Audio By Carbonatix
Authorities in Thailand have warned Facebook to take down content critical of the monarchy, or face legal action.
The social media giant has been given until next Tuesday to remove more than 130 items from pages viewable in Thailand.
Facebook says it does consider requests from governments to block material, and will comply if it breaks local laws.
Any comment critical of the monarchy can result in prosecution under Thailand's strict lese-majeste law.
Those convicted face long prison sentences.
Thailand's military government that seized power in Thailand in 2014 has made great efforts to suppress any criticism of the monarchy.
Thousands of websites have been blocked, and people caught sharing, or even liking Facebook posts deemed unflattering to the monarchy have been prosecuted.

The National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission told the BBC that Facebook had already cooperated in blocking some pages, but that more than 130 judged to be illegal remained visible in Thailand.
Last year, the country's deputy prime minister said Google agreed to co-operate with the removal of online content insulting Thailand's monarchy.
The US internet company said it was following its existing policies on content removal.
"When we are notified of content that is illegal through official processes, we will restrict it in the country where it's illegal after a thorough review," Google said at the time.
Up to 15 years in prison
Thailand's lese-majeste laws are intended to protect the most senior members of Thailand's royal family from insult or threat.
Article 112 of the country's criminal code says anyone who "defames, insults or threatens the king, the queen, the heir-apparent or the regent" will be punished with up to 15 years in prison.
However, there is no definition of what constitutes an insult to the monarchy.
Lese-majeste complaints can be filed by anyone against anyone, and they must always be formally investigated by the police.
More than 100 people have been charged with lese-majeste since the coup; seven were detained by the military last month, including a lawyer who is being charged on 10 counts of violating the law, carrying a punishment of up to 150 years in prison.
Some of the recent arrests for lese-majeste have been made over posts on social media sites.
A man faces 15 years in jail for posting images on Facebook in 2015 of then-King Bhumibol's favourite dog in a way that mocked the king, according to the prosecutor.
And a cleaning lady is being charged for posting the words "I see" in an exchange on Facebook between her and a political activist that police say had defamatory comments.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana, South Africa diplomatic collision over xenophobia exposes deep fractures in continental unityÂ
3 minutes -
Accra flooding caused by weak planning and enforcement — Bomfeh
13 minutes -
Ghana rolls out first National Paediatric Imaging Protocol to improve childhood cancer diagnosis
16 minutes -
Monogamous relationships require full commitment, not mood-based decisions — Dr Ayertey
25 minutes -
Firefighters contain two separate fire outbreaks in Accra, no casualties reported
27 minutes -
At least 19 dead after major earthquake strikes southern Philippines
28 minutes -
Australian doctor who underwent world-first brain tumour treatment dies
28 minutes -
TRiBE Culture Fest to show 2026 FIFA World Cup at all 16 Regions of Ghana
32 minutes -
Starmer tells Apple and Google to ban nude images on children’s phones
33 minutes -
Metro Mass clarifies 100 new buses are for intercity operations, not Accra routes
35 minutes -
Photos: Rescue operations continue at Avenor collapse site as death toll rises to three
43 minutes -
Belarus eyes Ghana for Africa expansion
53 minutes -
Belarus and Ghana establish Joint Trade and Economic Cooperation Committee
54 minutes -
Citizenship by investment in Ghana: Opportunity, risk, and the shape of a new economic citizenship
55 minutes -
Painful intercourse is common but treatable, couples must seek help early – Dr Ayertey
1 hour