Facebook to be banned in Papua New Guinea for a month
Papua New
Guinea will ban Facebook for a month while it identifies fake profiles and
considers the website's effect on the country.
Communication
minister Sam Basil said users posting pornography and false information would
be identified.
He also
suggested the country could set up its own rival social network.
Facebook has
faced scrutiny following the Cambridge Analytica scandal and has been
criticised over the way it has tried to tackle fake news.
Although
only about 10% of people in Papua New Guinea have internet access, the country
is proving proactive in its regulation of online services.
The
government aims to use the month-long ban to analyse how Facebook is being used
and prosecute those breaching the country's 2016 cyber-crime law.
Mr Basil
told the country's Post-Courier: "The time will allow information to be
collected to identify users that hide behind fake accounts, users that upload
pornographic images, users that post false and misleading information."
The rise of
so-called "fake news" has become a major problem for technology
companies globally. They have been criticised for not warning users when
information could be incorrect or misleading.
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