Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Media

VLC Media Player Banned In India (indiatoday.in) 40

One of the most popular media player software and streaming media server VLC media player, developed by VideoLAN project, is no longer working in India. India Today reports: As per a report by MediaNama, VLC Media Player has been blocked in India nearly 2 months ago. Neither the company nor the Indian government has revealed any details about the ban. Some reports suggest that VLC Media Player has been blocked in the country because the platform was China-backed hacking group Cicada was using it for cyber attacks. Just a few months ago, security experts discovered that Cicada was using VLC Media Player to deploy a malicious malware loader as part of a long-running cyber attack campaign.

Since it was a soft ban, neither the company, nor the Indian government officially announced the banning of the media platform. Some users on Twitter are still discovering the restrictions of the platform. One of the Twitter users by the name Gagandeep Sapra tweeted a screenshot of the VLC website that shows âoethe website has been blocked as per order Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology under IT Act, 2000." Currently, the VLC Media Player website and download link are blocked in the country. In simple words, this means that no one in the country can access the platform for any work. This is seemingly the case for users who have the software installed on their device. It is said that VLC Media Player is blocked on all major ISPs including ACTFibernet, Jio, Vodafone-idea and others.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

VLC Media Player Banned In India

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 12, 2022 @05:47PM (#62784930)

    Shame they cant also ban
    teamviewer, anydesk, desktopcontrol, aamyadmin, supremeadmin, in fact any remote control desktop software.
    that alone would save the west billions.

  • "blocked" (Score:5, Insightful)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @05:58PM (#62784952)

    >"In simple words, this means that no one in the country can access the platform for any work."

    Really?

    * If you use Linux, it is in every repo and every large media pack. How are they going to block that?
    * If you use Android, it is probably still on the store and on third-party "stores."
    * There are probably plenty of other reputable places to download it.
    * If you have it installed already, it will work.

    >"experts discovered that Cicada was using VLC Media Player to deploy a malicious malware loader"

    So are we just talking about MS-Windows?

    • Re:"blocked" (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 12, 2022 @06:00PM (#62784956)
      Can someone explain this sentence:

      "Some reports suggest that VLC Media Player has been blocked in the country because the platform was China-backed hacking group Cicada was using it for cyber attacks."
      • Just taking a shot in the dark here, but I'm going to guess that the Cicada group was distributing a version of the installer with malware attached.

    • This article-- what am I missing? How can you block a media player from being downloaded in the same country that sells office space to professional thieves?

      • They're apparently worried the ill-gotten gains of their largest industry will get stolen by the Chinese.
    • by Sin2x ( 1189089 )
      VLC is on Microsoft Store, so I guess the correct title would be "India blocked VLC website" and that's it.
  • Platform? Work? (Score:5, Informative)

    by andymadigan ( 792996 ) <amadigan@@@gmail...com> on Friday August 12, 2022 @06:01PM (#62784962)
    "In simple words, this means that no one in the country can access the platform for any work. This is seemingly the case for users who have the software installed on their device. It is said that VLC Media Player is blocked on all major ISPs including ACTFibernet, Jio, Vodafone-idea and others."

    What platform? VLC's website is just there to host downloads, nobody uses it for their day-to-day work. And there's no reason VLC needs a server to function, it doesn't even need an internet connection. Whoever wrote this article has no idea what VLC is, nor could they be bothered to find out.
  • vlc is in some linux distos so will they get banned?

    • The article, not just the summary, is a mess, missing some important details. It says that the software itself has stopped working. This shouldn't be the case if a user has the desktop version of the program. I can only hazard that maybe some mobile versions (e.g. smart phone or features phones) require some sort of ping back from the VLC web site to work. Another possibility is that it's VLC's ability to play online content that has been restricted, but a user can continue to use the app for local playback
      • Another possibility is that it's VLC's ability to play online content that has been restricted, but a user can continue to use the app for local playback (e.g. of files already in the device).

        That wouldn't make sense either. VLC only phones home to check for new versions.

  • It's ironic, given that India is mostly known for stealing technology from other countries, rebranding it as "from india by Raj", and trying to pass that off, that they would ban an open source software project that is freely given to everyone for free.

  • Just write a petition to any state high court and they ban first, release the ban later. If memory serves me right, this has happened once before when some fool of a film studio claimed that VLC was being used to play pirated downloads.

    Not sure what the latest trigger is.

    Having said that DoH is your friend.

  • They blocked the website of a piece of freely redistributable open source software. Where will anyone download it now?

  • The person detained did not bring a laptop; just a thumb drive

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

Working...