Thailand to Start Hacking Foreign Websites
March 18, 2008
I can’t believe that the Thai government would condone such illegal tactics, but this report from the Thai language newspaper Krungthep Turaij seems to indicate just that. I hope that I never come under the watchful eye of the ICT and this is just one more reason that I try to steer away from subjects that might be considered controversial by Thai standards.
I will agree that the websites they are targeting that are disrespectful to Buddhism are in poor taste, however I can’t agree with the hacking of ANY sites or the censorship of free speech and the internet. Considering the state of Thailand’s neighbor you would think that they would be more sensitive to censorship.
The Information and Communications Technology Ministry is to ‘hack and crack’ foreign websites deemed offensive to Thailand’s revered institutions.
A March 15 report in Krungthep Turakij newspaper quoted a source at the ICT that the ministry could pursue legal proceedings only with websites registered in Thailand, and is now planning a ‘hack and crack’ programme to hack offensive websites hosted abroad and delete their contents, because the legal process would take too long.
“This approach may be somewhat illegal, but sometimes it might be worth it, if [the websites] are really unacceptable,” the source said.
One website registered abroad has been found to advertise merchandise including calendars, dolls, bags, hats, glasses, watches, trousers and underwear, all with a logo of the Buddha meditating on a lotus, with the face of a dog. It was reported to have upset many Buddhists.
On March 14, ICT Minister Mun Patanotai said that he had called a meeting of investigators from the Department of Special Investigation, and Crime Suppression Division, and the ‘ICT cops’. ICT Minister’s Secretary Sarawuth Petchpanomporn was assigned to coordinate the collection of evidence and ask the courts to block websites and prosecute owners who, if inside the country, are subject to fines and imprisonment under the 2007 Computer Crime Act.
If the offense is committed abroad, the Minister admitted that there were difficulties. However, the Ministry has so far asked for cooperation from the authorities in each country or website administrators themselves, who have cooperated in solving the problems or delete offensive material, particularly concerning Thailand’s ‘supreme institution’.
“The ministry has 30 so-called ICT cops, so it is difficult to keep a thorough watch. We still have to rely on net surfers or webmasters to help, to solve the problem or notify the ministry of any irregularities,” Man said.
Acting Director Booncherd Kittitharangkul of the Office of National Buddhism’s Technology Centre said that on hearing the news he felt uneasy, and believed that it upset all Buddhists across the country.
The Technology Centre has found that the website has its server in California, USA, and the centre has twice asked the ICT Ministry in writing to shut down the website, but it is still online. The centre has also asked the Foreign Ministry’s Information Department to address the problem through diplomatic means.
“If within one month the problem is still not solved, I will ask for cooperation from ‘internet cop’ Pol Col Yanapol Yangyuen, Commander of Office of Technology and Information Cases under the Department of Special Investigation, to shut it down,” said Booncherd. He added that his centre has cooperated with relevant agencies in shutting down 5 similar websites which made commercial use of Buddhist symbols.
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Well, I don’t believe they have the right to hack foreign websites. That doesn’t make any sense at all. My site is always respectful of Thai culture - but the government is another issue. Thai politics are just as boring as US politics - but my general impression isn’t all that favorable.
For the Thai government to even consider hacking international websites is a bad move, even if they want to deface websites they think are disrespectful to Buddhism. There’s a discussion in the Buddhist sutras about whether the Buddha could be a dog, or whether a dog could be the Buddha. It’s a philosophical question, covered on many websites about Buddhism. Sometimes they include a famous photo of the Buddha with a dog head to illustration the discussion, and I see no offense in this, but the Thai government will probably go after these sites. And Cafe Press, which sells plenty of t-shirts with logos that might seem offensive.