phase_dancer
Bluelight Crew
I ask, how can someone with a self confessed learning difficulty (Conroy), be tasked with censorship? In the end it's all about forcing your views and beliefs on other people.
TLB has raised questions about other material - medical based stuff - being caught in the filter.
What about the research area? Tronica, how will this be likely to affect researchers like yourself? Not only will info you seek be harder to obtain but from what I can gather the mere publishing of drug discussion or illicit activity may be compromised. What will happen if the EDRS or a similar publication becomes the new drug users directory for finding out what drugs are used, how they are used, and even which are easiest to obtain? A little far fetched possibly, but I'm sure you get my drift. If public complaints are to be the basis for things being included under this broad wording, then anything like this published online could face a similar fate.
So, will universities be included under the government's ISP filter?
Apart from the obvious, there's also the issue of whether being in possession of any ISP banned material will be a criminal offense. It certainly is in relation to owning banned books in Qld. When PiHKAL was first published, there was virtually nothing equivalent available to those AOD workers who were attempting to stay abreast with the emergence of many of those compounds. Copies were kept out of sight, hidden by these workers and officials, as they knew all too well what they could face if caught. The way I see it, without set, well defined boundaries, this legislation has far reaching implications that go well beyond the internet.
Anyone know if this ever amounted to anything?
From here
TLB has raised questions about other material - medical based stuff - being caught in the filter.
What about the research area? Tronica, how will this be likely to affect researchers like yourself? Not only will info you seek be harder to obtain but from what I can gather the mere publishing of drug discussion or illicit activity may be compromised. What will happen if the EDRS or a similar publication becomes the new drug users directory for finding out what drugs are used, how they are used, and even which are easiest to obtain? A little far fetched possibly, but I'm sure you get my drift. If public complaints are to be the basis for things being included under this broad wording, then anything like this published online could face a similar fate.
So, will universities be included under the government's ISP filter?
Apart from the obvious, there's also the issue of whether being in possession of any ISP banned material will be a criminal offense. It certainly is in relation to owning banned books in Qld. When PiHKAL was first published, there was virtually nothing equivalent available to those AOD workers who were attempting to stay abreast with the emergence of many of those compounds. Copies were kept out of sight, hidden by these workers and officials, as they knew all too well what they could face if caught. The way I see it, without set, well defined boundaries, this legislation has far reaching implications that go well beyond the internet.
Anyone know if this ever amounted to anything?
Hackers target govt over filter
By Renai LeMay, ZDNet.com.au
09 September 2009 11:30 AM
A group of hackers mainly known for their attacks against the Church of Scientology has threatened a widespread web attack starting today against the Federal Government in an attempt to protest its internet filtering initiative.
The group, which dubs itself Anonymous, has achieved online notoriety for previous attacks against the Church of Scientology.
The group appears to have detailed public plans online to start attacking the websites, email addresses and fax numbers of the Federal Government, particularly Communications Minister Stephen Conroy and the Australian Communications and Media Authority after the expiry of an ultimatum published one month earlier.
"A state of war between Anonymous and the Australian Government, and between Anonymous and all other governments which find themselves so inclined to impose censorship upon the internet, will be recognised," the site, which describes the proposed attack as "Project Didgeridie" states. "We need to blast their servers into the dust."
Intelligent Business Research Services advisor and security expert James Turner said Anonymous should let Australians deal with the internet filter issue as per normal political processes.
"We are a democracy and this is one of the most popular governments ever," he told ZDNet.com.au this morning. "In contrast to this, the censorship plan has clearly been driven by a few fringe politicians who are out of touch."
"If these politicians fail to understand the sentiment in Australia around this censorship plan then it's very likely that they will be removed from their seats at the next election. This is how Australia works. We're probably the most stable democracy in the world, and we'll simply vote these politicians out."
Turner said Australia's press had done a "sensational job of eviscerating the censorship plan", which he said was "now effectively dead in the water". Consequently, violent attacks were not required.
A spokesperson for Minister Conroy's office had not yet responded to a request for comment on the issue.
From here

