As per betfury's restricted list of terms (if I saw correctly), I am allowed to register, but as per my countries law, it is prohibited.
Well, in that case, you can use the Betfury site without problems. But keep in mind that if the authorities in your country start to regulate it, and Betfury decides to adjust to them by adding the country to the list of restricted countries, then you will not be able to use your betfury account as usual. In this case, the site won't let you authorize because the corresponding pop-up window will appear every time.
I am USA so I am restricted. I could play around and use a vpn but I don't.
If you want to play online betting find out if there is a proper way or casino. If there is not you would be triple gambling.
1) the bet at the casino
2) the casino refuses payment if you win because you are not allowed to play.
3) your government figures out you bet and if you got paid takes the winning or just charges you with the crime of playing.
so 3x the bets for one bet.
I agree with you but a point i will address is the lack of protection casinos have in place to stop it from happening. I am from an unrestricted country but lived in the uk for a time, and since the UKGC is the worst regulatory body ive played under, bringing in constant changes to "protect players", which is just a nice way of saying to make the games less fun and to benefit casinos by not changing the glaring issues with terms & conditions, I quickly opted to avoid that mess and use a vpn to connect to where i am actually from. I do have the benefit of having a passport from there and an address, even when i didnt live there, though, so kyc was never an issue. Almost never. But my point is, i exclusively played outside of the uk regulated zone so i could play without restrictions of 2+seconds minimum between spins, no fast spins, less favourable bonuses, etc, and not once had an issue, aside from william hill who detect a vpn quite consistently. For clarity i use proton vpn, the only one worth having for my use case, due to it being open source and forms part of the broader proton suite such as mail, pass and drive. It is fairly low risk until you bring kyc into the equation, but some sites dont require it unless you are a high roller, which im about as far away from being as the sun is to us.