@anurag_bhatia Telegram also doesn't work with ISPs that use Airtel as their main peer.
I tried traceroute with a local ISP which peers with Airtel, and the connection drops when it reaches Airtel's network.
@Bhavani_00007 Brave is based on Chromium so it is basically same as Chrome underneath.
So you won't face any compatibility issues.
It makes no sense to use Chrome rather than Brave because Brave is basically a better version of Chrome.
@That_Counsellor As far as I know, I think you need to contact customer service and ask them to enable bridge mode.
You can't enable by yourself in Airtel.
@Cartidise Not just that, you can also set your Wi-Fi hotspot band (2.4ghz or 5ghz), set security (Open/WPA2/WPA3) and even enable Wi-Fi 6 functionality.
This gives us more flexibility over speed, efficiency and security.
@Stellanutellaxo Nope. Instagram doesn't check list of installed apps in your device. It doesn't have the permission to do so, you can check that in the list of permissions.
So the ban might be due to other factors, not because you installed X in your device.
@BunkWire2X8 The restrictions are only for VPN companies, not users.
Users can connect to any VPN freely.
Even banned VPNs like Cloudflare WARP works fine in India.
@imYadav31 They probably just said random number because they don't want to share their original number or the employee might be typed the number wrong which just happens to be your number.
Not much of concern. You can ignore it.
@notnild Kinda, but not fully.
Only the VPNs that have physical servers in India and isn't compliant with the new VPN laws are banned. (E.g., Cloudflare WARP).
But still they all work fine, there's no restrictions that block VPN connectivity in India.