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Australian Government Censorship 'Worse Than Iran'

An anonymous reader writes "The Australian Government's plan to Censor the Internet is producing problems for ISPs, with filters causing speeds to drop by up to 86% and falsely blocking 10% of safe sites. The Government Minister in charge of the censorship plan, Conservative Stephen Conroy, has been accused of bullying ISP employees critical of his plan: 'If people equate freedom of speech with watching child pornography, then the Rudd Labor Government is going to disagree.'" Read on for more, including an interesting approach to demonstrating the inevitable collision of automated censorship with common sense. The same reader continues: "Conroy's plan involves censoring at the ISP level to product 'Child-safe' Internet feeds. Initially he said that adults would be able to opt out. He since reversed that position, saying instead they can only go onto an 'Adult-safe' feed censoring 'illegal material', which another senator warned could include 'euthanasia material, politically related material, material about anorexia.' Colin Jacobs of Electronic Frontiers Australia said 'I'm not exaggerating when I say that this model involves more technical interference in the internet infrastructure [note: forum membership required] than what is attempted in Iran, one of the most repressive and regressive censorship regimes in the world.'"

Another anonymous reader suggests this answer to the proposed clone of China's great firewall: "Some of the tested systems use md5 hashes to find illegal content. As proof of concept, how long will it take Slashdot users to create an image with the md5 hash of 5ff742a58529efa02ba00ec8fa2e89bf? This md5 was picked because it is the hash of the current picture of the Prime Minister on his party's web site. A couple of points: The created image should be a jpg. It must be safe for work. It needs the correct MD5. It shouldn't break modern browsers. Its copyright should be free." Any takers?

24 of 516 comments (clear)

  1. Come on already by kaos07 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Pretty much everyone in Australia knows this is not actually going to get implemented. The Australian EFF are just enjoying having their moment in the sun. There's no reason to have another story on the exact same topic every few days.

    1. Re:Come on already by deniable · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That and Conroy is too busy getting caught rigging Senate hearings over Treasury issues. My worry is he'll push this to get some cover from the other stuff-ups.

    2. Re:Come on already by Xiroth · · Score: 5, Funny

      An amusing quote from the relevent Wikipedia article:

      Internet censorship in Australia is largely the province of the Federal Government and its laws on Internet censorship are, theoretically, amongst the most restrictive in the Western world. However, the restrictive nature of the laws has been combined with almost complete disinterest in enforcement from the agencies responsible for doing so.

    3. Re:Come on already by Legume · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Pretty much everyone in Australia knows this is not actually going to get implemented.

      I wish I could share your optimism. I'd guess most people in Australia are more-or-less oblivious to the whole thing. "Anything that stops those nasty paedopiraterrorists is a good thing, right?"

    4. Re:Come on already by Dracophile · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Unenforced laws are not good laws. They are potentially disastrous laws, lying dormant, awaiting selective enforcement.

      --
      Athy, athier, athiest.
  2. That settles it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's time to pick up stakes and move to Iran, that fabled land of freedom and tolerance--a shining country upon a hill.

  3. Free speech by Enderandrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is an absolute. Either you have it 100%, or you don't have it at all. And the idiots who think that censorship stops child pornography neither understand pedophiles nor censorship. It is akin to DRM, where you don't stop the problem (pirates/pedophiles/whatever) and instead punish everyone else.

    If you're upset by kiddie porn, then treat the problem. Don't shut off the internet.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
    1. Re:Free speech by deep_creek · · Score: 5, Insightful

      kind of like actions against guns...

    2. Re:Free speech by 1u3hr · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If you're upset by kiddie porn, then treat the problem.
      And how exactly do you propose that governments go about doing that? Because I assure you, they'd be very interested in the answer.

      Find the people who MAKE it. That's when the damage is done, and the crimes are committed. If some people enjoy looking at such images, that may be repulsive, but no body is getting hurt. If you want to ban that, why allow gore and splatter movies and serial killer novels? Or disturbing (to your) news photos?

