Founded by Andrew Lee in 2010, PIA was formed as a reaction to the exposure of IP addresses in Internet Relay Chat. The company’s goal to take privacy to the mainstream was built on the foundation of transparency by using open-source software to appeal to the masses. Over the past decade, Private Internet Access has become one of the most trusted VPNs in the business, thanks in part to its proven no-logs record. In 2019, Kape Technologies (formerly Crossrider), owner of Cyberghost, ExpressVPN, and Zenmate, acquired PIA in a 100-million-dollar deal.
One of the first downsides to PIA is its location, which is headquartered in Denver, USA. As a founding member of the Five Eyes alliance, the US collects and shares data with its fellow four members, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the UK. This means that PIA is obliged to give up information when called upon. In keeping with the company’s transparency commitment, all government requests are reported explicitly. Yet despite demands, no data is ever actually shared, as PIA’s strict no-logs policy has proven reliable time and again. So users can rest assured their data will remain in safe hands.