United Arab Emirates Makes Using A VPN A Crime... To Protect The Local Telcos From VoIP Competition
from the also-helps-with-surveillance dept
A few years ago, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) seriously clamped down on the internet, with new regulations designed to silence criticism on the internet. There have also been efforts there to ban the use of BlackBerries and other devices that offer encryption. So, perhaps it's of little surprise that the UAE has expanded a law that had originally been designed to block VoIP usage, to ban any use of a VPN or proxy that changes your IP address, and makes it all a crime that can get you jail time:Article 1 provides for replacing the text of Article 9 of Federal Law No. 9/2012 as follows:Now, you could argue that there's a condition here: that the use needs to be "for the purpose of committing a crime or preventing its discovery," but, again, remember that lots of things are a crime in the UAE, including using a VoIP provider. As the folks at Private Internet Access explain, this is a pretty big expansion of the law:
Whoever uses a fraudulent computer network protocol address (IP address) by using a false address or a third-party address by any other means for the purpose of committing a crime or preventing its discovery, shall be punished by temporary imprisonment and a fine of no less than Dh500,000 and not exceeding Dh2,000,000, or either of these two penalties.
Previously, the understanding of UAE internet law was that VPN or proxy use would be prosecuted under the Telecom Law only if it was used in connection to another crime – this is now going to be set law with a set fee and mandatory jail time. Now, with President Khalifa’s newest proclaimed laws, it is OK for the UAE police to go after individual VPN users for any criminal infraction. Currently, such crimes include accessing blocked services or websites, which can only be done with a VPN or proxy, use that the UAE considers fraudulent use of an IP address. That means watching pornography (a worry for tourists) and calling home on unlicensed VoIP services (a worry for most UAE residents) such as WhatsApp, FaceTime, or SnapChat. Internet users in the UAE, especially the large masses of immigrant labor, use VPN services to get past this geographical VoIP ban to talk to relatives and friends back home.The PIA article does point out that there is an "approved" VPN from the two state approved telcos, Etisiat and du, but that it blocks lots of services itself and is prohibitively expensive. And while the natural assumption about any attempt to ban VPNs is that it's for surveillance purposes, that may just be a side benefit here. The key focus does appear to be very much about blocking access to VoIP services to prop up the two official telcos. In other countries, the concern about net neutrality was always that telcos would do things like block VoIP. In the UAE, the government goes so far as to not just support such blocking, but actively work to criminalize the use of a VPN to get around such blocks.
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Filed Under: competition, encryption, net neutrality, privacy, surveillance, uae, united arab emirates, voip, vpn
Companies: du, etisiat
Reader Comments
The First Word
“In other countries, the concern about copyright was always that the publishers would do things like install malware on your computer to block copying. In the USA, the government goes so far as to not just support such malware, but actively works to criminalize the use of circumvention techniques to get around such blocks.
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Sounds like the UAE is exactly the kind of place for which we need an uncompromized TOR client.
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Re: Sounds like the UAE is exactly the kind of place for which we need an uncompromized TOR client.
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In other countries, the concern about copyright was always that the publishers would do things like install malware on your computer to block copying. In the USA, the government goes so far as to not just support such malware, but actively works to criminalize the use of circumvention techniques to get around such blocks.
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And Finally
https://www.techdirt.com/blog/innovation/articles/20121126/01165821142/russian-supreme-cour t-isps-need-to-proactively-block-illegal-content.shtml#c109
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Putin might use the UAE as an example...
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Businesses
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Networks use VPN's for traffic control; are NAT's next to be banned?
How do you think all that network traffic gets packaged up into a fiber?
NAT's translate (and somewhat obscure) network traffic too; without them, IPV4 is toast.
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When I go into Canada or Mexico, I can still access US Netflix, just like I was at home, because the connection goes through my home computer, Netflix is never the wiser.
Since this UAW law only applies to subscription VON services, and not to busineses, if you have business versions of Comcast, Charter, Cox or Sonic Internet, you just setup a VPN on your home computer going to the UAE.
To the UAE authorities, it look like you are connecting to a business VPN somewhere, and the UAE authoritiss will never be the wiser.
The SoftEther VPN server is best for this. It is free, and easy to coinfigure. You can set it up and having it running on your home computer in minutes. Just be sure to open the right TCP and UDP ports on your router, for it to work.
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Netflix, Hulu, and the like are looking for know subscription VPNs. My VPN on my home computer will not be detected by them.
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Which part of the text states that? I'm not seeing it.
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In other words, no, there's nothing in the text that excludes business VPNs.
"A connection to a business intenet service is going to attract a lot of suspicion."
...from the Saudi government, who would treat it with the same suspicion they would a domestic service, yes. Do you honestly think they'll just go "oh, don't worry he's connecting to a Comcast Business account, nothing can be suspicious there"?
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So whenver I travel outside of California, I connect to my private VPN, so that what I am doing cannot be monitored, and no evidence can be gatheed, because my connection is encrypted.
I love taking road trips all over the North American continent, and connecting my VPN on my Comcast Business connection, keeps my activity from being monitored, should I ever uknowingly violate state laws regarding connection to an unsecured WiFi.
Using a VPN for that purpose is currently legal in all 50 states.
Whenever I travel outside of California, I do that, and periodically use Evidence Eliminoator and/or KillDisk, so that if my laptop should ever be seized by local police, any evidence will totally wiped clean.
Also, before crossing the border into either Canada or the USA, I do session of Evidence Eliminator and/or KillDisk on my laptop, so that anything I don't know about that might get me put in jail is totally obliterated, and cannot be recovered be even the best forensic tools. This way if CBSA, CBE, or DHS decides to examine my laptop, they will get a big blank.
Using a VPN for work purposes in the UAE does not violate this new law, but just to be safe, if you ever go to the UAW, I would advice running eihter Evidence Eliminator or KillDisk on your laptop, daily, to obliterate any evicence
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Before you go, check with your boss about using the company VPN, while in the UAE. Using your company VPN would certainly not be illegal onder this law.
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Now, I, as the server operators, with my server in California, am NOT SUBJECT to proesecution in the UAE, for someone using my California server. My server, in California, is only subject to the laws, here in the United State, and UAE law DOES NOT APPLY to my, or to my sever, even if someone from the UAE is connecting.
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An SSL connection on 443 will not attract as much suspicion asa normal PPTP or LT2P VPN.
With SoftEther, all you have to do, before you go to the UAE, is just simply set up your VPN server on your home computer to host an SSL VPN on porrt 443. Just be sure to open port 443 on your router.
If you need a VPN to login to your work contact,talk to your boss about having a port 443 SSL VPN.
You can then use the SoftEther client, or any OpenVPN client to acdcess your SSL VPN.
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