Thailand’s junta is facing growing opposition over plans to introduce a single Internet gateway for the country in a bid to increase the government’s ability to monitor the Web and block content.
Tens of thousands of people have signed a petition against the proposal that has been dubbed the “Great Firewall of Thailand” — a play on China’s draconian Internet censorship program — by commentators, analysts and netizens.
News of the proposal first emerged last week when a Cabinet order was unearthed by a Thai programmer and spread on social media.
By yesterday afternoon more than 72,000 people had signed a petition on Change.org calling on the government to abandon the proposal.
The Cabinet statement, published quietly on a government news Web site, ordered the Ministry of Information, Communications and Technology to “set up a single gateway in order to use it as a tool to control inappropriate Web sites and information flows from other countries via the Internet.”
A spokesman for the ministry yesterday confirmed that it was working on the plans and that it aimed to update the public on the proposals within a week.
Internet gateways are the points on a network where a country connects to the World Wide Web.
Initially Thailand’s Internet flowed through a single gateway that was owned by the government, but the sector was deregulated in 2006, allowing dozens of companies to open their own access points resulting in dramatically increased Internet speeds and Thailand emerging as a regional information-technology (IT) hub.
Akamai, which ranks countries on their connectivity levels, says the kingdom’s average Internet speed this year is 7.5 megabits per second, on a par with nations such as Australia, New Zealand and France.
Thailand’s junta, which seized power in a coup last year, has vowed to expand the country’s appeal as a regional Internet hub, unveiling a plan it has dubbed the “The Digital Economy.”
However, the generals have also ramped up censorship, blocking scores of sites and pursuing online critics with criminal charges and so-called “attitude adjustment” sessions.
Prosecutions under the notoriously strict lese majeste legislation have also skyrocketed, with the vast majority of cases brought over comments made online, including a record-breaking 30-year sentence for one man over the content of six Facebook posts.
Critics of the single Internet gateway plan say that it would allow the military to further increase censorship, as well as leave the kingdom’s IT hub status vulnerable if the gateway were to fail.
“A return to the gold old days of a [government] monopoly would be disastrous,” technology analyst Don Sambandaraksa wrote in Telecoms Asia.
“The people of Thailand can kiss a fast internet goodbye purely from technical incompetence, not to mention all the monitoring, censoring and deep packet inspection the military want,” he added.
Many ordinary Thais have flocked to social media to oppose the plan.
“It contradicts policy of promoting Digital Economy,” wrote Twitter user @NataliePP.
“It’s irrational. State paranoia is driving irrationality,” she added.
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