Friday 18 September 2009

That Shape Shifting Australian Internet Mandatory Filtering Scheme or Ministerial Untruths Unchecked


Hardly a month goes past without some mention of government-sanctioned censorship occurring somewhere around the world.

On Wednesday 16 September 2009 Politikin in Denmark published an entire book in that day's edition of the newspaper. It did so to make sure that the government of the day (through its defence and treasury departments) did not manage to censor a new book by a former Danish commando.

The same day Senator Stephen Conroy, Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy in the Australian Federal Government, was caught out telling fibs about his 'past' intentions for the proposed mandatory national ISP-level Internet filtering scheme when he denied that he had ever considered censoring peer to peer traffic.

This is what the Minister personally said on a DBCDE official blog in December 2008 ( a similar statement was also attributed to him in a News Ltd report on 22 December):

The Government understands that ISP-level filtering is not a 'silver bullet'. We have always viewed ISP-level filtering as one part of a broader government initiative for protecting our children online.
Technology is improving all the time. Technology that filters peer-to-peer and BitTorrent traffic does exist and it is anticipated that the effectiveness of this will be tested in the live pilot trial.
Stephen Conroy

and

This is what the Minster said last Wednesday:

As Senator Ludlam well knows, there has never been a suggestion by this government that peer-to-peer traffic would or could be blocked by our filter. It has never been suggested. So for you to continue to make the suggestion that we are attempting to do that just misleads the chamber and the Australian public, Senator Ludlam, and you know better than that. We are not attempting to suggest that the filter can capture peer-to-peer traffic. So for you to continue to make the suggestion that we are attempting to do that just misleads the chamber and the Australian public, Senator Ludlam, and you know better than that. We are not attempting to suggest that the filter can capture peer-to-peer traffic.

Perhaps Senator Conroy's fearless leader might quietly ask him why he chose to tell untruths to Parliament when he rose to his feet in Senate Question Time on 16 September 2009.

Is it any wonder that the Rudd Government is considered by many to have suspect motives when it comes to its Internet filtering plans?

1 comment:

lazerzap said...

Thankyou for the data. I hope you dont mind that I have added a link here from my website

http://lazerzap.com/cgi-bin/wiki.pl/Plan_for_Cyber-Safety

(Hope you give it a view..)

Perhaps we should also contact:

Rudd, The Hon Kevin Michael Griffith, ALP 630 Wynnum Road (PO Box 476), Morningside Tel: (02) 6277 7700 Prime Minister Qld Qld 4170 Fax: (02) 6273 4100 Tel : (07) 3899 4031, Fax : (07) 3899 5755 E-mail: http://www.pm.gov.au

and

Conroy, Senator the Hon Stephen (Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy and Deputy Leader of the Government in the Senate) VIC ALP Suite 1B, 494 High Street, Epping VIC 3076 (PO Box 1067, Epping MDC VIC3076) Level 4, 4 Treasury Place, Melbourne VIC 3002 03/9408 0190 1300 131 546 03/9408 0194 (fax) 03/9650 1188 03/9650 3251 (fax) Email: senator.conroy@aph.gov.au


Many people are upset.

So let many upset people "contact" the would be "filterers" to let them know how they feel?

Makes sense to me...

Maybe eventually they will get the message?