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After the social media ban was announced by the Kashmir government on 26 April, a 16-year-old entrepreneur rose to the challenge to connect Kashmiris by launching his own social media network – “KashBook”.
Taking a cue from Kashmiriyat and Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook model, the website aims at connecting people in the Valley at a time when the government is restricting the internet in the state which serves as “a medium to spread anti-social messages”.
Zeyan Shafiq from Kashmir’s Anantnag district had finished his 10 grade exams a few months ago and had been interested in coding since he became a teenager. The young entrepreneur told The Quint that he wants to help Kashmir connect in a time of a social media blackout.
Shafiq started the website along with his friend Uzair Jan from Srinagar.
While not being used extensively since its inception, the website is now becoming integral to Kashmir’s communication.
The boys quickly got back to work after the email.
The duo, “worked for 7 days straight” and they “didn’t sleep, but only worked at night”.
The website now has a an Android app and the duo are working an app for iOS.
The hard work the boys have put in is making KashBook outperform Facebook in the state.
Given that social media was blocked in the state for a month owing to “anti-national material getting shared and causing turmoil in the Valley”, Shafiq answered the kind of content people are sharing on the website.
How have they managed to keep KashBook up when other sites are not being allowed to function in the state?
Each time their server gets blacklisted, they hop on online, change the servers allowing people to network seamlessly again. It’s something which Facebook hasn’t been doing, leaving it inaccessible to Kashmiris. It hardly takes 5-10 minutes for the site to bounce back up.
Shafiq is not worried about the site’s fate, once the social media ban ends.
The two are also vehemently opposed to the ban, which made them want to give people a voice that the government was taking away from them.
The two are hard at work to make sure the website stays up and running and are even welcoming people from outside the Valley to help them in their endeavour of growing and keeping KashBook functioning.
In a masterstroke, Shafiq and Jan tackled the ‘Digital India’ and ‘Make In India’ concepts of the government when it chose to cripple the digital backbone of the state.
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