Millions of free VPN user records leaked

VPN on laptop screen
(Image credit: Shutterstock)

Free Virtual Private Network (VPN) service provider Bean VPN, has leaked personally identifiable information on millions of its users, researchers have found. 

Cybersecurity researchers from Cybernews stumbled upon a database with more than 18GB of connection logs generated by the app.

The database, discovered by the researchers during a routine checkup using ElasticSearch, reportedly contained more than 25 million records, including details such as device IDs, Play Service IDs, IP addresses, connection stamps. 

Share your thoughts on Cybersecurity and get a free copy of the Hacker's Manual 2022end of this survey

Share your thoughts on Cybersecurity and get a free copy of the Hacker's Manual 2022. Help us find how businesses are preparing for the post-Covid world and the implications of these activities on their cybersecurity plans. Enter your email at the end of this survey to get the bookazine, worth $10.99/£10.99.

De-anonymizing people

All of these items, the researchers said, could be used to establish the users’ true identities:

"The information found in this database could be used to de-anonymize Bean VPN's users and find their approximate location using geo-IP databases. The Play Service ID could also be used to find out the user's email address that they are signed in to their device with," Cybernews security researcher, Aras Nazarovas, said.

The free VPN app, which is not available on Apple’s app repository, has more than 50,000 downloads on the Google Play Store - where it appears to have been pulled from.

However on its website, the company says it doesn’t keep user activity logs, “including no logging of browsing history, traffic destination, data content or DNS queries.” 

It also says it doesn’t collect IP addresses, outgoing VPN IP addresses, timestamps or the durations of sessions which, as Cybernews’ report suggests, is not true.

The best VPNs preserve one’s privacy when going online. By hiding the endpoint’s true IP address and location, the user can circumvent various censorships and geographical blockades. Ever since Russia invaded Ukraine, its government blocked its citizens from accessing western media outlets, which triggered an enormous spike in VPN downloads in the country. 

VPNs are also very popular in China, where people use it to bypass the Great Firewall of China.

Via: Cybernews

Sead is a seasoned freelance journalist based in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. He writes about IT (cloud, IoT, 5G, VPN) and cybersecurity (ransomware, data breaches, laws and regulations). In his career, spanning more than a decade, he’s written for numerous media outlets, including Al Jazeera Balkans. He’s also held several modules on content writing for Represent Communications.

Read more
Cartoon Phishing
One of the largest data leaks ever sees info on 1.5 billion people leaked online
Data breach
Privacy of millions worldwide compromised as huge data location broker got hacked
Russian flag on a laptop
Russia blocks almost 200 VPN services, but the Kremlin still wants to use them
Computer Hacked, System Error, Virus, Cyber attack, Malware Concept. Danger Symbol
China-linked cyberespionage group PlushDaemon used South Korean VPN service to inject malware
Data leak
This top security camera streaming app may have been putting thousands of users at risk
Outdoor photograph of a pair of hands holding a smartphone with navigator location points in the background
Millions of phone location records feared leaked as one of the biggest data leaks ever may be a whole lot worse
Latest in VPN Privacy & Security
Homepage of CloudFlare website on the display of PC, url - CloudFlare.com.
"Network blocking is never going to be the solution" – Cloudflare slams anti-piracy tactics
Panels at RightsCon 2025 during a press briefing about the latest Access Now report of internet shutdowns
2024 was the worst year on record for internet freedoms – again
Vector illustration of the word Censored in a glitch distorted style
Google, Apple, and internet restriction – how Big Tech is making censorship "much worse" according to experts
Google Chrome logo on a mobile phone's screen
Why you need a VPN browser extension
Google TV onscreen interface showing streaming apps
Why do streaming services geo-restrict content?
Pirate key on computer keyboard
Italy to require VPN and DNS providers to block pirated content
Latest in News
Google Pixel 9
There's something strange going on with Google Pixel phone vibrations after the latest update
A masculine hand holding the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti
Budget gamers rejoice as Nvidia RTX 5050 and RTX 5060 are rumored to launch in April
The Asus ROG Ally handheld gaming PC
AMD's new driver adds AFMF 2.1 support for improved frame generation - and it could be a game-changer for handheld gaming PCs
Victrola Stream Carbon turntable playing David Bowie, with the tonearm being operated
Victrola putting Bluetooth in its Sonos-only turntables is the hi-fi equivalent of ‘I think we should see other people’
Android 16 logo on a phone
Android 16 beta users are reporting major battery drain issues – but I’m not too worried about it
Woman holding phone in field with Spotify app onscreen
The Spotify bug that shows ads to Premium subscribers has finally been fixed - for now at least