![70s soft rock](https://cdn1.cdnme.se/5447227/9-3/15_64e61dfcddf2b36505b4c7c9.png)
When you’re at home, behind your password-protected WiFi (or wired Ethernet), you’re on a private network. This may be a refresher for every single one of you, but I’d hate to leave anyone wondering about this. Refresher on VPNsīefore I describe my hunt for a new VPN, let’s make sure we’re on the same page about what problems a VPN solves. It’s clearly time to find a new VPN after all. He said, “I like to quit software applications before they quit me.” I also heard from a few NosillaCastaways that they’d tried to get support for and they got nowhere. Dan Moren came up with a great way to think about end-of-lifed apps during an episode of Clockwise.
![mullvad server locations mullvad server locations](https://www.thevpnlab.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/Mullvad-interface.jpg)
I also said that since it was pretty much end-of-lifed, I’d be looking around for alternatives. In my article about the conversation, my bottom line was that I was cautiously optimistic, and that you could keep using for the foreseeable future. I reached out to the folks at Ziff-Davis, and had a nice conversation with them about their plans to incorporate ’s feature into one of the many other VPNs they had purchased.
![mullvad server locations mullvad server locations](https://i.pcmag.com/imagery/reviews/01nYpmkt7TVqs7Xpj0YLjEg-23.jpg)
He wanted to know what this meant for the product. Last October, alert NosillaCastaway John Shaffer let me know that the VPN I’ve been recommending for many years,, had been sold to Ziff-Davis.
![70s soft rock](https://cdn1.cdnme.se/5447227/9-3/15_64e61dfcddf2b36505b4c7c9.png)