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Thread started 10/18/08 10:57am

xperience319

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Aussie orger's, welcome to China!



No opt-out of filtered Internet
Australians will be unable to opt-out of the government's pending Internet content filtering scheme, and will instead be placed on a watered-down blacklist, experts say.

By Darren Pauli, Computerworld Australia
October 13, 2008

Australians will be unable to opt-out of the government's pending Internet content filtering scheme, and will instead be placed on a watered-down blacklist, experts say.

Under the government's $125.8 million Plan for Cyber-Safety, users can switch between two blacklists which block content inappropriate for children, and a separate list which blocks illegal material.

Pundits say consumers have been lulled into believing the opt-out proviso would remove content filtering altogether.

The government will iron-out policy and implementation of the Internet content filtering software following an upcoming trial of the technology, according to the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy.

Department spokesman Tim Marshall said the filters will be mandatory for all Australians.

"Labor's plan for cyber-safety will require ISPs to offer a clean feed Internet service to all homes, schools and public Internet points accessible by children," Marshall said.

"The upcoming field pilot of ISP filtering technology will look at various aspects of filtering, including effectiveness, ease of circumvention, the impact on internet access speeds and cost."

Internet Service Providers (ISPs) contacted by Computerworld say blanket content filtering will cripple Internet speeds because the technology is not up to scratch.

Online libertarians claim the blacklists could be expanded to censor material such as euthanasia, drugs and protest.

Internode network engineer Mark Newton said many users falsely believe the opt-out proviso will remove content filtering.

"Users can opt-out of the 'additional material' blacklist (referred to in a department press release, which is a list of things unsuitable for children, but there is no opt-out for 'illegal content'", Newton said.

"That is the way the testing was formulated, the way the upcoming live trials will run, and the way the policy is framed; to believe otherwise is to believe that a government department would go to the lengths of declaring that some kind of Internet content is illegal, then allow an opt-out.

"Illegal is illegal and if there is infrastructure in place to block it, then it will be required to be blocked -- end of story."

Newton said advisers to Communications Minister Stephen Conroy have told ISPs that Internet content filtering will be mandatory for all users.

The government reported it does not expected to prescribe which filtering technologies ISPs can use, and will only set blacklists of filtered content, supplied by the Australia Communications and Media Authority (ACMA).

EFA chair Dale Clapperton said in a previous article that Internet content filtering could lead to censorship of drugs, political dissident and other legal freedoms.

"Once the public has allowed the system to be established, it is much easier to block other material," Clapperton said.

According to preliminary trials, the best Internet content filters would incorrectly block about 10,0000 Web pages from one million.


madi can't believe i have to buy a shell server or vpn and tunnel my connection trough that...what a pain in the ass!!!!! FUCK YOU RUDD!mad

And for people trolling this thread from other countries...its a MATTER OF TIME before your politicians use this gimmick to secure the conservative voters on their next election!

http://www.infoworld.com/...source=gs:


RIP 1958-2016 Prince broken RIP 1947-2016 David Bowie

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Reply #1 posted 10/18/08 11:17am

ZombieKitten

and I'm sure the org will be one of those 10,000 confused
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Reply #2 posted 10/18/08 11:41am

missmad

im confused whats gonna happen to the net?
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Reply #3 posted 10/18/08 11:49am

xperience319

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Its being child-proofed on a national scale.

As well as a blanket block on any sites with illegal content, be it "illegal porn", file sharing/torrent sites...god knows what else. So whatever is illegal in Australia proper, will be similarly illegal online.

Any news topic the government dosen't like can be censored out, controversial topics, euthanasia websites etc.,

The only good thing about this is all the movie/game/music pirates will be stopped dead in their tracks, primarily because they cannot access the content.

...altho pirates are a difficult bunch to keep under restrictions...
[Edited 10/18/08 4:50am]


RIP 1958-2016 Prince broken RIP 1947-2016 David Bowie

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Reply #4 posted 10/18/08 12:03pm

purplesweat

Well...Australia was more than happy to elect this jerk just a few months ago.

For all the Howard bashing, we never realised what a sensible person he was.

Rudd's a conservative fool. Well done, Australia.
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Reply #5 posted 10/18/08 9:47pm

missmad

xperience319 said:

Its being child-proofed on a national scale.

As well as a blanket block on any sites with illegal content, be it "illegal porn", file sharing/torrent sites...god knows what else. So whatever is illegal in Australia proper, will be similarly illegal online.

Any news topic the government dosen't like can be censored out, controversial topics, euthanasia websites etc.,

The only good thing about this is all the movie/game/music pirates will be stopped dead in their tracks, primarily because they cannot access the content.

...altho pirates are a difficult bunch to keep under restrictions...
[Edited 10/18/08 4:50am]



wow that suxxxxx
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Reply #6 posted 10/18/08 10:00pm

Muse2NOPharaoh

xperience319 said:

Its being child-proofed on a national scale.

As well as a blanket block on any sites with illegal content, be it "illegal porn", file sharing/torrent sites...god knows what else. So whatever is illegal in Australia proper, will be similarly illegal online.

Any news topic the government dosen't like can be censored out, controversial topics, euthanasia websites etc.,

The only good thing about this is all the movie/game/music pirates will be stopped dead in their tracks, primarily because they cannot access the content.

...altho pirates are a difficult bunch to keep under restrictions...
[Edited 10/18/08 4:50am]


eek Yikes! I was going to say, it will only effect the average Joe. Pirates and dirty dogs will find out the work arounds rapidly.
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Reply #7 posted 10/18/08 11:10pm

BlueZebra

port 443 FTW ! woot!
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Reply #8 posted 10/19/08 2:25am

prb

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confuse
seems that i was busy doing something close to nothing, but different than the day before music beret
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