TOP INTERNET CENSORS - IRAN, CHINA....AUSTRALIA???
Dr JENSEN» (Tangney) (9:48 AM) —What has become of the government’s
despicable internet «filtering» plan? The minister for broadband,
communications, the digital economy and state censorship has been
strangely silent in recent weeks on his plot to demolish the freedom of
Australians to access internet material without government controls. I
hope that he has realised the error of his ways and will abandon the
idea, as the government have done with other plans when it has become
clear that they were hopelessly out of touch with those they purport to
lead.
Was the minister disturbed to learn, as I was, that
the brutal, dictatorial Iranian regime is employing similar technology
to that he plans to use in Australia? As authorities in Iran this week
moved to crush dissent over election results, there were reports it had
installed perhaps the world’s most advanced system for controlling
internet use by its citizens, greatly exceeding even the notorious
level of state intervention in the ‘great firewall’ of China.
Perhaps the minister was also disturbed to see the same reports, then
raised his plans for Australia as another example of governments
seeking to exert control over their citizens through internet
«filtering» and monitoring—Iran, China, Australia. Perhaps he is proud
to see our country, which was founded on a bastion of freedom and
rights, grouped with two of the world’s worst offenders on curtailing
civil liberties.
I am not proud of this. I am afraid and
disgusted. Trials of the internet «filtering» system continue, though
limited, particularly since major provider and «filtering» opponent
iiNet walked out. The minister has instead been talking of Stay Smart
Online, a campaign to maintain security for internet users. He has not
explained how blocking access to information will help anyone stay
smart.
The reality is that the free flow of information
stimulates learning and new ideas. It feeds the growth of knowledge.
Restricted growth of information has the opposite effect. The
government has been told that its plan will not work. It will fail to
prevent access to child pornography and other offences linked to
internet use. The government is planning a $43 billion high-speed
broadband network. One plan increases speeds while another reduces
them. Why not save all that money and leave the matter alone? Then we
will not be out of pocket and our right to view information of our
choosing will not be curtailed. Then we will not be placed in the same
basket as China and Iran, which is destined to be the sad outcome if
this plan goes ahead.