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Porn Ban—New Threat For Millions Of Smartphone Users
Porn Ban—New Threat For Millions Of Smartphone Users

Forbes

timea day ago

  • Forbes

Porn Ban—New Threat For Millions Of Smartphone Users

Do not put yourself at risk. Here we go again. Millions of iPhone and Android users are suddenly at risk as the latest porn ban comes into effect. But it turns out the most serious threat to all those smartphone users is not the content, but the dangerous workarounds. In the U.S., as state after state has passed porn ban legislation, users have turned to virtual private networks (VPNs) to maintain their adult content fix. These apps tunnel web traffic via remote servers. And if those servers are located in a different state or country, the porn site thinks the phone is there as well. The porn ban is bypassed. Now the U.K. has enacted its own version of this leaky, pointless legislation, resulting in VPNs suddenly dominating app download charts. One app developer told BBC News, 'it had seen an 1,800% spike in downloads' and many others have experienced the same. Similar surges have been seen in the U.S. as each new ban comes into effect. The reality is that the bans or requirement for age verification — which amount to the same when users don't want to associate real-world identifies with porn sites — do not work. Much worse though, these countermeasures are dangerous and are putting millions at risk. To run a VPN, a developer needs to operate expensive infrastructure — the servers and network capacity to route traffic between devices and websites. Good VPNs offer a menu of locations, enabling users to pick the country or state where they will seem to be. Porn sites take your IP address at face value. If there's a ban or restriction in your location but your IP address suggests you're somewhere else, you will be granted access. It would be very easy for the websites to check if you're using a VPN. A clash between your IP address and your browser fingerprints for example. But they don't. The risk is that users don't need a complex, fully-featured VPN to beat the bans. Any app will do. And China's free app industry is happy to oblige. Using a free VPN without good security and data protection is very much worse than using no app at all. Researchers have even found many free VPNs are linked to the Chinese government and its military. The Tech Transparency Project warns 'millions of Americans have downloaded apps that secretly route their internet traffic through Chinese companies.' Top10VPN's Simon Migliano says this means 'the risks are too great,' and 'in light of these findings, I strongly urge users to avoid Chinese-owned VPNs altogether." You should actually avoid any free VPN. Either use one you subscribe to, or one from a bluechip provider which is an add-on to its other services. As BeyondTrust's James Maude points out, 'if you aren't paying for a product, you are the product; these VPN services are a perfect example of the hidden costs of free apps.' My advice on VPNs is simple:

Porn Ban Warning For Millions Of iPhone And Android Users
Porn Ban Warning For Millions Of iPhone And Android Users

Forbes

time27-06-2025

  • Forbes

Porn Ban Warning For Millions Of iPhone And Android Users

Porn bans are more dangerous than you think. There's a new warning for smartphone users. Free apps with hundreds of millions of installs are now putting users, devices and data at risk. And this problem is about to get worse, with millions more certain to install those apps within weeks as a new porn ban goes into effect, putting more iPhone and Android users in danger. We're talking VPNs and a new report that says many of the top free apps on both Apple's App Store and Google's Play Store are secretly sending data to China. Free VPNs are dangerous, but two events have turned many of these apps into viral blockbusters. The first was the short-lived TikTok ban in the U.S., which saw a VPN surge even if using VPNs did not actually solve the problem — those apps are still on phones today. The second is ongoing and more widespread and is set for a new surge. We're talking porn bans and the age or identity verification checks required to access the world's most popular websites. Multiple U.S. states have now jumped on this bandwagon, resulting in many U.S. users installing VPNs for the first time. As the Tech Transparency Project warns, 'millions of Americans have downloaded apps that secretly route their internet traffic through Chinese companies.' And if the political push to introduce a national U.S. porn ban is successful, this will get much worse. VPNs — virtual private networks — route all online traffic to and from a device via a third-party server. The risk is that the wrong type of VPN is more dangerous than no VPN at all. And while users in plenty of places around the world cannot access the free internet without these location and identity masking tools — that's not the case anywhere in the U.S. At least not before these porn bans started to come into effect. But unlike the TikTok ban, VPNs easily bypass porn restrictions, tricking the websites into thinking you're in a different location not subject to any bans or requiring any form of verification. But while it's easy to skirt the rules, you could be putting your device and your data at risk, sending all your traffic to a shady foreign server. Now the U.K. is set to do the same. A month from now — on July 25 — it will mandate the same government approved age verification before users can access porn sites. Per BBC News, 'Pornhub and a number of other major adult websites have confirmed they will introduce enhanced age checks for users from next month. Parent company Aylo says it is bringing in 'government approved age assurance methods' but has not yet revealed how it will require users to prove they are over 18.' The U.K.'s controversial Online Safety Bill will 'bring pornography into line with how we treat adult services in the real world,' say the regulator charged with enforcing the new laws, warning that 'recent research indicated 8% of children aged 8-14 in the UK had visited an online porn site or app over a 28-day period.' Porn is more popular than ever on mobile devices, which are more at risk from free VPNs than other devices. It's all too easy to install a free app from even the official stores without asking how the app is being funded or who operates the service. As BeyondTrust's James Maude told me, 'if you aren't paying for a product, you are the product. These VPN services are a perfect example of the hidden costs of free apps.' The advice on VPNs is simple:

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