Because to be super secure, not only should they not know what websites you visit, but also they should not know who their customers are in the first place.

Credit cards and other traditional payment systems tell the recipient who you are, they also tell the bank or financial institution that you are using a VPN, adding a third party into the private relationship.

Using crypto, a VPN provider can offer to provide VPN to anyone without collecting any personal information.

The VPN provider will still have exposure to all of their customer's IP addresses, but maybe they do stuff to mystify that too.

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For example, I use mullvad, and I never gave a name, email, nothing.

Um... A VPN *always knows what website you visit.

Not always, I've see ones that use multiple hops to deanonymise your traffic... like a mini onion network.

https://restoreprivacy.com/vpn/multi-hop/

They're running the servers though. They see the IP address you come in on and which hops you're going through.

All multi-hop does is increase the crowd that you're hiding in. not help you if the provider itself is compromised.

The only way to get around it is to use two VPN providers. I use mullvad on the router level, so all my traffic goes straight to them, and then to an IVPN multihop on top of that.

So they would both have to be working together in order to de-anomise my traffic.

Yes, this is what I was talking about.