      Catching sad lonely guys who whack off over images on their PCs does absolutely nothing except make the cops feel they've done something. "500 arrested in Internet pedophile bust" makes a great headline. And except for destroying the lives of the 500, is nothing more than that.

      It's exactly like most responses to terrorism, (harassing Muslims, confiscating nail scissors and shampoo) completely futile in addressing the real dangers, while creating immense collateral damage.

  4. The real story is more interesting by afaik_ianal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The real story here is not that the government wants to censor the internet, but that the government has moved to gag a critic of the plan.

    I think the anonymous reader in the final paragraph of the summary needs to read up a little on the MD5 vulnerability. It's possible to generate two files with the same hash containing a 16-byte block of differing code (where you have no control over the contents of that block in either file), but the rest of the file needs to be identical to the original. That's fine for dynamically generated HTML or even executables where a decision could be made on the contents of the varying block, but doing anything useful with jpeg is a pretty tough ask. Or are they suggesting we brute force it?

    1. Re:The real story is more interesting by Falconhell · · Score: 5, Informative

      I happen to know Mark Newton, the guy they want to gag.

      Good luck with that!

      The only way to shut him up would be to hit him with a brick. Good on him!

  5. Here's my internet filter solution by Dracophile · · Score: 5, Funny
    1. Cup your hands. That's the filter.
    2. Pour water into your cupped hands. That's the internet.
    3. Drop some blue dye into the water. That's the naughty bits.
    4. If any blue gets through your hands, you lose.
    5. ???
    6. Profit!
    --
    Athy, athier, athiest.
  6. My first Federal Election by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hi,

    First time posting a reply so be kind :)
    The Australian Federal Election last year was the first one I had actually voted in (I'm 21).
    I am now sad to say that after watching what has occurred in australia in relation to the NBN (National Broadband Network) and this...filter, I am seriously believing that I made the wrong choice in voting for Labor.

    This is an absolute disaster...I was always under the impression that no matter who got into power here, neither side would actually attempt such a radical censorship let alone be completely willing to implement it.

    Does anyone have any ideas on what little me can do to perhaps turn this around? Writing / calling Conroy or my local MP perhaps?

    Kind Regards,

    Eliminatrix

  7. Re:A friendly warning from an American by calmofthestorm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It'll be coming to the UK within a month or two and it will be here in the US not too long after that. Don't get too smug:/

    --
    93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
  8. Re:posting link to unrelated penny arcade comic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Somehow, I don't think you've thought your cunning plan all the way through.

  9. As a person in AU by Psychotria · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is deeply worrying. Not only is it insane, it's, ultimately, Kevin Rudd (the Prime Minister) being a damn hypocrite. Just before the federal election the news media made a big deal of "catching" him visiting an adult bar (strip joint) in Japan or something. His response was something along the lines of he is an adult and can make choices and it was harmless. Now that he is in government there is this insane vendetta to censor the internet. Further, censor anyone who is critical of the plan. The Minister in charge of this (Stephen Conroy) is clueless. Unfortunately the rest of the elected government seems just as clueless and agrees with his recommendations. I don't think that it's been said, but I would guess that circumventing the draconian filters may also be made illegal (or at least the attempt might be made). We already have shitty broadband; what the fuck is mandatory filtering going to do to our already inflated prices and absurd monthly download limits? /rant

  10. Re:A friendly warning from an American by tpgp · · Score: 5, Informative

    I also really hate the notion that Americans are war-mongers.

    Perhaps not the American people, but the American government (with the consent of the people) certainly seem to be war mongers.

    Look how much money they US spends on war compared to the rest of the world (more than the next 45 highest spending countries in the world combined!)

    Have a look at the number of countries with a US army base (willing hosts or otherwise).

    These is not really the actions of a peaceful country.

