Hola (VPN)

Last updated

Hola
Company type VPN
Industry Internet
Founded2007
FounderOfer Vilenski
Derry Shribman
Headquarters
Number of locations
Worldwide
ServicesUnrestricted Internet Access
Website www.hola.org

Hola is a freemium web and mobile application which provides a form of VPN service to its users through a peer-to-peer network. It also uses peer-to-peer caching. When a user accesses certain domains that are known to use geo-blocking, the Hola application redirects the request to go through the computers and Internet connections of other users in non-blocked areas, thereby circumventing the blocking. Users of the free service share a portion of their idle upload bandwidth to be used for serving cached data to other users. [1] [2] [3] [4] Paying users can choose to redirect all requests to peers but are themselves never used as peers. [5]

Contents

History

In 1998, Ofer Vilenski and Derry Shribman founded KRFTech, a software development tools company. [6] With the profits from the company, they started Jungo in 2000 to develop an operating system for home gateways. In 2006, NDS (Cisco) acquired Jungo for $107 million. [7] [8]

In 2008, Vilenski and Shribman started investigating the idea of re-inventing HTTP by building a peer-to-peer overlay network that would employ peer-to-peer caching to accelerate content distribution and peer-to-peer routing to make the effective bandwidth to target sites much faster. [2] This would make the Internet faster for users and cheaper to operate for content distributors. They started up Hola with $18 million from investors such as DFJ (Skype, Hotmail), Horizons Ventures (Li Ka-shing's venture capital fund), [9] Magma Venture Partners (Waze), Israel's Chief Scientist Fund, and others. [10] [11]

Hola Networks Limited launched its network in late 2012, [4] and it became popular in January 2013 when consumers started using Hola for Internet privacy and anonymity by utilizing the P2P routing for IP masking. "After being around for two months with 80 downloads a day, on January 23, 2013, at 5 PM Israel time, the product was good enough. That was the second it took off and went up overnight to 40,000 downloads a day", Vilenski told Startup Camel. [12]

In May 2015, Hola came under criticism from 8chan founder Fredrick Brennan after the site was reportedly attacked by exploiting the Hola network. [13] In late 2014, Hola had begun selling access to its userbase as exit nodes, under the name Luminati, charging $20 per gigabyte for bandwidth that was actually coming from their free VPN users. [13] This was confirmed by Hola founder Ofer Vilenski who argued that this has always been part of the agreement with Hola's free users when signing up for the service. [13] After Brennan emailed the company, Hola modified its FAQ to include a notice that its users are acting as exit nodes for paid users of Hola's sister service Luminati. [13] Other criticism stemmed from vulnerabilities inherent to the software, which could allow an attacker to deliver malware to Hola users. [14] The Hola browser has also been used for distributed denial of service attacks. [15]

In response to the criticism, Vilenski told Business Insider, "[we have been] listening to the conversations about Hola and while we think we've been clear about what we are doing, we have decided to provide more details about how this works, and thus the changes [to the website] in the past 24 hours". [16] [17] According to the security researchers who performed the audit, Hola updated its software but some of the vulnerabilities remained as of 1 June 2015. [18]

In November 2016, Hola reached 100 million users. [19] [20] In August 2017, Hola sold a majority stake in Luminati to EMK Capital, a UK private equity investment firm. [21] The deal was potentially valued at $200 million, with Hola founders retaining some stake in Luminati and Vilenski remaining as CEO of the Luminati. [22] In 2019, the final purchase price was revealed to be $125 million in exchange for 75.6% of the company's shares with the company evaluated at $165 million. [23]

In March 2021, the company changed its brand name from Luminati to Bright Data. [24]

Architecture

The Hola company website claimed in 2014 that the "Internet is slowed down by server response times, Internet congestion, round trip times, and poorly written communication stacks in operating systems. Hola removes these bottlenecks by securely caching content on peers as they view it, and later serving it up to other nearby peers as they need it. Hola also compresses communication between peers to further speed the net." [25]

Platforms

Hola is distributed as a set of browser extensions for Firefox, Microsoft Edge, and Opera, as well as applications for Microsoft Windows and macOS. [26] Hola has also released an Android application [27] and an iPhone and iPad application, [28] [29] along with a dedicated browser. [30]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Proxy server</span> Computer server that makes and receives requests on behalf of a user

In computer networking, a proxy server is a server application that acts as an intermediary between a client requesting a resource and the server providing that resource. It improves privacy, security, and performance in the process.

China censors both the publishing and viewing of online material. Many controversial events are censored from news coverage, preventing many Chinese citizens from knowing about the actions of their government, and severely restricting freedom of the press. China's censorship includes the complete blockage of various websites, apps, video games, inspiring the policy's nickname, the "Great Firewall of China", which blocks websites. Methods used to block websites and pages include DNS spoofing, blocking access to IP addresses, analyzing and filtering URLs, packet inspection, and resetting connections.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Internet in China</span>

China has been on the Internet intermittently since May 1989 and on a permanent basis since 20 April 1994, although with heavily censored access. In 2008, China became the country with the largest population on the Internet and, as of 2024, has remained so. As of July 2023, 1.05 billion use internet in China.

