There were no government restrictions on access to the Internet or credible reports the government monitors
e-mail or Internet
chat rooms without
judicial oversight. Individuals and groups engage in the free expression of views via the Internet, including by e-mail. The law provides for
freedom of speech and
press, and the government generally respects these rights. An independent press, an effective judiciary, and a functioning democratic political system combine to ensure freedom of speech and of the press. However, the law provides for some exceptions to these freedoms, for example, in cases of "
hate speech",
Holocaust denial, and denial of
Communist-era crimes. The law prohibits arbitrary interference with privacy, family, home, or correspondence, and the government generally respects these prohibitions in practice. and
Vodafone pass mobile and fixed Internet traffic through
Cleanfeed, which uses data provided by the Internet Watch Foundation to identify pages believed to contain indecent photographs of children, and racist materials. On 13 August 2009,
Telefónica O2 Czech Republic, Czech
DSL incumbent and mobile operator, started to block access to sites listed by the
Internet Watch Foundation. The company said it wanted to replace the list with data provided by
Czech Police. The rollout of the blocking system attracted public attention due to serious network service difficulties and many innocent sites mistakenly blocked. The specific blocking implementation is unknown but it is believed that recursive
DNS servers provided by the operator to its customers have been modified to return fake answers diverting consequent
TCP connections to an
HTTP firewall. On 6 May 2010, T-Mobile Czech Republic officially announced that it was starting to block web pages promoting child pornography, child prostitution, child trafficking, pedophilia and illegal sexual contact with children. T-Mobile claimed that its blocking was based on URLs from the Internet Watch Foundation list and on individual direct requests made by customers. Since 1 January 2017,
internet service providers are obligated to prevent from accessing "internet sites" listed on non-permitted internet games list. The list is maintained by
Ministry of Finance of the Czech Republic. The motivation is to make obstacle in reaching unregulated and untaxed foreign internet lotteries by Czech citizens and to protect lottery companies that obeyed the Czech regulations. On 25 February 2022, as a result of the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine and a call from the government,
CZ.NIC decided to suspend 8 domains of conspiracy and
fake news websites spreading
Russian propaganda. On the same day, the cybernetic unit of the
Czech military Intelligence has asked internet service providers to block access to 22 websites (including 8 domains above), while the blocking is voluntary. The suspension period took 3 months and was not extended. ==See also==