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Telstra Fears LulzSec Attacks, Hesitates On Internet Filter

After the earlier report that some of Australia's largest telcos (and ISPs) were to start censoring internet traffic based on a blacklist, rdnetto writes with the news that "Telstra is now hesitating to deploy the internet filter it had previously promised to implement, fearing reprisals from online vigilantes." The linked article specifically names LulzSec as the source of such reprisals.

9 of 188 comments (clear)

  1. Article is false. by bbqsrc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Never trust News Corp. Here's some real journalism: http://delimiter.com.au/2011/06/25/telstra-proposes-to-filter-interpol-blacklist/

    Not that the real answer is any better than what the Australian said, but the truth is what matters.

    --
    Disagree != mod troll.
  2. FUD by Ja'Achan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Step 1: Create a scary and unspecific enemy
    Step 2: Give it some publicity
    Step 3: Demand funding and protection based on speculation ('Maybe someone might attack us! Think of the children!')
    Step 4: Profit! And power, too.

    Looks like it still works.

  3. Congratulations Lulzsec by bky1701 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You have already done more to protect the rights of common people than most governments in the world have in years.

    This really makes you wonder how a shadowy group of people on the internet have more influence than elected officials and regulatory boards. Of course, I guess that's because they have completely different goals... we are possibly seeing the dawn of a new world here.

    1. Re:Congratulations Lulzsec by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Y'know, in terms of 'collateral damage per unit freedom', Lulzsec is still doing pretty well...

    2. Re:Congratulations Lulzsec by Hazel+Bergeron · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You have already done more to protect the rights of common people than most governments in the world have in years.

      The average Western government each allows tens of millions of people to enjoy basic freedoms under the rule of law with a reasonably impartial justice system. By the standards of perfection, everywhere is awful; by contrast with justice in many places 40 (Spain, if you're gay?), 50 (Southern US, if you're black?) or 200 (Britain or France, if you're poor and steal a loaf of bread?) years ago, governments are in some areas doing really well. And if we spend a moment imagining ourselves as a chattel-wife in Saudi Arabia for a moment or held at gunpoint for everything around us in Somalia, suddenly that horrible rights-denying US doesn't seem so bad.

      It's clear that things have been getting worse over the past 30 years in the West. It's clear that we could demand and do a lot better. It's also clear that lulzsec's civil disobedience is having some sort of effect, although it's not quite clear how it'll play out (maybe it'll just be used as an excuse to impose more stringent anti-terror[tm] laws on the Internet?). But, when compared with history and the world in general, protecting the rights of common people is something your government almost certainly does more of every day than lulzsec. Don't throw out the baby with the bath water, even if the baby is sick.

    3. Re:Congratulations Lulzsec by bky1701 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Don't tell me what I should encourage.

      Lulzsec is just another part of a bigger cultural shift (wikileaks and "anonymous" as well) away from servitude into actual civil awareness. Yes, they quite often catch people in the cross-fire. Yes, they often act without any real goals, just to humiliate. However, they serve a role that has long since been shrugged off by people around the world, that of an actual opposition to the status quo.

      I'm not an anarchist, but there is something poetic about a group of sarcastic hackers achieving what people want better than their government.

      If I were you, I'd get used to it, because people are tired of the corruption. If it takes people like Lulzsec to actually get something done, so be it. There is a time for everything and the time for quiet obedience is past.

  4. There's now... by taktoa · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... a chilling effect on censorship

  5. Who gets to say what's on the list? by kawabago · · Score: 5, Informative

    Our local resource center for our less affluent residents provides free internet access. It is supposed to have a filter for porn, only porn. Someone asked me to help them find information on medical marijuana and it was blocked by the filter. It wasn't porn but it was blocked. I asked the manager what else is being blocked? They didn't know. They didn't know how to change it either. I just hope no one dies because of that filter. Filter's always filter out more than they are supposed to, including legitimate political dissent. How free is your country if the government can control what you see, hear and read?

  6. Re:Nice? by Z00L00K · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And censorship never ends well either.

    Too much "protection" and you have a totalitarian regime.

    If you want to take out crime - do it at the source or check the cause for the crime first. Strangling the internet is like shooting the messenger.

    --
    If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.