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AU Authority Moves To Censor Net Filtering Protest Site

An anonymous reader writes "On Friday the Sydney Morning Herald reported that an Internet censorship protest site had been set up under the banner 'Stephen Conroy: Minister for Fascism' and was ironically registered under the very name of the Australian Communications Minister responsible for trying to mandate the compulsory filtering scheme in federal law, stephenconroy.com.au. Within hours of the story being published, auDA, the Australian Domain Name Authority, had shut down the site, giving the owners only 3 hours to respond to a request to justify their eligibility for the domain. Normally auDA would allow several days to weeks for this process. An appeal to request an extension was denied, with no reason given. The site was quickly moved to a US domain, stephen-conroy.com in order to stay active while the dispute with auDA is resolved."

7 of 225 comments (clear)

  1. As evil as it sounds... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think this is somewhat justified. Sure, where do you draw the line but this site was registered under a false name -- that of someone in Parliament. There's always the mature way and the immature way to handle things, and in this case with the people who created the same, they took the immature route. There's a time and a place for things, this sort of thing is more suited to personal jokes between friends and groups on Facebook.

    1. Re:As evil as it sounds... by MichaelSmith · · Score: 5, Informative

      auDA requires you have some right to the name, in this case they did, they registered the business name to go along with it. They have every right to the domain name under auDA's own policies.

      smithm@michael:~$ whois stephenconroy.com.au
      Domain Name: stephenconroy.com.au
      Last Modified:17-Dec-2009 23:01:47 UTC
      Registrar ID:Domain Central
      Registrar Name: Domain Central
      Status:pendingDelete (Client requested policy delete)

      Registrant:SAPIA PTY LTD
      Registrant ID: ABN 94140321240
      Eligibility Type: Company

      Registrant Contact ID: C032321-DC
      Registrant Contact Name: Domain Manager
      Registrant Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs

      Tech Contact ID: C032321-DC
      Tech Contact Name: Domain Manager
      Tech Contact Email: Visit whois.ausregistry.com.au for Web based WhoIs

      Its not immediately clear to me how they qualified for this name.

    2. Re:As evil as it sounds... by bmo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      >I think this is somewhat justified.

      No, it's not. Not in the least.

      It's political speech. If there's *any* sort of speech that needs protecting, it's "controversial" political speech because mainstream political speech doesn't need protection as much. Stephen Conroy doesn't like criticism. Well, boo-hoo, cry me a river. It doesn't matter if it's "immature" or not. What's next, banning editorial cartoons that Steven doesn't like, or throwing people in prison that Steven doesn't like? He has now demonstrated that he won't stop at child pornography. This is *exactly* why Steven Conroy's "protect the children" censorship should be shouted down.

      Steven Conroy is a fascist with a stick up his arse, pure and simple.

      I'm in the States, and Steven Conroy makes me want to punch him.

      --
      BMO

    3. Re:As evil as it sounds... by whitehatnetizen · · Score: 5, Informative

      As much as I agree with you, you don't seem to understand that the group that registered the domain committed fraud. also in Aus, to have a .com.au domain, you need to either have a registered business/trading name related to the domain, or have the domain be your actual name. as far as I can tell, neither of these were the case and so it is fraud.

  2. To be fair... by BrokenHalo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm no fan of Stephen Conroy's Great Wall of Australia, but the owners of the site in question can't have any claim to legitimacy if they fraudulently use someone else's name to register it.

    1. Re:To be fair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      not in .com.au, it isn't. Have you seen the requirements to register a .com.au? Satire doesn't cut it, I'm afraid:

      1. To be eligible for a domain name in the com.au 2LD, registrants must be:
      a) an Australian registered company; or
      b) trading under a registered business name in any Australian State or Territory; or
      c) an Australian partnership or sole trader; or
      d) a foreign company licensed to trade in Australia; or
      e) an owner of an Australian Registered Trade Mark; or
      f) an applicant for an Australian Registered Trade Mark; or
      g) an association incorporated in any Australian State or Territory; or
      h) an Australian commercial statutory body.

      There is no

      i) in it for teh funnees.

  3. Eh, the SITE is a parody, the registry isn't by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If I act/dress like Steven Conroy goose-stepping through the streets, THAT is parody. If I create a passport with his name on it, then that is fraud.

    They should have registered the site in their own name, then it would be parody and they would probably win in court (don't know aussie laws on parody but presuming they are as similar to EU/US laws as you can expect from a continent of criminals).

    Mind you, the fact that the registry changed its normal procedure for this case shows that this is a real attempt at suppression of critical thoughts. Then again, everyone knows not to use local registers for anything, they are all corrupt but without the global oversight the .com.org.net have to work under.

    But if you want to parody/critize, you need to know what battles to fight. Like the show "Have I Got News For You". They can only do what they do because they got lawyers watching the entire show, who decide what joke/satire is worth it and which isn't. You can make far harder satire, if you give the enemy only the satire itself to fight. Not accidental criminal/libel stuff that they can use to shut you down.

    For instance, I can say that George Bush is the monkey whose brain was served in The Temple of Doom, but if I then hint "which leads him to cheat on his wife" I am opening myself up to much to attack. This side is now attacked because it faked the registry, neatly allowing the attacked to side-step addressing the charge of facism.

    Just as my post may now be modden down for attacking Bush, or the criminal aussie remark, rather then the main point I am trying to make.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.