close

Secure Podcast

AllSecure Podcast

What Your ISP Knows About You Would Scare You?

Reading Time: 3

Most people think they’re browsing privately when they go online—but that couldn’t be further from the truth. Behind every website you visit, video you watch, and app you open, someone is watching.

That “someone” is your Internet Service Provider (ISP).

Your ISP is the company you pay to connect to the internet. But what many don’t realize is that ISPs aren’t just connecting you—they’re also tracking you.

And the truth is: what your ISP knows about you would probably scare you.

What Does Your ISP Actually See?

Your ISP can see almost everything you do online—unless you take steps to protect yourself.

Here’s what they can track:

  • Every website you visit (even in Incognito mode)
  • How long you stay on each site
  • What you search for
  • When you’re online and how often
  • What devices you use at home

Even if the websites are encrypted with HTTPS, your ISP still sees which sites you’re visiting—just not exactly what you’re doing on them.

OrionVPN encrypts all your traffic, so your ISP sees nothing but noise.

Yes, They Can See Your Private Conversations Too

Think messaging apps are totally private? Not always.

Unless your app uses end-to-end encryption, your ISP can often see:

  • Who you’re chatting with
  • When you’re chatting
  • What app or platform you’re using

And if you’re using SMS or unencrypted apps, they might even see the content of your messages.

With OrionVPN, your connection is encrypted from the start—so your ISP can’t monitor your chats or app activity.

Why ISPs Track You in the First Place?

Why would your internet provider care what you’re doing?

Simple: your data is valuable.

ISPs use your data to:

  • Sell targeted advertising
  • Profile you based on your interests
  • Analyze behavior for third-party companies
  • Throttle or limit certain services like streaming or gaming

Yes, that’s right—your ISP might slow down your connection if it sees you streaming too much or using a competitor’s app.

OrionVPN hides your activity from your ISP, so they can’t slow down or snoop on what you’re doing.

The Real Scary Part: It’s All Legal

Here’s the part that surprises most people: your ISP tracking you is completely legal in many places.

In the U.S., for example, ISPs are allowed to:

  • Track everything you do online
  • Store your data for months or years
  • Sell your data to advertisers—without your consent

They don’t even have to notify you. It’s buried in the fine print of your service agreement.

Using OrionVPN gives you the privacy you thought you already had.

The Best Way to Stop ISP Tracking: Use a VPN

The only way to stop your ISP from tracking you is to hide your activity entirely—and that’s exactly what a VPN does.

How a VPN protects you:

  • Encrypts all your internet traffic
  • Hides your real IP address
  • Routes your data through secure servers
  • Prevents your ISP from seeing anything you do online

With OrionVPN, your ISP sees nothing—just that you’re connected to a secure server.

Real Risks of ISP Tracking

Still not convinced it’s a big deal? Here are real-world risks:

  • Getting targeted ads for sensitive searches (medical, personal)
  • Being denied insurance rates based on behavior profiles
  • Facing data throttling for using certain apps or sites
  • Being added to surveillance lists in some countries

OrionVPN helps you keep control over who sees your online life—and who doesn’t.

Recap: What Your ISP Knows About You

Here’s a snapshot of what your ISP may know right now unless you’re using a VPN:

Data TypeISP Can See Without VPN
Websites visitedYes
Search queriesYes
App usageYes
Time spent onlineYes
Streaming activityYes
Private conversationsPossibly
Location (via IP)Yes

Knowledge is power—and right now, your ISP has too much of it.

Final Thoughts

Your ISP shouldn’t have full access to your digital life. But right now, they do—and they’re using it for their benefit, not yours.

If you care about:

  • What you search
  • What you stream
  • Who you talk to
  • What you buy
  • Or just being left alone online…

Then you need a VPN. And not just any VPN—one that’s built for speed, privacy, and everyday protection

read more