Aug 20, 2013 · YouTube is currently banned in Pakistan; To access YouTube, one must use proxy softwares Proxy softwares are not easy to use or setup, they usually require some sort of common sense, that obviously most of the common people lack 🙂 We see that most of the people in this country are only interested in using YouTube for songs, movies and other
Jul 22, 2020 · The Supreme Court of Pakistan hints of YouTube being banned in Pakistan due to the unregulated content posted on it related to Judiciary and Armed Forces. ISLAMABAD: YouTube will remain blocked 'indefinitely' in Pakistan, a government official said Saturday as experts failed to find a way to filter content deemed offensive and blasphemous. Jan 19, 2016 · The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) has declared the YouTube website as 'unbanned' recently and has advised Internet users to 'surf safely'. Here are some other countries who have banned social media sites: China. The Chinese government has banned over 3,000 websites under its policy of Internet censorship. Jan 18, 2016 · Pakistan's government on Monday ordered the country's telecom regulator to lift a ban on YouTube within 48 hours, a senior Pakistani official told the Financial Times.
TikTok will be banned in Pakistan unless it cracks down on "immoral, obscene, and vulgar content," the country's government has said. The warning came after Pakistan blocked live streaming app Bigo.
23 Things That Are Banned In Pakistan But You Still Go Jan 31, 2017 YouTube still blocked in Pakistan: PTA | The Express Tribune YouTube still blocked in Pakistan: PTA. if the criteria for banning youtube were to apply then google search as well as any other search engine should also be banned for the reasons he stated.
Breaking: YouTube Banned in Pakistan
The Pakistan government repeatedly asked YouTube to remove the video, but were repeatedly rebuffed by the California company claiming that it would be a violation of free speech. YouTube’s refusal led to a 2012 Supreme Court ban of the world’s largest video provider for “blasphemous content.” In 2008, Pakistan banned YouTube over videos depicting the Prophet Muhammad. Muslims generally believe any physical depiction of Islam's prophet is blasphemous. Comments (0)