This paper presents an interdisciplinary approach in an attempt to bring about a holistic approach to communications, civil liberties, political democracy and Information Communication Technology (ICT) laws in Pakistan. There are no case law precedents in Pakistan pertaining to ICT law and this paper attempts to reason analogous arguments in a legal context to developing issues in the political and social arena; that may have an effect on freedom of expression with a particular focus on Mobile 2.0: content services, in Pakistan and relevant Asia Pacific jurisdictions The premise of arguments stem from mobile companies unilaterally denying “content services” to customers under reasonable terms of service. Who regulates content, mobile companies, regulators or government? Are privacy policies, customer friendly and encourage network neutrality and plurality? Moreover, it endeavors to ferret out the forces and environment that regulate the regulators and the policies in this regard. It will scrutinize the existing state of affairs of freedom of expression and civil liberties vis-a-vis Mobile 2.0. The aim is to come up with plausible suggestions for formulation of policies to regulate new electronic commercial services, media technologies and the telecom sectors suitable to operate in a democratic environment.