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Australia kicks off government web censorship with voluntary live trial

December 15th, 2008 No comments

I’ve already blogged on Australia’s plan to force internet service providers to implement filters that are intended to block access to internet sites that are on a secret list maintained by the government (and that internet providers may not disclose); the New York Times reports that the government has “invited Internet service providers and mobile phone operators to participate in a live trial of the program, which is set to begin this year.”

According to the NYT, the system will consist of mandatory blocks that will slow internet access for all users, and an optional additional filter that individuals could request.  Civil rights and users groups have expressed concerns about the possibility of further political pressures to expand censorship via the secret list, the likelihood that the filters will do little to stop the use of the internet for “illegal” purposes (apparently child pornography is the main target, while inconveniencing all users by slowing access.  According to the NYT:

The proposed system consists of two tiers. Under the first, all Australian service providers must block access to around 10,000 Web sites on a list maintained by the Australian Communications and Media Authority, the federal monitor that oversees film classifications.

The second tier would require service providers to provide an optional filter that individuals could use to block material deemed unsuitable for children, like pornography or violence.

The government says the list, which is not available to the public, includes only illegal content, mostly child pornography. But critics worry about the lack of transparency and say the filter could be used to block a range of morally hazy topics, like gambling or euthanasia.

“Even if the scheme is introduced with the best of intentions, there will be enormous political pressure on the government to expand the list,” said Colin Jacobs, the vice chairman of Electronic Frontiers Australia, a technology advocacy group.  …

“Our view is there are some serious shortfalls in what is being proposed,” said Mark White, the chief operating officer at iiNet, Australia’s third-largest service provider, which has applied to take part in the trial.

Mr. White said the mandatory filter was unlikely to work because it would not monitor illegal activity on peer-to-peer or file-sharing networks, where most child pornography and other illegal content is exchanged. The filter would also slow Internet browsing speeds for all regardless of whether they were trying to access forbidden sites, he said.

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Internet censorship: Australia seeks to emulate China, Iran; is the US next?

November 4th, 2008 No comments

According to news reports, the Australian federal government is planning to introduce a costly internet filtering plan that would “make internet censorship compulsory for all Australians” and would block illegal sites and others deemed undesirable by the government, but would be ineffective as it does not cover file-sharing sites.

“Australia’s level of net censorship will put it in the same league as countries including China, Cuba, Iran and North Korea, and the Government will not let users opt out of the proposed national internet filter when it is introduced.”

Critics have said that the Labor government’s plans are stricter than those of Iran:

“Colin Jacobs, chair of the online users’ lobby group Electronic Frontiers Australia said: ‘I’m not exaggerating when I say that this model involves more technical interference in the internet infrastructure than what is attempted in Iran, one of the most repressive and regressive censorship regimes in the world.'”

The Australian government’s plans apparently go far beyond the filtering systems implemented by other Western nations, such as Britain, Sweden, Canada and New Zealand, where participation by ISPs and customers was optional and the filtering was limited in scope.

More discussion here and here.

HT2 David Bruggerman

 

Categories: Austrialia, censorship, internet Tags: