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What Is a VPN Provider?

A VPN provider is a company that runs the servers and app you use to route your internet traffic through an encrypted tunnel, hiding your IP address and protecting your privacy. In short, the provider supplies the network, software, and security that make a VPN work.

What a VPN provider gives you

A provider maintains a network of servers in different locations, builds the app that connects you to them, and manages the encryption that keeps your data private. You subscribe, open the app, and connect without running any of that infrastructure yourself.

How to choose a trustworthy provider

Look for a clear no-logs policy, strong encryption like AES-256, and a kill switch that blocks traffic if the connection drops. Modern protocols such as VLESS, VMESS, and Shadowsocks help you stay connected even where VPNs are restricted.

Free vs. paid providers

Free tiers are great for trying a service but often add ads, limit speed, or cap your session time. A paid plan typically removes ads, unlocks unlimited use, and lets you protect several devices at once, which matters if you stream or connect daily.

Veepen as a VPN provider

Veepen is a VPN provider for Android and Android TV built on VLESS with Reality and XHTTP, plus VMESS and Shadowsocks. It follows a no-logs policy with AES-256 encryption and a kill switch, offers a free tier with one-hour sessions, and a Premium plan with unlimited, ad-free access on up to four devices.

Choosing the right VPN provider comes down to trust, speed, and ease of use. Veepen combines one-tap connection with strong encryption on Android and Android TV, and you can reach the team anytime on Telegram @veepen_vpn or at support@veepen.org.