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Thaksin, a billionaire who made his fortune in telecommunications, was no friend of free speech either, putting political and financial pressure to limit negative reporting from outlets he did not control. But after his ouster, there was a concerted push by those in power to "protect the monarchy"
-- going so far as to block all of YouTube for several months because of a few videos it hosted that were deemed insulting to the king. The interim military-installed regime enacted the 2007 Computer Crime Act, which bars the circulation of material deemed detrimental to national security or that causes public panic, and authorities have used it to block thousands of sites. This is often done quietly and many Internet users will see only an error message when they try to visit a blocked page. Websites that serve as mouthpieces for the Red Shirts have been the main targets of government censorship lately. But another one of those first 36 ordered shut after the declaration of the state of emergency was Prachatai.com, which was established by several respected journalists, senators and press freedom activists. It describes itself as an independent, nonprofit, daily Web newspaper that provides information "during an era of serious curbs on the freedom and independence of Thai news media."
"The attempt to control the Internet has become very great, even greater than after the coup took place in 2006. But then again, Internet communication has played a bigger role since then," said Prachatai's webmaster, Chiranuch Premchaiporn. Chiranuch was already facing charges of violating the Computer Crime Act by allowing comments "threatening to national security" to be posted on her site. She could receive up to 50 years in prison for the multiple charges against her. Prachatai, like others, is playing a cat-and-mouse game with censors, moving servers out of the country and finding other ways to get its news out. "If they keep blocking, eventually we might have to distribute content via e-mail," Chiranuch said. Users also can circumvent blocking, most typically by using proxy servers, which allow them to connect through a third party computer to disguise their intended destination, and sometimes even software developed to get past firewalls set up by more notorious censors such as China and Iran. Chiranuch said censorship is not the answer to Thailand's divisions. "From personal observation, the political crisis intensified after media were suppressed," she said. "The government is looking down on the people. If it believes people in the country are intelligent and smart enough, showing respect by allowing them to consume news and information from all sides is better than blocking them."
[Associated
Press;
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