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How To Skype In China _HOT_



As of February 2012, Skype provides support through their web support portal, support community, @skypesupport on Twitter, and Skype Facebook page. Direct contact via email and live chat is available through their web support portal. Chat Support is a premium feature available to Skype Premium and some other paid users.




How To Skype In China



To download Skype, you'd probably enter www.skype.com in your browser and look for a download link. If you are in China, however, when you go to www.skype.com, you are automatically redirected to Skype does not ask if you want to be redirected. They also do not inform you of the difference between the regular Skype and the Tom Online version. The websites look very similar. Skype and Microsoft are actively misleading users into thinking that they are using the regular version of Skype.


The regular version of Skype is not blocked in China, but downloading the client is made difficult by Skype and Microsoft. Whenever you try to go to www.skype.com they redirect you to skype.tom.com. One solution is to use a VPN or other circumvention tool when downloading Skype. That way you can avoid the automatic redirection to tom.skype.com.


Another solution is to download the client from a third-party website such as Yahoo. They in turn currently redirect you to the following download link on download.skype.com which seems to work fine in China: SkypeSetupFull.exe.


Anonymous:1. Any deal can be revised. As we write at the end of the story, Microsoft may be considering breaking their deal with Tom altogether (nor out of privacy concerns, though).2. Many domains are indeed DNS poisoned. None of them resolve to a website that works, as far as we know. Skype's partnership with Tom is official. This makes us believe that it's unlikely that www.skype.com is DNS poisoned.3. What Microsoft could do: Make the differences between the official Skype and Tom Skype clear. Offer Chinese users the opportunity to choose what client they want to use. Warn regular Skype users if the user at the other end of the conversation is using Tom. Apologize to Skype users that this has not happened earlier and that their private data may have been shared with the Chinese authorities. There is no law in China that would prohibit Microsoft from doing any of this.


Skype is banned nationwide in the following countries: Guyana, Kuwait, Libya, North Korea, Oman, Qatar, and the UAE.\nSkype is regionally limited, banned by certain ISPs, or periodically blocked in these countries: Bahrain, Belize, Brazil, several Carribean countries, China, Cuba, Egypt, Iran, Jordan, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Myanmar, Pakistan, Paraguay, Panama, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Syria, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey, Vietnam, Russia, Venezuela, and Yemen","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Paul Bischoff","description":"Paul is Comparitech\u2019s editor and a regular commentator on cyber security and privacy topics in national and international media including New York Times, BBC, Forbes, The Guardian and many others. He's been writing about the tech industry since 2012 for publications like Tech in Asia, Mashable, and various startup blogs. \nPaul has an in-depth knowledge of VPNs, having been an early adopter while looking to access the open internet during this time in China.\nHe previously worked in Beijing as an editor for Tech in Asia, and has been writing and reporting on technology for the last decade. He has also volunteered as a teacher for older adults learning basic tech literacy and cyber awareness. You can find him on Twitter at @pabischoff.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/paul-bischoff\/"}},"@type":"Question","name":"Can\u2019t I use a free VPN provider where Skype is banned?","answerCount":1,"acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"Free VPNs typically don't offer sufficient bandwidth for voice and video calls. Paid providers give users access to fast servers that won't diminish call quality or interrupt calls to buffer.\nFurthermore, free VPNs are not to be trusted. They often monitor users' activity while using the VPN and sell data collected to third-party advertisers. They impose bandwidth limits and data caps, and many are even known to carry malware.\nFor Skype users, paid VPNs are far superior.","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Paul Bischoff","description":"Paul is Comparitech\u2019s editor and a regular commentator on cyber security and privacy topics in national and international media including New York Times, BBC, Forbes, The Guardian and many others. He's been writing about the tech industry since 2012 for publications like Tech in Asia, Mashable, and various startup blogs. \nPaul has an in-depth knowledge of VPNs, having been an early adopter while looking to access the open internet during this time in China.\nHe previously worked in Beijing as an editor for Tech in Asia, and has been writing and reporting on technology for the last decade. He has also volunteered as a teacher for older adults learning basic tech literacy and cyber awareness. You can find him on Twitter at @pabischoff.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/paul-bischoff\/","@type":"Question","name":"Does Skype work in China?","answerCount":1,"acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"Skype is intermittently blocked in China, including Skype's website and its actual service. Users report being able to use Skype in China without a VPN, though it is unreliable. A VPN will ensure you can call and chat on Skype without restrictions, and without worrying about government spying.","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Paul Bischoff","description":"Paul is Comparitech\u2019s editor and a regular commentator on cyber security and privacy topics in national and international media including New York Times, BBC, Forbes, The Guardian and many others. He's been writing about the tech industry since 2012 for publications like Tech in Asia, Mashable, and various startup blogs. \nPaul has an in-depth knowledge of VPNs, having been an early adopter while looking to access the open internet during this time in China.\nHe previously worked in Beijing as an editor for Tech in Asia, and has been writing and reporting on technology for the last decade. He has also volunteered as a teacher for older adults learning basic tech literacy and cyber awareness. You can find him on Twitter at @pabischoff.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/paul-bischoff\/","@type":"Question","name":"How to make Skype faster?","answerCount":1,"acceptedAnswer":"@type":"Answer","text":"Skype call quality and reliability depends largely on your available bandwidth. If your calls are of low quality or are frequently interrupted for buffering, then your first step should be to increase bandwidth.\nYou can improve bandwidth by disabling downloads on any devices in your home, including streams and system updates, so that Skype has more bandwidth to work with. Turn off any apps or devices that Skype is sharing bandwidth yet.\nAll of the VPNs we recommend should give you sufficient bandwidth, but it will help to choose a server located near either yourself or the recipient of your call. This will reduce the time it takes for data to travel between you and the other party.","author":"@type":"Person","name":"Paul Bischoff","description":"Paul is Comparitech\u2019s editor and a regular commentator on cyber security and privacy topics in national and international media including New York Times, BBC, Forbes, The Guardian and many others. He's been writing about the tech industry since 2012 for publications like Tech in Asia, Mashable, and various startup blogs. \nPaul has an in-depth knowledge of VPNs, having been an early adopter while looking to access the open internet during this time in China.\nHe previously worked in Beijing as an editor for Tech in Asia, and has been writing and reporting on technology for the last decade. He has also volunteered as a teacher for older adults learning basic tech literacy and cyber awareness. You can find him on Twitter at @pabischoff.\n","url":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/author\/paul-bischoff\/"]} "@context":"http:\/\/schema.org","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":["@type":"ListItem","position":1,"name":"Home","item":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/","@type":"ListItem","position":2,"name":"Blog","item":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/blog\/","@type":"ListItem","position":3,"name":"VPN & Privacy","item":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/blog\/vpn-privacy\/","@type":"ListItem","position":4,"name":"Best VPNs for Skype","item":"https:\/\/www.comparitech.com\/blog\/vpn-privacy\/best-vpn-for-skype\/"]BlogVPN & PrivacyBest VPNs for Skype We are funded by our readers and may receive a commission when you buy using links on our site. Best VPN for Skype in 2023 & how to unblock Skype Skype is blocked in several countries. Using the right VPN will allow you to bypass these blocks and access Skype from anywhere. We take a look at best VPNs to access Skype from any location. Paul Bischoff TECH WRITER, PRIVACY ADVOCATE AND VPN EXPERT @pabischoff UPDATED: January 19, 2022 041b061a72


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