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20 April 2024

RIM blocks porn on BlackBerry

RIM said on Monday it would start filtering web content (AP)

Published
By AFP

Indonesia welcomed a promise by Canadian firm Research in Motion (RIM) to filter its BlackBerry web services for pornography, after threatening to revoke the smartphone maker's licence.

RIM said Monday it would start filtering web content provided to users in Indonesia in response to the mainly Muslim country's threat to block it from one of Asia's fastest-growing telecommunications markets.

RIM is the world's fourth biggest smartphone platform, with global sales of 11.9 million units, according to research firm Gartner. It does not filter its web content in any of its other markets around the world.

"We've heard about RIM saying it will filter the internet... That's good news to us and we highly appreciate that," communications ministry spokesman Gatot Dewa Broto said.

RIM said in a statement that it had been in talks with its partners and the government and "continues to make it a top priority to implement satisfactory technical solutions as soon as possible".

Communications and Information Technology Minister Tifatul Sembiring gave the company two weeks to comply or risk being kicked out of the country.

"If in the next two weeks, RIM fails to comply with the order by January 21, we will revoke its permit," Sembiring told reporters on Monday.

RIM set up a service centre in Indonesia - a country of 240 million people and with 40 million internet users - in 2009 at the request of the government. RIM representatives will meet officials to discuss how they intend to filter pornography from the highly encrypted smartphones, officials said.

"We need them to give us the word that they will comply and the actual filtering is just a matter of time," Broto told AFP.

The row is the latest in a series of controversies RIM has faced as governments including Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and India have complained about difficulties monitoring BlackBerry communications.