
ExpressVPN is a virtual private network service offered by the British Virgin Islands-based company Express VPN International Ltd.[1]The software is marketed as a privacy and security tool that encrypts users’ web traffic and masks their IP addresses.[2]
In July 2017, ExpressVPN announced in an open letter that Apple had removed all VPN apps from its App Store in China, a revelation that was later picked up by The New York Times and other outlets.[8][9][10] In response to questions from U.S. Senators, Apple stated it had removed 674 VPN Apps from the App Store in China in 2017 at the request of the Chinese government.[11]
In December 2017, ExpressVPN came into the spotlight in relation to the investigation of the assassination of Russian ambassador to Turkey, Andrei Karlov. Turkish investigators seized an ExpressVPN server which they say was used to delete relevant information from the assassin’s Gmail and Facebook accounts.[12][13] Turkish authorities were unable to find any logs to aid their investigation, which the company said verified its claim that it did not store user activity or connection logs, adding; "while it’s unfortunate that security tools like VPNs can be abused for illicit purposes, they are critical for our safety and the preservation of our right to privacy online. ExpressVPN is fundamentally opposed to any efforts to install 'backdoors' or attempts by governments to otherwise undermine such technologies."[14]





















