That ban will be challenged for the first time in court Wednesday -- and activists, as well as artists, some of whose careers were launched on YouTube, are keeping their fingers crossed.
Rapper, singer and
songwriter Adil Omar is a musician that has relied on social networking
sites to launch his career. Even without a record label, he successfully
used YouTube to reach both a domestic and international audience --
collaborating with international artists like Cypress Hill, Everlast,
Xzibit and guitarist Slash from Guns 'N Roses.
YouTube "has put me out there internationally. I've worked with major artists, been in the mainstream press," Omar said.
"I'm getting about a
tenth of the promotion I was getting before and I have about a tenth of
the sales I was initially getting," he said.
Numbers on YouTube
reflect his comment. Omar's last major single "Paki Rambo," released
before the YouTube ban, generated more than 320,000 hits. One of his
first singles after the ban got just over 30,000 clicks.
Protests erupted across the Arab world last year when trailers for "Innocence of Muslims," an anti-Islam film that mocks the prophet Mohammed, appeared online.
YouTube is not the only
social media website that was taken away from Pakistani Web users.
Facebook, Twitter and Tumblr all have been banned in the past. The
recent ban on YouTube, however, is the longest-running act of online
censorship in Pakistan's history.
Bytes for All,
an organization that fights for digital rights in Pakistan, has worked
to lift this censorship -- running a poster campaign, filing petitions
and writing to the U.N. Special Rapporteur for Freedom of Expression.
"We do not need
dictatorial nannies to tell people what to watch and what not to watch
and what decision to take and how to take it. Because after all, it's a
democracy. It's not a dictatorship anymore," said Furhan Hussain from
Bytes for All.
The ban on YouTube "is
in direct violation of the constitution of Pakistan. It violates the
fundamental human rights of freedom of expression and freedom of access
to information of the citizens of Pakistan," he said.
CNN reached out for comment repeatedly to Pakistan's minister of information technology but got no response.
Omar, like the activists from Bytes for All, hopes the ban will be lifted soon.
"What I'd like to see
happen is for YouTube to open up again. For Pakistani artists and
musicians to be able to earn money again and make a living ... to be
able to reach an international audience again."
source cnn
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