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How we built the public status page — and why it's worth doing honestly

Команда продукта· منتشر شده ۱۴۰۵/۱/۲۹· 7 دقیقه

Warrant canary, p95 measurements, incident timeline — how this stack helps us sell trust.

Why it matters

VPN is a trust product. Half of user objections reduce to "can we actually trust you?". There are three levers on that: (1) jurisdiction, (2) no-logs policy, (3) observable behaviour — i.e. the status page.

What has to be there

Current status — OK / degraded / outage, service-wide. Top of status.logrus.io.

By region — because London can be fine while Amsterdam is down.

Incident timeline — last 90 days. With honest descriptions like "we saw 40 minutes of degradation, the cause was X".

Uptime metrics — p95 latency, successful-connection rate. NOT marketing "99.99%".

Warrant canary — refreshed monthly. If it disappears, that's a signal.

What we don't show

  • User counts. Commercial secret.
  • Edge-node IPs. Security.
  • Detailed incident logs. Privacy promise.

How it helps sales

Our B2C conversion went up 8% after launching the public status page with the incident timeline. Why? The audience sees that we're not afraid to show failures. That triggers trust.

For comparison — Mullvad and Proton VPN do the same. NordVPN/ExpressVPN don't. That's not a coincidence.

Tech

status.logrus.io is a separate Next.js app that reads metrics from our SRE Grafana via a server-side proxy. 60-second cache. Served through Cloudflare Pages, load is negligible.

Warrant canary is a static Markdown file in the repo; PR review on every update.

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