Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Audio / Video
  3. News

VPNs are coming to Apple TV in tvOS 17

Add as a preferred source on Google
VPN listing in the Apple TV App Store.
Phil Nickinson/Digital Trends
Promotional logo for WWDC 2023.
This story is part of our complete Apple WWDC coverage

As is often the case with Apple’s major press releases, some of the more interesting (if obscure) details often are tucked away toward the end, or even in the footnotes. Case in point: Support for third-party VPNs is coming to Apple TV when tvOS 17 is released this fall.

For most normal folks, that’s probably not a huge deal. You plug in your Apple TV at home or wherever, and it just works. But for some folks, it’s going to open up a world of fun.

Recommended Videos

A VPN is a virtual private network that essentially allows you to connect to a remote network as if it were your network at home. That’s helpful for things like security, and basically makes it appear as if a remote server was right there next to you, on the same network connection.

It’s also a boon for those who want to make it look as if they’re somewhere they’re not. A VPN allows you to connect through specific servers in a specific location, which in turn allows you to watch content that’s meant for one region, but not another. You’ve maybe experienced this with a service like Netflix or Paramount+. But it’s also the sort of thing that very much comes into play with live sports, which might be available on one service in one country, but not in another. We’ll let you argue about the ethics of circumventing geo restrictions, but that game of cat-and-mouse is hardly new.

In any event, the official line from the Apple press release is that “this can benefit enterprise and education users wanting to access content on their private networks, allowing Apple TV to be a great office and conference room solution in even more places.” Which is also true.

In any event, get ready for an influx of some of the best VPNs available, coming soon to an Apple TV App Store near you.

Phil Nickinson
Former Section Editor, Audio/Video
Phil spent the 2000s making newspapers with the Pensacola (Fla.) News Journal, the 2010s with Android Central and then the…
Sonos Play review: A sweet spot portable speaker that I can’t stop firing up
An almost-perfect portable speaker and a stunning return to form by Sonos.
Sonos Play Speaker in white

See at amazon

Quick Take

Read more
Amazon’s Alexa+ just moved into your Bose speaker, if you’re willing to pay the rent
This is a signal that the AI assistant race is expanding well beyond the devices Amazon builds itself.
Alexa+ arrival on Bose speakers.

Amazon has officially expanded its AI assistant, Alexa+, beyond the company’s own hardware. Along with the announcement of its Lifestyle Ultra speakers, Bost has also announced that Alexa+ is coming to its lineup of speakers and soundbars across the United States.

This is a first for any non-Amazon audio brand. What’s even more interesting for me is that the rollout covers both new and existing Bose devices. 

Read more
Bose turns up the volume on home audio with its sleekest and smartest Lifestyle Collection
Bose's newest home audio lineup arrives with bold promises: cinematic sound without the clutter, a decade-overdue soundbar redesign, and a speaker small enough for your bookshelf.
Bost Lifestyle Ultra ecosystem featured image.

Bose has pulled back the curtain on the Lifestyle Collection. It consists of three new premium audio products, built to work individually or as a unified system: Lifestyle Ultra Speaker ($299), Lifestyle Ultra Subwoofer ($899), and Lifestyle Ultra Soundbar ($1,099).  

All the products promise high-fidelity sound wrapped in materials that are aesthetic enough to double as home decor. Pre-orders for the products are already open at Bose’s official website, and availability begins May 15. 

Read more