AUSSIE 'NET CENSORSHIP DRIVE IN TROUBLE? (Update)
6 March 2009
Major supporter has a change of heart
One of Australia's most vociferous opponents of online
gambling, Senator Nick Xenophon has withdrawn his
support from Aussie government moves to censor the
Internet and says he will oppose any legislation that
seeks to do so. Xenophon's change of heart from
supporter to opposition could generate more problems for
the already troubled and highly controversial government
initiative to introduce ISP filtering of whatever it
deems to be undesirable.
Xenophon was previously
in favour of a system that would run all citizens'
Internet connections through a filter for "illegal"
content because it might have also blocked access to
online gambling sites, reports Ars Technica. But as more
and more concerns about the practicability of the plan
have been raised, he has decided that there are too many
unanswered questions and he will move to block any
legislation on the topic.
Ars Technica recalls
that the Australian government first revealed its
filtering initiative in 2007, and was immediately met
with a widespread public outcry. Despite this, the
government moved forward with its plans and began
testing the system in Tasmania in February of 2008. At
the time, the Australian Communications and Media
Authority (ACMA) said that the filters would be enabled
by default and that consumers would have to request
unfiltered connectivity if they wished to opt-out of the
program (see previous InfoPowa reports).
In
October of 2008, however, it transpired that those
promises were only partially true. There were to be two
blacklists—one for "illegal" content (not optional), and
another for "additional material" targeted toward
content inappropriate for children (optional).
Unsurprisingly, this caused an even bigger uproar;
"illegal" is a broad definition, leaving users wondering
exactly what kinds of content would end up falling prey
to the government's mandatory filtering restrictions.
Just last month, the Australian Communications
and Media Authority (ACMA), which controls the secret
blacklist, added an anti-abortion website to the list
because it showed photographs of aborted fetuses. Those
things may be offensive content to some, but they are
certainly not illegal for adults in Australia to view,
Ars Technica points out.
The final straw for many
Australians came in December of 2008, when the
government released a report that essentially tore apart
its own filtering scheme, pointing out numerous
technical difficulties and legal concerns with
implementation. Among the anticipated problems were
overblocking and underblocking content, service
degradation, interception and hacking, privacy breaches,
and breaching sale of goods legislation.
The
report also notes that incorrect blocks may be uncommon,
but errors could prove to be costly - a single blocked
site could result in multiple legal claims, including
loss of revenue and "defamation, due to the grave
implication that the owner has been involved in the
distribution of illegal content."
Nevertheless,
the new Labour government in Australia insisted on
pushing forward, rationalising its actions by saying
that the report was commissioned by the previous
administration.
The Sydney Morning Herald has
since pointed out that Xenophon has now joined the Green
Party and the opposition in threatening to block
whatever legislation may be required to get the plan
going.
"The more evidence that's come out, the
more questions there are on this," Xenophon told the
newspaper. "I'm very sceptical that the government is
going down the best path on this. I commend their
intentions but I think the implementation of this could
almost be counter-productive and I think the money could
be better spent."
In addition to Xenophon's
decision to stop supporting the filtering legislation,
an independent poll of Australian citizens conducted by
Galaxy showed that only five percent of Australians
actually want ISPs to be responsible for controlling
access to content, and only four percent want the
government to hold the reins to such a system.
A
different survey by Netspace found that only 6.3 percent
of those surveyed agreed with the proposed policies.
Internet users in Australia are (still) against the
filtering legislation; perhaps if more senators have
second thoughts, Australia won't start taking the first
steps down the road trod mostly, until now, by countries
like China.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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