    --
    My pics.
  11. Conroy's flawed argument by Freaky+Spook · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Conroy has to get with the times and to stop using the 'nothing to hide' argument (in another light here: if you don't agree with us, they you are a pedo). That itself is a completley flawed argument because of the way child porn is distributed. The internet is used to move porn yes, but its largely not through HTTP/HTTPS, and there is no kiddyporn.com webserver to be blocked. ISP WEB filtering won't work. With services like SFTP, Tor, DC++, bit torrent and other encrypted forms of transmission and private networks, these filters will make no difference at all. I've written to Stephen Conroy and his office by letter and email at least a half a dozen times and received nothing but silence on the issue, even my local member doesn't respond on this issue. I also don't understand why this is such an issue, the previous government launched an internet saftey awareness campaign and offered FREE content filtering applications for every Australian if they wanted it, and this program was not well received, highlighting the fact that really most Australians don't care or are satisfied they can control their children's access without them. To me this appears to be nothing more then a government initiated campaign to restrict our access to information, and if it passes, this will be a very sad day for Australia.

    1. Re:Conroy's flawed argument by CrypticKev · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Society today has a minority of very vocal wowser extremists. Either to shut them up or because they are in influential positions, the governments do what these individuals/minorities want rather than what the general population wants. This mass internet filtering amounts to putting the entire country into jail for the crimes of a few - and as others have noted, it son't stop anything. All it'll do is give the wowser extermists & pollies a warm fuzzy feeling for a very short time until they realise it didn't work - then they'll try and tighten the screws even harder.

  12. Re:A friendly warning from an American by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 5, Interesting

    America is a peaceful country. As long as you do what it tells you to do and don't get in its way. Then, nobody gets hurt!

  13. Re:Parent post is not off-topic by Jacques+Chester · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It is not FUD. The scheme proposed requires total interception of web traffic. That is more than Iran does, and puts us in the same league as the Great Firewall of China.

    The point is not *what* is being filtered, it is that it is being filtered at all. Doing so is incredibly intrusive, has a deadening effect on free speech, and leaves open the door to police-state control of Australians' internet connectivity. We're supposed to be better than that.

    As an aside, political speech is protected by the Constitution, according to the High Court of Australia.

    Which raises an interesting point about whether this is constitutional, considering that this scheme will inevitably cause blocks to political speech due to false positives.

    --

    Classical Liberalism: All your base are belong to you.

  14. Re:WMD did exist and it has been proven by Cyberllama · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Good lord, you don't actually believe any of the crap you just spewed do you?

    WMD did exist. Talk about old rhetoric.

    Of course they existed -- past tense. That was never at question. That's why we had the UN inspectors there. But as the inspectors told us, and we later found to to be the case, most of those WMDS were either destroyed or not in any condition to where they could actually be used.

    Two weeks before we went into Iraq, Bush held a speech saying that we'd go into Iraq in two weeks. Immediately after that, we watched caravans of vehicles leave Baghdad heading for Syria and Colin Powell immediately said that we'd likely never find the huge stockpiles now as they were leaving the country.

    That never happened. The announcement that we were going into Iraq was 48 hours before we did, not 2 weeks.

    Despite that we still found missiles filled with Sarin gas, documentation for WMD, storage facilities for WMD, training manuals for WMD, etc.

    We found chopped up missiles with sarin gas residue in the warheads. That is not the same as what you are suggesting. We found defunct, destroyed, and useless old chemical weapons. We never found ANYTHING that could have been used against us. Ever. That's a fact -- look it up.

    And in fact, those destroyed warheads we did find were, right where we were TOLD they would be. It's not like it took any great detective work to find them -- we demanded documentation of all of Iraq's WMD programs before we invaded and amazingly -- they complied. Remember the footage of a table full of thick files, books, and covered in cd-roms that Iraq said was all of the information on all of their WMD programs? Remember how, just hours later, without even taking the necessary time to be able to pretend they had actually read all of that information (even with a team of a hundred people they would have needed a few days to process all of that) the Bush Administration immediately announced to the press that it was incomplete and false?

