A day after 30 people protested in front of Jordan's communications ministry, calling for the blocking of pornographic sites, the minister of communications and information technology, Atef al-Tal, surprised human rights activists and organisations by saying: "The ministry is discussing amending the communications law to include clean internet services, free from pornography and other bad sites." The head of the campaign to block porn sites, Mohamed al-Rauod, said: "A youth group implemented this sit-in pressing the ministry to issue a decree to block pornographic sites." Activists who wish to defend internet freedom in Jordan and proponents of personal privacy have started a campaign on social networking sites against the decree, under the slogan "Baaraf Ahmy Haly, Msh Shogl el Hkoma Thgeb El Net" (I Can Protect Myself, It's Not The Government's Problem). The counter campaign aims to increase awareness among citizens on how to protect themselves without governmental intervention, warning against repressing public freedom and the right to information. Is this policy threatening the right to information? Legal expert Yahya Shakeer said: "There is no reason to demand pornographic sites be blocked as long as families can subscribe to a safe internet service and block the things they think will harm their children". Shakeer added: "The absolute blocking even for adults will maintain 'the guardianship policy' which is not different from creating reasons to increase censorship to include political sites, for example those taking about Shia values which may decrease pluralism and restrict freedom." Minister al-Tal declared that the ministry was working with an Australian company in order to offer a protection programme for free in six weeks. Technical expert Raad Nishiwat said internet sites like news, advertisements, pornography, or others that use u p internet bandwith may blocked according to the hired company's modus operandi, a procedure that is rarely used in different countries. Many human rights activists agreed that internet monitoring or censoring websites threatened basic human rights and made Jordan sub-par with other free countries. It could also lead to the government taking non-monitored procedures against citizens. The freedom to information and of expression right have been ingrained in Jordanian law since 1995.
GMT 19:38 2018 Saturday ,13 January
Facebook joins Europol talks to fight Islamist propagandaGMT 10:23 2018 Wednesday ,03 January
Launch of bird collision avoidance system will save lives, moneyGMT 18:36 2018 Monday ,01 January
WhatsApp messaging service returns after global outageGMT 16:56 2017 Wednesday ,27 December
Hamilton apologises for criticising dress-wearing nephewGMT 19:06 2017 Tuesday ,26 December
Six Arab Instagram stars get their very own three-part reality showGMT 17:46 2017 Monday ,25 December
China shuts down more than 13,000 websites in past three yearsGMT 09:50 2017 Monday ,25 December
Artist 'released' in China after Liu Xiaobo tributeGMT 08:56 2017 Monday ,25 December
Where's Santa? US-Canadian military command tracking St NickMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor