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| t byfield on Tue, 1 Jun 1999 04:58:53 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> (fwd) IPA Bulletin: Internet Censorship Legislation [.AU] |
> From: Simon Hackett [SMTP:simon {AT} internode.com.au]
> Sent: Saturday, May 29, 1999 4:04 PM
> To: ipa-contacts {AT} adelaide.on.net
> Subject: [56] IPA Bulletin: INTERNET CENSORSHIP LEGISLATION
> Subject: [56] IPA Bulletin: INTERNET CENSORSHIP LEGISLATION
>
> Dear IPA customer
>
> We don't normally step outside of the boundaries of operational information
> and new service announcements in our IPA bulletins. However, this one
> exception is being made because the issue it concerns is incredibly
> important to all Internet users - and that means to YOU.
>
> INTERNET CENSORSHIP LEGISLATION
>
> If the mandatory censorship of Internet content in Australia is of concern
> to you, please take the time to read this entire message.
>
> If this topic is not of interest to you, you should ignore this message,
> but please bear it in mind if you receive 'permission denied' messages in
> the future, while accessing the Internet.
>
> Those messages will indicate that we have been required to block your
> access to an Internet site, or to censor or delete email from a mailing
> list or a newsgroup you participate in, before it reaches your computer,
> because the federal government forced us to do so.
>
> As you may have heard through the Media, Internet Content Regulation
> legislation was passed through the Senate on Wednesday afternoon. It is
> expected to be passed in the house of representatives early in this coming
> week.
>
> The stated aims of this legislation were set out originally in the
> following press release:
>
> http://www.dcita.gov.au/nsapi-graphics/?MIval=dca_dispdoc&ID=3762
>
> This says, in part:
>
> ****
>
> "The Minister for Communications, Information Technology and the Arts,
> Senator Richard Alston, today introduced legislation to protect Australian
> children from illegal and highly offensive material online.
>
> 'The Broadcasting Services Amendment (Online Services) Bill 1999
> meets the Australian community's legitimate concern to control the
> publication of illegal and offensive material online, but without placing
> onerous or unjustifiable burdens on the internet industry and thus
> inhibiting the development of the online economy,' Senator Alston said.
>
> [...]
>
> 'The issue is very simple: Labor either supports measures to protect
> children from paedophiles and drug pushers on the internet or Labor does
> not support the need to protect
> children.
>
> 'Which is it?'
>
> ****
>
> While these sentiments sound noble at first glance, unfortunately their
> intended implementation mechanisms in the new law are fundamentally and
> unrecoverably flawed. The legislation is incredibly bad. The press release
> above was made on April 21st, and in slightly more than one month, the
> intentions of the goverment are about to become law - allowing scarcely
> enough time for people to become aware of the existence of the law, let
> alone to consider it and respond to it.
>
> Despite being convened on a ludicrously tight time schedule, a senate
> standing committee to hear public comment on this law received over 100
> submissions, practically all of which strongly opposed the proposed new
> laws. The committee decided to approve the passage of the law without
> ammedments, despite the evidence against it doing so. For whatever reason,
> this law is being railroaded in the most cynical of manners, into becoming
> a part of the legal framework in this country.
>
> Commentary on this senate committee outcome may be viewed at the following
> web location:
>
> http://www.anatomy.usyd.edu.au/danny/freedom/senate/index.html
>
> Please take a look at the majority and minority reports from the committee
> which are at the URL noted above. The minority reports are articulate and
> clear in their explanations of what is wrong with this new legislation.
>
> Other detailed analysis of the bill, including discussions and much
> background information about its consequences, are available on the EFA web
> site, at http://www.efa.org.au/Campaigns/99.html. We urge you to read this
> information.
>
> The proposed law has already attracted substantial and damning
> international criticism for its attempts to do these things in an
> increasingly borderless world.
>
> In specific terms, this law will:
>
> * Prevent adults from accessing material intended for adults;
>
> * Impose a censorship regime which is more stringent than the policies
> of Malaysia and Singapore, both of whom introduced and then rescinded
> content censorship legislation *less* onerous than the Australian
> proposition.
>
> * Stifle the development of electronic commerce in Australia;
>
> * Restrict academic research by making material which is available
> to researches everywhere in the world inaccessible to Australians;
>
> * Drive the cost of Internet access up by pushing up prices for
> wholesale bandwidth;
>
> * Force ISPs to install expensive content filtering hardware and
> software, which will raise costs and slow down your use of the
> Internet;
>
> * Drive smaller ISPs out of business, thereby reducing competition and
> further raising prices; and
>
> * Force ISPs to monitor traffic (such as email and web) initiated
> by users, including information sent through mailing lists, and to block
> content deemed by the Australian Broadcasting Authority to be in
> contravention of this new act.
