- VPN Super has released beta apps for Apple TV and Android TV
- Apps protect your streaming traffic
- They also rethink how your TV handles your data
Streaming has become one of the main reasons people search for a VPN, and providers have noticed.
The latest example is VPN Super, which just rolled out beta apps for Apple TV and Android TV, expanding the service from phones and laptops to the screen we watch most.
The move follows a clear industry trend. Over the past few years, many of the top VPN services have shipped native apps for tvOS and Android TV, chasing viewers who want to unblock content, cut down on buffering, and keep their traffic private without messing with router settings.
What VPN Super brings to the big screen
The headline feature is straightforward: built-in apps that let you open the software on your TV, select a server, and get back to watching.
According to VPN Super, the Apple TV app offers streaming-optimized servers built for smoother 4K playback, more than 50 server locations, and coverage for up to 10 devices on a single Premium subscription.
The company also promotes a no activity logs policy and an ad-free interface along with a 30-day money-back guarantee. Apps are aimed at Premium subscribers and the Apple TV version runs on tvOS 17 or later.
There is also a sports hall. VPN Super points to easier access to international soccer tournaments and major tennis events.
It’s a pitch that other providers have also leaned on, with X-VPN recently launching dedicated servers for the FIFA World Cup.
Why a VPN on your TV matters right now
The privacy argument is arguably the more compelling half of the launch. Modern smart TVs are far from passive screens.
Many use a technology called Automatic Content Recognition, or ACR, which samples what is displayed on your screen and reports it back to the manufacturers or their partners. Some sets do this hundreds of times per second, and the practice has been alarming enough that the FBI has urged consumers to weigh the privacy trade-offs of smart TVs.
A smart TV VPN won’t turn off ACR by itself, and you should still dig into your TV’s privacy settings to disable it. What a VPN adds is an encrypted layer over the traffic leaving the device, making your activity harder to read on the network.
How to set up VPN Super on your TV
Getting started is designed to take just a few minutes: download the app, log in with your Premium account, select your desired location, and connect.
Both the Apple and Android apps are currently in beta, with sign-up links available via VPN Super’s website and its announcement.
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