Several widely used VPN applications, including Cloudflare’s 1.1.1.1, have been removed from India’s Apple App Store and Google Play Store at the direction of government authorities.
The Indian Ministry of Home Affairs reportedly issued takedown orders for these apps, as per documents reviewed and a disclosure from Google to Lumen, Harvard University’s database that monitors government-led content removal requests worldwide.
Among the affected VPNs are Hide.me and PrivadoVPN. Apple, in a communication to one of the developers, referenced a directive from the Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre, a division of the Ministry of Home Affairs. The notice claimed that the app content violated Indian laws.
Neither the Ministry of Home Affairs nor the affected companies, including Apple, Google, and Cloudflare, have provided comments on the matter.
This enforcement action is a significant step under India’s 2022 regulatory guidelines targeting VPN services. The rules demand that VPN providers and cloud service operators retain detailed records about their users for five years. These records include personal details such as names, physical addresses, IP addresses, and transaction histories.
The regulations have drawn considerable criticism from leading VPN companies. Industry giants like NordVPN, ExpressVPN, Surfshark, and Proton VPN have raised serious concerns about user privacy and operational feasibility under the new framework. Several companies have even removed their server infrastructure from India in protest.
Despite these challenges, some providers like NordVPN, ExpressVPN, and Surfshark continue to offer services to Indian customers. However, these companies have significantly reduced their marketing efforts in the region, likely in response to the stringent regulations.
The removal of these VPN apps highlights the growing tension between government efforts to regulate online activity and the privacy-focused ethos of VPN services. While these regulations aim to curb cybercrime and ensure compliance with local laws, they have raised alarms about the potential erosion of digital privacy and freedom for users in India.
This recent development signals a pivotal moment for the VPN industry in the country and raises questions about the future of privacy-focused services in an increasingly regulated digital landscape.