only the bride is supposed to wear a bridal gown.

When Jimmy Fallon asked people to post their best wedding fails, Amy Pennza showed off a truly awkward photo. It showed her, on her wedding day, in her wedding dress, standing next to her mother-in-law, who was also wearing a wedding dress.
She started off describing the wedding day, posting, “I didn't know what my mother-in-law planned to wear. I didn't think to ask. The morning of the wedding, all the women in the bridal party cram into a tiny room in the church. You know, body glitter and hairspray everywhere. Fifteen coats of mascara. Putting napkins under your pits so you don't sweat on your dress.”www.eisenge.com

When the mother showed up in the dress, Pennza initially didn’t know how to react. According to her, “I don't remember much about the day. Most people say their wedding is a blur, and that's true for me, too. But I know I said this: ‘You... You could be the bride...’ Later, my sister (matron of honor) said she didn't pull me aside and talk about it because she hoped I was too distracted to notice. My college roommate (bridesmaid) said the same thing. But secretly, they both spent the reception looking at me, then each other, then MIL, then me, then the cop the venue made us hire—hoping I didn't go for his taser.”
The reason why the dress didn’t cause more drama is because of how the mother-in-law grew up. “She grew up in extreme poverty. As a child, she used to sneak into the kitchen and eat match heads. That's a pica craving, and kids do it when they're malnourished. When you grow up with nothing, it stays with you. Forever, I think. No matter how much money you earn, there's always that little fear in the back of your mind that someone might take it all away.”

“However, she's a bargain hunter to the bone,” Pennza continued. “Her money-saving strategies are legend—and often hilarious. At family gatherings, we amuse ourselves telling stories of crazy shit she's done to save money. So when she spotted The Dress at an incredible bargain, she couldn't turn it down. If you ask her now, she says she feels terrible about it. Although, she also told me, ‘I think I've still got it. We should raffle it off.’ So, yeah, the wedding dress was a shock. But it gave me a pretty funny memory. No one who attended has ever forgotten it. And, you have to admit, weddings can be forgettable.”

Fortunately, it seems like Pennza doesn’t have any hard feelings about the dress. Also, her mother-in-law apparently isn’t upset about the photo being shared either. “When I told her about this getting a lot of attention, and said I worried it might hurt her feelings, she waved it off. ‘Whatever makes me famous.’”
Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments

HBO has announced that it will soon have a third streaming service – to sit alongside HBO Now and HBO Go – called HBO Max, which it no doubt hopes will rival the likes of Netflix and Amazon Prime.
HBO Max hasn’t launched yet, but here’s what we know so far about what to expect.
What shows and films will be on HBO Max?
We already know that Friends will be leaving US Netflix to move over the HBO Max, and that other ’90s favourite The Fresh Prince of Bel Air will also be on the platform. HBO has also commissioned six new movies already, with plans for more films and TV shows, and it’s using HBO Max as an excuse to ramp up its original content ambitions, with TV shows on the way including Dune: The Sisterhood, a Gremlins animated series, and a rom-com anthology series from Anna Kendrick called Love Life.
At San Diego Comic-Con it was also announced that the DC Universe show Doom Patrol would become an HBO Max co-production, with season two airing simultaneously on both streaming services, and the first season arriving in its entirety when HBO Max launches. It seems a safe bet that this could be the first of several such deals, especially with other DC Universe shows.
HBO has also signed a deal with the BBC to get exclusive US streaming rights to a whole range of British shows, including modern Doctor Who (from 2005 onwards), the Office (UK version), Luther, Top Gear, and more. The deal even includes new episodes of Doctor Who going forwards – though they’ll still be broadcast on BBC America first.
There’ll be kids TV too, anchored by iconic brand Sesame Street. This started airing on HBO back in 2015, but from 2020 onwards (well, for five years at least) a new deal will see new Sesame Street episodes air exclusively on HBO Max, along with four new Sesame Street shows including an Elmo-led late night talk show parody. Plus, all 50 seasons of Sesame Street’s back catalogue will be available to watch, including some that have never been available on-demand before.
The service has also commissioned Equal, a four-part docuseries from Scout Productions about the history of the LGBTQ+ movement. Variety stated that the series will include interviews with activists such as Harry Hay, reenactments, never-before seen footage and deep dives into events like the Stonewall Riots. 
Variety also reported that the drama team will be getting three new vice presidents - Roberto Alcantara, Chika Chukudebelu and Mark Tuohy – who will all be reporting to Joey Chavez, EVP of original drama. The team will all be the brains behind new original HBO dramas, set to kick off in Spring 2020. 
When is HBO Max launching?
HBO hasn’t announced a specific release date yet, but has said that the service will launch in 2020, so there’s still a little while to wait before it’s available. In the meantime, HBO Go and HBO Now are both around already – and we’ll go into more on how the services differ below.
HBO Max vs HBO Now vs HBO Go
There’s one final potential confusion worth clearing up: the difference between HBO Now, HBO Go, and HBO Max.
For reasons best known to itself, HBO currently operates two separate streaming services which offer almost identical features and interfaces, with HBO Max now on the way. The main difference right now is how you pay for them: HBO Now is a standalone service that anyone can sign up to for $15 a month, while HBO Go is provided to existing HBO cable subscribers free of charge.
If you’re not in the US you’re almost certainly not paying for HBO on cable, so you won’t be able to sign up for HBO Go anyway. However, if you are a US cable subscriber who’s staying or living abroad, you should be able to access HBO Go through a VPN just as you can with HBO Now.
HBO Max will be closest to HBO Now, as it will be a standalone service, not limited to existing cable customers. However, as already mentioned it will also include additional content that isn’t originally from HBO, along with all of the new exclusive shows and films.
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Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments

