• The US Freedom.gov was collateral damage of LaLiga’s anti-piracy blocks
  • Proton VPN confirmed the block occurred during weekend matches
  • A Spanish court ordered VPN providers to block illegal football streams

LaLiga’s aggressive crusade against illegal football streaming has triggered a diplomatic oddity and a digital rights fiasco, with the Spanish league accidentally blocking access to a United States government website designed to fight internet censorship.

During the weekend’s match schedule, Spanish internet users found themselves unable to access Freedom.gov, a new initiative by the US Department of State and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) intended to help Europeans evade content bans.

flagged on X by David Peterson, General Manager at Proton VPN, who confirmed that the site had become collateral damage in LaLiga’s ongoing war against piracy. The error appears to stem from LaLiga’s tactic of targeting IP addresses associated with Cloudflare, which hosts both pirate streaming sites and legitimate government infrastructure.

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This latest blunder underscores the volatility of the Spanish league’s “whack-a-mole” approach to copyright enforcement. By ordering ISPs to block IP addresses dynamically during match times, the league risks taking down innocent websites sharing the same server space — a phenomenon experts have warned about for months.

Peterson took to X to highlight the absurdity, noting the “massive collateral damage” caused by the blocks.

Affected legitimate sites and services, Peterson reports, include popular social media apps, local banking sites, and productivity apps like ChatGPT, GiftHub, and Microsoft services.

Now, the irony seems even more palpable — a platform funded by the US government to help citizens bypass censorship was itself censored by a European sports league.

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deepening conflict with Cloudflare, accusing the tech giant of not doing enough to remove illegal content.

In response, the league has ramped up its technical enforcement, leading to frequent weekend outages for legitimate sites that rely on Cloudflare’s infrastructure.

The situation recently intensified when a Spanish court issued a landmark ruling requiring NordVPN and Proton VPN to block illegal football streams. While the VPN providers have pushed back against these orders, citing technical impossibility and lack of due process, the blocking of Freedom.gov demonstrates that ISP-level filtering remains a blunt and imprecise instrument.

As these blocks become more aggressive, Spanish users are increasingly looking for ways to maintain open internet access, with Spaniards reportedly turning to Proton VPN to navigate blocks.

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