Our pricing is on the main page: www.gorzvpn.com, and in our Telegram bot as well.
We will create a post about this in our reddit and I will give you the link!
But in short, and in simple words, when you type www.google.com or any other website, DNS over HTTPS “hides” your “request” for connection to that website. Normally, when you use your default DNS (which very likely comes from your ISP), they “see” which websites you connect to! Using DNS over HTTPS (or DoH in short) nobody will “see” these “requests” for names.
Oh, so my understanding from your explanation is DoH is more or less like a silent whisper of the website you want to visit, instead of shouting it out where your ISP can hear.
No, you still need a VPN to hide your “data traffic.” DoH only encrypts the “Hey Internet, where is Wikipedia.com? I want to visit it.”
Using the internet is like booking a trip with a travel agency.
There are two parts to your journey:
Asking for directions (DNS request):
You say, “Hey internet, where is wikipedia.com? I want to go there.”
Actually going there (your real data traffic):
You browse, read, watch, or buy things on that site.
Here’s how it breaks down:
DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH) encrypts what sites you ask for.
It hides where you want to go.
A VPN encrypts what you do after that.
It hides where you are going and what you’re doing.
A VPN should normally do both parts (and ours do with our client software), but many apps don’t. They just hide the second part.
So, one might ask what is the merit of only using DoH? Is it still meaningful protection?
The answer is yes. For a person who doesn’t want a VPN (maybe the change in their IP using a VPN isn’t useful to them or an application/website/game they want to access, will not respond when they use a VPN), using DoH is still great and meaningful protection:
It breaks mass surveillance tools
ISPs, governments, or Wi-Fi owners often monitor DNS traffic specifically, because it’s easy to collect and analyze. DoH blocks that easy data source.
It stops DNS-based censorship
In many regions, websites are blocked by intercepting DNS requests. DoH bypasses this.
It helps against phishing and malicious DNS hijacking
Attackers (or shady networks) can reroute your unencrypted DNS to fake sites. DoH prevents that.
It makes profiling harder
Without your DNS data, it’s harder to build a history of what kinds of websites you try to visit — especially sensitive ones.
Welcome to Tron builders league, I am reading through your project to understand better how to interact with it. I’ll drop my questions and feed back soon.
Because the system is going to do its “DNS” thing anyway (with or without DoH), the main focus would be the VPN itself and how much the connection speed will be impacted when using a VPN.
We use one of the fastest encryption methods and the speed reduction in network is indeed minimal. In addition to that, everyone who used our DoH was impressed with the uplift in their connection performance (one reason is that public DNS services are overloaded)! Try the DoH we have offered here and see for yourself!
I want to ask whether this doh thing do it in any of the way come with vpn because I read the chat and you say doh is different from vpn but somebody can use it together, thank you
DoH (DNS-over-HTTPS) and VPN are different, but they can absolutely work together for stronger privacy.
Our VPN already uses DoH to protect your DNS lookups, which many other apps and networks don’t. So when you use our VPN, your DNS requests are already encrypted — no extra setup needed and you don’t need to purchase DoH when you have purchased VPN from us.
But if you don’t want to get a VPN, enabling DoH is still a big privacy win. It hides the websites you look up from your ISP or public Wi-Fi snoopers.
So whether you’re using the VPN or not, DoH is always a good idea — and it’s already built into our VPN accounts for maximum protection.
Everything is clear: you use the trial account for 3 days. It has 10 GB traffic. Your 3-day period starts with the first connection, not when you purchase it from the bot.
You’re welcome to join our Telegram channel Telegram: View @gorzvpn where we share free VPN accounts and educational content about online privacy, DNS, and crypto tools.
It’s a good place to stay updated and get hands-on resources.
And if you find our channel helpful, feel free to share it with others who care about privacy and crypto-powered tools. We really appreciate the support .