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Aussie Internet Censorship Minister Censors Self

An anonymous reader writes "Communications Minister Stephen Conroy, the minister attempting to ram the great firewall of Oz down everyone's throat, has been removing all traces of the unpopular legislation from his main website with a JavaScript filter. From the article: 'It was revealed today a script within the minister's homepage deliberately removes references to internet filtering from the list. In the function that creates the list, or "tag cloud," there is a condition that if the words "ISP filtering" appear they should be skipped and not displayed.' Bear in mind, this is the same minister that tried to get the ISP of tech forum Whirlpool to pull the site after users there posted a response email from the ACMA (Australian Communications and Media Authority)."

8 of 158 comments (clear)

  1. What more proof do you need? by acehole · · Score: 5, Interesting

    They can't be trusted to not use it for political ends. You wont ever hear the words "We've legislated against the filter being used to block political material."

    We're already got the ACL (Australian Christian Lobby) attempting to file its members into the classification board by applying for positions to put their own slant on approvals or most likely disapprovals.

    Every little interest group that wants the particular vice that they're against is already lining up to whisper in the Senator's ear. He's ethically corrupt and making dubious shady decisions. $250 Million for the free to air channels around Australia with no strings attached. I wonder why there is little to no coverage in the main stream press now days?

    --
    Be you Admins? nay, we are but lusers!
  2. National Disgrace by Anakie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am so embarrassed to be an Australian right now...

    1. Re:National Disgrace by chromas · · Score: 5, Funny

      Thanks for giving us Americans the day off.

  3. Re:Elections are coming up... by Architect_sasyr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm trying to figure out why we don't see more of it on the standard bullshit news shows.

    And then I realised where all the funding and authorisation comes from. I just find it... disturbing... that we are all of a sudden getting massive spin coverage on the facebook trolls over death-pages. Again, until I realise that it's the perfect reason to "censor" the internet.

    --
    Me failed English...
    FreeBSD over Linux. If my comments seem odd, this may explain...
  4. Re:Elections are coming up... by some_guy_88 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Any competent opposition could make it into a very major issue.

    *sigh*..

  5. Re:Elections are coming up... by Sasayaki · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unfortunately, this won't happen. (Disclaimer: I have posted this before, but it's worth restating)

    Tony Abbot (The head of the Liberal party- that's the guys NOT in power, for you Americans) visited humble Darwin city recently and it was there that I personally got to ask him, in his public question and answer time, the following question (roughly remembered):

    "The Internet is an important part of the lives of many young Australians, as well as Australia as a whole in this modern age- what do you think of (the Prime Minister- Americans would say 'president') Kevin Rudd's plan to censor the Internet?"

    His answer began:

    "Well, I'm afraid I'm probably going to disappoint you..." and yes, unfortunately, he did.

    Paraphrased his answer was: "Stopping child pornography is extremely important to me and the Liberal party and therefore, if we can prove the censorship plan doesn't work, we will oppose it; but only it. We will continue to seek effective means to block 'filth' (his word) from entering our country any way we can. If the filter works, we will support it."

    Basically the message I got from his reply is that Tony Abbot believes that the filter will work "well enough" and is too much of a hot potato to oppose politically. The subtext I personally divined from his answer was a little more chilling; that the filter didn't go far *enough* for his tastes, and that he'd personally rather a complete whitelist than a blacklist. Therefore, speaking as a card-carrying Liberal... if you think that voting for the Liberal party in the next election will make the filter go away, you are sadly mistaken.

    On a side note, the fact that he himself is an extremely religious man probably doesn't help a great deal, since it seems that too many politicians tend to "trust God about these things" when it's abundantly clear that God knows sweet F-A about the Tubes and how they work.

    --
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  6. Re:Elections are coming up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    all of a sudden getting massive spin coverage on the facebook trolls over death-pages.

    The massive spin coverage of Facebook trolls is in the MURDOCH press. Why? Because news corp owns MySpace, the competition. Call me cynical, but it's pretty bloody obvious.

  7. Re:Not helpful by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Dunno if it made the news down there, but well over a decade ago Sinead O'Connor tore up a picture of the pope on live television in the USA and said "Fight the real enemy" as she did it. She was hugely censured for it and although it did not kill her career as a musician it probably forever kept her off the pop charts here.

    The thing about her protest that most people didn't even realize, was that she had just finished singing a version of the classic reggae song "War" in which the lyrics were repurposed to be about stopping child abuse. Her message was drowned out by all the media outrage - for a few weeks we learned that everybody in America was catholic, but nothing else really came out of the incident.

    A decade later and the news media finally pick up on the abuses perpetrated by the catholic church - even the 'discovery' of an official super-duper-secret document detailing how to deny any molestation accusations and denigrate the accusers written by the guy who is now pope from back in the 70s - but not one of those people who took O'Connor to task for telling people the truth back then has come forward to apologize and say, "Sorry, guess you were right and we should have listened to you."

    So yeah, it doesn't go over very well when you tell them and they sure aren't willing to give you credit when they can no longer avoid the facts either.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.