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Apple accused of blocking VPN updates in face of Myanmar unrest

Myanmar has been the site of mass protests following a coup at the start of February.

What you need to know

  • ProtonVPN says that Apple has rejected updates to its iOS app.
  • It comes following a coup and unrest in Myanmar.
  • ProtonVPN says that Apple is actively hampering the defense of human rights in the country.

One of the best VPN services available, ProtonVPN, says Apple is blocking updates to its app at a time when the people of Myanmar need it most.

ProtonVPN has stated that it has long been a defender of freedom and democracy, and that people in Myanmar "have been fighting to preserve their human rights after the military deposed the democratically-elected government and seized power on Feb. 1."

ProtonMail is one app recommended by the UN for use by Myanmar citizens who want to send the UN sensitive information, and apps like ProtonVPN are vital because national telecom companies have been forced to shut down the internet and social media in the country. Yet ProtonVPN says Apple is now rejecting vital updates to its app:

On the same day the UN recommended Proton apps, Apple suddenly rejected important updates to our ProtonVPN iOS app. These updates include security enhancements designed to further improve safeguards against account takeover attempts which could compromise privacy. Apple says it blocked our security updates because our app is described as a tool to "challenge governments… and bring online freedom to people around the world". Given the current context, Apple's actions could not be more insensitive.

ProtonVPN says its app and others like it "are a lifeline to the rest of the world for the people of Myanmar who are being massacred" and that Apple is making it even more difficult for citizens of Myanmar "to send evidence of crimes against humanity to the United Nations." ProtonVPN further accused Apple of criticism by saying "Apple has no problem challenging governments when it is in its own financial self-interest (e.g., avoiding EU taxes or evading antitrust charges). However, when Proton does it for human rights reasons, it's suddenly against Apple's policies."

ProtonVPN says that Apple's actions "are actively hampering the defense of human rights in Myanmar", citing Apple's actions in Hong Kong and China as previous precedent.

You can read the full release here.

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