this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2025
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I don't know how any company I've worked for would operate, especially when headquartered in another country. They'll just have to fire everyone in that country rather than compromise their security
I'd assume they'd give companies an exemption if they made private VPN use illegal. Doesn't China do something similar to this?
VPNs work fine in China. The point of the great firewall is to keep Facebook et al out, not to keep anybody in.
I think the Chinese VPN ban is a bit exaggerated
They don't really ban them, but there is deep packet inspection where they may throttle the connection or in my experience, cut it off after a period of time. Sometimes they block them during national occasions. I could probably try something better than OpenVPN. I only use it for personal use anyway and I am a foreigner, so they really wouldn't care (if anything, it's kind of expected waiguoren behaviour). If you are roaming on a foreign sim card and using mobile data, there is no censorship from my experience. Just needed the VPN for wifi
To be fair, it's Mullvad that simply rocks.
I've heard they have government-approved VPN providers. And companies there use VPNs for their job. They'll also do business on platforms which are blocked on the regular Chinese internet. Of course business is guided by the communist party so you might have someone keeping an eye on your company VPN (mis)use. People who went there told me they're more lenient with foreigners. Your European/American company's corporate VPN might work well, you might also experience connections being dropped and the Great Firewall messing with it. And there are some attempts at circumventing blockage, like TOR's Snowflake, though all of this is a cat and mouse game, some (illegal) thing works for a while and then they shut it down and you'll move to the next one. Though as a citizen of an oppressive regime you'd better think twice before engaging in a cat and mouse game with authorities.