Do Androids Need VPNs On Public Wi-Fi?

Discussion in 'mobile device security' started by Capricornia, Nov 18, 2023.

  1. Capricornia

    Capricornia Registered Member

    I've read quite a few articles about mobile phones needing VPNs while using public Wi-Fi, therefore, do they need VPNs on public Wi-Fi?
     
  2. Brummelchen

    Brummelchen Registered Member

  3. Capricornia

    Capricornia Registered Member

    So, why not?
     
  4. LoneWolf

    LoneWolf Registered Member

    I wouldn't use public wifi without a good trustworthy VPN.
     
  5. Buddel

    Buddel Registered Member

    +1
    Mullvad or IVPN would be my choice when it comes to "trustworthy" VPN
     
  6. LoneWolf

    LoneWolf Registered Member

    Same here.
     
  7. Triple Helix

    Triple Helix Specialist

    Agreed and I use IVPN on all of my Devices.
     
  8. Tarnak

    Tarnak Registered Member

    I went with Proton VPN on my smartphone.
     
  9. reasonablePrivacy

    reasonablePrivacy Registered Member

    I simply use cellular connectivity when I am far away from my private Wifi networks
     
  10. TairikuOkami

    TairikuOkami Registered Member

    If you are accessing content only via https, that should be good enough even on a honeypot Wi-Fi, but there are vulnerabilities and some content is still unencrypted, so VPN provides an additional encryption on top, mostly due to privacy.
     
  11. Brummelchen

    Brummelchen Registered Member

    i never use public wifi! even not our enterprise network.
    what i have installed is a vpn provider extension for firefox for very rare use. i only need a hand with fingers to count the usage in a year.

    vpn is overrated, in special when using paid or registered services.
     
  12. LoneWolf

    LoneWolf Registered Member

    I find a VPN for myself works well for what I need.
    If you find not having one works for you then don't have one.
    The needs vary from person to person depending on their online habits.
     
  13. pegas

    pegas Registered Member

    I think a VPN is a good security improvement regardless of the OS and connection used. A VPN can increase privacy not only on wi-fi but also on mobile data as it prevents ISP from tracking online activity. This will prevent ISP from collecting data and selling it to third parties.
     
  14. reasonablePrivacy

    reasonablePrivacy Registered Member

    Then that VPN acts as an ISP and can track your online activity
     
  15. Buddel

    Buddel Registered Member

    You're right, but I trust my VPN provider more than my ISP.:shifty:
     
  16. Brummelchen

    Brummelchen Registered Member

    VPN raises not your privacy, it only gives you another ip, it also may fake your user agent. second may force wrong shown web pages, first do not prevent to read out browser features. some may filter ads, but thats a different thing.
     
  17. pegas

    pegas Registered Member

    +1
     
  18. pegas

    pegas Registered Member

    … and yet VPN services are popular. Corporates included.
     
    Last edited: Nov 22, 2023
  19. Brummelchen

    Brummelchen Registered Member

    jumping from a tower without bungee rope or parachute, would you do same, because its popular?

    read the description/features about our used vpn provider, compare with other vpn.

    for public wifi it really has benefit because the wifi provider normally cannot see your traffic, unless he breaks the connection -> MITM which is technically possible.
     
  20. xxJackxx

    xxJackxx Registered Member

    Some folks can't tell a public Wi-Fi from a fake one. Use your cellular connection, use a VPN, or be willing to sacrifice all of the data that passes through it. If for any reason any current email client would pass your credentials unencrypted you would be in a world of hurt if someone stole that info. As I've said before, once they get that, they change your password and reset the rest of your stuff...
     
  21. reasonablePrivacy

    reasonablePrivacy Registered Member

    Big providers like Google use OAuth so credential is token instead of password. Intercepting that token allows to read, write e-mail, calendar items etc, but it is not allowing to change password.
    Adversary would have to trick client into process of user authentcation again, which is not frequent and it should make user more alert.
     
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