SWEDISH ONLINE GAMBLING BLOCKS UNDER DISCUSSION
3 April 2009
Should the Swedish government institute ISP
blocks on Internet gambling websites?
It didn't work in Italy, and it is creating major waves
of protest in Australia at present - the prospect of
governments forcing Internet Service Providers to impose
blocks censoring online gambling websites.
Sweden
is the latest country to consider the censorship option,
reports The Stockholm News this weekend. The newspaper
reveals that a government report suggesting the blocks
is at present undergoing a public consultative
process...and picking up plenty of flak as it does so.
With Wednesday April 1st as the deadline, the
criticism is likely to escalate, the newspaper reports.
By then, regional authorities, local governments,
relevant organisations and private interests will have
all expressed views on how Internet gambling should be
regulated going forward in a country already notorious
for its state-sponsored gambling monopolistic system.
The main objections to the proposal are that it
constitutes blatant censorship and is offensive to the
democratic principle of freedom of speech.
The
proposal is one of many in the government report on the
future of Swedish gambling, and suggests that a Swedish
government agency should have sole responsibility to
decide what is and is not acceptable in terms of
Internet content, and issue orders for ISPs to block
specific websites.
It is not at this stage known
if this alternative is to be operated under the cloak of
secrecy as has been the recent case in Australia and its
Australian Media and Communications Authority trials
(see previous InfoPowa reports).
Major ISPs such
as Bahnhof have already condemned the proposal as rank
censorship, and Jon Karlung of the Svensha Dagbladet
newspaper has editorially posed the question: "Is it
really a good idea for the Swedish state to decide to
what Internet destinations its citizens may have
access?"
In practice, several Swedish ISPs
voluntarily block internet sites that depict child
pornography, but there is no state filtering, and
Karlung believes this is an important issue. Forcing
ISPs to block Internet content would be the first state
censorship in history, he points out.
Government
agencies are also critical of the proposal. The Swedish
Post and Telecommunications Agency, the High Courts and
the Agency for Administrative development have issues
concerning the blocking of Internet access. Attention is
drawn in recent responses to the fact that it is not
presently illegal to visit the Internet sites of foreign
gambling companies, therefore why should legal
accessibility be prevented by the government?
The
High Courts in the counties of Skåne and Blekinge have
characterised the proposal as “disproportional” and
point to the risk that one kind of state filtering of
Internet access can lead to an unwelcome expansion of
state censorship authority to other industries or
interests on the Web.
“What really must be taken
into account is that there are no similar regulations in
any other area of Swedish law”, the courts write in
their response to the government report.
In
similar vein, the Agency for Administrative Development
opined that the proposal will mean “a ban for Swedish
citizens to use parts of the Internet” and recommended
wider and deeper discussion on the possible consequences
of the proposal.
The Ministry of Finance, which
commissioned the report, has declined to make any
comments until the consultative phase has been
completed, but Finance Minister Anders Borg is on prior
record as saying that blocking Internet access may be
going "...a little bit too far” and to have questioned
the proportionality of the concept.
On the other
side of the discussion, Social Democratic spokesperson
Lars Wegendal has said that his party supports the idea
of a state filter on foreign online gambling sites.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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