World Watch/Qatar/Internet & Online Safety

Internet & Online Safety · Qatar

Internet & Online Safety - Qatar

Heavy restrictionCybercrime Prevention Law No. 14 of 2014 (as amended by Law No. 11 of 2025), enforced alongside content filtering by the Communications Regulatory Authority (CRA) and state-controlled ISPs; no DSA/OSA-style online-safety statute exists.

Qatar does not have a comprehensive online-safety/platform regime modeled on the EU DSA or UK OSA; instead it regulates the internet primarily through a criminal-law and state-filtering approach. The Cybercrime Prevention Law criminalizes 'false news' and content deemed to harm national security, public order, religion or the ruling family, while the CRA and state-owned ISPs operate transparent block-page filtering of pornography, LGBTQ, political and circumvention content. A 2025 amendment added penalties for sharing images/videos of individuals without consent, framed as privacy protection but criticized as a further restriction on expression.

Foundational cybercrime law

Law No. 14 of 2014 (Cybercrime Prevention Law) is the core instrument governing online conduct; Article 6 punishes publishing 'false news' that threatens state safety, security or public order with up to three years imprisonment and fines up to QR 500,000.

2025 amendment on image sharing

Law No. 11 of 2025, published in the Official Gazette on 4 August 2025, bans circulating images or videos of individuals without their consent, punishable by up to one year imprisonment and/or a QR 100,000 fine; rights groups warn it can be used against journalism and free expression.

State content filtering

The Communications Regulatory Authority (CRA), established by Emiri Decree No. 42 of 2014, oversees filtering, and state-owned ISPs block sites via a national proxy. Filtered categories include pornography, LGBTQ content, gambling, political criticism of Gulf states, sexual-health resources and circumvention tools; a block page is served (relatively transparent filtering).

No comprehensive platform-liability / online-safety regime

Qatar has no DSA/OSA-equivalent statute imposing systemic duties of care, notice-and-action, or transparency obligations on online platforms; control is exercised through criminal liability of individuals and direct ISP-level blocking rather than intermediary-liability rules.

No formal age-verification mandate

There is no published statutory age-verification regime for online services or adult content comparable to the UK OSA; access to age-restricted/adult material is instead handled by outright filtering and blocking. No official source establishing a mandatory age-assurance scheme was found.

Restrictive expression environment

Freedom House classifies Qatar as 'Not Free'; social-media users can face criminal penalties for politically sensitive posts, security forces reportedly monitor communications, and non-citizens and scholars widely self-censor.

Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →