Other fatal flaws in that section, fwiw
>Starting with the obvious, if you pay for a VPN service, they have to keep your user account and associated payment information and your payment history. So, unless you are using a fake identity and an anonymous credit card (is that even possible these days?), your VPN account will be linked to your actual identity.
Plenty of VPNs accept bitcoin, and prepaid anonymous debit cards are widely available.
>Most VPNs limit the number of devices that can be connected at the same time. For that to work, well, they have to store a piece of information stating which device is connected, and what VPN account it is associated with. They have to associate your VPN session with your VPN account, as counting the number of sessions per account would be impossible otherwise.
This is addressed in the link above. Besides, it's possible to limit simultaneous connections without storing anything to disk.
>What's your point here, exactly? Because my point was you have to trust either party.
The difference is that no major ISPs are claiming not to log.