Australia's Internet Filter Switches On In July

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Australia's Internet Filter Switches On In July


Four Australian internet providers, including the country's two largest, will begin voluntarily censoring the internet next month by blocking access to more than 500 websites.

Australia's plan to filter the naughtiness out of the internet has been kicking around [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/101950-New-Australian-PM-Sticks-With-Internet-Filter-Plans] for years but it never seemed to go anywhere because when you get right down to it, effectively censoring the whole internet is a pretty daunting technical challenge. That doesn't even take into account the fact that a significant number of people who actually use the internet are pretty vehemently opposed to the idea. But beginning in July, internet access for many Aussies will in fact be censored, not by the government but by the voluntary actions of four of the country's ISPs.

Telstra and Optus, the two largest internet providers in Australia, along with two other small outfits, confirmed that they will begin to block access to "child abuse websites" provided by the Australian Communications and Media Authority [http://www.acma.gov.au] and other unnamed "international organizations" beginning next month. The filter is being put into place despite the fact that the government dropped funding for the plan in May because of "limited interest" from the industry.

"The ACMA will compile and manage a list of URLs of child abuse content that will include the appropriate subsection of the ACMA blacklist as well as child abuse URLs that are provided by reputable international organizations [to be blocked]," an ACMA rep said.

But while Donna Ashelford of the System Administrators Guild of Australia said that concerns about reduced access speeds caused by the filter are probably unwarranted, she also pointed out that the scheme won't have any meaningful impact on the distribution of child porn either.

"The effectiveness will be trivial because you're just blocking a single website address [and] a person can get around it by changing that address with one character," she said. "Child abuse material is more likely to be exchanged on peer-to-peer networks and private networks anyway and is a matter for law enforcement."

Another worry, according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation [https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2011/06/australia-heads-down-slippery-slope-authorizes], is that there is no transparency or accountability in the creation and maintenance of the blacklist, which greatly increases the chance of legal websites being inappropriately blocked. It's not known which organizations are contributing to the list of forbidden beyond the ACMA , but the ACMA's own blacklist from 2009, revealed by Wikileaks, included the website of a Queensland-based dentist and other sites unrelated to illegal pornography. There also appears to be no appeals process for any sites mistakenly caught up in the filter.

But possibly the greatest concern is simply that it sets a precedent. Once the filters are in place and Australians have adjusted to the idea, is it much of a stretch to see them put to use blocking content the ACMA decides is "indecent" or controversial? "We've been waiting to hear details on this from the Government," said EFF board member Colin Jacobs. "It they turn out to be zealous with the type of material that is on the list then we'd want to have a discussion about ways to introduce more transparency."

Source: News.com.au [http://www.news.com.au/technology/internet-filter/telstra-optus-to-begin-censoring-web-next-month/story-fn5j66db-1226079954138]

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Rainboq

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2009
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And, just like last time it will be defeated in the span of a few hours. -_-

I don't even know why they try.
 
Apr 28, 2008
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Ain't that a *****. Hopefully it gets dropped. Or if it doesn't, hopefully it doesn't lead to many things getting censored to "protect the children" or some other stupid-ass excuse.
 

LongAndShort

I'm pretty good. Yourself?
May 11, 2009
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The worst part of this? The comment section is likely gonna be filled with people saying how much it sucks to be an Australian, or how glad they are to not live in Australia, as it always does whenever something like this happens.

Oh well, such is life.
 

Fayathon

Professional Lurker
Nov 18, 2009
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You know what, fuck this censorship thing. I'm not even Australian and this pisses me off. To any Aussies that are getting hit with this crap I have something for you:

The Tor Project [http://www.torproject.org/]

For those unfamiliar think of it as an uber-proxy, it takes a bit of TLC to get running quite right, and it's slower then regular internet, but it pretty well unblocks anything that you want once you've gotten it down.

For those that do know about Tor, well, I guess I needn't tell you about it.

Quick Edit: Yes, I know about the unsavory label that Tor has, but seriously, it has quite a few perfectly legal uses.
 

SonofaJohannes

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Apr 18, 2011
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Fayathon said:
You know what, fuck this censorship thing. I'm not even Australian and this pisses me off. To any Aussies that are getting hit with this crap I have something for you:

The Tor Project [http://www.torproject.org/]

For those unfamiliar think of it as an uber-proxy, it takes a bit of TLC to get running quite right, and it's slower then regular internet, but it pretty well unblocks anything that you want once you've gotten it down.

For those that do know about Tor, well, I guess I needn't tell you about it.

Quick Edit: Yes, I know about the unsavory label that Tor has, but seriously, it has quite a few perfectly legal uses.
I'm not that good with the technical stuff but that sounds great! Would that mean that I could play games only available to people in the US?
 

teqrevisited

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Mar 17, 2010
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The intentions are good but where will it end?

