Tag: Social Media & Internet

  • Authorities fix pothole after videos of a man ‘bathing’ in it went viral

    Authorities fix pothole after videos of a man ‘bathing’ in it went viral

    Authorities in the Indonesian regency of Central Lombok fixed a giant pothole after videos and pictures of a man “bathing” and “fishing” in it did the rounds on social media.

    According to details, the man, Amaq Ohan wanted to draw the attention of road authorities to the problem so he took a bath and did fishing in that pothole.

    One of the videos show Ohan taking  a bath in a pothole with his clothes on. He used a mug to pour water on himself and also washed his hair.

    Pictures that are circulating on the internet show Ohan sitting cross-legged on a plastic chair with an umbrella in his hand and fishing in the middle of the flooded pothole.

    The pothole was fixed by the relevant authorities after the videos and images went viral and made headlines.

  • Fans heartbroken after PSL 6 gets postponed

    Fans heartbroken after PSL 6 gets postponed

    The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has postponed the sixth edition of the Pakistan Super League (PSL) due to a surge in COVID-19 cases among players and officials participating in the tournament.

    As per reports, seven players and one support staff official have tested positive for the virus. Quetta Gladiators’ Tom Banton and Islamabad United’s Fawad Ahmed and Lewis Gregory were among the players who tested positive.

    Soon after the news broke, PSL fans took to social media to express their heartbreak over the decision.

    https://twitter.com/imPakistaniLAD/status/1367383159978008576?s=20

    https://twitter.com/syeda_rukhi/status/1367388008933167106?s=20

    Some took it as an opportunity to make memes that could lighten up the mood of PSL fans.

    https://twitter.com/KinzaAjmal/status/1367394007337365509?s=20

  • VIDEO: Mardan police arrest taxi driver for doing push-ups on moving car

    VIDEO: Mardan police arrest taxi driver for doing push-ups on moving car

    The police in Mardan arrested a taxi driver for doing push-ups on a moving car. 

    According to the police, the man was arrested after he posted video clips of himself doing push-ups on the moving car on social media.  

    A Twitter user Shoaib Ahmad shared the video of a group of men in a moving car, sitting on the car’s windows and hooting for the driver as he does push-ups with one hand on the open driver’s door and the other on the roof.

    A traffic police warden arrested the careless “taxi driver” identified as Jawad Ahmed alias Ladoo Khan, authorities confirmed on Twitter, adding that a case was filed against the man at the Par Hoti police station.

    “Police have also seized the car,” the Mardan Police added.

  • Aiman Khan says her 8 million following is ‘organic’

    Power couple Aiman Khan and Muneeb But got candid about their relationship in a recent interview with Ahsan Khan. During the interview Aiman also talked about her massive social media following.

    Answering a question about the change she felt in Muneeb after the marriage, Aiman stated: “I think Muneeb has become really happy after marrying me.”

    Talking about his relationship with Aiman, Muneeb said that marriages survive on understanding, compromises and sacrifices.

    He stated: “People say that males are more dominant in our society but let me tell you, in the cities, women are more dominant, especially in the matters of the house. You can’t dictate your wife at home. That’s her department,”

    During the interview Ahsan asked Aiman: “Is your following organic and did you aim to have that many followers or do you make content specifically for your account?”

    To which Aiman replied: “My social media following is organic.”

    “I created my Instagram account 5 to 6 years ago, when I was very new to acting, and I used to do commercials at that time,” adding that when she joined Instagram there were very few users on the platform.

    “I have never created my content specifically for Instagram,” she said, adding that sometimes she doesn’t even have pictures to post on Instagram.

    During the interview, Munneb also shared that he wants to play the role of a soldier in an ISPR [sponsored] drama, adding that he loves the Pakistan Army.

    Talking about why she started acting, Aiman said, “I wanted to do acting, and wanted to come on screen, when people used to see us together [Aiman and Minal] they used to say that we should act in dramas.”

    She further added that they both stated acting in commercials from a very young age.

    Aiman and Muneeb tied the knot in 2018 and their wedding broke the internet. They also have a one-year-old daughter Amal.

  • #WesupportIqrar: Celebrities back Iqrarul Hassan after netizens demand apology for praising India

    #WesupportIqrar: Celebrities back Iqrarul Hassan after netizens demand apology for praising India

    Social media users are demanding an apology from television anchor Syed Iqrarul Hassan for praising India. The Sar-e-Aam host was replying to a tweet that stated that India is the ‘vaccine hub’ of the world.

    “India vs Pakistan,” Hassan had written in response to the tweet. “We are not even sure that we ordered the vaccine or not, banana to door ki baat (making it is another story).”

    Muqabla kerna hai to taleem main kerain, science main kerain, khail main kerain, infrastructure main kerain, economy main kerain, technology main kerain … aur such ka samna kerain (If you want to compete, do it on the basis of education, science, sports, infrastructure, economy, technology … and face the truth).”

    Later, the television host also compared the public transport facilities of the two countries.

     Hassan then went on to highlight how even Pakistan’s currency is at a much lower value than other developing countries.

    Soon after these Tweets, Twitterati started calling him out and demanded an apology.

    https://twitter.com/yes_im_moonali/status/1350985716570972164?s=20

    Following the backlash, several celebrities, and social media users supported the anchor with the hashtag #WeSupportIqrar trending on social media. Shoaib Akhtar, Kamran Akmal, and Imran Ashraf were among those who came forward to defend the anchor.

    https://twitter.com/SyedGhayasAhma3/status/1351013489867948033?s=20

  • VIDEO: Ostrich on the loose in Karachi

    VIDEO: Ostrich on the loose in Karachi

    A video of an ostrich running across a road in Karachi is doing rounds on social media.

    As per reports, the bird had escaped a private park and made its way to a road in the city’s Korangi No 4 area.

