Authorities have given Facebook until Tuesday morning to remove 131 remaining posts by the Thai court order or face legal action. The legal action would first be against Facebook Thailand and its partners, he said. "It can only press charges against the ISPs as supporters if it has proof they have ignored to remove the illegal content," said Mr Dhiraphol. However, from the technical perspective, it is very hard for an ISP to know where those URLs or posts which contain illegal content are. "Forcing local ISPs to handle illegal content is not practical as they do not have the full capability to monitor and remove content.
Source: Bangkok Post May 11, 2017 10:41 UTC