Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In September, during Navratri, a condom ad featuring actress Sunny Leone caused outrage in Gujarat. [3] [4] In September, an Australian ad depicting Indian god Ganesha with lamb caused major controversy in nation. [5] [6] In November, food delivery service Zomato pulled off several banners from various cities featuring two dominant Hindi ...
The ban was challenged before the Bombay High Court, which rescinded it as exceeding government authority and illegal. In 2004, Eve Ensler's The Vagina Monologues was banned in Chennai. The play, however, has played successfully in many other parts of the country since 2003. A Hindi version of the play has been performing since 2007.
The Chinese government has repeatedly censored anime shows that the country considers immoral, especially those that include bloody and violent scenes. Blood-C, a Japanese anime television series, has been banned since it includes a "particularly bloody" scene which may cause "extreme discomfort". [1]
Two Democratic groups are rolling out an ad featuring a fictitious Republican lawmaker who wants to ban porn nationwide, the latest installment of the groups’ $2.5 million ad campaign accusing ...
The video footage itself remained banned and was to be removed from the website. [ 29 ] In June 2007, a judge ordered Cicarelli and her boyfriend to pay all court and lawyer costs, as well as R$ 10,000 (roughly US$ 3,203) to the three defendants—YouTube, Globo , and iG , citing a lack of good faith in pushing the privacy case when their ...
ABC warned its audience before airing a disturbing political ad the network said it was required to broadcast during a live episode of The View, with the commercial depicting graphic imagery from ...
The ban was enforced after extensive research from the Indian Ministry of Health found that cigarettes and liquor have adverse effects on a person's health. In addition to this, the Indian government holds the notion that these products are especially harmful to a person's mental health, making them lazy and unmotivated.
In 2016, India also put forwarded a new plan to control internet usage of its netizens. Accessing or pop-ups from ad services or malware infection of websites banned in India might invite 3 years of jail sentence and a fine of ₹ 300,000 (equivalent to ₹ 430,000 or US$5,000 in 2023). Until now, URLs and websites were blocked using DNS-filtering.