Tech

Twitter lifts its ban on porn, atheism tweets in Pakistan

As if there’s anything else on the Internet.

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Kevin Collier

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Twitter has lifted its ban on “blasphemous” and “unethical” accounts and tweets in Pakistan, after blocking the content at the behest of the country’s government.

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That means that, save a few Twitter handles that have been suspended for presumably other reasons, Pakistanis are now free to again search for Twitter’s juciest tidbits. Those range from tweets from “proud atheists” like @Hafsa1990 to American porn star Belle Knox, who called out Twitter’s censorship of tweets in Pakistan when the block  took effect in May.

Shout out to all my fans in Pakistan : the PTA might not like me, but I like you! <3

— Belle Knox (@belle_knox) May 28, 2014

Twitter users in Pakistan also are finally free to again search the hot phrase “burn quaran,” the only banned search term. Results currently include what books look like if they’re burned, as well as what appears to be a woman wiping her rear with its pages.

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Twitter’s stated reasoning for the ban, as well as for its reversal, are curious, and it indicates just how vague its policy for government censorship can be.

“On May 18, 2014, we made an initial decision to withhold content in Pakistan based on information provided to us by the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority,” the company said in a blog post quoted on Chilling Effects, a website that tracks government censorship. “We have reexamined the requests and, in the absence of additional clarifying information from Pakistani authorities, have determined that restoration of the previously withheld content is warranted.”

The company has come under fire for kowtowing to governments’ censorship demands via a two-year-old tool called Country Withheld Content. In Turkey, after the country ordered Internet providers to deny citizens access to Twitter and YouTube, Twitter agreed to selectively censor material the Turkish government wanted withheld. As it turns out, the accounts Twitter agreed to block were known for publishing accounts of alleged government corruption.

Of course, a ban can only do so much. In countries where Twitter is blocked—first Turkey, and now Iraq—useage of Tor, a free browser that allows users to both hide their tracks and view censored material—has skyrocketed.

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Illustration by Jason Reed

 
The Daily Dot