AU Goverment To Break Up Telstra; Filtering News
benz001 writes "The Minister who has pushed the ridiculous broadband filter plan has at least won a few brownie points with yesterday's press conference, in which he promised to force Telstra to split its network and wholesale businesses. Australia's largest ISP, and the country's main infrastructure owner, will be given a chance to implement the structural separation voluntarily; if it does not, the Government will step in with legislation. Here is the Minister's official press release." And speaking of the filtering program, reader smash writes "After several years of debate and electioneering, some statistics on the Australian national web filtering effort have been disclosed. Apparently, the typical Aussie web surfer is 70 times more likely to win the national lotto than stumble across a blocked page. Additionally, despite the claim that the main aim of the filter is to block child pornography, only 313 of the 977 total sites blocked is on the basis of child porn. At $40M AU so far in taxpayers funds, the cost so far is around $40,900 per blocked URL. Government efficiency at work..."
Let alone two.
Task Mangler
Say what you will about the effectiveness and appropriateness of the Austrailian web filters... This "70 times more likely to win the national lottery" business was clearly pulled out of someone's ass, and in the process, they made a number of egregiously wrong statements.
Implementation of a system like that unavoidably involves substantial fixed costs(both at startup and per year). Once you have one, though, incremental costs should be pretty low. Thus, the obvious way of making it "more efficient" in dollars/URL terms is to use it a lot more.
Obviously, the mere existence of the system sucks, and taking pot-shots at governmental inefficiency is always fun; but there is a serious point here(although this program is a poor example, since it shouldn't exist at all):
Inefficiency is bad; but do not make the mistake of assuming that procedural restraint is a form of inefficiency. After all, courtrooms could be much more efficient, in case/year terms, if jury trials and defense attorneys were abolished. Prisons would be much more efficient, in dollars/year/inmate terms, if they were kept as full and as crowded as possible. And just think of the negative impact of the internal affairs division on the number of officers actively patrolling the streets, a terrible waste.
If your justice system allows efficiency to replace justice as the primary criterion, you have issues.(Of course, if your justice system allows public hysteria and political convenience to replace justice as the primary criteria, you get web censorship schemes).
Really it's about time. From what I've heard, ever since Telstra went private in 2006, they've been nothing but a nightmare for Australians as well as the government. They've had such an adversarial relationship with the government I imagine they managed to make a good deal number of enemies.
I think this quote from Communications Minister Stephen Conroy is extremely apt: "For years industry has been calling for fundamental and historic micro-economic reform in telecommunications," Conroy said. "Today we are delivering this outcome in Australia's long-term national interest."
There are many countries around the world that could use this sort of reform. For some strange reason internet-related telecommunications has managed to escape government regulation and oversight ever since its inception. Despite the fact that internet speeds increase according to Moore's Law (http://www.physorg.com/news151162452.html), internet service has stayed stagnant or even increased, with price increases and the institution of caps.
My guess is the old-timer politicians could never properly understand the "new fangled technology", and as newer, younger, and more tech-savvy politicians make it into office they are able to see how the industry has abused its unregulated position for so many years.
As an Australian citizen I have to say I am ashamed of Australia's level of corruption at all levels of government (and the lower the level the higher the corruption) from local to state to federal. With a justice system for which truth is no defence against an allegation and unions that have no interest in actually doing their job.
Is Internet Filtering about protecting Australians or giving authorities more reason to prosecute and more agencies kickbacks for "essential services"?
Here in Australia you don't even need to break a present law to have committed a crime. The Australian Tax Office (or Federal Government) can, at any time, pass legislation that applies retrospectively. For anyone with a short memory consider the repealed alcopop tax in 2009, the luxury car tax that was levied prematurely, the petrol taxes levied by Keating without budget approval in the senate, etc etc.
People get excited about Australia but it is just the weather and landscapes that are worth raving about. The regulatory system has nothing fair or just about it.
...is that if Telstra had played ball with Kevin Krudd and implemented his national broadband plan this would not be happening. But Telstra doesn't want to play ball and that makes Kevins plans next to impossible. This is just Kevin getting his own back and forcing Telstra to play ball at the cost of the thousands of Mum and Dad investors that were encouraged to invest in Telstra. A double financial kick in the guts given the current financial climate. If Kevin really wanted to bring about this change *he should have done it before now* ... not right after Telstra flipped him and his badly thought out national broadband network the middle finger. Kevin is still the snot nosed debate team nerd he was in highschool, he's just more powerful and narcissistic now.
Users... the only thing keeping 1st level support from being the bottom feeders.
The Minister who has pushed the ridiculous broadband filter plan has at least won a few brownie points with yesterday's press conference
I'll believe it when something actually happens. Senator Conroy has a history of extreme inconsistency, ranging from "The government just wants to block child porn" to "The government just wants to stop 'Unwanted Content'". Conroy, get your story straight, the Australian people, including the non technical part of the community are tired of your complete and utter lack of consistency.
From the Brisbane times
"Unless it structurally separates, divests its ... cable network and divests its interests in Foxtel,'' Senator Conroy said.
I wonder exactly how profitable are those parts of Telstra's business? Has anyone seen what Telstra tries to charge for it's branded version of Foxtel? (it's much more expensive than the already expensive Foxtel)Honestly anything to try and break the monopoly, but realistically is this going to achieve much?
# cat
Damn, my RAM is full of cats. MEOW!!
It's just a shame that the government feel they need to do this in order to put together their NBN plans. (I believe this is the first time they've even mentioned the idea of splitting Telstra.)
Of course, once split, they should be able to buy up the infrastructure arm for a song and actually have a chance of getting the NBN in under budget...And removing any competition they would otherwise have for customers.
