Hi Libtech,

Thought some of you may be interested in 
reading my colleague Farieha Aziz's feature 
covering the now year long YouTube ban in 
Pakistan & the larger issues of Internet censorship 
in Pakistan.

http://www.newslinemagazine.com/2013/09/to-block-or-not-to-block/

Farieha is an Amicus Curiae (advisor to the court) for policy
& civil rights, on the ongoing YouTube case. 

More details regarding bolo bhi's work on YouTube case can 
be found here: 
http://bolobhi.org/resources/timelines/youtube-case-updates-by-bolo-bhi/


Best,
Sana

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Director, Bolo Bhi, Advocacy-Policy-Research [http://bolobhi.org] 
Blogger: Dawn.com[http://blog.dawn.com/author/sana-saleem/]
Global Voices: [http://globalvoicesonline.org/author/sana-saleem/]
The Guardian:[ www.guardian.co.uk/profile/sana-saleem]
Blog: http://sanasaleem.com] Twitter: @sanasaleem @bolobhi 






To Block or Not To Block


“We’ve taught YouTube a lesson by banning it and forcing Google to lose out on 
revenue in Pakistan because it did not remove the video.” This was the populist 
response to the ban, which is now almost a year long, on the video-sharing 
platform. But was that really the case?

The ban on YouTube was imposed in September 2012 upon the orders of then prime 
minister, Raja Pervez Ashraf. This was in response to a film, Innocence of 
Muslims, uploaded on the video-sharing platform, which depicted the Prophet 
(PBUH) in a disrespectful manner. Citing the possible breach of law-and-order, 
the domain as a whole was blocked to prevent access to the video. On the face 
of it, it was a preventive measure to stop violence from erupting in reaction 
to the video. However, despite blocking the platform and announcing “Love the 
Prophet Day” with the government declaring it a public holiday, neither of 
these measures stopped the violent protests. News that such a film existed was 
fodder enough for riots.

Violent protests are not new to Pakistan. Be it at the time of the Danish 
cartoons, the release of the film Fitna or the caricatures competition hosted 
on Facebook – they all led to the loss of lives and property, when mobs took to 
the streets to vent their anger. And all of the damage was internal and cost 
Pakistanis, not anyone else.

Similarly, the assertion that YouTube was taught a lesson is also misplaced. 
YouTube’s earnings from countries based on ads have to do with its local 
presence. Monetary benefit based on views is only generated when there exists a 
local version of YouTube in the country. As is explained further in this 
article, YouTube or Google do not have a local or legal presence in Pakistan.

The thing to understand about the internet is this: It is designed in a manner 
in which 10 roads lead to one destination. If one is blocked, there are 
alternate routes. This should be evident enough through proxies, which have 
been used to circumvent blockades, time and again. The other fundamental 
distinction to be made is that unlike the broadcast medium, what one does not 
want to see, one will not see online. Unless one consciously makes an effort to 
search and, most importantly, click to visit a page or website, it will not 
just appear.

So what did the ban achieve? If anything, it highlighted an unknown video and 
unknown filmmaker and put them in the limelight – few people knew either 
existed before the ban. The ban peaked people’s curiosity, and the most 
unfortunate part is that the traffic to the video surged exponentially after 
attention was drawn towards it due to the ban. What the ban did not do however 
was prevent violent protests. If the ban was supported to register one’s 
protest against Google and YouTube for not removing the video, why did Spotflux 
and Hotspot Shield become household names, shared as good options to circumvent 
the ban and access the platform? If the intention was to remove oneself from 
the platform, why is it being accessed by hordes, despite the ban? And what is 
the point in keeping the website blocked when it is being accessed anyway?

Much of this and more came up in the ongoing hearing at the Lahore High Court 
regarding a petition seeking to overturn the ban on YouTube. Initially, during 
the hearings in April, the honourable judge was of the view that the video must 
be blocked but not the whole website as it contains other valuable content – 
particularly of educational worth. There were two approaches to this: A policy 
approach and a technology solution.

The policy approach involved asking YouTube (Google’s subsidiary) to block the 
video. There was much back and forth between the Ministry of Information 
Technology (MOIT) and Google, but it resulted in little success. What emerged 
through the discourse in court was that YouTube, as a policy, does not remove 
content that does not meet the criteria in its Community Guidelines. According 
to the Google Transparency report 2013, Google “received inquiries from 20 
countries regarding YouTube videos that contain clips of the movie, Innocence 
of Muslims: Australia, Bangladesh, Brazil, Brunei, Djibouti, Egypt India, 
Indonesia, Iran, Jordan, Lebanon, Malaysia, Maldives, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi 
Arabia, Singapore, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, and the United States. 
Australia, Egypt, and the United States requested that we review the video to 
determine if they violated our Community Guidelines, which they did not. The 
other 17 countries requested that we remove the videos. We restricted videos 
from view in Indonesia, India, Jordan, Malaysia, Russia, Saudi Arabia, 
Singapore and Turkey. Due to difficult circumstances, we temporarily restricted 
videos from view in Egypt and Libya.”

The other question that arose was: Why did YouTube restrict access to the video 
in other countries but not in Pakistan? The response to this was as follows: 
Access to the video was restricted in countries where Google was registered and 
had a country level domain – and neither exist in Pakistan. If Google is 
registered in a country, then the local laws are applied. Additionally, if 
country-level domains exist, the content is restricted at that level, not on 
dot com. Neither Google nor its subsidiary, YouTube, have any legal presence in 
Pakistan, neither is there a country-level domain.

