VPN use surges in Brazil after X ban – but people now face huge fines

People in Brazil flocked to the best VPN services this weekend to keep access to X (formerly known as Twitter). Now they risk fines of up to nearly $9,000 per day if they choose to circumvent the government-imposed restriction.

On Friday evening, August 30, Brazilian Supreme Court Minister Alexandre de Moraes not only issued a suspension order to X for failing to appoint a local legal representative as required by Brazilian law. He went a step further and criminalized the use of VPNs to circumvent such restrictions.

“At this point, it seems difficult to imagine how the Brazilian government’s proposed fines for people using VPNs to access X could be implemented from a technical standpoint,” Gabriele Racaityte-Krasauske, spokesperson for leading VPN Surfshark, told me. “Especially considering that it’s one of the first restrictions of this kind in the history of internet restrictions.”

Through Proton VPN Observatory, the provider monitors spikes in VPN usage so that alarm bells can be raised if censorship suddenly occurs. (Image credit: Proton)

Despite the prospect of huge fines, citizens and visitors have flocked to VPN services. Two VPNs – NordVPN and Proton VPN – are reportedly the top applications in the Utilities category in the Brazilian Apple App Store.