DANISH INTERNET CENSORSHIP 'HYPOCRITICAL'
5 June 2009
Comparisons with oppressive regimes in China
and North Korea made
The Danish government's putative plans to censor the
Internet by asking ISPs to block specified websites that
reportedly include online gambling enterprises has come
in for some stiff criticism this week in the Danish
newspaper The Copenhagen Post.
The newspaper
reports that Denmark is being compared with North Korea
and China for its proposal to block internet users from
accessing certain websites, which have been labelled as
‘hypocritical’ by a group of executives claiming that a
proposal to prevent Danish internet connections from
accessing foreign gambling websites spells ‘the
beginning of the end of the free internet as Danes know
it’.
In an opinion piece titled ‘STOP! You are
not allowed to use this website’, published in
Berlingske Tidende, executives from the Danish Energy
Association, the Confederation of Danish Industries, the
Bar and Law Society, Telecommunications Industry
Association and FDIM (the lobby organisation for
internet media), compare Denmark with China and North
Korea when it comes to blocking access to certain
internet websites.
The group accepted that
blocking some sites, such as those with child
pornography, made sense, but called the proposal to
block access to gambling sites and sites with pirated
content ‘a slippery slope’.
The state maintains
a monopoly on gambling services through its Danske Spil
venture, but with the likelihood that a liberalisation
of the market in conformance with general European
trends will be approved, a proposal to deny access to
foreign gambling sites could be interpreted as a way to
protect the state gaming agency from foreign competition
- to the detriment of Danish punters.
Blocking
certain sites, the group said, would mean ‘we could no
longer be outraged when the Chinese and North Korean
government’s block access to foreign websites’.
It asks whether blocked sites would also include Iran’s
official website for ‘thundering against Western
values’, video sharing site YouTube, which ‘gives access
to large amounts of illegal content’ or search engine
Google, which ‘no doubt is used by some to find and
download illegal information’.
Clement Salung
Petersen, of University of Copenhagen Faculty of Law,
called it ‘worrisome’ that the government would rather
‘restrict access to the internet than increase efforts
to prosecute those who commit internet crimes’.
Helge Sander, the science minister, said that regulating
gambling by blocking foreign websites ‘did not conflict’
with its efforts to protect the freedom of speech.
Responses to the article were universally against
the idea:
"I suspect this clampdown has
everything to do with the Danish government being unable
to collect taxes from gambling on foreign sites," wrote
one poster.
Another posted: "Control and taxes.
Says it all - only one reason for the ban- NON TAXABLE
WINNINGS...and the goverment scared to death that
someone might be a little happy for once,instead of
being brainwashed and made to be so miserable all the
time and act like the puppets they want us to be....
MOVE WITH THE TIMES DK GOVERNMENT....give the danes a
choice for once."
A third wrote: "Even though
taxation is not mentioned directly in the article, that
is at the heart of the government's proposal to block
these sites because the governement cannot generate tax
income on foreign sites and will have a difficult time
collecting taxes on winnings. Note that through
DanskeSpil, they do not have either of these problems.
This story is a great example of taxation taking away
personal freedoms."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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