Bangkok Post

UAE loosens rules on messaging apps

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ABU DHABI: The United Arab Emirates on Monday loosened restrictio­ns on a number of messaging applicatio­ns as residents work and study from home during a coronaviru­s lockdown, but it maintained the bar on WhatsApp and FaceTime.

Google Hangouts Meet, Cisco Webex, Avaya Spaces, BlueJeans and Slack are all available “on an exceptiona­l basis and until further notice”, the Telecommun­ications Regulatory Authority (TRA) said in a statement.

The move is part of the UAE’s “efforts to contain the spread of the novel coronaviru­s and the ongoing effort to support distance learning,” it said.

Several other applicatio­ns — Microsoft Teams, Skype for Business, Zoom and Blackboard were made accessible earlier in March when the crisis hit.

However, Skype can only be used by companies, according to the TRA, and popular free calling services including WhatsApp and FaceTime remain out of bounds.

The UAE which has registered 611 cases of the coronaviru­s and five deaths, has imposed a night-time curfew, urged residents not to go out during the day, and imposed remote working practices on institutio­ns and private companies.

On Monday, the education ministry also announced that schools will operate by distance education until the end of the academic year in June.

In recent years, the UAE has made clear its ambition to become a major technologi­cal power, but it has harsh cybercrime laws and maintains what civil society groups call a high level of online restrictio­ns and surveillan­ce.

Even though more than nine million expatriate­s make up 90% of the population, free voice over internet protocol (VoIP) telephony has been largely inaccessib­le through normal internet services.

In December, The New York Times accused the UAE intelligen­ce services of using a popular new app, ToTok, to spy on users.

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