Government continues website ban in Singapore

SINGAPORE – Despite recommendations that Singapore lift its ban on some 100 ‘undesirable’ websites, the Government has announced it will leave the ban in place.

Government continues website ban in Singapore

The Censorship Review Committee (CRC) had recommended that the ban be replaced with a filtering service. But the Government points to the findings of a CRC survey, in which 67 per cent of respondents supported the ban’s retention, with 38 per cent wanting to include more sites under the ban.

Acting minister for information and the arts Lui Tuck Yew acknowledged that tech-savvy internet users would be able to circumvent the ban, “But we will retain it, not so much for its functional usefulness, rather as a symbolic statement of our society's values.

It serves as a reminder that there is a significant body of material on the internet that is unsavoury and unedifying," he said.

The ban covers pornographic websites, as well as sites which incite racial and religious intolerance, and which promote terrorism and extremism.

The Government will also direct internet service providers (ISPs) to offer opt-in internet filters.

Related Articles

Just Published

15 hours ago

Alibaba pledges 'aggressive' AI investment, reports ...

Revenue jumped 8% as Alibaba's AI-driven strategy paid off. A surge in investor confidence has sent its share price soaring over 60% since the start of the year.

17 hours ago

Five by Five Global to deliver AI-powered campaigns ...

Can creativity truly be compressed? Former Cheil Australia MD Mark Anderson, now at Five by Five Global, is betting big on AI with a new seven-hour sprint model to find out.

21 hours ago

BBDO launches new global vision to focus on bolder ...

'Do Big Things' will empower brands to take risks, make noise, and tackle the world's biggest problems with bold solutions, says global CEO Nancy Reyes.

21 hours ago

Is Elon Musk’s X winning back advertisers?

Social media platform X is reportedly in talks to raise money at its buying price valuation of $44 billion, despite user and advertiser losses since Elon Musk’s acquisition in 2022.