Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
India's overall Internet Freedom Status is "Partly Free", unchanged from 2009. India has a score of 39 on a scale from 0 (most free) to 100 (least free), which places India 20 out of the 47 countries worldwide that were included in the 2012 report. India ranked 14 out of 37 countries in the 2011 report.
In 1989, The import [50] of Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses was banned in India for its purported attacks on Islam. [51] India lifted the Ban in May 2011. In 1990, Understanding Islam through Hadis by Ram Swarup was banned. [52] In the same year, the Hindi translation of the book was banned, and in March 1991 the English original became ...
But TikTok actually faced an even bigger exodus of users in 2020, when India banned the app. At the time, India was TikTok’s biggest foreign market outside of China, with 200 million users .
As of March 2023, this is the list of banned terrorist groups in India. The official list often includes longer descriptions, such as "and all its manifestations", which are omitted here. The official list often includes longer descriptions, such as "and all its manifestations", which are omitted here.
In June 2020, after a violent clash on the India-China border that left at least 20 Indian soldiers dead, the government in New Delhi suddenly banned TikTok and several other well-known Chinese apps.
In India, the ban in 2020 was swift. TikTok and other companies were given time to respond to questions on privacy and security, and by January 2021, it became a permanent ban. But the situation ...
India: Asia 37 41.22 sel sel sel sel c i p h Indonesia: Asia 49 41.05 sel sub ne sel c i p h Iran: Asia 92 73.4 per per sub per c i p h Iraq: Asia 69 44.67 ne ne ne ne c i h Ireland: Europe 16 10.06 — — — — c i p Israel: Asia 30 32.97 ne ne ne ne c h Italy: Europe 33 26.11 ne sel ne ne c i p Jamaica: NAmerica 18 9.88 — —
Koo, an India-based alternative to Twitter, announced it had complied with the law, [3] while Facebook announced its intent to comply. [4] On May 26, WhatsApp took the Indian government to court, stating that they believed the new laws were "unconstitutuional".