Living in Guangzhou and trying to use Legal the same way you would back home? Welcome to one of the most frustrating problems in modern computing. The good news: the right protocol stack makes Legal feel exactly like it does anywhere else. The bad news: 90% of mainstream VPN providers don't ship that stack.
The Legal Question, Plainly
Most people Googling "uk online safety act and vpns" want a simple answer: *"Will I get in trouble?"* The honest answer in 2026 is almost certainly no, but the nuance matters — especially if you're a foreign national, a journalist, a business owner, or you intend to host VPN infrastructure rather than simply use it.
Three Different Layers, Often Conflated
When people talk about "VPN law" they're usually conflating three different things:
- Using a VPN as an end user — almost universally legal worldwide, including in China. Enforcement against individual foreign users for personal use is virtually nonexistent.
- Selling or operating a VPN service inside a country — heavily regulated. China requires a license. Russia maintains a "permitted providers" list. UAE restricts non-licensed VPNs for accessing blocked content.
- Using a VPN to commit a separate crime — this stacks penalties almost everywhere. Fraud, copyright infringement, harassment — the VPN doesn't shield you and may aggravate the sentence.
This distinction matters. "Is a VPN legal?" almost always means layer 1, but the news headlines you've read about arrests usually involve layer 2 or layer 3.
What's True About OxeraVPN
OxeraVPN is operated outside mainland Chinese jurisdiction. Servers run in RAM-only mode — there's no writable disk to retain logs. The provider has no technical capability to hand over user browsing history because no such history is recorded. This is a structural design choice, not a marketing claim.
Practical Guidance for Foreign Users in China
- Use a VPN for personal or business communication, streaming, work tools — completely standard, tens of thousands of expats do this daily.
- Don't run circumvention infrastructure (your own VPN server visible to the public) — that crosses into layer 2.
- Don't use a VPN to commit other offenses (cybercrime, IP theft) — that stacks penalties.
Read Is Using a VPN Legal in China? for the deeper jurisdiction-specific breakdown.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which protocol should I use for Legal in 2026?
Start with VLESS + Reality — it's the closest thing to invisible from a DPI perspective. Fall back to Hysteria2 if you're on a flaky mobile network or the GFW gets twitchy on a sensitive day.
How fast will my connection be?
On a healthy 500 Mbps home line in Hangzhou, expect roughly 172 Mbps of usable VPN throughput on VLESS to Singapore — enough for 4K streaming and HD video calls. Latency to nearby Asian servers is typically 75 ms.
Is OxeraVPN really free to try?
Yes. The Recon Protocol free tier includes 10 GB of data on a 30-day trial, no credit card required. It's enough to verify Legal works in your real conditions before paying anything.
What's the fastest way to get started?
Sign up at dashboard.oxeranet.cloud, install the OxeraVPN app on your device, connect to the nearest Singapore or Hong Kong server, and you're online in under 2 minutes. The free plan is enough to test Legal end-to-end.
The Bottom Line
For 99% of foreign users in 99% of countries, using a reputable VPN is legal, normal, and uncontroversial. Pick a provider that doesn't compromise on logging policy or jurisdiction. Use it for what VPNs are designed for. The rest of the legal complexity is for service operators, not end users.
This page is general information, not legal advice for your specific situation.