Pango, on its side, doesn’t collect or keep any personal information from Dashlane’s users, so there’s no data to share with third parties either. The company claims it doesn’t keep any history of your browsing through the VPN, nor does it provide any identifiable information about its users to Pango. There are no extra features often seen in other services, like split tunneling or kill switch. The VPN protocols it deploys depend on the platform you’re using it on, therefore OpenVPN is used on Windows and Android, IPSec on Mac, while Catapult Hydra - Pango’s proprietary protocol - is used on iOS. Privacy and encryptionĭashlane’s VPN can be used for peer-to-peer sharing, although port forwarding isn’t supported. We only learned that these servers are located in 26 countries, including Mexico, Australia, Hong Kong, Russia, and Singapore. Pango’s Hotspot Shield has 3,200+ servers in 80+ countries but we couldn’t get information on how many of those servers are at disposal to Dashlane’s clients due to, as we were told by the customer support, “security purposes”. Dashlane is a Paris-based startup but Pango, the company whose technology it uses to provide VPN services to its users, is based in Silicon Valley, with offices in Ukraine and Russia.