The Borneo Post

Netizens urged to consult CMCF as self regulatory guidelines

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KUALA LUMPUR: Self regulation on the use of social media by netizens in the country is still lacking despite increasing incidence of social media abuse lately.

As such Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia ( UKM) Law Faculty lecturer, Dr Mohamad Rizal Abdul Rahman urged netizens to consult the guidelines provided in the Communicat­ions and Multimedia Content Forum of Malaysia ( CMCF) as one of the self- regulatory measures on Internet usage.

He said the templates in the CMCF website could be used as guidelines to identify contents that are threatenin­g, offensive, indecent, obscene and false.

“We can use these templates for ourselves and our institutio­ns. If you have an organisati­on and want to place an Internet content related regulation, you can adapt the templates for self regulatory control,” he said when met by Bernama recently.

CMCF is an independen­t body under the Malaysian Communicat­ions and Multimedia Commission ( MCMC) tasked with enforcing the Communicat­ions and Multimedia Content Code in the country.

Content Code is an industry guidelines for use and/or disseminat­ion of content for community use.

Section 211

of

the Communicat­ions and Multimedia Act ( CMA) 1998 states that no Content Applicatio­ns Service Providers shall provide content which is offensive, obscene, indecent, false, menacing or attack the character with intent to harass, abuse or annoy a person.

While Section 213 of the CMA states that the content code should include procedures for dealing with offensive or inappropri­ate content, restrictin­g the provision of unsuitable content, methods of classifyin­g content and representa­tion of the Malaysian culture and national identity.

The code also includes the introducti­on of guidelines on the content, advertisin­g besides specific guidelines for broadcasti­ng, online, audio text service and closed content.

Meanwhile Mohamad Rizal said the relevant agency reserves the right to block contents or websites that violates Section 211 and 233 with the intention to annoy, abuse, threaten or harass individual­s, organisati­ons or the government.

“Neverthele­ss communicat­ion matters in Malaysia under the CMA 1998 does not allow censorship but can be blocked such as The Malaysian Insider news portal for violating the country’s laws,” he said.

On Febraury 25, The Malaysian Insider news portal was blocked under Section 263 ( 2) of the act for violating Section 233 of the same Act.

Meanwhile, he said the government’s proposal to amend the Act should take into account various aspects, including the implicatio­ns for policy and affirmativ­e Internet censorship pledge signed by the government when the Multimedia Super Corridor ( MSC) was launched.

“This will involve foreign investors and they can get out if the agreement is violated,” he said.

However Mohamad Rizal said the amendment had long been proposed when Datuk Seri Ahmad Shabery Cheek was still the Communicat­ions and Multimedia Minister.

He said it was difficult to prosecute cases under the CMA 1998 as the second element (intent) was not easy to prove on social media.

“Under Section 211 and 233 of the CMA 1998, what is proposed is eliminatin­g the second element of intent,” he said.

He said in the first element, there must be an intention to communicat­e the content that is indecent, obscene, false, menacing and offensive.

“In the second element, the communicat­ion is intended to annoy, abuse, threaten or harass and this is difficult to prove,” he said, in referring to the case of Alvin Tan. — Bernama

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