Transparency report & warrant canary
A VPN is only as trustworthy as its record. This page states plainly what we have — and have not — been compelled to do. Because we keep no historical traffic logs, there is nothing to hand over in the first place.
- 0
- Wiretap orders
- 0
- Trap & trace
- 0
- Search warrants
- 0
- Court orders (gag)
- 0
- Subpoenas
- 0
- Data handed over
Counts are cumulative since December 2019 and are reviewed at each reporting period.
Warrant canary
As of the latest review, Veilock has never received a National Security Letter, a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act order, or any gag order of any kind. We have never been required to modify our systems to facilitate surveillance, and we have never disclosed the encryption keys protecting our network. Should this statement fail to be updated at the expected interval, users should treat its absence as a signal.
Why the numbers are zero
Two things make a zero count meaningful. First, our jurisdiction and operating posture: we require valid legal process and challenge overbroad demands. Second — and more importantly — our no-logs architecture means we do not retain the browsing history, DNS queries or traffic records that such demands typically seek. You cannot disclose what you never store.
What we do and don't keep
- ✓ Minimal account and billing data required to run your subscription and prevent fraud.
- ✓ Aggregate, non-identifying network health metrics.
- ✕ No historical traffic logs.
- ✕ No browsing history or DNS query logs.
- ✕ No record mapping a user to the sites they visit.
This report is provided for transparency and is not legal advice. For questions about our practices, contact our team.
Privacy you can verify
Read our no-logs commitments and put them to work.