

Others put up GIFs of people laughing, shaking their heads or facepalming. "That's not the way it works!" wrote (opens in new tab). The reaction to the tweet from infosec professionals was immediate. VPNs in fact can do little to protect you from identity thieves. Stay safe," read the tweet, accompanied by a link to the NordVPN website with the tag line "Get NordVPN. "Ain't no hacker can steal your online life. The whole problem came to light because of a marketing tweet (opens in new tab) that NordVPN sent out Friday (Oct. Unintentional tweetstorm reveals nasty truths
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VikingVPN does not seem to have commented on the allegations that one of its private encryption keys was stolen.

That seems to be exactly what happened, as the complaint posted by TorGuard is dated June 29. NordVPN said that the lawsuit against it by TorGuard had been dismissed on June 19, but "without prejudice," meaning the lawsuit could be brought again. "We aimed to do the right thing in the right way and to compete honestly without damaging the industry, which is why we were so shocked by the response." "All of these accusations, and we say this with unwavering confidence, are fabricated," said NordVPN.
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The legal complaint can be read in full here (opens in new tab).įor its part, NordVPN said on its own blog in May (opens in new tab) that it had been "trying to disclose own vulnerability to them." "TorGuard first became aware of this disclosure during May of 2019 and in a related development we filed a legal complaint against NordVPN in the Middle District of Florida on June 27, 2019," said the TorGuard post.Īn earlier TorGuard blog post said that NordVPN had tried to blackmail TorGuard by threatening to release stolen private information, and that TorGuard in June had filed a lawsuit against NordVPN and a third company. We don't know if anyone actually did exploit it, and the NordVPN blog post implies that the key would have expired in early March 2018.įor its part, TorGuard said in its blog post that due to "secure PKI management," its main certificate authority encryption key was not compromised.īut interestingly, the post hinted that NordVPN itself may have been behind the TorGuard server breach. NordVPN's blog post said that the company became aware of the server breach "a few months ago," implying that the stolen private key may have been abused for several months.