What would it take to get Google to localise in Pakistan was the next question. 
There exists a thing called intermediary liability protection which in Pakistan 
exists for Internet Service Providers (ISPs). This is basically a legal clause 
that stipulates that the service provider cannot be held liable for the actions 
of its users. In more simple terms, a telecom company for instance, cannot be 
held responsible for what its users say to one another through the use of their 
services. This, for online platforms, does not exist in Pakistan.

In the hearing held on April 26, 2013, the judge instructed the MOIT to seek a 
response from Google whether it would agree to localise if criminal 
intermediary liability protection was extended to it by the court for an 
interim period, until parliament legislated, and if that would enable the 
particular video to be blocked. Google in return asked the court for a period 
of four weeks to submit a written response on the matter, which was submitted 
in July. The thrust of Google’s response was this: “The decision as to whether 
to offer this service is a business, legal and commercial decision, and takes 
into consideration, for example, whether there is adequate legal certainty and 
protections for the provision of such online services in the country.” So not 
only would other considerations factor in for localisation in addition to 
intermediary liability, Google’s letter stated that without a legislated 
notice-and-take-down system through which very specific requests are routed, 
there can be no compliance with requests. One option that Google did offer was 
interstitial warnings, which is what led to the reopening of YouTube in 
Bangladesh in June.

An interstitial is a warning screen that appears as a disclaimer before a video 
displaying in writing: the content in this video may be inappropriate. The only 
way to watch the video is by clicking to proceed to it. The important 
distinction here is ‘should one choose to.’ And one very simply can choose not 
to by never clicking to proceeding to the video. With that, the chapter on what 
Google could do to resolve this problem came to an end. Next it moved to what 
MOIT and Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) could do.

During the hearings in April, when questioned why particular links to the video 
had not been blocked but the website as a whole had, PTA officials had this to 
say: They would block one link and hundreds more would appear. That is when the 
decision was taken to block at the IP level. This decision, it was said, was 
taken by the IMCEW (Inter-Ministerial Committee for the Evaluation of 
Websites), and a document with the relevant notification was produced in court.

According to PTA, blocking takes place at the ISP level and depending on the 
ISP – whether it is a large one or small – and the different equipment they 
have, they can block up to a certain limit. With the video in question, one, 
the capacity to block links to this video had been exceeded. Two, while they 
were able to manage blocking HTTP traffic, they were unsuccessful in blocking 
HTTPS traffic. In a written submission made to the court by PTA on July 25, the 
authority maintained there was no system in Pakistan capable of blocking HTTPS 
traffic. In an earlier hearing, a PTA official had remarked that attempting to 
tamper with HTTPS traffic would be detrimental for commerce and industry.

Asked if upgrading capability and investing in filtering equipment could 
guarantee that the video and links to it would remain blocked 100%, the answer 
to this query was, no. This is what led the judge to question why one should 
then seek a solution that doesn’t guarantee results. Alternately, why not try 
and raise tolerance levels and make tools available that allow blocking at 
home, since morality is very subjective and varies family to family.

It is at this critical juncture that the matter rests and the next steps in 
terms of what the solution is, remains to be decided. On July 25, the judge 
issued instructions to the Secretary IT and Minister of State to appear at the 
next hearing so it could be communicated to them what everyone’s input has been 
and what the court’s mindset is on the issue. Twice, both the secretary and the 
minister did not appear and excused themselves. Once the date for the next 
hearing was set for September, alarming statements started being issued by the 
ministry.

The minister – and the ministry – have been in pursuit of filters from day one. 
Nothing on the internet can be blocked 100%. It is pertinent to mention here 
that even China with its ‘Great Firewall,’ which boasts an investment of with 
millions into it and with a battalion manning it, has not been able to succeed 
in blocking efforts 100%. Citizens have found ways to side-step and access 
blocked domains and content.

Despite how the discourse on the issue has evolved in court, the ministry has 
vehemently stuck to filters as the ultimate solution even though the risks 
associated with them have been pointed out repeatedly.

Accepting filters to reopen one platform will have terrible ramifications. 
Blocking a domain is one thing and does not involve invasive methods. But 
blocking encrypted traffic through methods such as man-in-the-middle attacks, 
which mask a third-party as the intended recipient to acquire data, is a 
dangerous deal to strike. As it is, there is no check on the powers of state 
bodies. What would happen when unfettered powers and technology tools are at 
their disposal? It’s no secret how in the past political content has been 
blocked under the garb of national security. If filters are introduced, who is 
to know – leave alone check – what is taken down in the name of anti-Islamic 
and ‘immoral’ content. And what happens to all communication online, that is 
left open for anybody to scour.

This is the first time a reasoned discourse has taken place – and the court has 
provided the platform where that could happen. Where else will government 
officials be in a position to come face-to-face with civil society 
counterparts, and actually listen – even if not heed – to what they say. But 
now it is for the top officials of the bureaucracy to adopt a more 
multi-stakeholder and participatory approach. It won’t be enough to issue 
statements and remain disconnected from the proceedings. The matter needs to be 
resolved by taking into account views of all stakeholders instead of making 
decisions unilaterally.

This article was originally published in the September issue ofNewsline.
Farieha Aziz is a Karachi-based journalist and teacher. She joinedNewsline in 
2007, rising to assistant editor. Farieha was awarded the APNS award for Best 
Investigative Report (Business/Economic) for the year 2007-2008. She has a 
masters in English from the University of Karachi. Find her on 
twitter@FariehaAziz.



Find more articles by Farieha Aziz

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