Thai minister calls URL blacklisting a failure

Summary: A senior IT minister in the Thai government has said that the current government blacklisting system is 'too much to handle'

A senior minister in Thailand's IT authority, which oversees internet censorship in the country, said that blacklisting has failed and should be dropped.

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Thongchai Sangsiri, director of computer forensics within Thailand's Ministry of Information and Communication Technology, told the Asia-Pacific Telecommunity cybersecurity forum in New South Wales, Australia, on Tuesday that its blacklists are verbose and have created onerous management problems for ISPs.

"We would like [to] leave parents and teachers to decide what to filter... because [the current system] is too much to handle," Sangsiri said. "The blacklists grow with many, many websites to become a burden on ISPs. Blacklisting doesn't work."

For more on this ZDNet UK-selected story, see Our blacklist has failed us: Thai minister on ZDNet Australia.

Topic: Security

Darren Pauli

About Darren Pauli

Darren Pauli has been writing about technology for almost five years, he covers a gamut of news with a special focus on security, keeping readers informed about the world of cyber criminals and the safety measures needed to thwart them.

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  • THAI MINISTER IS ABNORMAL. THAI MINISTER HAVE COULD NOT HELP THAI PEOPLE.
    Nam-Dang