More on Australia’s ISP Filtering Plan
The Age, Melbourne’s #1 newspaper, ran a story on page 3 about Senator Stephen Conroy’s proposed ISP-Level filtering initiative. Read: Filtering out the fury: how government tried to gag web censor critics
This article comes just days after Senator Conroy was questioned on the $44.2 million Internet filtering plan by the Senate Estimates committee, and in particular Senator Ludlam of the Greens. Transcripts of the conversation are available online at: http://scott-ludlam.greensmps.org.au/content/transcript/cybersafety-net-filtering.
The most interesting element for me was Senator Conroy’s confirmation of early reports that the system will likely be two tiers: one that filters content a family would want to block and one that filters illegal content. ISP users will be able to opt-out of the family level filter, but the illegal content filter would be mandatory. Here are Senator Conroy’s exact words:
No. As I said, we are in the early stages. But we are looking at two tiers-mandatory of illegal material and an option for families to get a clean feed service if they wish.
You could make the argument that filtering the illegal content is just enforcement of laws that are already on the books. I think that argument has some flaws though. Take the same concept and extend it to driving. Roads have speed limits and drivers often speed. Should the government invest in a GPS system that is programmed to know the speed limit and link it into your car’s onboard computer to limit your speed so you can’t speed? No, we instead setup speed traps to watch for people violating the speed limit, and then deal with the offender. This is the typical law enforcement model.
Even if this system is established in Australia to limit access to illegal content (ACMA Blacklist) it won’t stem the flow of illeagle content in or out of Australia. The people trafficking this content will simply adapt and find a way around the filters, it will only take them a matter of hours. But I don’t think the goverment is really studying the ease of circumvention because they believe that ISP-level filters can’t be circumvented.
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Aaron Kenny
