BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Protecting children onlin
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Thu, 2 Apr 2026 10:49:53 -0500
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"Protecting children online is a parental responsibility, not a regulatory
one"  the VPN industry reacts to Government VPN spending amid discussions on
restricting child VPN use

Date:
Thu, 02 Apr 2026 12:14:26 +0000

Description:
Following our exclusive research, how does the VPN industry see the UK
Government's actions?

FULL STORY
We recently uncovered that the UK Government is spending millions on VPNs
despite ongoing discussions around VPN bans for children . 

While much of that spending relates to corporate VPNs  used mostly to allow
access to internal intranets and secure resources while working from home
many instances relate to consumer VPNs too. VPNs focus mainly on privacy. 
They hide internet traffic data from internet service providers and snoopers
alike. But their use has now been associated with getting around
geo-restricted content blocks, including material that has now been
age-restricted within the UK.

This week, I contacted some of companies behind the best
VPNs to see just how big an impact the UK Government's attitude could have on
the industry, and what needs to be rectified. As Yegor Sak, Co-founder and 
CEO of Windscribe, put it: 

"The core contradiction your research highlights is hard to ignore. The UK
government spends millions on VPN technology to protect its own data while
exploring policies that would restrict the same technology for everyone 
else."

The comparison problem -- "Its encouraging to see the Government and
regulators like Ofsted and Ofcom endorsing the use of VPNs," began David
Peterson, General Manager of Proton VPN . 

"Their investment highlights the role of VPNs as essential cybersecurity and
privacy tools." 

But, as was highlighted by Pete Membrey, Chief Research Officer at ExpressVPN,
"Consumer VPNs use the same underlying technology [as corporate VPNs] for
the same purpose." 

"If VPNs are trusted to protect government systems and sensitive data, it is
difficult to justify denying individuals access to the same protection."

So why limit the availability of these tools for consumers if they're trusted
at the highest levels? 

As Membrey notes, "secure network access is not a special entitlement 
reserved for institutions." The Government's biggest problem The Government's
primary concern remains circumventing age verification. But, as Windscribe's
Sak put it, "kids are resourceful" and "will find workarounds for any
technical restriction". 

VPN adoption rose in the wake of the arrival of UK age verification measures.
Proton VPN recorded spikes of over 1400% , while several untrustworthy free
VPNs also shot to the top of app stores . 

These untrustworthy providers are notoriously capable of slipping through 
nets intended to catch them. Theyre often circulated via social media links 
on forums, without any formal verification of their safety. 

Restricting reputable VPN providers could backfire..." David Peterson, 
General Manager of Proton VPN As Sak suggests, if VPN restrictions do come
into place, its more than likely that children would remain exposed to them.
However, instead of being directed towards trustworthy solutions, theyd
directed to more harmful products, with safer VPNs of better repute adhere to
the new regulations. 

This problem would also expand beyond children. As Proton's David Peterson
explains: 

"Restricting reputable VPN providers could backfire, pushing privacy-conscious
users toward less transparent alternatives, some linked to authoritarian
regimes which are known to exploit user and corporate data through intrusive
surveillance." 

In our research, it became clear that despite the corporate solutions
available, many top individuals, including Labour MPs, were using consumer
VPNs instead. 

These same solutions are those that would be restricted for children should
the discussions be successful. 

VPNs would be required to break their no-logs policies to identify and
separate user activity and ID, a move no provider would support. This would
also compromise the security capabilities these tools are built to achieve.
The VPN industry's response Fixing the problem may require different means
outside of restrictions because, as Sak notes, children face real threats
online that VPNs actively protect against. 

Removing VPN protection leaves huge potential for children to be exposed to
tracking, data harvesting, and malicious content  all of which could have 
huge ramifications on their wellbeing. 

The government's energy would be better spent helping parents understand and
use the tools already available to them Sak continued. 

"Protecting children is a parental responsibility, not a regulatory one." 

According to Sak, solutions being considered, such as locking VPNs behind age
checks, would have an inverse effect  asking privacy tools to become
surveillance tools. 

For the moment, theres little more that VPNs themselves can do to tackle 
these issues. Providers such as NordVPN and ExpressVPN have introduced
parental control functionalities to offer secure limitations for families. 

The technology is also yet to exist to allow for safe age verification within
VPNs themselves, and, even if it were, Membrey notes, Limiting access does 
not remove risk - it shifts it onto users, leaving them more exposed online
without addressing the underlying harms.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-services/protecting-children-online-is-a-par
ental-responsibility-not-a-regulatory-one-the-vpn-industry-reacts-to-governmen
t-vpn-spending-amid-discussions-on-restricting-child-vpn-use

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