Amany Hassan

Amany Hassan

Amany Hassan is a news editor and content reviewer at VPNX, specializing in technology, cybersecurity, and digital privacy topics. Her focus is on reviewing, fact-checking, and refining articles to ensure accuracy, clarity, and added value — delivering reliable and well-edited news to readers.

AI, Quantum & ZTNA: VPN Future Trends

VPN Future

VPNs are no longer just about hiding an IP address. In 2025 the category is being reshaped by three converging forces: AI-driven threat detection and optimization, post-quantum (quantum-safe) cryptography, and the broad industry move toward Zero Trust Network Access (ZTNA)(VPN…

Shift to Zero Trust: VPN’s Death Spiral

VPN’s Death Spiral

In a transformative shift, organizations are increasingly viewing traditional VPNs not as security enablers, but as liabilities. According to Zscaler’s ThreatLabz 2025 VPN Risk Report, 81% of firms are either already implementing or planning to adopt Zero Trust architectures within…

“VPN Trap”: Why Legacy Remote Access is Now Risky

VPN Trap

Despite their long-standing role in remote access, legacy Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) are increasingly under siege. Recent reports show that these systems, once considered the gold standard for remote connectivity, now represent one of the most attractive entry points for…

VPNs Under Siege: Legacy Risk Report

VPNs Under Siege

Traditional VPNs — once the backbone of remote access — are suddenly under intense scrutiny. The latest Zscaler ThreatLabz 2025 VPN Risk Report finds enterprises increasingly view VPNs as security liabilities, with many organizations actively planning to replace them as…

VPN Traffic Fingerprinting Still Feasible Despite Encryption

VPN Traffic Fingerprinting

VPNs are often considered nearly invincible — encrypting your data and shielding your online activity from prying eyes. But recent academic research reveals troubling reality: even with encryption, OpenVPN traffic can be fingerprinted by network-level adversaries(VPN Traffic Fingerprinting) . This…

Rising Security Risks in Free Android VPNs by 2025

Rising Security

Free Android VPNs are widely used for quick privacy, access to geo-blocked content, or simply avoiding paid subscriptions(Rising Security). But experts are now raising the alarm: by 2025, as many as 39% of free Android VPN apps may contain malware…

Privacy Firms Alarmed by New French VPN Backdoor Law

Privacy Firms

France’s recent legislative maneuverings to require backdoors or weaken end-to-end encryption have alarmed privacy and VPN firms across Europe (Privacy Firms). Although framed by lawmakers as tools to combat serious crime, critics warn the proposals — part of a broader…

Firefox Tests Free Browser-Only VPN Feature

Free Browser-Only VPN Feature

Mozilla is experimenting with a free, built-in browser-only VPN inside Firefox — a beta feature called Firefox VPN (formerly “IP concealment”)(Free Browser-Only VPN Feature). Unlike the paid Mozilla VPN, this version only encrypts web traffic within Firefox and is currently…

IPVanish Deploys RAM-Only Servers for Privacy

IPVanish

In a major move to reinforce its privacy-first philosophy, IPVanish has begun deploying RAM-only servers across its global network. Unlike traditional VPN servers that rely on physical hard drives, these diskless servers store all data in volatile memory (RAM), which…