592
Nepal decides to ban TikTok
(kathmandupost.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
in nepal posting in "vulgar" language is also forbidden by law, as is stuff like stating that you are poly on social media, so them passing another overreaching censorship law is no surprise.
Source?
Found it linked in an article within the article here toward the bottom.
um… where did you get that information?
How about you read the one link you are commenting on before asking for another? It is in the article.
I got my information from the article about the new social media rules within that article here:
https://kathmandupost.com/national/2023/11/10/cabinet-passes-rules-to-regulate-social-media
the relevant passage:
so for nepal human trafficking and polygamy is in the same category of "wrong activities".
What do you mean its not the point? its literally a crime to post "vulgar" language, like you said a catch all term that they can use to censor anything they deem "vulgar". How is this not a law designed to censor?
For clarity, I am not the person you replied to, I wrote the comment above. Imo Usernames are a bit hard to see on some frontends!
There's a substantive degree of overlap, particularly in parts of the world where young women are sold by desperate parents and criminal cartels for the pleasure of old perverts. This isn't Sam Bankman Fried and three if his closest money launderers in a sex pile. This is cloaking sex trafficking under the cover of marriage.
The law did not ban polyamory, it is already illegal in nepal, so there is no "cover of marriage" there. It banned posting pro poly posts online. That is pretty harsh. Just because criminals use it does not mean stating your opinion had to be banned!
The only explanation I can come up with is that they just banned a bunch of stuff the legislators deemed immoral. I dont know enough about nepal to say that with any certainty, but my hunch is that pro-poly messaging may have been banned because of the muslim minority.
https://www.girlsnotbrides.org/learning-resources/child-marriage-atlas/atlas/nepal/
:-/
Damn thats pretty dire. Apperently the nepali government is doing something about it, so good luck to them!
Anyway, this isnt relevant to the "cover of marriage" claim. That statistic is about marriage under 18, not polygamic marriage.
I read the article. The article doesn't mention "vulgar language being illegal". I'm from Nepal and I'm going to ask where people come up with made up scenarios.