WikiBit 2026-04-05 16:27Key Points Despite years of government restrictions, millions of Iranians continue using Telegram through VPN technology Pavel Durov, Telegram’s
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How 50 Million Iranians Are Circumventing the Telegram Ban Using VPNs in 2026
Years after implementing a nationwide prohibition on Telegram, Irans censorship strategy has spectacularly failed to achieve its objectives.
This assessment comes directly from Telegram co-founder Pavel Durov, who revealed on Friday that millions of Iranian citizens continue accessing the messaging platform by leveraging virtual private network technology.
VPN services function by redirecting internet data through international servers, effectively masking users actual geographic locations and enabling them to circumvent regional blocking measures.
According to Durov, Tehrans strategy aimed to migrate the population toward government-sanctioned messaging platforms that authorities could easily surveil. The outcome proved to be the exact opposite—a widespread embrace of privacy-enhancing technologies.
Iran banned Telegram years ago, with a result similar to Russia. The government hoped for mass adoption of its surveillance messaging apps, but got mass adoption of VPNs instead. Now 50M members of the Digital Resistance in Iran are joined by 50M+ more in Russia.
— Pavel Durov (@durov) April 4, 2026
“The government hoped for mass adoption of its surveillance messaging apps, but got mass adoption of VPNs instead,” Durov stated.
His estimates place Irans VPN user base at approximately 50 million individuals. A comparable number of Russian citizens are employing identical circumvention methods.
Complete Network Shutdown Across Iran
The digital landscape in Iran deteriorated further in January 2026 when authorities implemented a comprehensive internet shutdown. This drastic measure coincides with intensifying regional hostilities involving Israel, the United States, and Iran, with the blackout continuing indefinitely.
Despite these severe restrictions, portions of the population maintain internet connectivity through alternative channels. One prominent workaround involves Starlink, the orbital internet service operated by SpaceX. While Iranian authorities have officially prohibited Starlink usage, enforcement remains incomplete.
Another emerging solution is BitChat, an innovative application that operates independently of traditional internet infrastructure. The platform establishes mesh networks through Bluetooth connections among proximate devices. Each smartphone functions as a node, transmitting messages to other BitChat-enabled phones within signal range.
This architecture allows BitChat to maintain functionality even when conventional internet services and satellite connections face complete disruption.
BitChat Emerges as Protest Communication Tool
BitChat has previously demonstrated its utility during government-imposed internet shutdowns.
When Nepal implemented social media restrictions in September 2025 amid widespread demonstrations, BitChat experienced a surge exceeding 48,000 installations within Nepal during that week. Protesters successfully removed the Nepali government from power during the same month.
Madagascar witnessed a comparable increase in BitChat adoption during concurrent protest movements.
Durov characterized this technological shift as digital defiance, referring to what he described as “50 million members of the digital resistance in Iran.”
The comprehensive internet blackout initiated by Iranian authorities in January 2026 remained active at the time of Durovs Friday statement.
The post How 50 Million Iranians Are Circumventing the Telegram Ban Using VPNs in 2026 appeared first on Blockonomi.
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