Everyone who has to travel by plane wants to get an airline ticket at the best price possible. After all, airline travel can get expensive fast. You know by now that the distance of the flight, the airline you choose and the date you purchase your flight can affect the cost. It’s so hard to figure out.
But did you also know that your computer’s IP address—more accurately, your city or country—can affect airline ticket prices if you price-shop and buy online? And for the most part, it doesn’t work in your favor.
Yes, travel companies are using your online location and looking at your ticket-buying behavior to set a price they want you to buy at. And it’s often not to give you a discount, even if it’s not necessarily to cheat you or gouge you. They just want you to buy at their prices.
It’s not publicized, but travel sites will give you online ticket options and pricing based on where they think you are.
Someone else—in another city or location—can buy a ticket on the same flight for possibly hundreds of dollars less than you can! Prices differ by geographic location even if you’re looking at exactly the same date and flight at the same time!
Also, it’s not uncommon that ticket prices seem to be going up while you’re in front of your computer, getting ready to book a flight. Or you get a message saying that seats are going fast, so you need to decide and make your purchase NOW or lose out on the ticket and price.
Some flights are sold for less depending on where you are in the world.
Turning the tables.
But you can get around that trick, and turn the tables on them, using a few online tricks of your own. And you just might save yourself hundreds of dollars in the process.
The secret? Open a personal account with a virtual private network (VPN) provider and trick the travel sites into thinking you’re in another country…while tricking them into a better price for the same ticket.
An example of VPN savings.
Here is an example from someone who used a VPN account to get a better price on an airline ticket:
Scenario: The individual lives in Los Angeles, California, and was shopping online for a ticket from Los Angeles to Melbourne, Australia.
“I live in Los Angeles, California, in the U.S. So I first went online like always and visited my usual travel site, where I searched for flights from Los Angeles (LAX) to Melbourne (MEL) for my travel dates.
“I was quoted a price of $1,842. That was the lowest I came across, so I thought that was the best deal I could get.
“Then, I logged out of my search and went back online using my VPN account. That allowed me, I discovered, to link to a VPN server in Brazil…so my IP address would indicate, to any website tracking it, that I was shopping from Brazil. (They’d have no clue about my previous search.)
“I’d read somewhere that flights are sometimes pretty cheap from Brazil, so I went to the same travel website and did the exact same search—same travel destinations, same airline, same date and time.
“My ticket this time was around $475 lower than it was before…simply because the travel website thought I was in shopping online in Brazil instead of Los Angeles.”
Ready to save? Take these steps.
The first thing you will need to do, of course, is choose a Virtual Private Network provider:
Most VPNs offer a money-back guarantee or a free-trial period, so exploring the world of VPNs is virtually risk-free. More than that, take some time to learn why using a VPN service is a good idea for almost all of your online activity, if you want to…
start exploring online to see if you can save on purchases
view content blocked in your region (sporting events, TV shows, online services)
stay protected from identity thieves or eavesdroppers
A personal VPN account can make it all happen—because as you’ve learned, by using a VPN you can move your IP address to any country or city around the world with the click of a button.
And you won’t need to go to a travel agency to do that.

