• @limer@lemmy.ml
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    4523 days ago

    It’s like watching an online version of Brexit, without the referendum

  • @myrmidex@belgae.social
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    23 days ago

    “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.

  • AmbiguousProps
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    2523 days ago

    So surely no corporations or governments will be using them to remote in, right?

  • Possibly linux
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    1122 days ago

    The UK politicians who thought this was a good idea deserve a “ban”

    Seriously, how did they not see this coming?

  • Baggins
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    923 days ago

    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.

    • @towerful@programming.dev
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      523 days ago

      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”

      • Baggins
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        323 days ago

        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.

        • @towerful@programming.dev
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          423 days ago

          The only other solutions to “VPNs circumvent OSA” are:

          1. 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.

          2. 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

  • @IcyToes@sh.itjust.works
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    23 days ago

    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”

  • Phoenixz
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    323 days ago

    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

      • cub Gucci
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        323 days ago

        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

          • cub Gucci
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            523 days ago

            I want to see another failed attempt and the peak of human stupidity again

            • @neidu3@sh.itjust.works
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              123 days ago

              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.

      • Possibly linux
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        122 days ago

        It would make the public hate the politicians who came up with the online safety bill in the first place

        • @shalafi@lemmy.world
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          322 days ago

          Nah. Shit will just be broken and insecure and the normies won’t know who to blame until they’re told “hackers”.

            • WolfmanEightySix
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              122 days ago

              I don’t. In the U.K. you have people listening to Farages lies for the third time.