Dubai Censoring The Net - Instablogs
Dubai Censoring The Net
Marco Villa , Connecticut: Mar 23 2009
Made Popular Mar 24 2009
United Arab Emirates :

Dubai Censoring The Net

Yesterday I titled a post “Is Dubai Becoming The Next Saudi Arabia?” The post concerned the soon-to-be legally enforced code of conduct in Duabi whose crafting was overseen by none other than Crown Prince Shiekh Maktoum.

The code was drafted in response to the well-publicized controversy involving a British couple whom were arrested and subsequently deporting having sex on a public beach.

Recognizing that Dubai tolerant culture has allowed it to flourish by welcoming skilled foreigners who otherwise would steer clear of a conservative country, the code states that such tolerance must remain a bedrock but then offers a list of regulations that would make null an pretension of making that so.

The code seeks to uphold local sensibilities by, for example, limiting the number of alcohol-serving bars, beaches were bikins are allowed and moving strip clubs into “Red Light” districts. The latter is reasonable, Europe does the same; but regulating beaches and bars may undermine Dubai’s efforts to become a trendy spot.

But the code goes beyond that to regulate matters that should be beyond the remit of an even mildly reasonable state. A British mother of two was recently arrested for adultery and homosexuals have become the target of a “morality” campaign. It is one thing to limit alcohol and differ bikinis to select beaches, it is another for the state to interfere and punish the decisions, whatever the merit, of consenting adults. Infidelity is unfortunate and you may believe that homosexuality is a sin, but using the police power of the state to punish such “crimes” would set Dubai back in its ambitions to become a global destination. Dubai’s rulers should take note that nobody really cares to visit Riyadh, Saudi Arabia’s capital.

That was yesterday, and this morning I read that Dubai second telecom operator Du has banned the online photo sharing site Flickr. That comes after the Emirates other telecom operator Etisalat has banned Flickr. Thus in Dubai and the entire UAE it is no impossible, at least without a bypass system, to access the mundane Flickr. Both providers failed to offer an explanation.

Dubai’s Internet City may no longer be an example of state efforts to expand human capital, but an image of heavy-handed state censorship.

If the city that previously built a “Internet City” to attract foreign investment starts banning sites it dislikes then the whole idea of a Dubai Dream will only turn out to be a mariage.

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1 Stars
Hamed
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
I recently had the same issue but purchased a unlimited bandwidth account at
http://www.strongvpn.com I'm able to surf where I need to know and have a VPN. When will governments learn there are no controls on the Internet?
1 Stars
Mohamed
Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
Growing up in UAE, I've noticed the best thing these blocks have done, is pushed none technical people to learn how to bypass them effectively and efficiently, and in turn they've have gotten more security aware in the process, and some of them even made careers out of it.

China, UAE and KSA probably have the most tech aware populations TCP/IP networking wise in the world.
1 Stars
Natalie
San Francisco, United States
The UAE tries hard to convince foreigners that the UAE is a modern place with an 'attractive' lifestyle, and then imposes nanny-state censorship to try to impose its own cultural identity on those very people it is trying to attract. Dating is a sin? Since when!?
1 Stars
Keith
Birmingham, United Kingdom
UAE doesn't censor child pornography or hate speech. It bans free speech about religion. And sorry, I do not see how secularism can be worse than religious extremism. Secularism doesn't kill, it doesn't censor Internet. And here in Europe, I can access any page I want to. There are no censor screens.
2 Stars
Paramjeet
Ottawa, Canada
There is a saying which goes the one who doesnt understand it, bans it. It applies to political decisions, however in practicality also to the dull minds, to the ones without any vision of the future.
1 Stars
Savanna
Brisbane, Australia
This is really silly... the UAE is supposed to be a leading city in the world, yet there are restrictions on web sites?

Why do some fashion, art, music... sites have to be blocked?
1 Stars
James
La, United States
The problem with one country blocking "inappropriate" content, which largely a free speech issue, is you allow unenlightened control freaks who decide what content is suitable for you to read, view and/or enjoy on the Internet. That is not acceptable and these unenlightened control freaks wanted to control how you live your life because you let them!s
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