How OneLNQ thinks about security and privacy.

This page provides a high-level description of the security practices and design principles behind OneLNQ. It is not a formal audit report, but a transparent overview of how we approach protecting your connection.

1. Encryption

OneLNQ uses modern encryption standards (such as AES-256) to help protect your traffic while it is in transit between your device and our infrastructure. This reduces the risk that your connection can be easily intercepted or read on untrusted networks.

2. Zero-log approach for traffic content

We follow a strict zero-log approach for traffic content. We do not log the content of your browsing, DNS queries, or the specific services you access while connected through OneLNQ. Limited technical logs may be used to keep the service reliable, but are designed to avoid storing what you are doing online.

3. Infrastructure protections

Our infrastructure is built with multiple layers of security and monitoring. We work with reputable data center and cloud providers that implement strict physical and logical security controls, and we regularly review our configuration to reduce unnecessary exposure.

4. Public Wi-Fi protection

When enabled, OneLNQ can encrypt your connection on untrusted networks such as public Wi-Fi in cafés, airports, or hotels. This helps reduce the risk of eavesdropping or session hijacking when you are connected over shared networks.

5. Responsible disclosure

We welcome security researchers who responsibly report potential vulnerabilities. If you believe you have found a security issue in OneLNQ, please contact us so that we can investigate and address it.

For responsible disclosure, you can reach us at:

security@onelnq.com

6. Ongoing improvements

Security is an ongoing process, not a fixed state. We regularly review and update our infrastructure, software, and internal practices to adapt to new threats and industry best practices.

As OneLNQ grows, we plan to continue improving transparency around our security posture and may publish more detailed technical documentation in the future.

This page is intended to give a plain-language overview of our current security design. It does not replace legal terms or formal audit reports, and may evolve as OneLNQ develops.