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[mailto:silicon-bea...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of James Purser
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Sen Conroy has just had a his piece published today on The Punch at http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/the-truth-about-net-filtering/
There’s two pretty alarming bits to it. Firstly, the scope and ability for this filter to actually have a negative impact is worse than I initially feared: rather than a thousand or so URLs maintained by a handful of under-funded boffins and accidentally including the odd dentist, the list is now going to be a free for all based on public complaints. “Importantly, the RC Content list for ISP-filtering will be maintained through a public complaints mechanism. It will apply only to overseas-hosted material.”
While Conroy’s claim that it doesn’t slow down the internet – “Australia’s largest ISP, Telstra, undertook its own testing that showed the impact on internet performance would be less than one seventieth of the blink of an eye!” – this is still 5ms, presumably for every single http request that leaves the country. In case you’re not aware, this is a long time in internet terms.
"America Online practices censorship on a large scale. ... It's
because they believe that practicing censorship is profitable. They
believe that it's what the majority of their customers want. Do you
think that's crazy? Think again. ... To a huge number of people out in
the real world, the Internet is a disgusting wasteland, full of rude,
cruel, nasty people, child pornographers, and photos of people having
sex with dogs. ...
Now, if there are people who truly want that, that's their
prerogative. ... I have no problem with that.
But what happens if the world changes, and AOL becomes even more
wildly successful than they already are? What happens if the
independent, non-censoring ISPs can no longer compete with the AOL
behemoth, and it turns out that the only practical way to connect to
the internet is through one of the large, international internet
corporations like AOL? ... what if to publish a document there, you
need to comply with their ``Terms of Service''?
Perhaps this is far-fetched. I hope so. ..." (from http://www.jwz.org/gruntle/aol.html)
Now, ten years later, is that still far-fetched? I wish it was.
On Dec 17, 10:09 am, Silvia Pfeiffer <silviapfeiff...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> I think somebody has to make a serious and well argued submission onhttp://www.dbcde.gov.au/online_safety_and_security/cybersafety_plan/t...
> .
>
> Silvia.
>
> On Thu, Dec 17, 2009 at 9:30 AM, Ash Angell <angell...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > I am happy to join the "Silicon Beach #NoCleanFeed Army" (does this make me
> > a freedom fighter).
>
> > If there are people here who wish to be generals in this fight, deploy me
> > where you wish! ;)
>
> > Ash
>
> > 2009/12/16 Elias Bizannes <elias.bizan...@gmail.com>
All Conroy and his ilk see in an article like that is an author who
has no problem with people who want access to bestiality content &
child pornography. This is why Labor gets away with describing the
anti-filtering crowd as people who "equate freedom of speech with
watching child pornography". Makes things much harder for people with
more tangible concerns about the plan.
Regards,
Nathan de Vries
> > Perhaps this is far-fetched. I hope so. ..." (fromhttp://www.jwz.org/gruntle/aol.html)