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Australian PM Has Parody Site Shut Down

babbling writes "The Australian Government has shut down a parody website that mocked Australian Prime Minister John Howard. The website featured a satirical speech that 'apologised' for the Iraq war. The site was down for two days before a phone call from Melbourne IT advised the owner that it had been shut down 'on the advice from the Australian Government'. A mirrored PDF copy of the "apology speech" is available."

20 of 289 comments (clear)

  1. Dumbest article quote by AEton · · Score: 4, Insightful

    MelbourneIT representative: "To us it looks like a phishing site."

    Not bloody likely.

    --
    We recently had heard in the office over one of the Yellow Machine that's made by Anthology Solutions.
    1. Re:Dumbest article quote by hey! · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The answer is if you elect politicians who think you need to be protected from your own stupidity, those politicians may be onto something.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    2. Re:Dumbest article quote by iminplaya · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When you're mired in it, it's pretty hard to see what you're mired in. Anyway, the politicians are living pretty well. Stupid are the people who elect them. Ignorant really. I don't think they would get elected if the voters actually made an effort to find out the truth about the people they're voting for. If not ignorant, then apathetic, if not that, then despicable, because they actually want censorship of "undesirables".

      --
      What?
  2. Why can't people take a joke any more? by HellYeahAutomaton · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Politicians are in the public eye, and should expect satire and public attention. No one forced them to be politicians. Danish cartoons causing bloodshed, and now this. Does the Australian government think its people so dumb that they can't distinguish parody from sincerity?

    What a miserable miserable world we live in.

  3. Re:Parodies, "fair use" and Melbourne IT by mpe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a Bad Thing, and it's quite possibly unlawful.

    It's also rather counter productive since it gets a lot of people looking at whatever all this fuss is about.

  4. Some people have no sense of humour by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Politicians should grow some thicker skin in Oz. Hard to imagine a more thin skinned bunch, what next, censorship, oh, wait, that's exactly what it is.

    50 years ago, March 17th, 1956, Fred Allen, born May 31, 1894 in Cambridge MA to irish catholic parents, famed comedy writer and radio comedian, died of a heart attack while walking his dog.

    I'll toast him with a pint of Guinness. Thanks Fred, for all the laughs.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  5. Tired of John Howard and the like? VOTE THEM OUT by digitaldc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He said that after two days of silence, a customer service representative from Melbourne IT today informed him by telephone that the site had "been closed on the advice from the Australian Government"

    People know censorship when they see it.
    People do not like being censored.
    I suggest if you are an Aussie and this bothers you, vote John Howard and his friends out of office.

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  6. Free speech in Austrailia? by Kohath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't they have free speech in Austrailia?

    This wouldn't happen in the USA because we have free speech. Except if a lesbian is offended, then it's sexual harrassment. Or on campuses with a speech code. Or it you want to advertise cigarettes. Or alcohol. Or if you want to run political ads, then it might violate campaign finance reform, even if it's exactly like this John Howard web site.

    So this wouldn't happen in the USA in the early 80s. We sort-of had free speech back then.

  7. Johnny gets tough! by ockegheim · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well at last he's doing something about sedition instead of just talking about it. I'd better stop thinking freely.

    Any Australian would know this is a fake speech because the Mr Howard is pathologically unable to apologise for anything.

    --
    I’m old enough to remember 16K of memory being described as “whopping”
  8. Re:Parodies, "fair use" and Melbourne IT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    So, don't just blame the "Australian government" for this, as it's unclear who exactly intervened.

    The current Australian government's reputation doesn't help them though...

    Particularly they have a very poor reputation as far as "supporting civil liverties on principle" is concerned. It is one of the few governments that is entirely happy for the US to keep its citizens who are terror suspects in Guantanamo Bay (on the grounds that that way Australia doesn't have to deal with them). Their attitude towards assylum seekers is notorious worldwide. And the opposition aren't actually much better - they have just successfully campaigned to remove accountability for controversial drug approvals from the Health Minister [who might have to justify himself to the Australian people] and pass it to an entirely unaccountable "panel of experts". I wonder how long before John Howard realises that so long as you pass all the unpopular decisions to an unaccountable "panel of experts" then no voter can ever reasonably complain about anything you do!
  9. Re:It doesn't look like satire to me by 'nother+poster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Satire doesn't have to be "Ha Ha" funny. I'm American. I follow world politics fairly loosely, and I can tell that the Australian PM, wossisname, Um, Howard Dean? Nah. Oh, yeah, John Howard didn't write that. His political allies would shit kittens, then have him commited to the loonie bin for saying those things.

  10. Re:Tired of John Howard and the like? VOTE THEM OU by ozmanjusri · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I suggest if you are an Aussie and this bothers you, vote John Howard and his friends out of office.

