VPS and privacy-hosting glossary
Plain-English definitions of the VPS and privacy-hosting terms you will meet when shopping for a no-KYC offshore server — each one linked to a deeper guide.

Privacy hosting comes with its own vocabulary, and a lot of it is used loosely or as marketing. This glossary defines the terms you will run into when comparing offshore, no-KYC and crypto-paid VPS providers, in plain language and without the hype. Where a word carries a promise that deserves scrutiny — anonymous, DMCA-ignored, clean IP — we say exactly what it does and does not mean.
Each definition is short by design. When a term has a deeper page, follow the link to read how it actually works at vpscrypto.io, an all-NVMe KVM host that takes Monero, asks for no ID, and runs in eight jurisdictions. Start anywhere; the groups below move from the hardware basics to payment, jurisdiction, networking, and the newer machine-to-machine terms.
Key terms at a glance
- VPS
- A virtual private server: an isolated slice of a physical machine with dedicated CPU, RAM and storage, and full root access.
- KVM
- Kernel-based Virtual Machine — true hardware virtualisation that gives each VPS its own kernel, unlike shared containers.
- NVMe
- Solid-state storage on the PCIe bus, far faster than SATA SSD or spinning disk. Every VPSCrypto tier is all-NVMe.
- No-KYC
- Hosting that collects no identity documents — no ID, no passport, no phone. Not the same as anonymity. Read the full guide →
- Monero (XMR)
- A privacy cryptocurrency that hides sender, receiver and amount on chain — the most private way to pay for hosting. Read the full guide →
- Offshore hosting
- Renting a server in a jurisdiction other than your own, chosen for legal or privacy reasons. Read the full guide →
- DMCA-ignored
- An operational policy of not actioning US-style copyright notices — not a promise of legal immunity. Read the full guide →
- Clean IP
- An IP address with no spam or abuse history and not on DNS blacklists, so mail and signups are not pre-flagged. Read the full guide →
- On-chain settlement
- A payment that confirms directly on the blockchain, with no third-party processor holding your payment identity. Read the full guide →
- x402
- An open protocol that lets software agents pay over HTTP; VPSCrypto supports gasless USDC-on-Base via x402. Read the full guide →
- DDoS protection
- Always-on filtering that absorbs distributed denial-of-service attacks; included free on every tier.
- Reverse DNS (PTR)
- A DNS record mapping an IP back to a hostname — essential for mail deliverability. Read the full guide →
Hosting basics: VPS, KVM, vCPU, NVMe
VPS (Virtual Private Server) — a slice of a physical server that behaves like its own machine, with a dedicated operating system, root access and resource allocations. You get the isolation of a private server at a fraction of the cost of bare metal.
KVM — the virtualization technology underneath. A KVM VPS is fully virtualized: it runs its own kernel, can load custom modules, and is genuinely isolated from neighbors — unlike container-based OpenVZ, where the host kernel is shared and oversubscription is common. Every vpscrypto tier is KVM.
vCPU — a virtual CPU core mapped to physical processor time. A tier listed as 2 vCPU gives you two cores' worth of compute. NVMe — solid-state storage that talks to the CPU over the PCIe bus, several times faster than SATA SSD and far ahead of spinning disk. Every tier here, from the $3.50 Pup to the 16-core Fenrir, is all-NVMe; we do not drop to slower disk to hit a low headline price. Unlimited traffic means no metered bandwidth cap and no overage billing, and deploy time is how long provisioning takes — roughly 60 seconds once payment confirms here.
Privacy and payment terms: no-KYC, private vs anonymous, Monero
No-KYC — the host does not run a "Know Your Customer" identity check: no ID, no passport scan, no document upload. At vpscrypto an email address for credential delivery is the only personal detail we touch. Read what that protects you from on the no-KYC VPS page.
Private vs anonymous — these are not the same, and the difference matters. We describe ourselves as private, not anonymous: we collect no ID, but true anonymity also depends on your own payment and network hygiene. If you fund a wallet from a KYC exchange or connect from your home IP, no host can undo that for you.
Monero (XMR) — a cryptocurrency that hides sender, receiver and amount at the protocol level using ring signatures and stealth addresses, unlike Bitcoin's fully public ledger. We treat it as a first-class payment option. On-chain settlement means a payment is verified directly on the blockchain rather than through a third-party processor that would hold your identity; we run an any-coin checkout that settles on chain and never expose payment-rail internals. A non-custodial wallet is one whose private keys you alone hold, so no company can freeze or surrender your funds.
