Trust & transparency
A VPN that doesn’t treat you like a conversion funnel.
SingleEyeVPN is being built for people who just want to be safe on hotel, airport and café Wi-Fi – without 2-year contracts, popup scare tactics or “90% off lifetime” gimmicks. This page explains, in plain English, how we think about trust, logs and your data.
This isn’t the full legal privacy policy or terms (those will arrive before launch), but it gives you a clear idea of what we’re aiming for.
What SingleEyeVPN is (and isn’t)
Under all the gradients and emojis, the product is simple: short passes that protect your connection when you actually need them, then quietly step aside.
Built around passes, not traps
You buy a 24-hour, 3-day, 7-day, 14-day or 28-day pass. When it ends, it just ends. No hidden auto-renew, no “intro price” that jumps in month 2.
Travel-first, not speed-test-first
Routes, nudges and wording are designed around real-world Wi-Fi: hotels, airports, trains, coffee shops and co-working spaces – not just hitting a big number on a speed test screenshot.
No dark-pattern circus
No fake “only 3 licenses left” countdowns, no fear-based popups, no ten different upsell tiers. You’ll always know what you’re buying and what it costs.
How we think about logs & data
The goal is to keep as little data as possible while still running a healthy, sustainable service – and to explain that balance in normal language. Here’s the high-level philosophy we’re designing around:
What we aim not to collect
The plan is to avoid storing:
- What websites you visit or apps you use
- Exact contents of your traffic
- Long-term histories of your IPs + destinations combined
What we may need
To keep the lights on and catch abuse, we may need limited data such as:
- Very short-lived technical logs for debugging
- Basic usage metrics (e.g. pass active / not active)
- Anonymous aggregates for capacity planning
Plain-English documents
Before public launch, there will be a full privacy policy and terms that match what’s in the app – written to be read, not just to tick a box.
Final details around logging, retention and legal obligations may evolve as SingleEyeVPN moves from private testing to public beta and beyond. Any meaningful changes will be explained in plain English.
Passes, payments & accounts
The business model is simple: you buy time-boxed access when you need it. No bundles, no add-on “boosters” hiding behind tiny footnotes.
Time-boxed passes
A pass gives you the right to connect for a fixed period (for example, 24 hours or 7 days). When it expires, the app stops connecting until you choose to buy another pass.
No fake countdowns
Pricing may change over time like any normal product, but the goal is to avoid fake “ending in 2 minutes” discounts or confusing intro offers that quietly renew at a higher price.
Minimal account friction
The aim is to use the lightest account model that still lets you manage passes and devices, while keeping personally identifiable data to a minimum.
Infrastructure & security practices
SingleEyeVPN isn’t a magic shield, but it does raise the bar significantly compared to using raw public Wi-Fi.
Modern encryption
The app is being built around modern, well-reviewed VPN protocols instead of custom “home-rolled” encryption. Details will be documented before public launch.
Travel-friendly routes
Initial routes are focused on UK, US and EU locations that make sense for travellers and remote workers, rather than chasing the highest number of flags on a marketing page.
Iterative hardening
As the app grows, the plan is to regularly review the infrastructure, reduce data where possible and respond quickly to security reports from the community.
Your choices & control
Wherever possible, you’ll be able to see what’s stored about your account, and request that it be updated or removed if the law allows.
Clear in-app explanations
Important privacy choices won’t be hidden behind tiny links. The aim is to explain, inside the app, what’s happening and why.
Data access & deletion
Before launch, processes will be set up so you can request a copy of account-level data and ask for deletion where technically and legally possible.
No surprise changes
If the privacy stance or logging approach materially changes, the goal is to explain that clearly – not just quietly update a PDF.
Questions, concerns or ideas?
If something here feels unclear – or you’re a security-minded person who wants to poke holes in the approach – that’s welcome.
You can reach the project directly at singleeyevpn@gmail.com. Feedback from early users is what will shape how SingleEyeVPN evolves.
Last updated: November 2025. As the service moves from private testing to public beta and full release, this page will be kept up to date to reflect reality – not just aspirations.