Ticket ok: Pakistan lifted the ban after 10 days


The Pakistan Telecommunications Authority said in a statement on Monday that it was reversing a decision announced 10 days ago to ban ticket ok after a Chinese-owned application committed to moderate content in accordance with local law.

The regulator said on social media that it has been assured by the management that they will block all accounts frequently in spreading obscenity and immorality.

The Pakistan Telecommunications Authority said on October 9 that it would ban Tiktok due to complaints that it hosted “unethical” and “vulgar” content. But some analysts said the move was likely about censoring videos that were critical of the government.
Tickets ok that many countries have faced obstacles. India was A huge market for tickets ok Amid rising tensions with Beijing, New Delhi authorities banned the application in late June, along with several other Chinese-owned services. In the United States, the Trump administration has been fighting in court to block the application, citing national security and data concerns. A U.S. federal judge ruled in late September that Trump could not yet force him to remove it from the App Stores.

Ticket OK, which allows users to upload and share short videos, has been installed about 43 million times in Pakistan. It makes the country its 12th largest market, according to research firm CensorTower.

A Ticket OK spokesperson said in a statement, “We are pleased to see that the Ticket OK application has been re-established in Pakistan and we will continue to enable Pakistani voices and creativity in a safe environment.”

Pakistan started using its internet control even before the ticket was issued. Authorities blocked YouTube from 2012 to 2016 after an anti-Islam short film was posted.

In 2016, the country enacted the controversial Cyber ​​Security Act to regulate Internet content. Which authorizes the blocking of a variety of content for a variety of reasons, including “the glory or integrity of Islam, the security or defense of Pakistan.”

Between June 2018 and May 2019, more than 800,000 websites were blocked in the country, according to Human Rights Watch and Freedom House.

Many of the applications that have been banned this year have already been shut down. In September, for example, the government said it had blocked access to dating apps Tinder, Content, Scout, Grinder and Seihin based on “unethical and indecent content.”

Selena Wang and Sofia Saifi contributed to the report.

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