Run our Speed Test and get advanced diagnostics of the performance of your connection
Our Speed Test will measure your Upload Speed by sending data to the Internet and calculate the rate at which data is moved from your device to the Internet.
Our Speed Test will measure Download Speed by receiving data from the Internet and calculate the rate at which data is moved from the Internet to your device.
Our Speed Test will measure your Connection Latency by analyzing different reaction times.
Our Speed Test will measure your Connection Jitter by analyzing variation in response times.
When you connect to the Internet without Cloud1Vpn, you are exposing a lot of sensitive information about you.
Protecting your Identity with Cloud1Vpn is a wise decision.
Any website you visit on the Internet can determine your physical location based on your IP Address; If you are not using Cloud1Vpn to hide your real location, you may be restrictied access to certain types of contents based on your location.
Without Cloud1Vpn protection, you are literally giving away your online privacy: Your IP address is out there for prying eyes enabling advertisment agencies, trackers, ISPs and even governments to monitor anything you do on the internet.
There is really no boundaries to what information websites can gatther about you while you're browsing the Internet without protecting yourself.
Your IP address is your public identifier on the internet. It is used so websites, apps, and online services know where to send information back to your device.
Your internet service provider usually assigns your public IP address when you connect to the internet. In many cases that address can stay the same for a while before it changes.
A website can often estimate your country, region, city, and network provider from your IP address. It may also use that information for content filtering, fraud checks, analytics, or location-based restrictions.
IP geolocation is based on databases and network mapping, so it is usually an estimate rather than an exact physical address. It can be close, but it is not always precise down to your street or building.
Sometimes, but not reliably. Your ISP controls your public IP address, so changing it without a VPN usually depends on your provider, your lease period, or changing networks entirely.
Masking your real IP can help reduce tracking, hide your approximate location, avoid shared-network profiling, and make it harder for websites, advertisers, or hostile parties to build a clean profile of your connection.
Yes. When you connect through a VPN, websites usually see the VPN server's IP address and geo-location instead of your own connection's public identity.
A local IP address identifies your device inside your home, office, or private network. It is different from your public IP address, which is the address seen on the internet.
WebRTC is a browser technology for real-time communication. In some situations it can expose local network details unless your browser, network configuration, or VPN setup blocks that information properly.
A DNS leak happens when your device still sends domain name lookups outside the VPN tunnel. That can reveal what sites you are trying to visit even if the rest of your traffic is protected.
Yes. Hiding your IP improves privacy, but websites can still use cookies, browser fingerprints, account logins, and other signals to recognize you. A VPN helps, but it is only one part of your privacy setup.
Those fields show information your browser can expose, such as timezone, language, screen size, operating system, and hardware hints. They help explain how sites can identify more than just your IP address.
Latency is the time it takes for data to travel from your device to another point on the network and back. Lower latency usually feels faster and more responsive, especially for calls, gaming, and remote work.
Jitter is variation in latency over time. Even if your average connection speed looks good, high jitter can make a connection feel unstable during video calls, streaming, or real-time apps.
Kbps means kilobits per second, while Mbps means megabits per second. Mbps is 1,000 times larger than Kbps and is the unit most people use to describe broadband speed.
Speed tests measure raw network performance under specific conditions. Actual browsing or streaming can still be affected by Wi-Fi quality, device performance, browser overhead, distance to the service, and congestion on the destination website.
Not always in a noticeable way, but some overhead is normal because your traffic is encrypted and routed through another server. The impact depends on server distance, route quality, and the condition of your base internet connection.
If the Network Diagnostic Tool does not run, your computer or network may be blocking the required traffic. You or your network administrator may need to allow ports 3001-3010 and 32768-65535 through the firewall.