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Order blocking porn sites a Modi "ruse" to create a government controlled web filter in India?, wonders NYT

By Our Representative
In a stinging article, the โ€œNew York Timesโ€ (NYT) has accused the Government of India (GoI) of โ€œblockingโ€ Indiaโ€™s 857 porn sites โ€œwithout warning or explanationโ€, in defiance of a Supreme Court โ€œdecision.โ€ Quoting Nikhil Pahwa, editor and publisher of MediaNama, which monitors digital policy, NYT says, this has sent fears that the GoI is โ€œusing pornography as โ€˜a ruseโ€™ to create a government-controlled web filter for India.โ€
โ€œThis one is a clear attempt by this government to control the Internet in India,โ€ the top American daily quotes the expert as saying. โ€œItโ€™s not just one incident. There are numerous battles, all linked to one another, for free speech and Internet freedom that are being fought in the country right nowโ€.
Interestingly, the Modi government has followed footsteps of Pakistan, where the government similarly blocked 1,000 sites in 2011, with the decision to add "more" to the list. The Pak decision also led to internet service providers saying there was a list of "over 170,000 websites", and it was "not feasible for any operator" to block all of them.
Qualifying the Modi government decision as the single most important incident of banning so many number of websites at one time, David Barstow, writing in NYT says, the Government of India just followed the list provided by โ€œan anti-pornography activist.โ€ And no sooner the blocking was effective, there was a rush to see whether particular sites had been blocked.
โ€œWithin hours, social media platforms in India lit up with complaints from people trying to visit pornography sites only to find either a blank screen or a cryptic message saying the site had been blocked โ€˜per instructionsโ€™ from Indiaโ€™s Department of Telecommunicationsโ€, NYT says.
โ€œBecause the government made no official announcement about why it was censoring so many websites, much remained unclear about its intentions, including how it chose which sites to block. According to Internet service providers in India, thousands of other pornography websites were unaffected by the orderโ€, it adds.
The top daily underlines, โ€œAdding to the confusion, the government acted just weeks after Indiaโ€™s Supreme Court declined a request to block access to online pornography. In rejecting the request, Indiaโ€™s chief justice, HL Dattu, said adults had a fundamental right to watch pornography within the privacy of their own homes.โ€
The man who whose list the Government of India acted is Kamlesh Vaswani, a lawyer who failed to persuade the Supreme Court to block online pornography. NYT notes, now, after the blocking instructions went out to internet service providers, he thanked Prime Minister Narendra Modi for โ€œtaking a step that the Supreme Court would not.โ€
Vaswani, 43, is a private lawyer from Madhya Pradesh โ€œdecidedโ€ to begin a legal crusade against online pornography in response to the brutal gang rape of a 23-year-old woman on a New Delhi bus in 2012. With help from a college engineering professor, Vaswani โ€œanalyzedโ€ traffic data for pornography websites and came up with a list of the most popular sites. This list of 857 websites is what he asked the Supreme Court to block.
โ€œAfter the Supreme Court rejected his petition, Vaswani gave his list of 857 websites to Pinky Anand, once a top lawyer for Mr. Modiโ€™s Bharatiya Janata Party and now a top lawyer for Mr. Modiโ€™s government. It was Ms. Anand, he said, who delivered his list to the Department of Telecommunicationsโ€, NYT notes.
The letter asking internet service providers to block pornographic sites did not give any reason, NYT says, quoting Dinesh Chandran of the Asianet Satellite Communication Ltd. โ€œIt is a simple letter with instructions to block the aforesaid websites The government gives no explanation for why it wants a website blocked, and internet service providers have little choice but to comply. For us, the Department of Telecommunications is the government.โ€
As for government officials, they too have no explanation. While one official, quoted by NYT, says, the decision to block the sites was taken because they were โ€œfound to be spreading antisocial activities as hyperlinksโ€, another said, โ€œthe ban was temporary, in place only until the government adopted new regulations to block child pornography.โ€

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