'BRUDDBAND' A $43 BILLION SHAMBLES
Dr JENSEN (Tangney) (5:35 PM) —I rise to speak on the
Telecommunications Legislation Amendment (National Broadband Network
Measures—Network Information) Bill 2009. The members opposite will be
all too aware of the preposterous pledge made by their former leader,
Bob Hawke, that under his colourful maladministration ‘No Australian
child will be living in poverty’. Of course, this laughable commitment
was never fulfilled and there was never any intention for it to be
fulfilled, given that Hawke’s words were aimed at winning votes, not at
winning the fight against poverty. How little things change with the
ALP. Two decades on and his evolutionary spawn, the Prime Minister,
heads a government which is promising no Australian child will be
living without a high-speed broadband connection. Let us set aside the
way in which this reflects the much higher expectations of the
Australian public in all aspects of life because of the 11 years of
sustained economic growth and widespread prosperity under the competent
and enlightened coalition management. What we are seeing in the
National Broadband Network proposal is Labor again making grand
promises which it has absolutely no idea about fulfilling. Like Bob
Hawke, the Prime Minister appears set to be forever remembered and
derided for delivering a sweeping but hollow commitment which is
entirely based on spin and is totally devoid of substance.
This is nothing but a fancy promise which the government has no hope of
delivering and which is a desperately cynical attempt to cover up its
failure to make any real progress on a key election promise two years
after coming to office. Of course, the government wasted 18 months and
$20 million on its first bungled National Broadband Network plan and is
again haemorrhaging cash under this latest farcical attempt to win
votes through spin rather than action. Millions of dollars are already
being poured into salaries and operating expenses for those appointed
to manage the network, even though there is no network to manage. Where
is the demand or the evidence of the demand for this proposed service?
Most Australians already have access to relatively high-speed internet
services, whether it be ADSL or ADSL2 or via the dramatically growing
wireless internet services. Do the Australian people really want $43
billion of their money spent on a system which will be of marginal
benefit to few and of significant benefit to even fewer?
Where is the evidence of the effectiveness of the proposed network? The
systems in place work. How will the one proposed be better and to what
degree? Will the improvement justify the massive expense and for how
long? There have been suggestions of a 10-year roll-out for the
proposed network. It has taken nearly six months from the government
announcing the plan to bring this bill before us, so the project is
already mired in delays. Ten years is an extremely long time in
politics but it is several generations in technology. Indeed, we heard
the member for Kennedy talking about how in a period of 15 years there
have been four different generations of technology, and the government
is betting on a technology here.
Ten years ago, most of the
high bandwidth services which we are seeing as driving the push for
high-speed broadband services today simply did not exist. YouTube,
Facebook and, of course, Twitter were not here; yet the government is
presuming to plan a network today which will meet today’s demands but
not for another 10 years. Will we then have to start over yet again
because of an ill-thought-out policy implemented by the members
opposite? Why is a long-term strategic telecommunications strategy
setting its aim at only the second-rate technology of today when other
countries already enjoy far superior network service and are planning
to improve these further? Will we be happy with the service when it is
complete, whenever that might be? Will we be happy with it after six
months, after 12 months or after two years, as we watch communications
services in neighbouring countries leapfrog Australia? A $43 billion
investment should be delivering more than short-term gratification.
These are just some of many very pertinent questions which remain
unanswered on this issue. The Australian public deserve to know these
answers before we get the bill passed onto us. It is our duty as
members of parliament when considering such massive commitments to
ensure that they are the best choices for our country. The government
has in this instance failed to demonstrate that this is the case. The
members opposite would have us believe that this legislation is
essential if Australia’s broadband infrastructure is to be improved and
that critics are holding back development of better systems, yet the
same members opposite are themselves bent on slowing Australian network
speeds through their insidious internet censorship scheme. Of course,
the same minister is responsible for both of these farces.
Internet service providers have won the backing of colleagues around
the world in their loathing for a man apparently set on hindering the
infrastructure he is supposed to enhance. The Minister for Broadband,
Communications and the Digital Economy recently won formal recognition
for his unpopularity in the industry as Internet Villain of the Year.
Some individuals felt strongly enough about the issue that last week
they attacked the websites of both the minister and the Prime Minister.
Computer users, particularly the more tech-savvy—and a special mention
must go to the Whirlpool website forums for fostering real debate of
the issue—hold the minister as an object of contempt and ridicule,
particularly for his bumbling attempt to impose controls over the
medium which is ultimately setting the world free. The internet
delivers power to the world’s people. It is an ally of all who cherish
freedom, individual liberty and true democracy. That is why it is the
enemy of authoritarian rulers in countries such as China, Burma and
Iran—and, it seems, of the Australian Labor Party.
Members
should recall that under the last coalition government we had a very
simple, very cost-effective and very popular program under which
families could get free copies of an internet filter program for their
homes to protect their children from unsavoury internet content. The
Rudd government scrapped that, and two years after taking office the
minister is still unable to offer an alternative. Delay after delay has
very fortunately put this censorship plan on hold, and for this some
thanks must go to internet service providers who refused to take part
in sham trials.
By now, the members opposite must also have
realised how deeply flawed is the internet filter pursued by the
minister, and we can only hope that they will quietly abandon it at
some stage. What grew from the idea of protecting children using the
internet rapidly became billed as a weapon against child pornography,
and these are surely two very different issues. From there, the
minister has broadened it to propose blocking Australians from viewing
any material which a select group of faceless bureaucrats deem
inappropriate. And to top it off, the list of banned material would
itself be banned from public scrutiny, effectively making the censors
unaccountable. IT experts say such a system will slow the network and
that it will not work, regardless. This is particularly the case in
combating traffic in child pornography, which reportedly is usually
distributed through peer-to-peer networks rather than via websites, and
so could continue unhindered by the filter.
And so we have
a government pledging to spend tens of billions of dollars on a
national broadband network of dubious worth which will supposedly offer
higher speed data links to all. At the same time, the government is
planning a censorship scheme which will have the opposite effect,
reducing data speeds and hindering access. And, most crucially, it
would stop the free flow of information which we have come to expect
from the internet, a strategy more akin to foreign dictatorships, for
which Labor feigns distaste, a strategy wholly not in keeping with our
country’s proud history of free speech and open debate. The internet
promised to take us all into the future, but this government appears
intent on applying the policies of the past in its selfish pursuit of
power and control, not only in this building but over the lives of all
Australians.