CNET | January 10, 2011 | Don Reisinger
Research In Motion will block pornography accessed through its smartphones in Indonesia.
The company announced today that it will develop a “prompt, compliant filtering solution” for Indonesia BlackBerry users by the country’s January 21 deadline. If RIM doesn’t start filtering out pornographic sites through its service by that date, the company could find itself in hot water with the Indonesian government.
According to Bloomberg, which first reported the story and spoke with officials in Indonesia, the country could block BlackBerry Web browsing altogether if RIM doesn’t filter pornography.
Indonesia was quick to point out to Bloomberg that it wasn’t alone in battling with RIM over Web-access regulations. Heru Sutadi of the Indonesian Telecommunications Regulatory Body told Bloomberg that “Middle Eastern countries are also being hard on RIM.”
Last year, RIM faced threats of service bans from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates over those countries’ demand to have access to communications on BlackBerry devices. The company’s strict encryption and security features make it nearly impossible for governments to monitor communications through its smartphones. The countries contend that by not providing access to BlackBerry communications, RIM is putting them at risk of terrorism.
Reports later surfaced, claiming RIM was able to come to terms with Saudi Arabia by reportedly installing a server in the country to allow the government to monitor communications. However, RIM has said publicly that it has never entered into special arrangements with countries, and it has no way to provide governments with the data they desire, due to the encryption it employs.
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