THE DIGITAL Economy and Society (DE) Ministry has managed to have Facebook block 131 remaining posts deemed illegal under a sweeping court order since Tuesday.
The
 ministry planned to block access to more than 100 posts on social media
 outlets, including YouTube and Twitter, by the end of this week for 
posting content deemed illegal or improper, according to the DE Deputy 
Permanent Secretary Somsak Kaosuwan.
 Early this month, the 
authorities issued an ultimatum to many social outlets to block access 
to hundreds of web pages and URLs featuring “dubious” content.
 After Tuesday’s deadline passed, the ministry claimed that all 131 posts on Facebook alone had been blocked in the Kingdom.
 A Facebook spokesperson said the company would render the content 
unavailable in the specific country or territory and notify people who 
try to access it why it is restricted.
 The government has blocked at least 6,900 web pages since 2015 deemed to carry illegal or improper content.
 “We have had good cooperation from social media companies to close 
illegal URLs and we are still monitoring to delete illegal web pages,” 
said Somsak.
 The Criminal Court advised the ministry in writing 
that it was authorised to block web addresses with illegal content 
without having to seek a court order for every one.
 The ministry 
now plans to issue five announcements that will set guidelines of 
operation required under the Computer Crime Act which came into full 
effect on Wednesday.
 New ministerial orders involve rules about 
the data screening committee, spam mail, and data storage. All these 
orders must be issued by July 23, two months after the Computer Crime 
Act became effective.
Source - TheNation 

