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Malaysian Government Wants Internet Filtering

adewolf tips news that the government of Malaysia is looking into the development of an internet filtering program. According to a Reuters report, "A vibrant Internet culture has contributed to political challenges facing the government, which tightly controls mainstream media and has used sedition laws and imprisonment without trial to prosecute a blogger." The Malaysian government insists that such a filter would only be used to block pornography, though critics of the plan expect it would be wielded as a political tool, censoring websites that are critical of the current administration. "An industry source says the government could impose the filters late this year or in 2010, coinciding with the rollout of a high-speed broadband network run by Telekom Malaysia. Malaysia aims to increase broadband penetration to half of all homes by 2010 as part of its drive to boost economic efficiency."

3 of 113 comments (clear)

  1. Re:ipv6 by ScytheBlade1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Erm, there is no mandatory encryption with IPv6.

    The change from v4 that you're thinking of is IPSEC being a first class citizen to the protocol, as opposed to a backported second class citizen in the networking world.

    Not that it doesn't work fine with v4, mind you.

  2. Re:Religion and Internet Filtering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seems to me the "common thread" between all 6 of the countries you mention is their governments fear dissent. There are plenty of Muslim and Confucian majority countries that do not censor the Internet.

  3. Re:How does that work, again? by raju1kabir · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You realize people dealt with this soft of problem before the Internet existed right? People actually ... talked to each other ... rather than twiting it up or facebooking.

    People can talk to the people they know, and the people in their community, sure. But that is very limiting:

    • No possibility for anonymity
    • Limited number of viewpoints
    • Limited access to externally verifiable information

    The internet has transformed politics in Malaysia, by bringing people all over the country together based on their shared views rather than based solely on whom they happened to live nearby. It's allowed people to have open, frank discussions that previously they would only be able to have with their closest confidants. It's allowed facts and evidence to be brought to general public attention which would previously have been squelched by the BN-owned mass media.

    Of course humans can survive without the internet. But in my mind there is no question that it has enabled a transformative level of communication which we are only beginning to see the full impact of.

    --
    "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS