Conroy reveals plans to censor the internet

By Ry Crozier, Brett Winterford, Ben Grubb on Dec 15, 2009 3:55 PM
Filed under Services

Mandatory ISP-level filtering comes to Australia.

The Federal Government will introduce laws to make ISP-level filtering mandatory for all refused-classification material hosted overseas.

It will amend the Broadcasting Services Act next August to enforce the filter, which it expects to be operational within a year of implementation.

Grants will be made to providers that wish to further filter X18+ sites.

Announcing the measure today, Communications Minister Stephen Conroy said that the legislation would require ISPs to block RC-rated material hosted on overseas servers. He said it was an "additional measure to the existing take-down regime for Australia-hosted content".

Senator Conroy justified the filter, saying that "most Australians acknowledge that there is some internet content which is not acceptable in any civilised society".

"It is important that all Australians, particularly young children, are protected from this material," he said.

Report released

Senator Conroy said a pilot conducted by Enex TestLabs in conjunction with Australia's largest ISPs proved that such filtering was viable.

"The report into the pilot trial of ISP-level filtering demonstrates that blocking RC-rated material can be done with 100 percent accuracy and negligible impact on internet speed," he said.

Transparency?

The Government announced that the list of blocked RC content would be compiled "through a public complaints mechanism".

But these public complaints will only form a subset of the total content blocked. The Government will also add "specific internet addresses (URLs) of known child abuse material through sharing lists with highly regarded international agencies after an assessment of the rigour and accountability of classification processes used by these agencies".

The Government said it was "also introducing new transparency measures to ensure the public can have absolute confidence in the process for material being placed on the RC Content list" but is yet to release details.

It is believed the mechanism for this process will be hammered out during the consultation phase over the next few months.

Click here for industry reactions to the news.

Read the latest breaking news on the filtering announcement here.

 
Follow us on Facebook and Twitter
 
Conroy reveals plans to censor the internet
"If Stalin had had an internet... !!! -Give people power and sooner or later they will use it... -and abuse...."
 
 
 
 
Comments: 6
DOSPCRS
Dec 15, 2009 5:21 PM
I'm really quite surprised this hasn't received more media attention -- methinks they probably wanted it that way.
zaphod6502
Dec 16, 2009 9:05 AM
Many of us have been fighting Conroy and Rudd's internet censorship plan since the election. Sadly the majority of the Australian public chooses to keep their heads in the sand and ignore this vitally important issue.

Maybe the Australian public will finally stand up and notice this issue once they realise they can no longer download their favourite pirated TV and film torrents. By then it will be too late.
eddiew
Dec 16, 2009 5:58 PM
Labour will always want to control the masses - it is part of their fundamental political philosophy where they believe that it is the Government (so long as it is Labour) who has to look after the people since the people are unable to fend for themselves and make decisions that might enable them control their own destiny.

It perhaps is one of the reasons why Rudd was and is so insistent on having a National Broadband network to make internet speeds be not too dissimilar to what we have now given much of the filtering process will soak up bandwidth and access times to the internet.

It leaves you wondering if this not just the tip of the iceberg.
geriatrixcomputerix
Feb 23, 2010 2:18 PM
If the Vatican had been running a (hypothetical) internet a few hundred years ago, any search on "Martin Luther" would have been blocked.

geriatrixcomputerix
Feb 23, 2010 2:20 PM
If the Vatican had been running a (hypothetical) internet a few hundred years ago, any reference to "...equal right for women..." would have been blocked.
geriatrixcomputerix
Feb 23, 2010 2:23 PM
If Stalin had had an internet...
!!!

-Give people power and sooner or later they will use it...
-and abuse....

Comments have been disabled for this article.
 
 
Top Stories
Five companies courting controversy this week
For the week ending May 18, CRN looks at five companies making headlines for the wrong reasons.
 
HP announces mass lay-offs
Over 10 percent of global workforce to go.
 
Inside Acer's Australian computer facility
Local HQ where desktops and laptops are repaired, tested and assembled.
 
Sign up to receive CRN email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...
Latest Comments
Polls
Will Windows 8 snatch Microsoft a large chunk of the tablet market?

   |   View results
Yes
  42%
 
No
  58%
TOTAL VOTES: 45

Vote now
CRN Magazine

Issue: 303 | May

CRN Magazine looks in-depth at the emerging issues and developments for the channel, and provides insight, analysis and strategic information to help resellers better run their businesses.