

“A lot of people don’t realize that when you come across a social button on a website, whether you interact with it or not information is sent back to that social network. TunnelBear also took the time to protect its users from social data leaks specifically, the personal information that social networks leech out of online communication in order to fuel targeted advertising and other services.Īs TunnelBear CEO Ryan Dochuk told Wired: So, if your connection to the service is broken, for even just a minute, it will keep unsecured items offline until it reconnects.”

Most recently, TunnelBear installed “vigilant mode.” Here’s The Next Web with a description of what this security protection entails: “When turned on, this blocks all unsecured data from being transmitted while a computer is not connected to Tunnelbear. None of this is TunnelBear’s fault, and in fact the company is continuously installing new security safeguards to protect its users. These are the users who are unlikely to have effective internet security software installed on their laptops or home computers the group that is likely to download items that contain malware or malicious code. Of course, this also means that there will be plenty of users who hop on to TunnelBear and expose themselves to all kinds of security risks, simply because they do not know how to protect themselves.

(Officially, from TunnelBear: “TunnelBear does not support the use of our software to: spam, violate copyright, share pirated software, unlicensed audiovisual material, or to access illegal content”). These are the types of casual computer users who don’t understand how a VPN works all they know is someone on the internet told them that Tunnelbear will make it look like their laptop is in the UK, and that means they can watch their favorite BBC series online. By releasing popular series like Downton Abbey and Sherlock in the UK weeks before making them available to US audiences, thousands upon thousands of American users have taken to the internet to find out how to catch up with Sherlock, Watson, and the Dowager Countess without waiting for the American release.

TunnelBear has gotten increased press in the past few months, for which we can blame one single entity: the BBC. TunnelBear, one of the biggest players in the freemium VPN market, is a little bit of both. There are two kinds of bears: the cuddly, teddy-bear type and the vicious, sneaky bear that will eat you alive if you’re not careful.
