Islamabad: Pakistan has threatened China's TikTok and blocked the Singapore-based Bigo Live streaming platform, citing what the regulating authority called widespread complaints about "immoral, obscene and vulgar" content on the apps.
The move was promptly decried by Pakistani rights activists who saw it as a potential precursor to even greater censorship in this conservative Muslim nation.
In a statement, the Pakistan Telecommunications Authority said the content on the two platforms could have "extremely negative effects on the society in general and youth in particular," without elaborating.
A tweet on Monday from the regulating authority said it had complained to the companies behind the platforms but that "the response of these companies has not been satisfactory".
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Both TikTok, a video-sharing app owned by Beijing tech giant ByteDance, and Bigo Live, a live streaming platform owned by a Singapore company, are popular among Pakistani teens and young adults.
"The government is testing the ground to what extent they can go in censoring," Shahzad Ahmad of Islamabad-based social media rights group BytesForAll said in a telephone interview on Tuesday.
TikTok has especially grown in popularity among the country's young, which makes up nearly 70% of the 220 million population, Ahmad said. "This is the start of more censorship."
AP