Jurisdiction and policy terms: offshore, DMCA-ignored, the hard floor
Offshore hosting — running your server in a jurisdiction other than where you live or operate, so a different country's law governs the hardware and its content. It is not a synonym for no-KYC or for anonymity; it is purely about where the server sits. See what offshore hosting means for the full picture.
DMCA-ignored — an operational policy, not legal immunity. A host outside US jurisdiction has no obligation to action a US copyright notice, so we handle routine notices as policy rather than automatic takedowns. We never claim content is "untouchable" or "bulletproof." Whether this is lawful is a fair question, and we answer it plainly in is DMCA-ignored hosting legal.
Court-order-only takedown — we act on valid court orders in the server's own jurisdiction, not on every complaint that arrives. The hard abuse floor is the absolute limit beneath that policy: no CSAM, no weapons trafficking, no terrorism content, ever — no exceptions and no appeals. Everything else lives within the laws of the jurisdiction you choose.
Networking and IP terms: clean IP, blacklist, reverse DNS
Clean IP — an IP address with no prior spam or abuse history and no entries on DNS blacklists, so your mail and signups are not pre-flagged. Most budget clouds recycle ranges that arrive already tainted; we screen and allocate clean IP space, and you can verify our ranges yourself before you buy. Use the check if an IP is blacklisted guide to test any address.
Blacklist / DNSBL — a DNS-based blocklist (Spamhaus, for example) that mail receivers query to decide whether to reject a message. Landing on one quietly destroys deliverability. Reverse DNS (PTR) — the record that maps your IP back to a hostname; correct PTR is essential for sending mail and is set through the control panel.
SPF, DKIM and DMARC — the three email-authentication records that prove your mail is legitimate. SPF authorizes which servers may send for your domain, DKIM cryptographically signs each message, and DMARC tells receivers what to do when the first two fail. Without all three, even a clean IP struggles to reach the inbox.
Agent and automation terms: x402, gasless payment, USDC-on-Base
x402 — an open protocol that revives the HTTP 402 Payment Required status code so software can pay for a resource over HTTP. We support it so an AI agent can buy and deploy a VPS autonomously, with no human checkout loop. The agents page has a copy-paste quickstart.
Gasless payment — a transaction where the network fee is sponsored or abstracted away, so the payer does not need to hold a separate token just to cover gas. USDC-on-Base is the US-dollar stablecoin USDC running on Base, the low-fee Ethereum layer-2 we use for x402 settlement, which keeps per-use agent payments cheap and fast.
agents.json and llms.txt are machine-readable files at the root of a site: agents.json describes how an autonomous agent can transact with the service, and llms.txt gives language models a clean, structured map of the site's content. Together with an OpenAPI spec they let agents and answer engines discover and use the API directly, without scraping a marketing page.
Frequently asked questions
What is a KVM VPS?
A virtual private server built on KVM virtualization. It gives you a fully isolated machine with its own kernel, dedicated vCPU and RAM, and real root-level control — not a shared container like OpenVZ. Every tier at vpscrypto, from Pup to Fenrir, is KVM.
What does no-KYC mean?
It means the host does not collect identity documents — no ID upload and no "Know Your Customer" check. It is not the same as anonymity: we say private, not anonymous, because anonymity also depends on your own payment and network hygiene. More detail on the no-KYC VPS page.
What is an NVMe VPS?
A VPS whose storage is NVMe solid-state — flash that connects over PCIe and is far faster than SATA SSD or spinning disk. Some "cheap" offshore hosts quietly fall back to SSD or HDD to hit a low price; every vpscrypto tier is all-NVMe.
What is a clean IP?
An IP address with no spam or abuse history that is not listed on DNS blacklists, so your mail and signups are not pre-flagged. We screen and allocate clean IP space, and you can verify a range yourself with our blacklist-check guide.
What is x402?
An open payment protocol that lets software pay over HTTP using the 402 Payment Required status code. We support gasless USDC-on-Base via x402 so an AI agent can buy and deploy a VPS without a human checkout — see the agents page.
Is DMCA-ignored the same as anonymous or offshore?
No — they are three different things people often conflate. Offshore is about where the server physically sits. No-KYC is about not collecting your ID. DMCA-ignored is an operational takedown policy, not legal immunity. A host can be any one of these without the others; we explain the policy honestly in is DMCA-ignored hosting legal.
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