Archive for the ‘Media’ Category
NoCleanFeed shirts sold to support the Leukaemia Foundation
Websinthe has put together anti-censorship shirts for the March in March with all profits going to the Leukaemia Foundation.
These shirts are a great way of supporting two causes at once and for once dispelling the idea that the anti-censorship lobby is doing nothing to protect children.
So if you’re planning on attending the March in March or are just looking to support two good causes at once, it might be time to whip out the credit card and place an order or two.
ACMA blocks political website
Investigations by Whirlpool community user xFoadx has found that political websites are anything but immune to the ACMA ban-hammer.
Anti-abortion advocacy website abortiontv.com was submitted to the ACMA by xFoadx as a phony complaint. Unfortunately, the ACMA fell for the deception and added the site to its blacklist.
Further information can be found at:
Australian Christian Lobby resorts to hypocrisy to promote the filter
Managing Director of the Australian Chrisitan Lobby Jim Wallace has written an article in the Sydney Morning Herald accusing the anti-censorship lobby, in particular the GetUp! foundation, of cherry picking statistics and misleading the public.
He then choose to fight this by cherry picking statistics and misleading the public.
Further information can be found at:
- Geordie Guy - Geordie Guy fires up about the blatant hypocrisy in Jim’s article
- Websinthe - Websinthe rebuts the article point-by-point
- Stilgherrian - Tears shreds out of the political childishness and lies in the article
- Letters to the SMH - Letters to the SMH show that readers truly disagree with Jim Wallace
Netspace survey shows Internet users do not want the ISP filter
Australian ISP Netspace has conducted a survey of nearly 10,000 of its customers asking questions about the government’s proposed filter.
The results were a statistical bombardment of the government’s claims that the Australian populace actually wants the filter.
Further information can be found at:
- Netspace - The survey results
- TechWiredAU
- Somebody Think Of The Children
*Links in order of post order
Web filter plan extends further
This page can be found here.
NEWS.com.au
December 22, 2008 04:55pm
In a post on his department’s blog, Senator Conroy today said technology that could filter data sent directly between computers would be tested as part of the upcoming live filtering trial.
“Technology that filters peer-to-peer and BitTorrent traffic does exist and it is anticipated that the effectiveness of this will be tested in the live pilot trial,” Senator Conroy said.
Peer-to-peer file-sharing technology is the most common way for computer users to share video, picture and music files over the internet.
It was previously thought the Government’s filtering plan would be restricted to traffic on the “world wide web” – the channel through which users view websites like news.com.au.
Senator Conroy revealed the plan to trial peer-to-peer filtering technology in a reply to critical comments made on the Digital Economy Future Directions blog launched earlier this month.
The blog was launched to encourage public input on the future of Australia’s digital economy, but has so far been saturated with comments attacking Senator Conroy over the Government’s filtering plan.
Senator Conroy addressed the level of critical feedback in his post and said he had been following discussion of the plan on social networking websites such as Twitter.
“I’m aware that this proposal has attracted significant debate and criticism – on this blog and at other places in the blogosphere,” Senator Conroy said.
“I’m following the debate at sites like Whirlpool and GetUp and on Twitter at #nocleanfeed.”
The filtering scheme has made headlines around the world in the The New York Times and British newspapers and was the target of protests held in major cities across the country earlier this month.
Live pilot trial
A live trial of filtering technology is scheduled to begin this week, but internet service providers have so far been kept in the dark over the details.
Less than a week before the trial was due to begin, participating ISPs Optus and iiNet said they had not been told if their applications had been accepted.
An Optus spokesperson today said the company had still not been notified of the status of its application.
“We still have not received notification about whether or not our proposal has been accepted, however our proposal does not include peer-to-peer filtering,” the spokesperson said.
Comment is being sought from iiNet.
‘Not like China’
Despite announcing the live pilot trial would likely include filtering peer-to-peer traffic, Senator Conroy rejected accusations that the scheme was similar to internet censorship in countries such as China.
“Freedom of speech is fundamentally important in a democratic society and there was never any suggestion that the Australian Government would seek to block political content,” Senator Conroy said.
“In this context, claims that the Government’s policy is analogous to the approach taken by countries such as Iran, China and Saudi Arabia are not justified.”
Senator Conroy said the internet filter would be in-step with existing methods to censor books, films and video games.
“Australian society has always accepted that there is some material which is not acceptable, particularly for children,” he said.
“That is why we have the National Classification Scheme for classifying films, computer games, publications and online content.”
“Australian ISPs are already subject to regulation that prohibits the hosting of certain material based upon the Scheme.
“All the Government is now seeking to do is to examine how technology can assist in filtering internationally-hosted content.”
Links
Senator Conroy’s blog post – http://www.dbcde.gov.au/communications_for_busines…
Internet filter to block 10,000-plus “unwanted” sites
This page can be found here.
November 13, 2008 01:16pm
READERS of The Courier-Mail online have blasted plans for Australia’s mandatory internet filter to block as many as 10,000 websites.
The websites form a blacklist of unspecified “unwanted content”, Broadband Minister Stephen Conroy revealed in Federal Parliament.
The 10,000 blacklisted websites would be blocked in addition to 1300 websites identified by the Australian Communications and Media Authority.
The majority of 271 comments posted to 14.12pm yesterday revealing fears of interference from ”Big Brother.” (more…)
Conroy tight lipped on content.
The federal Government has been urged to come clean over grey areas in its internet filtering plan after Broadband and Communications Minister Stephen Conroy pointed to “unwanted content” being censored.
On Monday, the Government released details of its long-awaited call for expressions of interest on internet content filtering trials that will involve ISPs and mobile phone operators.
During question time yesterday, Senator Conroy was unclear on the exact type of content that would be blocked during the trials.
“The pilot will test filtering specifically against the ACMA blacklist of internet prohibited content, which is mostly child pornography, as well as filtering of other unwanted content,” he said in response to a question by Greens Senator Scott Ludlum. (more…)
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