At the age of 15 I could tell the Telstra Share Offers were vastly overpriced, this is why they only sent their prospectus to selected individuals in the first release. Telstra has held back the advance of internet and telecommunications services in this country and why should we help them hold it back even further for the sake of other peoples bad investment.
Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
To decrease the stupid cost per blocked url metric?
Seriously, the filter proposal is simply lipstick on a pig... The real problem for Australia is the lack of a clear regulatory system. As a gamer, the fact that we don't have an R18+ classification really irritates me, the internet classification system just depends on what the ACMA feels like on that day, as they don't have to get a site a classification, just declare what they believe the classification board would approve. It might help if we got a politician who understood technology, instead of the current streak of 'wonderful' caretakers
Idiots exist everywhere, but there seems to be a particularly higher-than-average concentration of them in Queensland.
... wait, what?
Only those in management positions and politics, not too unlike the US
Really? Vastly over priced? And yet they were selling for almost triple the initial offer price two years later.
Sure they are below that price now so those people who bought then and are still holding see the shares that cost them $3.30 are now selling for $3.24. I'm pretty sure it will have been very easy to have done worse in a stock pick.
Oh but inflation, you say? Yes $3.30 then is equivalent to $4.53 now. But I skipped the dividends, those $3.30 shares if held for all this time will have paid $3 in dividends. Since $5.24 is greater than $4.53 that "vastly overpriced" investment has done better than inflation which seems strange for being overpriced at purchase time...
Those who got in later didn't do so well, but that wasn't the "first release".
FIltering news? This seems to me completely unrelated. The government wants to force Telstra to ensure it permits wholesale customers?
A little like we forced Bell to do so in Quebec?
Except that in Quebec Bell forces its wholesale customers to throttle as well (or rather, it throttles its wholesale customers without their consent!) And as we know throttling is evil. The CRTC is reviewing the case right now, let's hope liberty prevail!
Liberty .. Anonymity.. prevail!!!!!! (I should become a sailor)
Given that you're working for "low grade morons", what does that make you?
I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
Good on govt. for doing what should have been done before telstra was sold. This actually ensures that there will be some competition, rather than a continual requirement for regulation. In its current form, telstra is a recipe for anti-competitive strategies. With a monopoly on copper, they have a retail arm and a wholesale arm, that sells to companies who compete with the retail arm.
Sol and his amigos didn't exactly help telstra either. In Australia the government is not afraid of regulating with the consumer in mind.
meh
"Divide and Conquer."
Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
The separation of Telstra's wholesale and retail divisions has been discussed heatedly for many years, long before the change of government. The previous administration was happy to let it stand, which made Telstra investors happy but pissed off Telstra customers as well as competitors, not to mention holding back innovation. You only have to look at the number of times Telstra has lost in fights with the ACCC, the courts and even the government to see why this was a mistake.
The only group of people who are opposed to Telstra being split are the (unlucky) shareholders. Pretty much everyone else who has had to deal with Telstra are unhappy with their service and pricing, their treatment of retail customers and wholesale customers.
I'm not saying that the government's NBN plan is well-thought-out or anything, but Telstra's joke of a proposal and their juvenile "change the law to suit us or we take our toys and leave" attitude is even worse for the competitive landscape and the general Australian public. A split can't come soon enough.
Why would anyone engrave "Elbereth"?
I believe the current government is maneuvering to buy back the wholesale arm of Telstra. It should be in public hands IMO, and it sure would make the NBN (National Broadband Network) a lot more viable. ... and I don't think it's the wrong thing to do.
"only 313 of the 977"?! WTF, that is a lot! Bl00dy stupid argument. I am very happy that they took care of those and for the time being couldn't care less about the other warez sites! Go, get them.
The 3rd line from the bottom was meant to say:
"Grow your business by attracting more (& not only geeky) customers."
Not separating wholesale and retail operations was a major error when competition was first opened up.
If Conroy can pull this one off, he may not be an entirely surplus sack of shit after all.
http://rocknerd.co.uk
Telstra Wholesale, cant give Telstra ISP preferential treatment so, other ISPs can buy wholesale at the same price as Tesltra ISP. Splitting up a company is pretty much the opposite of privatisation!
IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
yeah some population densities for the cities, because its silly to average a population concentrated in a few large cities over a continent as large as australia.
Tokyo Population Density 5655 /km /km /km /kmÂ
kanagawa 3,711.6
osaka 4,664
sydney australia 2058/km2 (2006)
aichi 1,424
So... if the lotto is daily, you are saying that one page is blocked every 70 days nationally?
(Assuming all people play lotto)
-- I was raised on the command line, bitch
The claimed aim of the filter to justify its existence is to block child pornography, but only half of all blocked sites are porn-related, less than 1/3 are actually related to child porn.
I'd like to know more about what is on the other sites and why they are blocked.
It sounds like this is yet another case of yet another government claiming they're doing something reasonable just to get the mechanism in place, just to abuse that trust and use it to attack their own citizens key constitutional rights such as freedom of speech.
Does this mean that ... FINALLY ... we too will know what it is like to have uncapped internet?!
Ayjay on Fedang
Is laws that make it difficult to violate existing laws.
Child pornography: illegal. But let's make it more difficult to break this law. Oh, and btw, here are some freedoms you used to have.
Additionally, despite the claim that the main aim of the filter is to block child pornography, only 313 of the 977 total sites blocked is on the basis of child porn.
If the other 666 sites are all in a singular satanic bucket, then you could maybe justify the wallet and freedom wrenching "only". If the other 666 sites are divided up into ten groups of 66.6 site each, then there is no need to put this forlorn tin-foil spin on "main aim". (My math presumes two sites exploring a cross-over genre.)
If you set up an HIV clinic, you're going to prescribe for other common infections, unless you deliberately turn a blind eye to prevent having your main aim called into disgrace by the strategically innumerate.