The Next Frontier of Censorship: Killing the VPN

Many countries pushing new content-regulation laws are no longer satisfied with controlling what you see, they now want control over how you connect. VPNs began as a simple way to regain privacy and bypass local blocks, but in the current political climate they’ve become a target.

Why?

Because a VPN breaks the geographic map regulators rely on to filter information. If they can’t locate you, they can’t censor you.

This is why governments and platforms are increasingly blacklisting VPN IP ranges, detecting datacenter traffic patterns, and blocking any connection that looks “too anonymous”. Behind the friendly narrative of “user protection” lies a simpler truth: systems built for control cannot tolerate escape routes.

The trend is obvious. As regulatory pressure intensifies, more States will try to restrict or outlaw VPN usage to keep their censorship architecture intact. Free access will become the exception, not the rule.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Soon, the only part of the internet that won't be controlled is the darknet over Tor and I2P.

interesting because when I was telling you about how we are doing next level evasion, you were telling me to shut the fuck up and use brave browser.

I don't speak in those terms. I am respectful, and I am sure I expressed my opinion correctly. I am sorry if you took offense to my differing opinion.

I am not offended by profanity. More so people being closed off to knowledge or new ideas. Apology accepted

I've even seen small local utility providers block VPNs on their websites. There is no way they could figure that out, so somebody is out there offering this as a service to websites. It will become the default for all random websites soon, like how Cloudflare dominates DDoS protection.

I’m not sure VPN blocked will deter VPN usage. You may have to turn off your VPN to access some official/institutional website which already ties to your real identity anyway. However, websites that are broadly accessed through pseudonyms would shoot them themselves in the foot with those restrictions. If they are forced to do so via regulations, it will help decentralized alternatives. The only real way VPN bypass can be countered is by enforcing a digital ID at the ISP level.