@Wetrix Not revered but I'll still add my input if that's alright. SquirrelVPN looks okay at first glance but I'd be extremely wary. They're an extremely new service from what I found, I don't see much to substantiate some of their claims, they don't make their payment methods publically available until you make an account and go to purchase a package from what I can see, and last thing if you search for SquirrelVPN - their official website has some Chinese looking characters in the title.
1/4
Really you might not need a VPN though and something like For might be a way better bet. By design VPNs are honeypots, if you're looking for privacy or anonymity, then Tor is what you're looking for, if you're getting fooled by thinking your data will get stolen on public WiFi and you need a VPN providers encryption, you don't.
3/4
HTTPS already encrypts all of your traffic, therefore not only securing your details on public networks, but also hiding the content of the websites you visit from your ISP, only revealing to them the beginning of the URL (i.e. your ISP will see https://YouTube.com instead of https://YouTube.com/watch?=jsPkwhYfaN ).
4/4
This means they could have some ties to Chinese organizations, that said I couldn't find any substantial evidence to support that. Mozilla's VPN service is just rebranded, marked up, and (I've heard from some people) less reliable Mullvad. If you're looking for a trustworthy VPN service my best recommendations are Mullvad and IVPN, they're the only two VPN companies that I would actually put my trust in if I actually trusted VPNs or their idea.
2/4