India's push to regulate VPNs is just the latest move in a years-long campaign to tighten government control over what people can see and say online. Blocking orders have more than doubled — from 12,000 in 2024 to over 24,000 in 2025 — and the proposed VPN law would strong-arm companies into enforcing that censorship or face criminal penalties. Threatening jail time for compliance officers is a pressure tactic designed to silence dissent, not protect national security.
VPN providers can't hide behind privacy arguments when their platforms are actively enabling exam fraud, cybercrime and evidence tampering at a national scale. The Delhicourt High Court upheld Telegram's block precisely because targeted takedowns kept failing — offending channels rebuilt instantly through bots and mirror accounts. Requiring local compliance officers and registered offices just gives authorities a lawful, accountable way to enforce blocking orders that already have a solid legal foundation.
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