News
YouTube back on in Pakistan
Pakistan has lifted a ban it imposed on YouTube on Sunday, YouTube has said.
The ban was reportedly imposed by the Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) on Sunday in response both to a film preview by Dutch MP Geert Wilders, which some Muslims may have found offensive, and in reaction to protests against Danish publications reprinting cartoons that some Muslims found controversial.
A YouTube spokesperson said on Wednesday: "We are pleased to confirm that YouTube is again accessible in Pakistan." The spokesperson declined to comment as to why the ban had been lifted.
The ban had the side effect of knocking YouTube off the Internet for two hours on Sunday said YouTube owner Google, which blamed the outage on traffic being routed via "erroneous protocols".
"For about two hours [on Sunday], traffic to YouTube was routed according to erroneous Internet protocols, and many users around the world could not access our site," said a Google spokesperson. "We have determined that the source of these events was a network in Pakistan. We are investigating and working with others in the Internet community to prevent this from happening again."
The results of the Google investigation are unlikely to be made public, according to the Google spokesperson.
However, there are different reports as to the cause of the outage. The BBC reported that Hong Kong-based Internet protocol backbone company PCCW, which provides upstream Internet access to many of Pakistan's ISPs, had "leaked" details of the ban to ISPs around the world, which had then mistakenly blocked YouTube.
Based on Pakistan lifts YouTube ban amid speculation on ZDNet UK
More about Software
- Obama in sex video shocker? Oh wait, it's just spam September 11, 2008
- No black holes from Large Hadron Collider, say scientists September 10, 2008
- Michael Moore to premiere film online September 05, 2008
- Images: Touring Google's Chrome browser September 05, 2008
- Extensions promised for Chrome September 04, 2008

- Samsung S5560 and B3410: Festive phones from Carphone Warehouse
- Microsoft security updates causing 'black screen of death'?
- 3 to let mobile-broadband punters cancel contracts over poor 3G coverage
- Twitter denies Japan plan to pay you 70 per cent for tweeting
- Google and Bing top searches of 2009: Swine flu, Facebook and the king of pop
- Gimmicks are the new megapixels: The new generation of unusual digital cameras

- Microsoft security updates causing 'black screen of death'?
- Twitter denies Japan plan to pay you 70 per cent for tweeting
- Google and Bing top searches of 2009: Swine flu, Facebook and the king of pop
- Pub fined £8,000 after punter pirates with their pint
- Virgin Media and CView to rifle through your packets
- How MySpace can beat Facebook in 2010
- Want to try the new Google homepage? We show you how
- Windows 7 Family Guy clips outed, with bonus Sugababes
- Last.fm interview: Behind the music
- Truphone talks turkey with free calls on Thanksgiving
- Man arrested for not tweeting to teeming tween tumult
- The best of Photosynth
- Seesmic Desktop for Windows: Better for Twitter than TweetDeck?
- Microsoft and Murdoch ganging up on Google?
- Spotify launches on Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson phones



