Your VPN May Not Be Private. This Blockchain Startup Nym Has A Fix
Nym CEO Harry Halpin hopes his ultra-private VPN will be his killer app. .
Harry Halpin
Virtual Private Networks are marketed as a cloaking device to trick internet users into thinking they
are anonymous online. However, it's an open secret that VPNs sell user data for money.
By Steven Ehrlich, Forbes Staff
There’s an old saying among marketers, “If you are not paying for the product, then you are the
product.” Over the past two decades, “free” internet services like Google and Facebook have built giant
innovative businesses by essentially selling their customer data to advertisers.
Virtual private networks (VPNs) are far more insidious. These products are marketed as a simple way to
browse the internet privately, free from governments and companies’ prying eyes. They are widely used by
corporations to protect proprietary information. The market for VPNs surpasses $50 billion with more
than a billion people worldwide are using these cloaking applications. However, talk to industry leaders
like Roger Dingledine, founder of the Tor Project, whose website promises “You have the right to browse
without being watched,” and you will soon find out that most VPNs are private-in-name-only. “It all
comes down to privacy by promise,” says Dingledine, “There is no way for you to know if we're screwing
you.” Key privacy threats, according to Dingledine, include a company keeping a log of user activities,
even if it promises not to, and the ability of VPN operators to monitor traffic flows to deduce when a
user visits a website.
Nick Percoco, Chief Security Officer at crypto exchange Kraken, began working with VPNs over 20 years
ago. At the time, they were primarily a business-to-business product, used by organizations requiring
increased security in online communications, such as banks. Percoco points out that VPN issuers started
to monetize ‘privacy’ by marketing their products to consumers. “People started to equate having a VPN
on my phone or my computer as super secure and ultra-private,” says Percoco.”You're just teleporting
yourself to some arbitrary point on the internet. We know that over the years, many VPN companies record
what their clients are doing and sell that data to people.” One such provider called “Hide My Ass”
requires users to take extra steps to stop the sale of their data. Not exactly privacy by default.
Since many people don’t value privacy enough to pay for it, VPNs sell customer data to fund operations,
in addition to offering subscription plans. The latest entry into the virtual private network market is
a Swiss-based blockchain startup called Nym Technologies. Its founder Harry Halpin says his new NymVPN
doesn’t need to sell customer data because blockchain technology will be used to create “self-sustaining
economics.” NymVPN falls under the crypto category known as DePIN, for decentralized physical
infrastructure because it relies on a blockchain to coordinate the operation of its network. In fact a
key differentiator for NYM is that its blockchain, and the tradeable tokens it produces, are used as the
payment rail for the VPN, which should fund the entire operation.
"We have a technology that nobody else does, we add noise to your data to scramble surveillance tools
using artificial intelligence," insists Halpin. "Its now or never for this kind of tech."
Originally from South Carolina, Halpin did not set out to be a privacy crusader. That changed when he
studied for a PhD in Informatics at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, focusing on artificial
intelligence and large language models that became precursors for companies like OpenAI. At the time, he
was primarily interested in climate activism.
His focus changed in 2009, when he was arrested by Danish authorities when he was in Copenhagen to
protest a lack of government action on climate change as a delegate to the United Nations Climate Change
Conference. “At that time, I became interested in privacy, anonymity, and security. Then, in 2011, as I
was finishing my PhD, I did some early work on VPNs, primarily because I had friends in North Africa.”
says Halpin. “I found the Tunisian revolution against Ben Ali very inspiring. As someone who was
targeted by undercover police, I was in a dark place, and it inspired me to see the courage of all these
young people in Tunisia, Egypt, and elsewhere [rise against authoritarian regimes].”
After supporting protesters by helping them get set up with various VPNs during the Arab Spring, Halpin
went to work for Sir Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, to help make web browsers like
Google Chrome more secure. His next epiphany came following the Edward Snowden revelations in 2013. “I
realized that the problem of mass surveillance is much worse than I thought because Snowden revealed
that you now have a global passive adversary that can watch every [data] packet with a god’s eye view of
the internet,” says Halpin referring the Snowden’s revelations about the U.S. government’s surveillance
from his days as an NSA analyst.
It turns out that the European Union agreed. So in 2015, it put out a $4.5 million grant proposal
described by Halpin as designed to “Build NSA-proof anti-surveillance software ,because they didn't want
[former German Chancellor Angela] Merkel's phone to be spied on.” Halpin won the grant and started Nym.
The grant funded Halpin’s research into a concept known as mix-networks or “mix-nets”, which offer the
ability not only to conceal a user’s online activity but their identity as well. These differ from
simple VPNs because they use a network of relays to shuffle messages and break linkages between senders
and receivers. The catch is that mix-nets use a lot of computational power, so they are slow.
“They couldn't scale to general purpose VPN style traffic,” says Halpin.
Halpin’s Nym, which has about 50 employees, including convicted Wikileaks spy Chelsea Manning who serves
as a Security Consultant for the startup, recently launched its new VPN, NymVPN in beta. It is still a
work in progress. For Halpin and his team to succeed they must solve two complex problems
simultaneously. First, they need to create a mix-net that performs at usable speeds. When Forbes used
NymVPN during a video chat, the screen kept freezing and pages took more than 30 seconds to load. The
company has already had to compromise to some degree, offering a faster “two-hop” VPN, which utilizes a
pair of relays to complement its more secure, but slower “five-hop” alternative. Manning says of the
comparison, “You are trading anonymity for speed.” However, the two-hop method is recommended for video
calls or sending large files. Halpin and Manning aim to find a way to more efficiently organize data
packets and leverage hardware to reduce this sluggishness, especially when setting up the initial set of
nodes.
“The closer we can get the packet exchange down to bare metal, the more secure it is, the faster it is,”
says Manning, referring to the efficiency that comes with hard-coding programs directly onto silicon
chips as opposed to running software programs to accomplish tasks atop generic hardware.
The company’s next challenge comes from crypto markets. Currently Nym’s token is languishing, down 92%
since it launched in April 2022, and there is scant activity on the blockchain. Hardly any applications
are running on Nym right now despite a $300 million innovation fund set up by venture capitalists on
behalf of Nym in October 2023. “We thought people would be very excited about mix-nets, but we received
very few proposals,” says Halpin. “There were maybe 30 proposals, of which only one got venture capital
funding.” Halpin’s team at Nym decided to build its new VPN, which he hopes will be the killer-app for
his privacy focused blockchain.
Tor’s Dingledine warns that Nym’s reliance on demand for its blockchain and higher prices for its token,
as its VPN’s funding mechanism is risky. “There are some downsides to the capitalist-based approach,”
says Dingledore. “One of the big ones is, why people participate in the first place. Is the primary goal
user safety or profit? If it's profit, you will put your relay in the cheapest possible place.”
DePIN, as a sector within crypto, has attracted more than $16.8 billion in 1,746 deals since 2020
according to Pitchbook, but it is still largely unproven. The only project held up as a success right
now is Helium, a blockchain-based wireless hotspot service that promised to create what it is being
touted as “the people’s network.” However, in its short history, it has already had to switch from
operating its blockchain to moving on top of $72 billion (market cap) Solana, and it has faced
accusations of insider enrichment. Its token, HNT, is down 88% from its all-time high of $54.88 in 2021,
and the network only generates about five thousand dollars a day in fees.
Undeterred, Halpin and team endeavor to continue to build a better mousetrap. “One of the biggest
problems I see in [VPN] technology right now is a lack of vision, where people keep building the same
thing,” says Manning. “The most fun part about this project is that the mix-net is something new.”
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