During Bangladesh's 2015 internet ban, police conducted roadside stops and physically inspected mobile phones for VPN software, confiscating devices found with VPN installed and asserting VPN use was illegal — despite no official government directive prohibiting VPN. This extra-legal enforcement, carried out by low-ranking constables, created a chilling deterrent effect on circumvention adoption beyond the technical challenge of blocking.
From 2017-morshed-when — When the Internet Goes Down in Bangladesh
· Findings – Response to the Ban
· 2017
· Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing
Implications
In contexts where physical device inspection is a risk, circumvention tools should support inconspicuous UX — no prominent app icon, deniable cover UI, or stealth mode — to reduce the legal and physical cost of carrying the tool on the device.
Tools that operate as background services or browser extensions rather than prominently branded standalone apps are harder to detect during a physical device inspection and therefore lower the risk to the end user.