Archive for January, 2009
Friday, January 30th, 2009
According to a news report on SMH this afternoon, iiNet has heard nothing from the Government about their application (lodged December 6) to participate in the next trial of ISP filtering systems. That trial is still yet to start, despite a Christmas wish from Senator Conroy it would begin as ...
Posted in Internet Censorship | 4 Comments »
Thursday, January 29th, 2009
In brief: Despite Mark Newton's clear explanation of what prohibited content contains, Director of the Australian Christian Lobby Jim Wallace told ABC Radio National listeners that Newton is telling 'absolute nonsense' when he says the Government wants to block legal material (yes I spat out my Weet-Bix).
Wallace says the only ...
Posted in Internet Censorship | 24 Comments »
Wednesday, January 28th, 2009
In an exclusive letter to GameSpot UK explaining why he won't permit R18+ games, SA A-G Michael Atkinson claims he is not the only Australian censorship minister opposed to introducing an adults only classification:
I don't support the introduction of an R18+ rating for electronic games, chiefly because it will greatly ...
Posted in Game Censorship | 24 Comments »
Wednesday, January 28th, 2009
Mark Newton will be on ABC Radio National Thursday morning at 09:05 EST to spar with the director of the Australian Christian Lobby Jim Wallace over Australia's net censorship plan. For those who haven't seen Wallace's factually-limp opinion piece on filtering from earlier this week I suggest you check it ...
Posted in Internet Censorship | 4 Comments »
Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
A survey on mandatory ISP filtering conducted by one of Australia's major ISPs, Netspace, has received responses from nearly 10,000 customers.
Asked whether they agree with the Federal Government's policy to make ISP level filtering mandatory for all Australians, 61% of respondents strongly disagreed, with only 6.3% strongly agreeing.
[caption id="attachment_2254" align="aligncenter" ...
Posted in Internet Censorship | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
Briefly: Fran Foo from Australian IT reports that the starting date for the Government's live mandatory ISP filtering trial is imminent and that 16 ISPs are in the final round of the selection process. She writes:
One issue understood to be stalling the process is that service providers have been negotiating ...
Posted in Internet Censorship | 3 Comments »
Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
Senator Conroy's responses to Senator Scott Ludlam's Questions On Notice regarding mandatory filtering are now available to read in full. Previously some answers were missing from Question No. 833. You can download the PDFs below.
- Question No. 0831
- Question No. 0832
- Question No. 0833
- Question No. 0834
Hat tip to Roo.
Posted in Internet Censorship | 2 Comments »
Tuesday, January 27th, 2009
Managing Director of the Australian Christian Lobby, Jim Wallace, abandoned his mainstay argument of Christian morals when he wrote his SMH opinion piece about mandatory ISP filtering, preferring instead to tackle the Government's net censorship plan primarily from a technical standpoint. The equivalent of a five year old offering advice ...
Posted in Internet Censorship | 15 Comments »
Friday, January 23rd, 2009
If the Chinese government's claim that Internet pornography and vulgar content seriously threaten the mental and physical health of youth is true, then perhaps looking at too much porn really will turn you blind?
I'm no doctor so I'll refrain from further speculation on the physical effects, but reports are in ...
Posted in International | 6 Comments »
Friday, January 23rd, 2009
South Australian Liberal Senator Simon Birmingham has described Kevin Rudd's filtering policy as an ill-considered and dangerous policy with the potential to inflict serious harm on a variety of levels.
[caption id="attachment_2183" align="alignright" width="100" caption="Senator Scott Birmingham"][/caption]
In a letter to a Whirlpool member, Birmingham says Labor’s compulsory filtering would potentially dramatically slow internet access at ...
Posted in Internet Censorship | 6 Comments »