What 'No-Logs' Actually Means — and How to Verify It
Every VPN claims to keep no logs. Very few actually prove it. Here's what to look for, and why audits matter more than marketing copy.
CueVPN Blog
Deep dives on VPN technology, online privacy, cybersecurity, and the tools that keep you safe.
The CueVPN blog is where we write about the things that actually change how private you are online not the vague marketing slogans that crowd most VPN review sites. We cover the protocols we use (WireGuard, ChaCha20-Poly1305, Curve25519), the threats they mitigate, the ones they don’t, and the everyday situations where a VPN genuinely helps: hotel and airport Wi-Fi, ISP profiling, travel, and basic operational security on phones and laptops.
Whether you’re looking up how to use a VPN on iPhone, wondering do I really need a VPN, troubleshooting why your VPN is slow, or just trying to understand the difference between a no-logs claim and a no-logs design, you’ll find answers grounded in how CueVPN is actually built. We don’t invent benchmarks, we don’t fake user counts, and we link out to authoritative sources when something is debated.
New articles arrive when we have something useful to say not on a content-mill schedule. Use the category filter below to narrow the list to Technology, Privacy, Security, or product Features. Have a question we haven’t covered yet? Email hello@cuebytes.com and we’ll consider it for a future post.
WireGuard is faster and leaner. OpenVPN has a longer track record. We break down the real-world differences so you can choose confidently.

Every VPN claims to keep no logs. Very few actually prove it. Here's what to look for, and why audits matter more than marketing copy.
Airport lounges, hotel networks, coffee shops — convenient but dangerous. Here's what attackers can realistically do on an open network, and how to stay safe.
A kill switch is the difference between a VPN that protects you and one that only protects you most of the time. Here's how it works.