Alioski has a great engine on him, he never stops closing down and was making runs into there box in the last 5 mins, I have criticised him in the past but that was when he thought he was the likes of Ronaldo throwing himself to ground when not being touched, Bielsa has made him a better player but not the finished item in my eyes.
I've gathered that another important consideration is the location of the VPN providers servers - i.e. can the likes of the FBI get access? They have much farther reach than you might think! In view of that, location is overtaken in priority by whether the VPN provider retains logs or not. If they don't keep logs, then even if the FBI somehow gets access, there is no traceable data for them to use. If any of you are puzzled by what you can use VPN for, let me give you an example. File sharing. I'll guess that those 2 words might well have some scratching their heads, so let me explain. There are loads of websites out there that support file sharing. What that means is that they host movies on their servers, for example, and you are able to download them. Illegally. But they not only host the movies, they also facilitate downloading copies from the computers of individuals, assuming the computer owner allows access (which is done via the same app that allows you to download the movie in the first place). The bottom line is that your downloads are done incredibly quickly by picking up little bits of the same movie from loads of sites & throwing it all together on your computer. This is not just for downloading (where you get your own copy), btw, it also includes streaming (where you watch something in the same way you'd watch tv - a universal iPlayer, if you like). And it's not just movies, you can get your hands on anything - TV series, sports events, software, porn, books - you name it! But not everything is available for ever, take note. Which is why I, for instance have built up a huge library of TV series that I prolly won't live long enough to watch. But at least I have absolute certainty that I can access it now that i have my own copy. So, where does this VPN come in? Well, it basically hides you from the authorities, because what you're getting involved in is illegal. Yup, illegal. For instance, a provider like Virgin or Sky in the UK will not allow you access to certain downloading sites, and will report you if you yourself make material available for sharing. But they can't do this if your computer is in the US. Or Australia, or Singapore, or anywhere else you can select with your VPN software, as they're only required to deny/detect in their own country, and have no way of knowing where your physical location is as they only deal in cyber locations. And that's VPN in a very big nutshell. Hope it's right & hope it helps someone.
So if you had a VPN, and set it to America, you could access American search engines, and look up lets say FBI files?
If you want to search things privately with your web browser use Chrome and install the plugin called Windscribe which is free. It would allow you to subscribe or join USA sites that have GEO blocking. Example being moviesanywhere.com - you’d then link your moviesanywhere account with let’s say an AppleTV set that to USA then you could buy movie UV codes for a few dollars and watch them in HD weeks often months before they are released here.