>
> While ISP's will be legally protected from the consequences of implementing
> this new law, they will not be protected from being forced out of business
> by having to try implement the impossible, and from being forced to spend
> money and time to make the attempt or incur fines up to $22,500 or more per
> day for failures to immediately comply with all censorship orders issued by
> the ABA.
>
> On the other hand:
>
> * Childrens' ability to access material which is unsuitable to them
> will not be affected at all;
>
> * Material which is illegal on the Internet in Australia under this law
> will still be available overseas, and will be able to be accessed
> by circumventing the filtering laws in ways that are technically
> infeasible to stop, by those who wish to do so.
>
> * Australian-hosted banned web sites will simply move offshore.
>
> * Content filtering hardware and software is not technologically
> capable of performing as advertised, despite Senator Alston's
> claims to the contrary. These claims underpin the onus for
> framing the bill as a technology-based information access
> filtering regime that can be effective. These claims are false.
>
> * It will cast the jobs of the thousands of people employed by the
> Internet industry into doubt, as content moves overseas and ISPs
> close down.
>
> * It will prevent overseas investment in the Australian IT industry,
> since we will have grave difficulty attracting technologically-savvy
> overseas companies as one of the only countries in the world with
> content regulation slowing down our access, making it expensive,
> and making content difficult to find.
>
> You will not be able to avoid this censorship by changing ISP's, because
> all ISP's in the country will be forced to participate in this content
> regulation. Compulsory unionism of ISP's will ensure that all of them must
> join in and participate in this outcome.
>
> Your Internet access performance will be reduced by forcing every item of
> information you retrieve to be subject to examination by filtering systems
> that all ISP's will be forced to install, whether they work properly or not.
>
> Any member of the public who objects to content that you create and host on
> the Internet can complain to the ABA, who can force all Australian ISP's to
> remove it if they believe, in their sole discretion, that it is appropriate
> to do so.
>
> All Australian ISP's will be required to immediately block such content (by
> 6pm of the next business day at the latest, under threat of huge fines for
> non-compliance).
>
> If your commercial activities on the Internet become the subject of such a
> 'takedown' order under this regime, your business will be banned from
> appearing on the Internet in Australia until and unless you have succeeded
> in taking your case to the adminstrative appeals tribunal, who may or may
> not agree with your point of view. You will have to wait until they can
> hear your case, in their own time. In the meantime, you're banned from the
> Australian Internet instantly, and the effects on your business are obvious.
>
> WHAT YOU CAN DO
>
> If you agree that this legislation is not the correct approach to achieve
> the government's stated aims, you can take the following actions to express
> your disapproval to the politicians who are responsible for the law:
>
> * Telephone or fax your member of Federal Parliament (details provided
> below)
>
> * Attend the protest rally on Sunday May 30 at 3:00pm on the steps
> of the State Library on North Terrace.
>
> * Make it clear that your future voting patterns are affected by the
> outcomes on your life of the implementation of this new law.
>
> * If you run a business taking advantage of the Information Revolution,
> tell your MP what you think this bill will do to your growth prospects.
>
> Thank you for your attention and support,
>
> The staff of Internode Professional Access
>
> CONTACT DETAILS: SOUTH AUSTRALIAN MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT
>
> Name Canberra Canberra Fax Electorate Electorate Electorate
> Phone Fax Phone
> Andrew, John (02)62774000 (02)62772050 Wakefield (08)85230511(08)8523 0555
> Downer, Alexander(02)62777500 (02)62734112 Mayo (08)83708166(08)8370 9288
> Draper, Patricia (02)62774370 (02)62778407 Makin (08)83960785(08)8265 2236
> Gallus, Christine(02)62774840 (02)62778538 Hindmarsh (08)82340456(08)8234 5877> Pyne, Christopher(02)62774842 (02)62778581 Sturt (08)83630030(08)8363 0666
> Secker, Patrick (02)62774217 (02)62778541 Barker (08)85312124(08)8531 2466
> Southcott, Andrew(02)62774283 (02)62778476 Boothby (08)83743071(08)8374 0511
> Wakelin, Barry (02)62774943 (02)62774431 Grey (08)86455933(08)8645 4255
> Worth, Patricia (02/62774337 (02)62778465 Adelaide (08)82231174(08)8223 1130
---
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