In computer networks, download means to receive data from a remote system, typically a server such as a web server, an FTP server, an email server, or other similar systems. This contrasts with uploading, where data is sent to a remote server.

The Great Firewall is the combination of legislative actions and technologies enforced by the People's Republic of China to regulate the Internet domestically. Its role in internet censorship in China is to block access to selected foreign websites and to slow down cross-border internet traffic. The Great Firewall operates by checking transmission control protocol (TCP) packets for keywords or sensitive words. If the keywords or sensitive words appear in the TCP packets, access will be closed. If one link is closed, more links from the same machine will be blocked by the Great Firewall. The effect includes: limiting access to foreign information sources, blocking foreign internet tools and mobile apps, and requiring foreign companies to adapt to domestic regulations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Content delivery network</span> Layer in the internet ecosystem addressing bottlenecks

A content delivery network, or content distribution network (CDN), is a geographically distributed network of proxy servers and their data centers. The goal is to provide high availability and performance by distributing the service spatially relative to end users. CDNs came into existence in the late 1990s as a means for alleviating the performance bottlenecks of the Internet as the Internet was starting to become a mission-critical medium for people and enterprises. Since then, CDNs have grown to serve a large portion of the Internet content today, including web objects, downloadable objects, applications, live streaming media, on-demand streaming media, and social media sites.

Cisco Videoscape was a majority owned subsidiary of News Corp, which develops software for the pay TV industry. NDS Group was established in 1988 as an Israeli start up company. It was acquired by Cisco in 2012 before being sold back to the private equity company Permira in 2018 for US$1 billion. The company is currently headquartered in Staines, United Kingdom.

Streaming television is the digital distribution of television content, such as television shows and films, as streaming media delivered over the Internet. Streaming television stands in contrast to dedicated terrestrial television delivered by over-the-air aerial systems, cable television, and/or satellite television systems.

Ad blocking or ad filtering is a software capability for blocking or altering online advertising in a web browser, an application or a network. This may be done using browser extensions or other methods.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Net neutrality</span> Principle that Internet service providers should treat all data equally

Network neutrality, often referred to as net neutrality, is the principle that Internet service providers (ISPs) must treat all Internet communications equally, offering users and online content providers consistent rates irrespective of content, website, platform, application, type of equipment, source address, destination address, or method of communication.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">LogMeIn Hamachi</span> Virtual private network application

LogMeIn Hamachi is a virtual private network (VPN) application developed and released in 2004 by Alex Pankratov. It is capable of establishing direct links between computers that are behind network address translation (NAT) firewalls without requiring reconfiguration. Like other VPNs, it establishes a connection over the Internet that emulates the connection that would exist if the computers were connected over a local area network (LAN).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Giganews</span> Usenet/newsgroup service provider

Giganews, Inc is a Usenet/newsgroup service provider. Founded in 1994, Giganews service is available to individual users through a subscription model and as an outsourced service to internet service providers. Well-known ISPs that have outsourced Usenet access to Giganews include RCN Corporation, BT, WOW!, and Kingston Communications.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Opera (web browser)</span> Freeware web browser

Opera is a multi-platform web browser developed by its namesake company Opera. The current edition of the browser is based on Chromium. Opera is available on Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, and iOS. There are also mobile versions called Opera Mobile and Opera Mini. Opera users also have access to Opera News, a news app based on an AI platform.

Internet censorship circumvention, also referred to as going over the wall or scientific browsing in China, is the use of various methods and tools to bypass internet censorship.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Network sovereignty</span> Effort to create boundaries on a network

In internet governance, network sovereignty, also called digital sovereignty or cyber sovereignty, is the effort of a governing entity, such as a state, to create boundaries on a network and then exert a form of control, often in the form of law enforcement over such boundaries.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lantern (software)</span> Internet censorship circumvention software

Lantern is a free internet censorship circumvention tool that operates in some of the most extreme censorship environments, such as China, Iran, and Russia. It uses wide variety of protocols and techniques that obfuscate network traffic and/or co-mingle traffic with protocols censors are reluctant to block. It also uses domain fronting. It is not an anonymity tool like Tor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Brave (web browser)</span> Chromium-based open-source web browser

Brave is a free and open-source web browser developed by Brave Software, Inc. based on the Chromium web browser. Brave is a privacy-focused browser, which automatically blocks most advertisements and website trackers in its default settings. Users can turn on optional ads that reward them for their attention in the form of Basic Attention Tokens (BAT), which can be used as a cryptocurrency or to make payments to registered websites and content creators.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">HMA (VPN)</span> Virtual private network service founded in 2005

HMA is a VPN service founded in 2005 in the United Kingdom. It has been a subsidiary of the Czech cybersecurity company Avast since 2016.

