Pondering routing more of my traffic via nodes outside the UK because of the direction of UK online safety policy | Neil's blog
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Pondering routing more of my traffic via nodes outside the UK because of the direction of UK online safety policy
Published on: 2026-06-20 21:00:07 by Neil Brown
Some of the UK government’s policy announcements around the Internet<br>- and, in particular, social media and VPNs - are downright concerning<br>me at the moment.
In the name of “online safety”, the fundamental rights of both<br>freedom of expression and privacy appear to be under imminent<br>threat.
I have concerns which go beyond our shores - mostly stemming from<br>Google, frankly - but the UK legislative / policy issues are bothering<br>me especially at the moment.
I value my ability to read, learn, and communicate almost without<br>borders. I don’t like signing up to websites or newsletters (I prefer<br>RSS), I don’t like storing my data on other people’s computers, and I’ve<br>certainly no wish to prove my age or identity outside core government<br>services.
The current proposal to ban people under 16 - who also have the<br>rights to freedom of expression and privacy - from some (as yet not<br>fully delineated) social media services is likely to result in<br>wide-spread verification.
While I am unlikely to be affected directly - although it would<br>depend on the definition of “social media” - I anticipate that more<br>websites will simply choose to block traffic from UK IP addresses,<br>especially if UK-originated traffic does not matter a huge amount to<br>them.
I am already seeing this as a consequence of the Online Safety Act,<br>and I expect any future UK laws in this area to exacerbate that.
I also anticipate that we will soon see the first court-ordered<br>blocking injunctions under the Online Safety Act, when the fines issued<br>by Ofcom against some website providers (so far, most quite niche porn<br>sites, as far as I can tell, plus a “suicide discussion forum”) go<br>unpaid and the “compliance issues” which Ofcom has identified go<br>unresolved.
Some - many - UK ISPs have already implemented, and carry out, DNS<br>blocking, both for mandatory and non-mandatory reasons. Mine - A&A -<br>is probably one of the outliers, with no blocking save for the mandatory<br>sanctions-related requirements.
In any case, so far, since I run my own recursive DNS infrastructure,<br>I have not been affected.
I use Tor quite a lot, but I’ve seen an increase - sure, a small<br>increase, but an increase nevertheless - of sites which are blocking Tor<br>traffic.
And so, for the first time, I am considering locating something<br>(perhaps a WireGuard node, or a SOCKS proxy, or a recursive DNS server /<br>DNS proxy, or perhaps all of them) somewhere on the Internet outside the<br>UK, so that I can route some traffic through that, as needed, to<br>maintain my access to the web.
Honestly, it seems such a shame to me, that UK Internet censorship<br>should reach such a place, but there we go.
I have not decided exactly what I might do, or exactly how, or where,<br>I might do it, but it is far more attractive to me now that it has been<br>ever before, in all the 30ish years that I’ve been online.
To me, the need to even contemplate this kind of thing is the stuff<br>of dystopian sci-fi.
And yet here I find myself.
Internet online safety UK regulation Tor SOCKS WireGuard proxy Online Safety Act
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