IP and port blocking dropped from 30% of countries historically to only 9% during the study period (six countries), with the decline attributed to difficulty maintaining ephemeral blocklists, CDN collateral damage, and IPv6 expansion. Iran is a significant exception: it has implemented port allowlisting — permitting only ports 80, 443, and 53 — on multiple occasions, blocking all other ports entirely.
From 2023-master-worldwide — A Worldwide View of Nation-state Internet Censorship
· §4.3, Table 2
· 2023
· Free and Open Communications on the Internet
Implications
Design circumvention infrastructure to operate exclusively on ports 80, 443, and 53 — Iran-style allowlisting makes non-standard ports a deployment liability, especially during crackdowns.
CDN-based infrastructure (domain fronting, meek-style transports) gains collateral-damage protection as a side effect of the censor's own reluctance to block CDN IP ranges — this structural asymmetry should be exploited.