China | Access delayed

Why are VPNs getting slower in China?

The government seems increasingly uneasy about people leaping over the great firewall

Commuters look at their mobile phones while riding a monorail train in Chongqing, China.
Photograph: Panos Pictures/ Qilai Shen
|BEIJING

“The internet is not beyond the law!” warned police in Fujian province earlier this month. They had recently arrested a man, identified as Mr Gong, for using a virtual private network (VPN). This is a piece of software that can make it appear as if a computer or mobile phone is in another country. VPNs thus allow netizens to bypass the “great firewall”, as China’s system of online censorship is known. By using one, Mr Gong had allowed “false foreign information” to flow into China, the police claimed.

Explore more

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline “Access delayed”

From the August 24th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from China

Why China banned international adoptions

Much has changed since the programme was started

Can Xi Jinping take Hong Kong “from stability to prosperity”?

A fixation on security may cost the city in the long term


China is beating America in the nuclear-energy race

They have pioneered a new generation of reactor


Liberalism is far from dead in China

Despite an intense clampdown, it may even be drawing more adherents

How to get kicked out of China’s Communist Party

Officials are trying to expel slackers and the superstitious

Why Xi Jinping is envious of his predecessor

China’s ruler would like to grab Deng Xiaoping’s legacy