Pakistan Might Block Wikipedia for Hurting Religious Sentiments
Wikipedia is arguably the greatest source of information on the
internet, since it acts as a compendium of crowd sourced knowledge that
is well edited which makes it quite reliable from an academic point of
view. Given its status as an objective resource of information, the
online encyclopedia will certainly contain content that certain
religious groups might find objectionable.
With all of that having been said and now out of the way, it is important to note that the government of Pakistan has threatened to ban Wikipedia
if the online platform does not remove supposed “sacrilegious content”
from its servers. The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority has already
moved to “degrade” Wikipedia in the country for a period of 48 hours,
and a permanent ban might ensue if the supposedly objectionable content
is not removed.
While the Pakistani authorities have not yet
defined what specific sacrilegious content it has objecting to, it
wouldn’t be a stretch to imagine that a ban could come into effect
rather quickly. Pakistan has a long history of banning popular platforms
out of a concern regarding the content that they are bringing to the
table, and it is by no means alone in the region in that respect.
Wikipedia was approached for blocking/removal of the said contents by issuing a notice under applicable law & court order(s). An opportunity of hearing was also provided, however, the platform neither complied by removing the blasphemous content nor appeared before the Authority. pic.twitter.com/6dWRcbxHGB
— PTA (@PTAofficialpk) February 1, 2023
"Instead of blocking Wikipedia, simply block access to those specific pages or content.", commented one user.
If elephants in the corridors of power were smart enough, they would maintain a team of editors to take down/ report content within Wikipedia instead of creating a public fiasco like this.
Then again, Pakistan's machinery is soaked in myopia. 'Knowledge Economy' down the drain.— Zaki Khalid (@misterzedpk) February 1, 2023
The prospective ban of Wikipedia is shocking!
— Economy of Pakistan (@Pakistanomy) February 2, 2023
Regulator needs to understand:
•Wikipedia is a non profit organization, closure will be our loss only.
•Anyone can edit Wikipedia, some pages can be edited by top editors only (we can).
•You can ban pages rather than easyway out.
On the other hand, India has recently made overtures to exert
greater control over the information that its citizens can access
online. The aggressive takedowns of the BBC documentary which analyzed
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Singh Modi’s role in the Gujrat Riots of
2002 suggest a more active approach from the Indian government, and this
is indicative of a wider trend in the South Asian region overall.
TikTok
found itself banned in South Asia back in 2021, and YouTube was banned
in Pakistan for a full three years after a blasphemous video of the
Prophet Muhammad was uploaded and subsequently not taken down. This is
showing a dangerous trend that might deprive the people of South Asia
from free and unrestricted access to resources of information and
community spaces on the internet.
It will be interesting to see
how this plays out. Pakistan is not nearly as big of a market as India,
so tech companies might be willing to pull out if it tries to exert too
much control.