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Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments

One of the primary reasons people use a virtual private network (VPN
) is to hide or disguise their true IP address while they’re online. For instance, some sports fans can watch a game that’s blacked out in their area by tricking a website into thinking the user/viewer, based on their IP address, is in another part of the country or world. (Whether that’s fully legal is another matter).
Others who are concerned about their privacy hide their IP address because they don’t want advertisers tracking their online behavior and purchases and then matching that information to their IP address.
Oftentimes, websites will deny a person’s computer access by “blacklisting” their IP address, if that website feels someone has violated a rule. But by using a VPN, a user can get around the ban on their normal IP address. Better yet, websites have no way of finding out the true IP address.
That is, unless their VPN has a leak. Then they might have something to be concerned about.
Recently, news came out about a security flaw in VPN connections that may allow websites (or investigators) to track down a person’s true IP address while they’re using a VPN. That’s not supposed to happen.
Review: how a VPN works.
Let’s review a few basics about going online, browsing the Web and using a Virtual Private Network:
Your Internet Service Provider (ISP) makes your Internet connection possible. When you go online, your ISP assigns an IP address to your computer or router. Your IP address becomes your Internet “pass”—your behind-the-scenes network ID.
When you have a VPN account, your Internet connection still comes from your ISP (or whatever network you’re connected to while online)—the office, Wi-Fi at the airport, etc.
By logging in to your VPN and selecting the region or country you want to reroute through, the VPN assigns you a different, temporary working IP address—your real IP address is still working, but in the background, hidden.
At that point, other networks and computers could see your “VPN” IP address, if they bothered to look for it.
So where’s the problem? It happens to be built in to the Web browsers everyone uses.
Security “flaw.”
There is a special interface (program) in most Internet browsers (Chrome, Firefox, etc.) called Web Real Time Communication, or WebRTC, and that’s where the so-called flaw is.
However, WebRTC isn’t a flaw at all. It’s actually a special facet of your Web browser.
WebRTC allows computers on different networks to perform special browser-to-browser applications, such as voice calling, video chats, file sharing and more.
But as it turns out, in the hands of a technically savvy person, WebRTC can be tricked into revealing your actual IP address, even if you’re actively using a VPN service! That’s certainly not what you would expect or want.
IP address revealed!
Here’s how websites are fighting back: They have an IT person “write a few lines of code” (in other words, create a mini-program) to initiate or imitate a WebRTC-type connection with your browser. In the process, the program tricks the VPN into revealing the actual IP address. The website can then use the information to block the active connection.
Think of it as having a fake driver’s license pasted over your real license. WebRTC is like an x-ray machine: Websites can see through the fake IP address and identify the real one…and then block it.
What happens next?
News travels very fast on the Internet. It’s possible that the network administrators at Hulu, Netflix, Spotify, MLB Network—which have issues with people using VPNs illegally to access their sites—will start turning the tables on some people.
If and when they do, you may find that you can no longer get away with streaming movies or watching games or TV shows as you have been.
What can you do? Two things: 1) Check to see if your VPN is leaking your IP address and, if it is, 2) take steps to prevent it.
How to check for leaks.
If you have a VPN account, here’s how you can check your account for leaks*:
1.Open your browser, go to WhatIsMyIPAddress.com and jot down your IP address.
2.Log in to your VPN, choose a remote server (as you regularly do) and verify that you’re connected. Wait a few minutes.
3.Revisit WhatIsMyIPAddress.com and take note of your IP address once more. You should see a new IP address, provided by your VPN connection.
4.Here is the key step: Visit this WebRTC test page and note the IP address displayed on the page.
5.If the WebRTC test shows your normal IP address, then your browser is leaking your ISP-provided address to the world.
You can count on WhatIsMyIPAddress.com around the clock to help you verify your Internet connection and determine if your VPN is leaking your IP address.
How to fix the leak.
There’s no need to panic. You might be able to fix the VPN leak on your own, either by disabling WebRTC on your browser or installing a browser plug-in that blocks it.
The Chrome, Firefox, and Opera browsers operate with WebRTC active, or enabled, by default; Safari and Internet Explorer do not. (If the WebRTC test showed your true IP address, you have it enabled.) Here’s how to disable it:
For Chrome and Opera: Install the ScriptSafe extension from the Chrome Web Store, which will definitely disable WebRTC. It works for Opera as well, but it may be a cumbersome process to install it.
For Firefox: There are two options: 1) Disable WebRTC directly by opening a tab and going to “about:config” in the address bar. Find and set the “media.peerconnection.enabled” setting to “false.” 2) Install the “Disable WebRTC” add-on from Mozilla Add-ons (go to @YourAnonNews for the link).
Just so you know, disabling WebRTC may disrupt some Web apps and services, such as chat or other services involving your computer’s microphone or camera. If that happens, you can always enable WebRTC temporarily to fix that.

