http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/indonesia-reels-surprise-vimeo-ban/

Tifatul’s Surprise Vimeo Ban Raises Freedom Concerns
By Benjamin Soloway on 07:09 pm May 15, 2014
Category Editor's Choice, Featured, Movies & Music, News, Tech
Tags: Indonesia censorship, Indonesia pornography, Internet, Tifatul Sembiring, 
Vimeo
Jakarta. Indonesia’s film and tech communities gasped collectively on Monday 
when Communications Minister Tifatul Sembiring tweeted from his personal 
account that video sharing site Vimeo would be banned.

As the week wore on, anger mingled with bafflement as some Internet service 
providers (ISPs) blocked the site while others did not. The ministry refrained 
from clarifying its position.

Artists and filmmakers have long seen the decade-old, New York-based site — a 
pioneer in high definition playback — as a refined alternative to YouTube.

“If YouTube is a hawker food court, then Vimeo is a café,” acclaimed Indonesian 
stop motion animator Wahyu Ichwandardi, better known as Pinot, told the Jakarta 
Globe.

The ban came at a moment when films made in Indonesia had begun to attract 
attention on the world stage, with Joshua Oppenheimer’s “The Act of Killing” 
joining the ranks of the most acclaimed documentaries of all time, Daniel Ziv’s 
“Jalanan” taking the victory for best documentary at the Busan festival in 
South Korea and Gareth Evans’ martial arts thriller, “The Raid 2,” showing on 
big screens around the globe.

“Every filmmaker in the world uses Vimeo to share work with colleagues,” 
Oppenheimer said in an email. “Banning it is like banning Microsoft Word 
because pornographers use it to write scripts, or Excel because they use it to 
make their production budgets.”

‘Difficult not to get emotional’

Tifatul tweeted on Monday that the site had been blacklisted for hosting 
pornographic content.

A Ministry of Communications and Information press release on Monday listed the 
bizarre search terms the ministry had used to come to its decision: “Nudie 
Cutie,” “Art of Nakedness” and “Beautiful of Nakedness [sic].”

“Vimeo does allow nudity in some non-sexual and creative contexts, but doesn’t 
allow pornography. We rely on our users to flag violating content for our 
moderators,” Vimeo spokeswoman Jessica Casano-Antonellis said.

Tifatul, a staunch anti-pornography crusader and former head of the 
Islamic-based Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), joined President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono’s cabinet as part of the Democrat-lead ruling coalition after the 
2009 election and has sought to tighten government control over the Internet 
ever since.

In a speech on the Muslim holiday of Idul Ahda in 2009, he blamed a devastating 
Sumatra earthquake and other natural disasters on what he said was the moral 
degradation of society, indicated by the prevalence of pornography.

During his tenure, the ministry has blacklisted thousands of porn sites under a 
controversial anti-pornography law passed in 2008.

In March of this year, he caused an uproar by following a pornographic twitter 
account, which he said he had done by accident.

Earlier this week, he provoked anger with a seemingly flippant response to a 
question on Twitter about a website expressing support for Nigerian terrorist 
group Boko Haram — responsible for thousands of killings and the recent 
kidnapping of over 200 schoolgirls.

Twitter users wondered why he was willing to block sites like Vimeo while 
blowing off requests to censor pro-terrorism sites.

Some critics accused him of banning the video site over a fake campaign film 
making fun of the PKS.

“There is no connection with that, don’t be too narrow-minded, people just made 
it up,” he responded. He said politics had nothing to do with the ban.

“Blocking Vimeo is an example of a government decisions that aims to educate 
but is done in a very stupid way,” Pinot said. “This is evidence that the 
Indonesian government does not have sufficient insight and knowledge to make 
these decisions. Their arguments increasingly show how low their understanding 
of information technology really is.”

Oppenheimer said the ban threatened the strength of Indonesian democracy.

“There is no place in a democracy for banning the tools that we use for the 
free exchange of ideas and information, whether Vimeo or other social media,” 
he said. “If the government is eager to live down the image of thuggery and 
intimidation that we see in ‘The Act of Killing,’ this is certainly not the way 
to go about it.”

If Indonesia let the ban remain in place, he said, more censorship could follow.

“The ban on entire platforms — rather than on individual films — is 
particularly alarming, because it’s easy to imagine that social media will be 
next,” he said.

