AirRaid wrote:
> Pakistan blocks 'objectionable' YouTube
>
>
>
> (CNN) -- Pakistan has become the latest country to block access to the
> video-sharing Web site YouTube on the grounds that one or more videos
> on the site offend Islam, authorities said Monday.
>
>
> Protests burn a Danish flag in Karachi over the publication of
> drawings depicting the Prophet Mohammed.
>
> The Pakistani government is also asking YouTube to remove
> "objectionable content," said Nabiha Mehmood, a spokeswoman for the
> Pakistani Telecommunications Authority.
>
> If YouTube removes the video or videos that concern Pakistan, she
> said, the government may once again let its people post and view video
> clips.
>
> It is unclear what the video or videos in question depict, but a PTA
> official, who asked not to be identified, told the Associated Press
> that the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority blocks Web sites that
> show controversial drawings of the Prophet Mohammed.
>
> Such drawings were originally printed in Danish newspapers in 2006 and
> were reprinted by some papers earlier this month, sparking protests
> throughout Pakistan, with demonstrators burning Danish flags and
> effigies of Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen.
>
> Wahal us Siraj, one of the founders of the Internet Service Providers
> Association of Pakistan, told CNN Monday that the telecommunications
> authority sent him a link to a YouTube video that concerned Pakistani
> authorities. A click on that link Monday yielded a message saying the
> "video has been removed due to terms of use violation."
>
> In a statement released Monday, YouTube did not address the Pakistani
> government blocking access to its site. However, it said that an issue
> related to its site in Pakistan affected the access of users around
> the globe to YouTube for about two hours on Sunday.
>
> "Traffic to YouTube was routed according to erroneous Internet
> Protocols, and many users around the world could not access our site,"
> the statement said.
>
> YouTube added, "We have determined that the source of these events was
> a network in Pakistan. We are investigating and working with others in
> the Internet community to prevent this from happening again."
>
> The 3-year-old video sharing Web site has exploded in popularity by
> letting ordinary people post their own videos online and watch videos
> that others have posted. Yet the Web site's growth also has spawned
> efforts around the world to regulate the site.
>
> Authorities in Brazil, China, Iran, Morocco, Myanmar (also known as
> Burma), Syria and Thailand have blocked access to YouTube in the last
> few years, according to Reporters Without Borders, a press advocacy
> organization.
>
> The countries acted after concluding that YouTube videos were
> subversive (China), immoral (Iran), embarrassing to well-known figures
> (Brazil) or critical of a country's king (Thailand), the group said.
>
> Governments also have sought to regulate user-supplied Internet
> content to stymie allegations that they abuse human rights, the group
> said.
>
> A few months ago, YouTube took down videos posted by an award-winning
> Egyptian human rights advocate that showed what he described as police
> abuse. YouTube subsequently restored his account and let him continue
> posting videos.
>
> In Pakistan, a committee made up of representatives from various
> government ministries ordered the Pakistani Telecommunications
> Authority to block YouTube access, Mehmood said.
>
> The authority sent a letter to Internet service providers on Friday
> evening ordering them to prevent people in Pakistan from visiting
> YouTube, she said.
>
> The decision has received mixed reactions.
>
> "Some people are quite upset and screaming. They say they have been
> using YouTube regularly," said Siraj, who helped found an association
> representing about 50 Internet service providers in Pakistan,
> including Micronet Broadband, where he is the chief executive officer.
> "There are others who say that YouTube is full of videos ... that are
> damaging to the character of children."
>
> Roughly 3 to 5 million of Pakistan's 165 million people have Internet
> access, the Internet Service Providers Association of Pakistan says.
>
> Reporters Without Borders condemned the government's decision
>
> The group said in a statement on its Web site that Pakistani
> authorities cited an increase in the proportion of "non-Islamic
> objectionable material" on YouTube.
>
> "It should not be up to the (Pakistan Telecommunications Authority) to
> order this kind of blocking," the group's statement. "Such a decision
> should be taken by the courts, not by a body that is under the
> government's control."
>
> YouTube is a subsidiary of Google Inc., which bought the site in 2006
> for nearly $1.7 billion.
>
>
> http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/02/25/pakistan.youtube/index.html
HOW TO BECOME A DHIMMI SHIITHEAD MOSLEM - this is how: fuck goats, fuck
your mother (nikomak), molest children, wear a beekeepers outfit all the
time, never shower or bath, beat your wives, learn terrorist activities
at a maddrassa, wipe your ass with stones, sell the donkey you fucked to
a nearby village, marry a nine year-old , send your child off to an
indoctrination camp, practice thighing with little kids, ............
Practice all those and you too could become a prophet !!
Elif air ab tizak mohammad !!!!
info@muslimmatch.com or apache@muslimmatch.com or
politicsIranian@googlegroups.com
--
moslem cartoon character mohammad and his bumchum allaah were child
molesting goat fuckers and nikomaks
_
/'_/)
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/ /
/'_'/' '/'__'7,
/'/ / / /" /_\
('( ' /' ')
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'\' _.7'
\ (
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Up your ass mohammad - Elif air ab tizak!!!
info@muslimmatch.com or apache@muslimmatch.com or
politicsIranian@googlegroups.com