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Result

FALSE

VPNs hide IPs, not every browser signal.

A VPN can hide your IP address from websites, but browser fingerprinting uses browser, device, screen, language, extension, and behavior signals that a VPN does not erase.

Claim support: WeakConfidence: High

FALSE means the claim conflicts with the pinned sources.

Distortion risk90%
Manipulation signalHIGH

Claim

A VPN stops websites from seeing your device type, browser, and screen size.

Comeback

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FALSE
That claim does not hold up. A VPN can hide your IP address from websites, but browser fingerprinting uses browser, device, screen, language, extension, and behavior signals that a VPN does not erase.

Source trail: factpage.ai/v/a-vpn-stops-websites-from-g2472

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The Weaponizer

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PoliteCalm enough for group chats, still clear.
"A VPN stops websites from seeing your device type, browser, and screen size."

A VPN can hide your IP address from websites, but browser fingerprinting uses browser, device, screen, language, extension, and behavior signals that a VPN does not erase.

FactPage marked it FALSE with distortion risk 90%. Source trail: factpage.ai/v/a-vpn-stops-websites-from-g2472

3-line evidence

Bulletproof checks

Bottom line

A VPN can hide your IP address from websites, but browser fingerprinting uses browser, device, screen, language, extension, and behavior signals that a VPN does not erase.

A browser fingerprint next to a shield, showing that privacy claims involve more than one signal.

Claim visual

Privacy claims have layers

A claim-context visual for privacy receipts. The cited proof trail below carries the evidence.

Mozilla SupportBrowser-vendor source on fingerprinting signals.
FirefoxConsumer browser explanation of fingerprinting.
Google Chrome HelpBrowser privacy context for limits of local/private browsing.
Evidence source: Mozilla Support
1

VPN and fingerprinting are different layers

The VPN changes the network address websites see; fingerprinting looks at browser and device traits.

2

Browser protections matter

Anti-fingerprinting defenses are browser-level protections, not a guarantee created by any VPN alone.

3

The better claim is narrower

A VPN can help with IP exposure, but complete website anonymity is much stronger than the evidence supports.

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To overturn this result, bring browser privacy documentation showing VPNs remove browser and device fingerprinting signals.

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FALSE: A VPN stops websites from seeing your device type, browser, and screen size. | FactPage