A virtual private network (VPN) service provides a proxy server to help users bypass Internet censorship such as geoblocking and users who want to protect their communications against data profiling or MitM attacks on hostile networks.

Bright Data, is an Israeli technology company that offers web data collection and proxy services to B2B companies. The company's headquarters are located in Israel, with additional offices in New York and San Francisco. Since 2018, the CEO of Bright Data is Or Lenchner.

References

  1. Protalinski, Emil (23 January 2013). "Sweet: Hola lets you use Hulu, Pandora, Netflix, CBS, Fox, BBC iPlayer TV, and iTV from any country". The Next Web. Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  2. 1 2 Gell, Aaron (25 January 2014). "Reinventing The Web: A New App Lets You Watch Whatever TV Program You Want, Including The Olympics, Anywhere In The World". Business Insider . Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  3. Klosowski, Thorin (24 January 2013). "Hola Unblocker Gives You Access to iPlayer, Netflix, Pandora, Hulu, and More Regardless of Region". Lifehacker. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  4. 1 2 Turner, Adam (25 January 2013). "Unlock Hulu and BBC iPlayer in a click with Hola". The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 29 September 2014.
  5. "FAQ – Hola – Is Hola Free?". Hola. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  6. "Jungo Ltd. - Company Profile". BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on 30 December 2008.
  7. "NDS to buy Israel's Jungo for up to $107.5 mln". Reuters. 4 December 2006.
  8. Ben-Artzi, Amir. "NDS to pay $107 million for Jungo". Electronic Engineering Times . Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  9. "The story behind a HK billionaire's $130 million donation to the Technion". Haaretz . Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  10. "Faster Internet co Hola raises $10m". Globes . 25 October 2012. Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  11. "Ofer Vilenski Co-Founder, Hola!". BusinessWeek . Retrieved 28 September 2014.[ dead link ]
  12. "'How Hola went from 80 daily new users to 40,000 overnight with zero marketing' (interview with Ofer Vilenski, co-founder and CEO of Hola for Startup Camel Podcast". Startup Camel. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Osborne, Charlie (29 May 2015). "Hola: A free VPN with a side of botnet". ZDNet. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  14. Franceschi-Bicchierai, Lorenzo (29 May 2015). "Your Tool to Watch Netflix Abroad Also Makes You Vulnerable to Hacking". Vice. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  15. Alexander, Martin. "Do you use Hola VPN? You could be part of a DDoS, content theft – or worse". The Register. Retrieved 7 June 2017.
  16. Price, Rob (28 May 2015). "A wildly popular Google Chrome extension was being used as a giant botnet". Business Insider. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  17. "חברות הטכנולוגיה שצריכות לבקש סליחה" [The tech companies that have to ask for forgiveness]. Calcalist. 22 September 2015. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  18. Franceschi-Bicchierai, Lorenzo (1 June 2015). "Hola Claims to Have Fixed Holes, But Security Researchers Disagree". Vice. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  19. Tsipori, Tali (6 March 2017). "Beating the Internet censor". Globes (in Hebrew). Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  20. גלובס, שירות (27 November 2016). "HOLA הישראלית חצתה את רף ה-100 מיליון המשתמשים" [Israeli HOLA has crossed the threshold of 100 million users]. Globes (in Hebrew). Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  21. Ravet, Hagar (10 August 2017). "EMK קונה חטיבה של Hola Networks בכ-200 מיליון דולר" [EMK buys a $ 200 million division of Hola Networks]. Calcalist. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  22. "EMK buys stake in Luminati for nearly $200m". Globes. 10 August 2017. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  23. Orbach, Meir (3 February 2019). "לומינטי: אופס, כך התכווץ השווי של האקזיט" [Luminati: Oops, that's how the Exit has shrunk]. Calcalist. Retrieved 1 May 2020.
  24. "Luminati Networks Becomes Bright Data with Focus on Web Transparency and Continuous Innovation". www.businesswire.com. 17 March 2021. Retrieved 14 February 2023.
  25. "FAQ – Hola". Hola. Archived from the original on 3 March 2014. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  26. "Download Hola, unblock restricted sites - Free!". Hola. Retrieved 16 February 2021.
  27. "Hola Lets You Watch Region-Blocked Videos From Any Country For Free". Lifehacker. 25 January 2013. Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  28. "Can I get Hola for my iPhone, iPad or iPod Touch?". Official Website. Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  29. "Hola Unblocker – Easily Access Region-Blocked Content". www.makeuseof.com. 19 May 2013. Retrieved 28 September 2014.
  30. "Hola! The content you want - for free!". Hola Free VPN - Access Any Website. Retrieved 16 August 2022.