Aulia Masna, the chief editor at DailySocial, a leading Indonesian tech blog, 
said he found it “very difficult not to get emotional” over the news.

“The fact that a small range of nudity and sexually suggestive videos exist on 
a public service that does not actually promote such themes should not form the 
basis of a blanket censorship that involves the banning of the entire service,” 
he said. “It’s entirely possible that the very logic and reason that drove this 
decision will be used to block other services such as Twitter, YouTube, Tumblr, 
Facebook, Instagram, or even Google. You can easily discover porn and nudity on 
any of those services if you know the terms. These are content platforms for 
the public to use and the public will use them in any way they like.”

He said creative industries would suffer without government support for 
Internet innovation.

“Banning Vimeo entirely is affecting people whose livelihoods depend on having 
access to the service such as advertising professionals, students, educators, 
journalists, filmmakers, animators, and so on,” he said. “This decision to ban 
Vimeo entirely is akin to banning DVD players because there’s porn on DVD.”

Meninaputri Wismurti, director of Jakarta’s underground Q! film festival, which 
celebrates gay and lesbian cinema, said the ban would stand in the way of 
filmmakers, many already on the margins.

“This decision will apply to my film festival,” she said. “Why? Because we 
received films from international filmmakers through this website. If the 
ministry is insisting on blocking the website, then it will limit our moves and 
way of getting good films internationally.”

The US embassy in Jakarta expressed concern over the decision.

“In the debate on Internet freedom, the United States is on the side of 
openness,” embassy spokesman Troy Pederson said. “When ideas are blocked, 
information deleted, conversations stifled, and people constrained in their 
choices anywhere in the world, the Internet is diminished for all.”

 
Vimeo remained accessible through some Indonesian ISPs on Thursday, despite a 
ban announced on Monday. (JG Photo/Safir Makki)

‘Talk first, ban later’

Critics were just as confused by the announcement as they were angered; some 
ISPs banned the site while others did not.

Vimeo itself seemed to have no idea what was going on.

“What’s the latest from Indonesia? Is Vimeo accessible or blocked? Keep us 
posted!” the company tweeted on Tuesday.

The Indonesian Internet Service Provider Association (APJII) on Monday said 
that the ban was coming into effect sporadically as ISPs updated their lists of 
banned sites. But by Thursday, some providers still had not banned the site and 
others had lifted their bans.

Indonesian news portal Tempo reported that the ministry was reconsidering its 
decision, but as of Thursday afternoon Tifatul had not made a definitive 
statement.

On Monday, he tweeted that the ministry would be willing to work with the site 
to remove offending content, which would take away the need for ban — similar 
to the accommodation the ministry reached with YouTube after it was blocked 
briefly in 2008.

“We’re still evaluating our options. It’s a tricky situation!” Vimeo said, in 
response to a tweet from the Jakarta Globe.

“We received a letter of notification from the Republic of Indonesia’s Minister 
of Communications and Information Technology requesting Vimeo block and/or 
remove pornographic material from being accessible in Indonesia on our site. We 
are looking into the matter and hope to resume service for the affected users,” 
Vimeo spokeswoman Casano-Antonellis said.

Donny B.U., executive director of Internet rights group ICT Indonesia, said 
that the ban had never gone into full effect because service providers saw it 
as poorly conceived.

“Some ISPs already unblocked Vimeo, or just simply choose not to ban at all 
from the beginning,” he said. “With the public pressure, especially when the 
minister is not a kind of walk-the-talk person regarding this issue, I believe 
most of the ISPs already realized that the banning request was not based on 
proper reason and procedure.”

Enricko Luckman, a writer for Tech in Asia, said that the government should 
have reached out to Vimeo before blocking the site.

“I just hope that they would use the ‘talk first, ban later’ approach for 
special cases like Vimeo,” he said.

Aulia of DailySocial said the poor implementation of the ban was as revealing 
as the ban itself.

“The fact that… not all ISPs and carriers received the instructions at the same 
time… speaks volumes of the quality of the organization and personnel,” he 
said. “I can only hope that the next government has no such people holding key 
positions.

“It’s almost like [the Communications Ministry] has no interest in catching up 
with the best in the world as quickly as it can with regards to technological 
progress.”

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