Protests after Pornhub is banned in Thailand

#SavePornhub: Protests after adult site is banned in Thailand where users spend an average of 11 minutes and 21 seconds a day on the website – the longest in the world

  • Protesters met outside the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society in Bangkok
  • Porn and gambling websites are illegal under Thailand’s cybercrime law  
  • Thais trended the #SavePornhub hashtag on Twitter to protest the ban

Thailand’s government said today it had banned Pornhub and 190 other websites showing pornography, prompting protests in Bangkok and a social media outcry over censorship. 

A few dozen activists gathered to protest the ban outside the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society, holding banners saying ‘free Pornhub’ and ‘reclaim Pornhub.’

Digital minister Puttipong Punnakanta said earlier the block was part of efforts to restrict access to porn and gambling websites, which were illegal under the country’s cybercrime law.  

But many Thai users trended the #SavePornhub hashtag on Twitter and criticised the shutting of a site in a country that was among the Top 20 by daily traffic for Pornhub in 2019 and which has a globally-known sex industry. 

According to Pornhub, Thai users spent more time on the site last year, at 11 minutes and 21 seconds, than elsewhere in the world.  

A pro-democracy protester shouts during a demonstration at the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society in Bangkok today, after the Pornhub website was blocked by the ministry

A pro-democracy protester shouts during a demonstration at the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society in Bangkok today, after the Pornhub website was blocked by the ministry

Thai protesters flash the three-finger salute in front of a banner reading 'Don't hurt the lonely person, with inaccessibility and reclaim of Pornhub [sic]' during a protest following the blocking the access of the adult website Pornhub, outside the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society in Bangkok, Thailand today

Thai protesters flash the three-finger salute in front of a banner reading ‘Don’t hurt the lonely person, with inaccessibility and reclaim of Pornhub [sic]’ during a protest following the blocking the access of the adult website Pornhub, outside the Ministry of Digital Economy and Society in Bangkok, Thailand today 

A Thai man shows the screen of a mobile phone after trying to access the adult website Pornhub, in Bangkok, Thailand today

A Thai man shows the screen of a mobile phone after trying to access the adult website Pornhub, in Bangkok, Thailand today 

An activist group called Anonymous Party said: ‘We want to reclaim Pornhub. People are entitled to choices.’  

Pornhub did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Internet research firm Top10VPN said it saw a spike in searches from Thailand for Virtual Private Networks (VPN), which help circumvent censorship, by 640 per cent compared to the September-October daily average, after Pornhub was inaccessible from late on Monday. 

Some internet users asked whether the ban was about trying to protect Thai morals, or because the site featured some compromising royal images.

Thailand’s government has faced months of youth and student-led protests demanding the removal of Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, a former junta leader, as well as reforms to reduce King Maha Vajiralongkorn’s powers. 

A Thai man makes the three-finger salute while wearing a cap with the Pornhub logo on it during protests in Bangkok today

A Thai man makes the three-finger salute while wearing a cap with the Pornhub logo on it during protests in Bangkok today 

Pro-democracy protesters give the three-finger salute during protests against the Pornhub ban in Bangkok today

Pro-democracy protesters give the three-finger salute during protests against the Pornhub ban in Bangkok today 

A hashtag that translates as #HornyPower is trending on Thai Twitter following the Pornhub block, accompanied by comments or memes that the government could face greater opposition now beyond the protesters.

‘If someone doesn’t hate the current military government, now they probably do,’ said a Twitter user named Jirawat Punnawat.

Emilie Pradichit, director of the Manushya Foundation, which campaigns for digital rights, said the decision showed Thailand was ‘a land of digital dictatorship, with conservatives in power trying to control what young people can watch, can say and can do online.’

source: dailymail.co.uk