my apologies for the long screenshot. i had purchased adguard's vpn service for five years since its primary adguard service is well know in the iapple ecosystem.
on android, though, their app appears to send data to a lot of third-parties. has it always been this compromised? am i a fool to go for their vpn services as well?
thanks for the feedback. i would be happy to hear what I'm presuming incorrectly here. always willing to learn and gain an understanding of how things do work.
Not op ( that guy was being intolerably rude ) but I'm not surprised that ddg is reporting that a vpn app is sending all these requests, the very nature of a VPN app is to capture and proxy all your traffic, so it will end up proxy all the tracking requests on your system. These likely came from a browser ( any site with an Amazon button for example will likely show as an amazing tracking hit )
In short, your VP is likely not selling your data.
The problem with a VPN is that it isn't a technology that's designed to be private. It actually mainly was used for companies until recently.
When you use your VPN you are tunneling your traffic to someone else's servers. They can see the same data your ISP can. Hopefully everything you do is encrypted but that is a discussion for another day. The point is that a VPN companies servers are no more trustworthy than the rest of the internet. You can't control anything that leaves your device. That's not how the internet was designed and it can't be changed no matter how many claims a VPN company may make. Someone somewhere will always see you connect to the internet. At the end of the day you give up some privacy in exchange for your ability to use the internet.
How exactly? Explain to me how your VPN can somehow make you anonymous. The backbone of the internet is decentralized which means someone somewhere will always see your traffic.