- Pakistan has resumed VPN licensing under new framework
- Five local companies are now authorized to provide “legal” VPN services
- Users can use these licensed VPNs without registering their personal IP with the PTA
Pakistan’s government has taken a significant new step in its long and often controversial campaign to regulate the Internet, officially launching a licensing regime for virtual private network (VPN) providers.
The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) announced on November 13 that it had granted the first set of licenses to five local companies, authorizing them to offer what it calls “safe and legal” VPN services to the public.
The move is the latest chapter in a multi-year effort by authorities to regulate the use of VPNs, tools that have become essential for many Pakistanis to circumvent widespread censorship.
Major social media platforms, including X (formerly Twitter), have been blocked intermittently or permanently for months, forcing citizens and businesses to turn to the best VPN services to freely access the global Internet.
For users, one of the immediate changes now is that they can use these specific licensed services without needing to go through the previously cumbersome process of registering their individual IP addresses directly with the PTA.
A new framework, old concerns
While the government presents this as a measure to improve cybersecurity and provide regulatory convenience, the context of Pakistan’s digital landscape raises serious concerns for privacy advocates.
Previous attempts to ban “unregistered” VPNs have failed due to legal challenges and public backlash, leading to this new, more structured approach of creating a group of government-approved providers.
The central issue remains the potential for surveillance. By forcing VPN providers to obtain local licenses, the government makes it easier to force these companies to monitor user activity and hand over data.
This is in stark contrast to the policies of major international providers, many of which have strict no-logs VPN policies and have previously removed physical servers from countries with intrusive data retention laws, such as neighboring India.
Furthermore, this move comes against the backdrop of reports that Pakistan is working with China to develop a “Great Firewall”-style internet censorship system.
A licensed and therefore controllable VPN system could be a crucial component of such an infrastructure, ensuring that even citizens attempting to bypass censorship are funneled through state-sanctioned channels.
What does this mean for Pakistanis?
Pakistani citizens now have a choice: use one of the five newly licensed local VPN providers or continue using unlicensed international services and risk potential outages.
The PTA announcement frames the new system as a way to promote “regulatory facilitation, user convenience and greater cybersecurity across Pakistan’s digital ecosystem.” However, for many, the biggest risk is not malware but the loss of anonymity and the possibility of the state monitoring their online activities.
Digital rights experts have consistently warned that such regulatory efforts could seriously damage the growth of the country’s digital economy, which relies heavily on open Internet access for freelancers, IT companies and startups. Previous crackdowns on VPNs have already been blamed for throttling internet speeds and creating an unpredictable online environment for businesses.
As this new licensing regime is implemented, the key question will be whether the PTA will now more aggressively block access to international VPN providers who refuse to apply for a local license.
If that happens, millions of Pakistanis who rely on these tools for their privacy, security and access to information will face a stark choice between using a potentially compromised local service or being cut off from the global Internet.
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