Browser VPNs Explained: Brave, DuckDuckGo, and Firefox VPN Options Compared

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BRAVE FIREWALL + VPN

The browser of Brave has the Firewall + VPN option, where users can subscribe to have increased security. It is a paid, system-wide VPN (that includes a firewall) by Guardian. When turned on, it encrypts all internet traffic on the device, not only the traffic of the browser. Effectively, Brave + VPN supports all applications on Android, iOS, Windows, and macOS (Linux is in the pipeline). Subscriptions are approximately 10 devices per account and cost either 9.99/month or 99.99/year. Nothing is explicitly recorded by Brave: its accountless mechanism of logging in implies that Brave cannot know what sites you access or whether you use the VPN. The only thing that is provided to Brave is a randomized ID to confirm an active subscription. The no-logs position of Brave has been confirmed by independent audits (Feb 24–Apr 24).

Protocols & Encryption: The VPN of Brave is based on the infrastructure of Guardian, with the WireGuard technology. Guardian uses the great AES-256 encryption to encrypt all traffic, technology, and data. This means that the VPN of Brave has a modern encryption of high quality (ChaCha20/AES-256 through WireGuard) to conceal your IP and location on the network. On iOS, a kill switch can be used (it blocks traffic when the VPN connection is lost), and on iOS and desktop, Brave has so-called smart proxying, which works with sites that block VPN traffic. Altogether, the VPN by Brave offers multi-tier privacy; it is able to block ads/trackers, mask the IPs, and protect the DNS.

Latency and Availability: Brave VPN has 300 or more servers in 40 or more regions around the globe, with several locations in the United States, the EU, and Asia. This wide coverage will reduce the loss of speed. Brave VPN has been tested on closed networks and is able to connect well using its WireGuard implementation (WireGuard is typically faster than older protocols) with only a slight slowdown. Due to its network-wide nature, the performance will be different depending on the device and connection. Any VPN will slow down slightly, but WireGuard and a network of global servers can ensure that it remains fast.

Drawbacks: The VPN provided by Brave is not free; it requires a subscription. Previous pieces of writing have mistakenly argued that the VPN provided by Brave was free and unlimited, although the paid one still exists. Additionally, the kill switch is still iOS exclusive and is not available on Android or desktop. There are also cases when streaming services can block VPN users, which can be blocked with the Smart proxy feature provided by Brave, though not with all the services. Finally, the default VPN provided by Brave is not compatible with other browsers, and it has to be activated using the Brave browser.

FIREFOX VPN OPTIONS

Firefox has two solutions that deal with VPN. To start with, an experimental in-built browser VPN (named Firefox VPN) is underway in beta. When activated, this feature will only direct your Firefox browser traffic over Mozilla’s VPN servers. It is in the form of a toggle/button adjacent to the search bar. Early testers require a Mozilla account and are automatically allocated the optimal location (by default, the U.S.). Firefox VPN can be utilized in the beta entirely free and is limited to the browser (it does not extend to other applications). According to Mozilla, it has logging on connection data (e.g., what one uses) for up to 3 months; it does not log browsing history or site content.
Second, Mozilla additionally sells an individual Mozilla VPN (previously Firefox Private Network)—a subscription service. This VPN is driven by the Mullvad network. It charges approximately 9.99 every month (with options of multi-month plans), extends to 5 devices, and secures all internet-based activities on these devices. The infrastructure is one of Mullvad that employs WireGuard (thus ChaCha20 encryption). Mozilla VPN supports 500+ servers in 30+ countries. It has such features as DNS-over-WireGuard, leak protection, ad/tracker blocking, and optional multi-hop. Similar to Brave, Mozilla VPN has a no-logs policy (Mullvad is famous for no-logs) and a kill switch on platforms.

Critical Differences: The significant difference is the scope. Firefox VPN (beta), the free version, only secures Firefox itself, but the paid version of Mozilla VPN secures the whole device. Its free version now has fewer options (only default server selection, no customization) and is limited to platforms. The Mozilla VPN is a paid service that is compatible with Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, and Android and provides end-to-end device encryption. In addition, the paid option utilizes an established VPN server (Mullvad) and has more servers. The Firefox-only version of VPN, on the other hand, is still in development and supported by desktop Firefox.

COMPARISON OF FEATURES

 Devices & Platforms:
  • DuckDuckGo VPN

SETUP AND USAGE:

  • Toggle the VPN to on.

WHEN TO USE A BROWSER VPN VS. DEDICATED VPN

 

 

Nandini Bajpai
Written by Nandini Bajpai
A passionate content writer with four years of experience delivering high-quality content across multiple domains. I believe in writing that informs, connects, and adds value.

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