Is Publicroam safe to use?
Here’s the part worth paying attention to. Ordinary open WiFi — the kind with no password that anyone can join — carries real risks. Because the traffic often isn’t encrypted, it’s technically possible for someone on the same network to snoop on what you’re doing, and criminals sometimes set up fake “evil twin” hotspots to trick people into connecting.
Publicroam is built specifically to solve this. Your connection is encrypted, your login is secured, and the service actively helps prevent your device from connecting to fake networks pretending to be legitimate ones. It’s privacy-friendly by design (GDPR-compliant, no selling your data, no advertising profiles), which puts it in a completely different league from the anonymous open hotspot at a random snack bar.
That said, no public network can protect everything you do online, and if you regularly work while travelling, it’s worth adding another layer. A VPN (Virtual Private Network) encrypts all of your internet traffic end-to-end, hiding your activity even from the network operator and keeping your data private on any connection.
For anyone using public WiFi for professional work, a dedicated IP VPN goes a step further. Because you get your own private IP address rather than one shared with thousands of strangers, you enjoy a more stable, reliable connection, far fewer annoying CAPTCHA and verification prompts, and smoother access to work systems that only allow trusted IP addresses. In other words, a dedicated VPN improves not just your security, but the whole experience of getting real work done on the road.
So next time your data runs dry halfway through your Amsterdam trip, don’t panic. Set up Publicroam, add a VPN if you’re working, and get back to enjoying the city — fast, connected, and secure.