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Invited Paper: "All of them claim to be the best": Multi-perspective study of VPN users and VPN providers
slides-biasws-all-of-them-claim-to-be-the-best-multi-perspective-study-of-vpn-users-and-vpn-providers-00

Document history

Date Rev. By Action
2024-01-11
00 Mirja Kühlewind Added to session: interim-2024-biasws-03
2024-01-11
00 Mirja Kühlewind
Changed abstract to Invited talk of published paper:
https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity23/presentation/ramesh-vpn

As more users adopt VPNs for a variety of reasons, it is important to develop empirical …
Changed abstract to Invited talk of published paper:
https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity23/presentation/ramesh-vpn

As more users adopt VPNs for a variety of reasons, it is important to develop empirical knowledge of their needs and mental models of what a VPN offers. Moreover, studying VPN users alone is not enough because, by using a VPN, a user essentially transfers trust, say from their network provider, onto the VPN provider. To that end, we are the first to study the VPN ecosystem from both the users' and the providers' perspectives. In this paper, we conduct a quantitative survey of 1,252 VPN users in the U.S. and qualitative interviews of nine providers to answer several research questions regarding the motivations, needs, threat model, and mental model of users, and the key challenges and insights from VPN providers. We create novel insights by augmenting our multi-perspective results, and highlight cases where the user and provider perspectives are misaligned. Alarmingly, we find that users rely on and trust VPN review sites, but VPN providers shed light on how these sites are mostly motivated by money. Worryingly, we find that users have flawed mental models about the protection VPNs provide, and about data collected by VPNs. We present actionable recommendations for technologists and security and privacy advocates by identifying potential areas on which to focus efforts and improve the VPN ecosystem.
from Invites talk of published paper:
https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity23/presentation/ramesh-vpn

As more users adopt VPNs for a variety of reasons, it is important to develop empirical knowledge of their needs and mental models of what a VPN offers. Moreover, studying VPN users alone is not enough because, by using a VPN, a user essentially transfers trust, say from their network provider, onto the VPN provider. To that end, we are the first to study the VPN ecosystem from both the users' and the providers' perspectives. In this paper, we conduct a quantitative survey of 1,252 VPN users in the U.S. and qualitative interviews of nine providers to answer several research questions regarding the motivations, needs, threat model, and mental model of users, and the key challenges and insights from VPN providers. We create novel insights by augmenting our multi-perspective results, and highlight cases where the user and provider perspectives are misaligned. Alarmingly, we find that users rely on and trust VPN review sites, but VPN providers shed light on how these sites are mostly motivated by money. Worryingly, we find that users have flawed mental models about the protection VPNs provide, and about data collected by VPNs. We present actionable recommendations for technologists and security and privacy advocates by identifying potential areas on which to focus efforts and improve the VPN ecosystem.
2024-01-11
00 Mirja Kühlewind
Changed title to Invited Paper: "All of them claim to be the best": Multi-perspective study of VPN users and VPN providers from "All of them …
Changed title to Invited Paper: "All of them claim to be the best": Multi-perspective study of VPN users and VPN providers from "All of them claim to be the best": Multi-perspective study of VPN users and VPN providers
2024-01-11
00 Mirja Kühlewind State changed to Active
2024-01-11
00 Mirja Kühlewind
Changed abstract to Invites talk of published paper:
https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity23/presentation/ramesh-vpn

As more users adopt VPNs for a variety of reasons, it is important to develop empirical …
Changed abstract to Invites talk of published paper:
https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity23/presentation/ramesh-vpn

As more users adopt VPNs for a variety of reasons, it is important to develop empirical knowledge of their needs and mental models of what a VPN offers. Moreover, studying VPN users alone is not enough because, by using a VPN, a user essentially transfers trust, say from their network provider, onto the VPN provider. To that end, we are the first to study the VPN ecosystem from both the users' and the providers' perspectives. In this paper, we conduct a quantitative survey of 1,252 VPN users in the U.S. and qualitative interviews of nine providers to answer several research questions regarding the motivations, needs, threat model, and mental model of users, and the key challenges and insights from VPN providers. We create novel insights by augmenting our multi-perspective results, and highlight cases where the user and provider perspectives are misaligned. Alarmingly, we find that users rely on and trust VPN review sites, but VPN providers shed light on how these sites are mostly motivated by money. Worryingly, we find that users have flawed mental models about the protection VPNs provide, and about data collected by VPNs. We present actionable recommendations for technologists and security and privacy advocates by identifying potential areas on which to focus efforts and improve the VPN ecosystem.
2024-01-11
00 Mirja Kühlewind Changed title to "All of them claim to be the best": Multi-perspective study of VPN users and VPN providers
2024-01-11
00 Mirja Kühlewind New version available: slides-biasws-all-of-them-claim-to-be-the-best-multi-perspective-study-of-vpn-users-and-vpn-providers-00