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Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments

One of the most misunderstood computer terms—and services—may be the proxy. Most of us aren’t IT experts or computer geeks, so all we want to know is “What does it do for me?” So let’s try to answer that question as simply as we can.
You may have even used a proxy, but just not have been aware of it. Today, a common type of proxy is called a VPN, for “virtual private network.”
1.If you look up the word proxy, you’ll see that it simply means a “substitute who stands in for or represents another.” In the Internet world, a proxy is an IP address that you can use as you go on the Internet that also shields your actual IP address at that time.
You either have to sign up for a virtual private network
or be given access to one, by your employer, for example.
2.A VPN is more than just a substitute IP address—it also provides a highly secure connection that delivers more security that most on the Internet, including the one offered by your Internet Service Provider.
3.A VPN is a connection that’s available online, on demand. Once you sign up for a VPN account—whenever you want anonymity, a safer secure connection or a way around Internet blocks on your IP address—you can route your connection through your VPN provider.
4.You get to keep your current ISP, which remains your primary Internet connection at home. There are some free VPNs, but it’s better if you pay for better service.
There are two different types of VPNs that are common today. One is for private/corporate work purposes and the other is for Internet browsing only.
A VPN for work purposes.
For example, my wife works for an advertising agency as a proofreader. At times, she’s asked to do work on the computer long after she’s left work. But she no longer has to go back to the office to do her work, thanks to the company’s very own virtual private network.
Instead of going into the office, she simply goes to her work laptop in our home office. We have an Internet connection that is always running. She doesn’t have to open an Internet browser, such as Google Chrome or Internet Explorer—she simply clicks on an icon and keys in her password to open up the VPN automatically.
Once she’s on, she can access drives and folders on her company’s server, which are accessible only to employees who are on-site or who have the exclusive VPN connection. That way, she can open up a presentation or a document that she’d typically be able to open only at work. That whole time she’s online and connected to her workplace computer/server, she’s using a virtual private network.
A secure connection is what is important.
This VPN connection provides her with a data “tunnel” which all of her online activity will go through. This is the first and most well-known quality of a VPN. All data “traffic” that goes through a VPN, whether it’s an email or a Google search, is encrypted—that means it’s electronically “scrambled” and would be undecipherable if tapped into by a hacker.
A VPN for ordinary folks.
As you might know, a lot of people have become worried about Internet safety and privacy. Many of these same people are worried that their IP addresses might be captured by “outsiders” or hackers and used for scams or computer attacks.
Thankfully, there are VPNs that are dedicated to the one application (program) that people care about the most: Internet browsing. Instead of a corporate virtual private network to connect to the workplace, a public VPN service lets you connect to a network of computers to hide your IP address and give you a secure connection on the Internet, while protecting all of your data transmissions.
To recap: People don’t use VPNs just to hide their IP addresses. A VPN can also protect your data when you’re on the Internet and can give you access to the websites and information that might otherwise block you out.

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Oct 28 '19 · 0 comments
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