Dear People Of Australia: If You Don't Want Widespread Gov't Censorship Of The Internet, Speak Up Now
from the make-yourself-heard dept
We recently wrote about the latest in a long series of attempts by the government in Australia to massively censor the internet, creating its own "Great Wall" blacklist, like China. However, as Andrew Djemal alerts us, despite lots of complaints about this online, it appears that people in Australia are not speaking up in the official forums provided for public comment on this matter:If you've ever wondered why government and legislators so routinely ignore the numerous protestations and objections made by gamers and those against internet filtering, you'd be well advised to look at the Australian Law Reform Commission's (ALRC) list of public submissions. The Issues Paper has been published since May 20 and as yet only 80 public submissions have been made - 80 per cent of them from people who believe in government intervention for the sake of child protection.As the report notes, if people don't speak up in the right places, it shouldn't be any wonder that politicians ignore them. The ALRC is reminding people that if they want to submit comments, they need to do so by July 15th. So, to all the folks in Australia who are complaining about these actions online, now would be a good time to move your complaints from random other places on the internet, and put them where it matters right now.
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Filed Under: australia, censorship, filters, free speech, public comment
Reader Comments
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No filter
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Re: No filter
There's also a lot of Christian groups pushing the Government for a filter, and these groups have considerable power in votes.
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Re: Re: No filter
The Christian groups have no senate members. Labor + Greens can. Staunch Christians will never vote for Labor anyway.
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Re: Re: No filter
The minister for communications Conroy probably supports the filter, but it's definitely not something the party itself wants. If they did they would have tried to put it through parliament before July 2008 (when it almost definitely would have passed through the senate) or between July 2008-2011 before the new senate came in (when it probably wouldn't have but much more likely than it is now July 1st has passed and we have the new senate). They've put so many things through parliament in that period, including things they just announced and things that were never going to pass (ETS for example) so it's clear as day they don't want the filter and only wanted the support of Fielding from Family First (you know the party that thinks legalising gay marriage is the same as legalising child abuse - and whose candidates have said "Victorians bushfires are punishment from God for Victoria legalising abortion")
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Re: No filter
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Don't tase me, bro!
Have you ever seen a clip that involves a man asking well thought, well intending questions to a US politician (john kerry)? The guy did exactly what this article is suggesting a man should consider doing when something he disagrees with is going on. The guy got the crap kicked out of him.
Countless times a man have come to the group of powerful men with protest and honest words of disagreement and well thought out reasons as to why this or that should not come to be. -Very- often do the words fall on deaf and uninterested ears. I am betting that someone has written a letter and called him or her about this issue, but we all know that generally, the governments of this world do whatever it wants. With that statement, I am brought to the most clear and absolutely obvious solution to the problem that so many are faced with.
Many many governments of planet Earth are incredibly corrupt, broken, and repressive. There is only one solution to those kinds of groups, and it does not involve 'speaking up in the official forums provided for public comment on [any] matter'. Take action, forget the words.
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Re: Don't tase me, bro!
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Re: Re: Don't tase me, bro!
good points... while mocking valid points... or something?
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Change ya DNS
LOL
Cheers
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Re:
a lot of people who would be in a position to oppose things like this are probably of the mindset of 'well, nothing i say's going to be taken seriously because i don't have the resources to back it up, and given that i can simply bypass the whole thing it's not worth the effort to bother trying'
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Re:
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Re: Re:
This is true. Unfortunately, these three strike laws are not being pushed into existence by the consensus of the public, but by a relatively small minority of legacy businesses with huge lobbying resources.
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"only 80 public submissions have been made"
2nd, gov't "input" lines are sheerly PR to make people think that they /can/ affect outcome. But this is on rails, regardless of public opinion. So your last assertion, that it "matters" to complain on the gov't site, is worse than optimistic.
3rd, simply blocking open DNS servers too defeats the current remaining loophole. I predict they'll think of that soon enough; it may be left open for now just to see who's savvy.
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Be great if someone (Mike?) could provide some insight into what the ALRC is thinking about with those questions...
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Re:
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This Is A Job For Alligator Aberdeen
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Template?
Like it was said earlier, the questions can be quite difficult to decipher, and I would like to get a submission in by the due date.
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