    “Ostriches are afraid of water. This one escaped from a private park when water entered it” said the police. “The park’s employees ran after it and captured it later.”

    Meanwhile, other reports have stated that the bird escaped from the Landhi Korangi Zoo.

  • Memes break the internet after Shafqat Mahmood announces reopening of schools

    Memes break the internet after Shafqat Mahmood announces reopening of schools

    Amid the second wave of coronavirus, the government has decided to open educational institutions in phases from January 18.

    Soon after the news was announced, memes started doing rounds on social media adding to the popularity of Federal Minister for Education Shafqat Mahmood.

    Mahmood’s memes also went viral earlier after he announced that educational institutions would be closed till January 11 due to rising COVID-19 cases. In an exclusive interview with The Current, the minister talked about the memes and which ones were his favourite.

  • PM Khan shares breathtaking pictures of Skardu with photo credits

    PM Khan shares breathtaking pictures of Skardu with photo credits

    Prime Minister Imran Khan on Wednesday posted some beautiful pictures of  Skardu, Gilgit Baltistan on his Twitter account but this time the photographer has been credited for his work.

    “I have been sent more pictures,” he wrote on Twitter. “This time from around Skardu after my last tweet with pictures from GB.”

    The photographer Abrar Khawja also took to social media to express his joy over his work being shown to the world.

    “My passion for photography has delivered results today,” wrote Abrar, sharing the premier’s tweet. “My beautiful Pakistan, captured through my lens, is being shown to the whole world by my own prime minister.”

    Earlier, the PM’s post showing Gilgit Baltistan’s beauty stirred controversy when the photographer alleged that his watermark had been removed from the pictures. 

    A day later, however, Asmar tweeted that the PM Office had apologized for the mistake.

  • Anti-democracy rules

    Anti-democracy rules

    “Our democratic dispensation now rests on the courts to strike these draconian rules down, on the Parliament and especially the opposition parties to walk the talk of protecting democracy, and on the government to prove its sincerity to its digital dreams. Or should we stop pretending?”

    If the internet offers an open space for citizens to freely express themselves, the newly notified internet rules seek to clampdown on those very freedoms in an autocratic manner. Whether one considers the process by which they were drafted, or the substantive matter of the tules, they flout democracy.

    In a democracy, rules relating to the internet would at the very least be well-informed in terms of the functioning of technology; take input of the technology sector, human rights experts, the companies that these rules would impact, students, as well citizen groups; and follow a consultative process where multiple drafts were shared with stakeholders and discussed and revised before being notified.

    What we saw instead was surprise news early on in the year that rules had been notified by the federal cabinet. No consultation was held or stakeholder input sought.

    After national and international outcry by human rights groups, consortium of technology companies such as the Asia Internet Coalition (AIC), and multistakeholder forums such as the Global Network Initiative (GNI), the PM said he will “suspend” the rules and hold more consultations. Except legally, a cabinet notification can only be “taken back” — denotified — by the cabinet itself, and not the PM, as held in the Mustafa Impex case in the Supreme Court, as well as the rules of business.

    However, the cabinet never denotified the previous set of rules, and has recently notified yet another set.

    For the new set of rules, consultations were an eyewash as expected, as not only are the new ones any less draconian than the last, but also make several additions that raise several questions.

    For one, in an attempt to include safeguards and protections, they give the powers of judge, jury, and executioner to the PTA where the authority, which is clearly not above pressure of the federal government, has the power to order social media companies to block or restrict content on the internet, decide what content is unlawful, and also review appeals against such a decision. The stipulation for appeal at high court comes after all of these steps. This goes against the separation of powers that the Constitution outlines and forms the basis of democratic governance.

    “The important question is who is making these decisions? Is the PM sincere in his wishes for a Digital Pakistan?”

    That is all the more problematic when one sees the exceptions to freedom of speech that the rules stipulate. They empower the PTA to not only interpret Articles of the Constitution but also sections of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) relating to the blasphemy laws for defining “glory of Islam”, “obscenity and decency”, and “public order” where powers under section 144 are cited as the yardstick for determining what online content can be deemed illegal.

    Most problematic is the rule regarding “integrity, security and defence of Pakistan” whereby it goes on to not only give PTA the powers to interpret Article 260 of the Constitution with regards to defining these terms – which is a function of the higher judiciary – but also expands it to “also mean and include the dissemination of an information which intimidates or harms the reputation of federal or provincial government or any person holding public office” and “brings or attempts to bring into hatred or contempt, or excites or attempts to excite disaffection towards the federal or provincial government”, effectively covering any criticism of the government on the internet to be restricted or blocked on the orders of the PTA as it wishes.     

    Additionally, the rules also go against the parent legislation – PECA – by making intermediaries, i.e. internet companies and internet service providers liable for content regulation and data sharing, hence privatising censorship. Section 38 of PECA explicitly limits intermediary liability. No company is going to agree to implementing a government’s rules over its own detailed community standards, as obvious form the AIC statement that signaled that internet companies may exit Pakistan if these rules are to remain. Rules also expect the companies in face of these orders to open an office in Pakistan, establish local databases, and offer the FIA unrestricted access to user data.     

    The important question is who is making these decisions? Is the PM sincere in his wishes for a Digital Pakistan? Or is the vision to make it like China where the country is cut off from the rest of the world, capacity for which is lacking here exactly because of years of similar shortsighted policymaking mistakes, lack of state investment in encouraging a robust IT ecosystem, and ad-hoc policy of censorship and privacy violations that discourage potential investment and growth?

    Our democratic dispensation now rests on the courts to strike these draconian rules down, on the parliament and especially the opposition parties to walk the talk of protecting democracy, and on the government to prove its sincerity to its digital dreams. Or should we stop pretending?