    Yeah, we found documentation on WMDS -- they gave it us when we asked for it. We barked. They rolled over. That was the whole idea behind the resolution giving Bush the authority to go to war. We wanted to show Iraq we were serious so that they could capitulate and we could *avoid* war. Guess what? It worked. And, despite that, we went in anyways because the Bush wanted the war. He said from day 1 he was going into Iraq and he found a way to make it acceptable to the public -- he just had to lie a lot.

    Bush won the war without ever going into Iraq, then somehow snatched defeat from the Jaws of victory. Whether this was due to some sort of "democracy will flourish in the middle east" naivete or just "daddy issues" as others have suggested, I have no idea and won't guess -- but the facts are the facts: We won the war in Iraq before it was a war -- and we threw that victory away when we went in.

    We never found any documentation on WMDs that suggested the programs were still active. We never found any sort of weapon of mass destruction that wasn't just some rusted old hunk of metal in a scrap yard. We killed far, far more civilians (accidentally, of course -- don't suggest I am suggesting otherwise) than Saddam could have killed if we let him live out the rest of his life (he was clearly already knocking on Deaths door anyways). We've spent nearly a trillion dollars on the war. I won't even tell you all the ridiculous things we could do with that much money. It's 25 times the ammount we spend on education per year, and we spend more than anyone else. Don't even get me started on the cost to our troops. There's simply no metric by which you can look at this war, or the Bush administration by extension, and not conclude that it has been an unmitigated disaster for this country. It disgusts me, as does your willful ignorance and gleeful repetition of republican talking points and right-wing radio misinformation.

  15. Re:"You have completely lost your grip on reality" by Cyberllama · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, in this particular instance, its just complete and utter garbage.

    There's about 1 million people living in detroit and about 400 murders per year. That's fairly bad.

    Here's a link to 2006's muder rate: http://detroit.areaconnect.com/crime1.htm -- it was actually less than 400 in 2007. So we'll just say, about 400.

    Now what someone is saying, when they make up a bullshit statistic like this one, is that there were fewer than 400 SOLDIERS killed. This is bullshit for a couple of reasons. This would be like comparing the number of police killed in Detroit to soldiers dead in Iraq, not civilians to soldiers. But moreover, there are about 8 times more people in Detroit than soldiers in ALL OF IRAQ -- and far fewer than that in just Baghdad. So of course, on a per capita basis, its just nonsense to say its "more dangerous" in detroit. Complete nonsense.

    There have been over 29 civilians CONFIRMED as killed in the past WEEK (from last friday to this thursday) in baghdad. Just one week. At that rate, we're looking at about 1500 per year. Way higher than Detroit in a city with a much smaller population.

    It turns out, that's a *GOOD* week. Check this out

    From April 14th to 31st August, 2,846 violent deaths were recorded by the Baghdad city morgue. When corrected for pre-war death rates in the city a total of at least 1,519 excess violent deaths in Baghdad emerges from reports based on the morgue's records.

    And last year? Try over 20 thousand confirmed civilian deaths. It's no wonder the fighting has died down since the surge -- there's hardly anyone left to kill. All the neighborhoods are now completely segregated because anyone who didn't flee is dead. That's one way to put an end to ethnic infighting -- not the one I would have chosen.

    Nevertheless, suggesting the murder rate in Baghdad is less than Detriot for any period of time in the last 50 years is just a ridiculous joke. Like I said, the only way you could come even close to such a ridiculous number is if you ONLY COUNT American troop deaths in Baghdad. The most up to date information I could find suggests that we have roughly about 13,500 of our troops in Iraq in Baghdad. This falls WAY short of the 1 million people in Detroit. So saying that fewer of those 1 million people were shot than of the 13,500 troops is saying very, very, very little. It's per capita that matters here and that clearly has been ignored.

    That's how easy it is to make a statistic lie -- thus explaining your Twain quote.

  16. Re:WMD did exist and it has been proven by Atriqus · · Score: 5, Funny

    As someone from Michigan, I can assure you that if a location exists that isn't Detroit, it's safe to assume it's safer than Detroit.

    --
    Hey, look! It's Bono's brother.