- It’s like watching an online version of Brexit, without the referendum 
- “Many of these free VPNs are riddled with issues,” said Daniel Card, a cyber-security expert with the Chartered Institute for IT (BCS). - “Some act as traffic brokers for data harvesting firms, others are so poorly built they expose users to attacks.” - He told the BBC despite posing a range of potential privacy risks, such apps “end up in the hands of kids trying to watch age-restricted content”, or adults “trying to get round blocks”. - Ah yes, there it is: won’t anyone think of the children. I expected that argument higher up in the article. 
- So surely no corporations or governments will be using them to remote in, right? 
- Here’s a free vpn that will keep you safe enough to watch porn on: https://protonvpn.com/ - And if you don’t want to use a sketchy free VPN: https://mullvad.net/en/vpn 
 
- UK: from the EU to the Uzbekistan of the Atlantic. - EU is working on that, too 
 
- The UK politicians who thought this was a good idea deserve a “ban” - Seriously, how did they not see this coming? 
- I can’t see anywhere in the article that says they may be ‘banned’. - They can try though. They can also try and collect water in a sieve. - Eh, a back bencher has called for a report on how VPNs interfere with ofcoms ability to enforce/regulate the online safety act within 6 months. - https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/vpns-online-safety-bill-labour-champion-b2239810.html - "My new clause 54 would require the Secretary of State to publish, within six months of the Bill’s passage, a report on the effect of VPN use on Ofcom’s ability to enforce the requirements under clause 112. - “If VPNs cause significant issues, the Government must identify those issues and find solutions, rather than avoiding difficult problems.” - The likely conclusion of that report is that “VPNs circumvent the age verification requirement, so circumvent the OSA, so VPNs must be banned” - Yes, I read that. ‘Likely conclusion’ does not equal a ban though. - I’m just being a bit pedantic about the headline - this whole thing is crappy (and unworkable) enough as it is, without jumping to conclusions. - The only other solutions to “VPNs circumvent OSA” are: - 
Licence/regulate VPN usage (which is essentially a ban WRT the OSA). 
 Extremely difficult to do. It’s fairly trivial to just tunnel your connection over SSH to a VPS in another country.
 Also fairly trivial to get a VPN that tunnels over a websocket, making the traffic identical to website traffic.
 The government is going to play cat&mouse with decades of legitimate infosec.
- 
Do something progressive, and drop the OSA (which isn’t going to happen). 
 They’ve literally just implemented these laws. It’s not getting repealed.
 - They are going to make consumer use of anything that changes the public source address of a packet illegal. 
 How they enforce that, I dunno.
 Like the whole OSA, it seems really poorly thought out. I dunno how they completely overlooked VPN usage- It’s about time we banned CGNAT. 
 
- 
 
- Somehow I don’t see this being a popular move 
 
 
 in china, the ccp will punish citizens for circumventing their internet firewall in china, the ccp will punish citizens for circumventing their internet firewall
- What’s with the clickbait headline? Did the linked article change or did OP twist it to mean opposite? - Linked source says: - Headline “Labour rules out VPN ban in UK but issues warning to UK households” - Byline “Labour won’t ban the use of Virtual Private Networks” 
- “Keep calm and give up all and everything for your own safety” 
- OOOHH yeah, let’s ban a standardized security system because we’re idiots - Politicians always look like that kid with a propellor cap on their head 
- Please do it - Why? How is any of this a good thing? - Maybe they just really hate the uk 
- I just remember how Roscomnadzor started banning everything - 
they’ve banned 127.0.0.1 
- 
they banned all telegram IP ranges, downing card payments in the country 
- 
they learned how to ban wireguard in the whole country, effectively ruining a lot of internal contours 
 - So? - I want to see another failed attempt and the peak of human stupidity again - Valid. There’s no practical way of implementing a blanket ban on VPN. Hell, I’ve set up a VPN tunnel to the UK that I use for work. I wish them the best of luck, while I grab my popcorn. - If a ban were to be implemented, there would be no way of enforcing it. - If a ban were to be implemented, there would be no way of enforcing it. - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39067213 - Hold my beer. Also, from the personal experience, shadowsocks is partially banned by a lot of ISPs 
 
 
 
 
- 
- It would make the public hate the politicians who came up with the online safety bill in the first place - Nah. Shit will just be broken and insecure and the normies won’t know who to blame until they’re told “hackers”. - I think most people are smart enough to realize what is going on. - I don’t. In the U.K. you have people listening to Farages lies for the third time. 
 
 
 
 
 