    We would, but there's nobody to vote into office. All we can chose from is a bunch of near-identical lying pricks.

    --
    "I've got more toys than Teruhisa Kitahara."
  11. Rights vs Laws by stlhawkeye · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is one of those tricky intersections of "rights" and "law." Note that "rights" are things we have whether the law recognizes it or not. That's the classic liberal "natural law" version, and it's what most modernized democracies found their legal system on. Among those rights are speech, especially the right to speech of a political nature. The law protects IP because such laws ultimately benefit everybody (in theory), but this guy MIGHT be breaking IP laws to make a political statement. My take would be that his political statement isn't being silenced, just this particular method of making it. The guy could probably re-package or re-do the web site to make it more clearly a parody and get around the IP laws on this. What pisses me off is that it was just SHUT DOWN rather than trying this very reasonable intermediate step.

    --
    "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
  12. Re:Chilling. by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful


    It's an easy enough misunderstanding: a phishing site looks like a genuine site, but isn't.

    Parody sites look like genuine sites too. That's the general point of parody.

    Yes, he's missed the point that phishing is about data capture not misinformation but I wouldn't rag him too hard, he's in the right ballpark.

    "The right ballpark"????? For Chrissakes....he's the chief technology officer at Melbourne IT. If he doesn't fucking understand what a phishing site is, Melbourne IT Needs a new CTO.

    What's more likely? That a CTO of a major ISP actually doesn't understand the concept of a 'phishing site', or said CTO is prevaricating because the Government is breathing down his neck? You do the math.

    --
    ____

    ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

  13. Re:Good by deesine · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We'd all do better off without such hateful speech.

    Betterment through censorship is a one step forward-two steps backwards maneuver.

    --
    damaged by dogma
  14. I'd rather by tkrotchko · · Score: 3, Insightful

    In the U.S. we're supposed to be a beacon of freedom and tolerance. When we don't meet these ideals, they should be pointed out. In fact, people are doing us a favor for pointing out our flaws because it's possible we don't see them ourselves.

    Let me use an analogy... If I have some food on the corner of mouth after I eat, I hope my friends will tell me about it, and not just ignore it because some guy down the hall spilled his entire meal on his tie.

    People from around the world point out our flaws because we're disappointing them. After we did so much to liberate the world from tyranny in the 20th century, they want us to continue in the 21st. And if we don't meet that benchmark, then they want to tell us to get better.

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
  15. Re:Parodies, "fair use" and Melbourne IT by IAmTheDave · · Score: 3, Insightful
    It's also rather counter productive since it gets a lot of people looking at whatever all this fuss is about.

    It's also bad press. Anyone/thing that can look at themselves and make fun of themselves or accept a good making-fun-of always comes out looking better in the end. In fact, they'd be smarter to publicize that they support the proprieter's free speech rights.

    Trying to stifle speech, on the other hand, never, ever looks good.

    --
    Excuse my speling.
    Making The Bar Project
  16. Re:Parodies, "fair use" and Melbourne IT by qwijibo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not just Arabic sounding names. There is no way to dispute being on the list, so there is no way to find out if the lists are abused. I know someone named David Nelson who managed our data center and is subjected to additional review, because someone else with a common name made it on the list. Here's a reference for this problem:

    http://archives.californiaaviation.org/airport/msg 26610.html

  17. Re:Parodies, "fair use" and Melbourne IT by billgates · · Score: 3, Insightful
    'they have just successfully campaigned to remove accountability for controversial drug approvals from the Health Minister [who might have to justify himself to the Australian people] and pass it to an entirely unaccountable "panel of experts"'


    This is not true and you know it. Didn't your mother tell you not to tell lies? The health minister had a right wing Christian agenda. That's why many people in his own party voted against him.
  18. Re:Parodies, "fair use" and Melbourne IT by drsmithy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    And the opposition aren't actually much better - they have just successfully campaigned to remove accountability for controversial drug approvals from the Health Minister [who might have to justify himself to the Australian people] and pass it to an entirely unaccountable "panel of experts". I wonder how long before John Howard realises that so long as you pass all the unpopular decisions to an unaccountable "panel of experts" then no voter can ever reasonably complain about anything you do!

    For non Australians, what *actually* happened, was that the Health Minister had veto power over a *single* drug - the abortion pill RU486 - and that veto power has been removed. The only reason the Health Minister even had such a veto was because several years earlier the Government had traded it for the support in Parliament of a Christian fundie independent MP, since at that time they needed it to have legislation passed.

    The situation has *nothing* to do with "accountability" and everything to do with anti-abortion agenda of the Christian Right. Parent post should be modded "-1, Blatant Misinformation".