Companies paying the filter watchdogs to block their competition? Blocking whatever the hell they like if they really wanted to.

This really isn't the answer.
 

Hiphophippo

New member
Nov 5, 2009
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SomethingAmazing said:
Fayathon said:
You know what, fuck this censorship thing. I'm not even Australian and this pisses me off. To any Aussies that are getting hit with this crap I have something for you:

The Tor Project [http://www.torproject.org/]

For those unfamiliar think of it as an uber-proxy, it takes a bit of TLC to get running quite right, and it's slower then regular internet, but it pretty well unblocks anything that you want once you've gotten it down.

For those that do know about Tor, well, I guess I needn't tell you about it.
They really should make this kind of thing illegal if it isn't already.

The government(And organizations like this) should have every right to block websites from user access.
Boy I bet it's lonely in your little world.
 

Fayathon

Professional Lurker
Nov 18, 2009
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SomethingAmazing said:
Fayathon said:
You know what, fuck this censorship thing. I'm not even Australian and this pisses me off. To any Aussies that are getting hit with this crap I have something for you:

The Tor Project [http://www.torproject.org/]

For those unfamiliar think of it as an uber-proxy, it takes a bit of TLC to get running quite right, and it's slower then regular internet, but it pretty well unblocks anything that you want once you've gotten it down.

For those that do know about Tor, well, I guess I needn't tell you about it.
They really should make this kind of thing illegal if it isn't already.

The government(And organizations like this) should have every right to block websites from user access.
I seriously hope that you are posting with a great deal of sarcasm, because reading your comments is making me want to post something that would likely get me a lot of mod wrath for doing. Acceptance of censorship of any kind is akin to letting someone tie you up, tape your mouth shut and beating you every time you complain about it.
 

Fayathon

Professional Lurker
Nov 18, 2009
905
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0
SonofaJohannes said:
Fayathon said:
You know what, fuck this censorship thing. I'm not even Australian and this pisses me off. To any Aussies that are getting hit with this crap I have something for you:

The Tor Project [http://www.torproject.org/]

For those unfamiliar think of it as an uber-proxy, it takes a bit of TLC to get running quite right, and it's slower then regular internet, but it pretty well unblocks anything that you want once you've gotten it down.

For those that do know about Tor, well, I guess I needn't tell you about it.

Quick Edit: Yes, I know about the unsavory label that Tor has, but seriously, it has quite a few perfectly legal uses.
I'm not that good with the technical stuff but that sounds great! Would that mean that I could play games only available to people in the US?
I'm not sure, as I've not delved too much into Tor's other functions, I just run the firefox bondle if I want to bypass country blocks on youtube and crap like that. Do some digging on the forums, Tor is a communal project after all, and they're (from my experience) happy to help newcomers out with it. Just remember, tread carefully in Tor, as there are a number of highly undesirable sites that it hides.
 

Rainboq

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2009
16,620
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41
SomethingAmazing said:
Fayathon said:
You know what, fuck this censorship thing. I'm not even Australian and this pisses me off. To any Aussies that are getting hit with this crap I have something for you:

The Tor Project [http://www.torproject.org/]

For those unfamiliar think of it as an uber-proxy, it takes a bit of TLC to get running quite right, and it's slower then regular internet, but it pretty well unblocks anything that you want once you've gotten it down.

For those that do know about Tor, well, I guess I needn't tell you about it.
They really should make this kind of thing illegal if it isn't already.

The government(And organizations like this) should have every right to block websites from user access.
So they should have the right to censor their opposition from speaking?
 

Rainboq

Elite Member
Nov 19, 2009
16,620
0
41
Xzi said:
SomethingAmazing said:
Thank goodness.

After a while I hope we can get this in the U.S. too so that we can phase out internet pornography and piracy.
ROFL. There would be rioting in the streets. Buildings would burn. People would die.
Governments would fall, continents shift, Pigs would fly, chickens would give kissing lessons.
 

IndianaJonny

Mysteron Display Team
Jan 6, 2011
813
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SomethingAmazing said:
Fayathon said:
You know what, fuck this censorship thing. I'm not even Australian and this pisses me off. To any Aussies that are getting hit with this crap I have something for you:

The Tor Project [http://www.torproject.org/]

For those unfamiliar think of it as an uber-proxy, it takes a bit of TLC to get running quite right, and it's slower then regular internet, but it pretty well unblocks anything that you want once you've gotten it down.

For those that do know about Tor, well, I guess I needn't tell you about it.
They really should make this kind of thing illegal if it isn't already.

The government(And organizations like this) should have every right to block websites from user access.
While I'm sure your heart's in the right place, doesn't it bother you that the list is generated purely by the whims/procedures of the companies involved; it doesn't even appear to be decided by an external concenus/watchdog.