BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  2025 worst year for internet shutdowns
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Tue, 21 Apr 2026 08:48:30 -0500
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2025 was the worst year on record for internet shutdowns as censors move to 
more targeted blocks

Date:
Tue, 21 Apr 2026 11:02:17 +0000

Description:
Access Now's latest report on internet shutdowns reveals that 2025 was the 
worst year on record for digital freedom. With VPNs and satellite internet 
increasingly under fire, we recap the years biggest threats and look at whats 
next for global connectivity.

FULL STORY
Not a single day of 2025 passed without at least one internet shutdown. That's
the striking opening to the latest annual report from digital rights group 
Access Now and the #KeepItOn coalition. 

It has been 10 years since the coalition began tracking global communication 
blackouts, and the toll continues to rise. In 2025, a record 313 internet 
shutdowns were documented across 52 countries, with seven nations appearing 
on the list of offenders for the first time. Felicia Anthonio, #KeepItOn 
Global Campaign Manager, told TechRadar that while conflict remains the 
primary trigger for these blackouts  accounting for 125 shutdowns in 14 
countries  her team has identified a sophisticated new trend. There is a 
clear shift from total internet blackouts to more "targeted" restrictions. 

Make no mistake  this shift is not a victory for digital rights. Instead, it 
represents a tightening of the screw. Censors are increasingly targeting VPN 
services and satellite internet connections, systematically closing the 
alternative routes that people rely on during a crisis. These vital lifelines 
are becoming harder to access exactly when they are needed most. We sat down 
with Anthonio to discuss how the face of internet censorship is evolving and 
the challenges that lie ahead for 2026.

A rise in platform-level shutdowns

Shutting down the internet entirely carries
massive repercussions for a nations economy, as businesses are paralyzed and 
unable to conduct day-to-day operations. In 2025, the total global economic 
loss resulting from these blackouts is estimated to be a staggering $19.7 
billion. 

This economic fallout is why experts are seeing a strategic shift: instead of 
pulling the plug on the whole web, censors are increasingly opting to block 
specific social media and messaging platforms. 

According to Access Now, this approach is becoming the preferred choice for 
many governments. The group recorded 94 shutdowns specifically targeting 
platforms like WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Telegram across 40 
countries in 2025. This is a significant jump from the 77 incidents recorded 
in 2024. 

Anthonio explains that governments often view this as a more "acceptable" 
middle ground compared to a total blackout. "But people rely on these 
platforms to run businesses and communicate, so it still acts as a total 
shutdown for them," Antonio explains. 

 Virtual private network (VPN) apps and other circumvention tools offer easy 
workarounds to these types of blocks. By spoofing a users IP address, these 
tools allow individuals to appear as if they are connecting from a different 
country with just a few clicks, granting them a "free pass" to reach blocked 
services.

Sudden surges in VPN adoption are now a reliable indicator of 
government-imposed restrictions. In 2025, a popular free VPN provider, Proton 
VPN , recorded a surge in sign-ups as high as 35,000% across 62 countries . 
Targeted attacks on alternative connections As more citizens turn to 
circumvention tools to bypass platform blocks, governments are finding 
increasingly aggressive ways to obstruct them. From physical crackdowns and 
sophisticated digital filtering to new legislation and heavy fines, the 
campaign against these digital lifelines has never been more widespread. 

In Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir, authorities enacted a two-month ban 
on unauthorized VPNs . This wasn't just a digital block; reports emerged of 
police conducting physical phone searches and initiating security proceedings 
against hundreds of users found with VPN applications on their devices. 

Venezuela was particularly harsh against VPN usage last year, too, blocking 
over 20 VPN websites in January 2025 alone. Despite the change of regime, 
local digital rights advocates confirmed that there are " no meaningful 
changes " in the country's censorship landscape. 

While VPN censorship is nothing new, though, 2025 was also marked by a newish 
attack on alternative connections  the targeting of Low Earth Orbit (LEO) 
satellite internet like Starlink.  Anthonio explains that governments "are
going an extra mile" to shut down Starlink and similar tools. 

In June 2025, Iran adopted legislation that criminalizes the import, sale, 
and use of unauthorized internet tools. Under this law, citizens caught using 
satellite internet services risk severe legal consequences, including 
long-term imprisonment. 

In Myanmar, the crackdown is even more physical, with reports of authorities 
confiscating hardware and arresting local service providers. 

"Last year, we saw 14 incidents across seven countries where alternative 
connections were targeted, compared to just four incidents in 2024," Anthonio 
told Techradar. 

The first few months of 2026 have already shown that the trend is 
accelerating. In Iran, authorities have begun jamming Starlink connections, 
rendering them almost useless. Meanwhile, in Uganda, the government ordered 
Starlink to disable all terminals and services in January 2026  citing a lack 
of local licensing  just days before imposing a nationwide internet blackout 
during the general election. 

This escalation reveals a clear pattern of digital enclosure. "Previously, 
VPNs were common for bypassing shutdowns, so governments went after them. Now 
that satellite connection is becoming a lifeline, they have started 
disrupting access to that," Anthonio added.

Whitelisting: The next frontier for digital control?

If 2025 was a record year for the erosion of global
digital freedom, 2026 is already on track to surpass it, with Iran and Russia 
leading the charge. 

Iranians have already lived through two near-total communication blackouts. 
The second wave  which is still ongoing  has now surpassed the 50-day mark . 
An infamous achievement that, Anthonio explains, makes it the "longest 
nationwide shutdown in history." 

Russia has also kicked off what observers have deemed the " great internet 
crackdown ." Internet access has been disrupted in some cities, Telegram has 
been blocked, and new systems to detect and block VPN use have been 
implemented. 

Crucially, both nations are now pivoting toward a more sophisticated 
censorship regime: whitelisting . Unlike traditional "blacklisting," where 
specific sites are blocked, a whitelisting system flips the script. Censors 
block the entire internet by default, allowing only a handful of 
government-approved, "socially significant" services to function. 

"It is just a clear way for the government to control what is happening and 
decide who gets access, which defeats the purpose of advocating for a global 
internet for everyone," said Anthnio. "We should draw as much attention to 
this as we do to complete population cutoffs."  While the
challenges are mounting, the global resistance remains formidable  and 2025 
delivered several landmark victories for digital rights. 

On the International level, the International Criminal Court (ICC) has 
formally recognized the link between internet shutdowns and crimes against 
humanity. Last June, the Freedom Online Coalition also released a statement 
urging governments to stop targeting internet infrastructure during 
conflicts. 

However, the most significant pushback comes from those living under the 
shadow of censorship. Every day, civilians risk their safety to smuggle 
Starlink terminals into restricted zones and to develop new ways of evading 
digital blocks. 

Their persistence in sharing information and documenting human rights 
violations remains the primary defense against state control. In a year 
defined by digital darkness, these individuals continue to find ways to turn 
on the light, ensuring the rest of the world can see the truth.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/2025-was-the-worst-year-on-
record-for-internet-shutdowns-as-censors-move-to-more-targeted-blocks

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 * Origin: Capitol City Hub (1:2320/105)

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