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						India orders clampdown on 
						Internet porn, sparks censorship debate 
			
   
            
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						[August 03, 2015] By 
						Aditya Kalra 
						 
						NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India has blocked 
						hundreds of adult websites to prevent pornography 
						becoming a social nuisance, a government official said 
						on Monday, sparking a debate about censorship and 
						freedom in the world's largest democracy. 
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				 In India's first big crackdown on Internet porn, service 
				providers have been directed to block 857 websites, N.N. Kaul, a 
				spokesman at the department of telecommunications, told Reuters. 
				 
				"Free and open access to porn websites has been brought under 
				check," Kaul said. 
				 
				"We don't want them to become a social nuisance." 
				 
				The government, in a 17-page order issued on July 31 and leaked 
				to freedom of speech activists on Monday, listed offending sites 
				and directed service providers to block access on the grounds of 
				morality and decency.(http://bit.ly/1DkfEx8) 
				 
				Last month, the Supreme Court refused to impose an outright ban 
				after hearing a petition that said Internet porn fueled sex 
				crime. The court said individuals should be free to access such 
				websites in private. 
				  
				
				
				  
				
				 
				But the court asked the home ministry to submit its views and 
				the government acted after the ministry sent a letter to the 
				telecom secretary, Kaul said. 
				 
				Over the weekend, several sites became inaccessible and 
				displayed messages that they were blocked on instructions of the 
				competent authority. The hash tag #Pornban became a trend on 
				Twitter. 
				 
				"Porn ban is anti-freedom, impractical, not enforceable. 
				Politically not very smart too. Avoidable. Let's not manage 
				people's private lives" best-selling novelist Chetan Bhagat 
				posted on Twitter. 
			
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			India has the second largest number of internet users after China. 
			Social media and smartphone use is growing rapidly. 
			 
			In 2011, India urged social network companies to screen content and 
			remove offensive material. A year later, the government faced 
			criticism for ordering dozens of Twitter accounts to be blocked for 
			spreading rumors. 
			Censorship extends to Bollywood and Hollywood movies, with 
			regulators often forcing producers to edit dialogues and scenes to 
			suit audiences in the generally conservative country. 
			 
			Demand for porn, however, seems strong. Pornhub, an adult 
			entertainment website included in the ban, last year said India 
			ranked fifth for daily visitors. 
			 
			Kaul said the government was working on a long-term solution and 
			suggested the ban would not remain indefinitely. 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Aman Shah in Mumbai; Editing by Frank Jack 
			Daniel and Robert Birsel) 
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