Pakistan Blocks Youtube (and no-one else could access it either)

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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7262071.stm


Pakistan 'sparks YouTube outage'
A computer shows YouTube (file image)
Turkey and Thailand have in the past also banned access to the site
Pakistan's attempts to block access to YouTube has been blamed for an almost global blackout of the video website for more than an hour on Sunday.

BBC News has learned that the outage was almost certainly connected to Pakistan Telecom and Asian internet service provider PCCW.

A leading net professional said the global outage was "probably a mistake".

Pakistan ordered internet service providers to block the site because of content deemed offensive to Islam.

The BBC News website's technology editor, Darren Waters, says that to block Pakistan's citizens from accessing YouTube it is believed Pakistan Telecom "hijacked" the web server address of the popular video site.

Those details were then passed on to the country's internet service providers so that anyone in Pakistan attempting to go to YouTube was instead re-directed to a different address.

But the details of the "hijack" were leaked out into the wider internet from PCCW and as a result YouTube was mistakenly blocked by internet service providers around the word

The block on the servers was lifted once PCCW had been told of the issue by engineers at YouTube.


Users are quite upset. They're screaming at ISPs which can't do anything
Wahaj-us-Siraj, convener of the Association of Pakistan Internet Service Providers

A leading net professional told BBC News: "This was probably a simple mistake by an engineer at Pakistan Telecom. There's nothing to suggest this was malicious."

IP hijacking involves taking over a web site's unique address by corrupting the internet's routing tables, which direct the flow of data around the world.

No-one at YouTube or PCCW was immediately available for comment.

Cause of ban

Reports said Pakistan made the move because YouTube content included Danish cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad that have outraged many.

But one report said a trailer for a forthcoming film by Dutch lawmaker Geert Wilders, which portrays Islam in a negative light, was behind the ban.

"They [Pakistan's telecommunications authority] asked us to ban it immediately... and the order says the ban will continue until further notice," said Wahaj-us-Siraj, convener of the Association of Pakistan Internet Service Providers.

The government decision has caused uproar in Pakistan, according to Wahaj-us-Siraj:

"Users are quite upset. They're screaming at ISPs which can't do anything.

"The government has valid reason for that, but they have to find a better way of doing it. If we continue blocking popular websites, people will stop using the internet."

Other countries that have temporarily blocked access to YouTube include Turkey and Thailand.

and
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/technology/2008/02/is_youtube_down.html

UPDATE FOUR: There will definitely be some fall out from this. It would seem that all it takes to hijack a website globally is for a telecoms firm to instruct its ISPs that they now run a domain, and for one of those ISPs to announce that globally. So that other ISPs follow suit in a piggyback chain of confusion.

Herman G. Neuname, Sunday, 24 February 2008 23:29 (eighteen years ago)

At least it's back up now.

Herman G. Neuname, Sunday, 24 February 2008 23:35 (eighteen years ago)

It's Pakistan's fault I got all this shit done today.

Kerm, Sunday, 24 February 2008 23:40 (eighteen years ago)

i think they'd be better off blocking flickr to stop heave ho stalkings

gershy, Sunday, 24 February 2008 23:42 (eighteen years ago)

I hardly ever watch youtube but I got linked to several videos and I couldn't get it to work and just assumed it was down for maintenance, had no idea this had happened.

Herman G. Neuname, Monday, 25 February 2008 00:15 (eighteen years ago)

This is going to cause a big stink I bet

Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Monday, 25 February 2008 07:29 (eighteen years ago)

What will happen?

Herman G. Neuname, Monday, 25 February 2008 13:22 (eighteen years ago)

Bunch of Something Awful nerds will stand outside the Pakistani embassy in some gay-ass masks, pretend this has any bearing on the real world.

Dom Passantino, Monday, 25 February 2008 13:23 (eighteen years ago)

Association of Pakistan Internet Service Providers

Aspisp?

StanM, Monday, 25 February 2008 13:27 (eighteen years ago)


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