Filtering works - like tripping over old ladies at the intersection!

RESULTS of a federal government trial show that live ISP-level content filtering does not have a negative impact on network performance and can work in a real-time environment.

However, a highly anticipated report based on the pilot is still weeks away and the federal Opposition says the government can not be trusted to deliver on the $43 billion national broadband network when the goalpost keeps shifting for a mere $300,000 filtering trial.

"The trial shows that filtering does work and that the gear stops identified IP addresses without major degradation to network speed," sources close to the trial said. "We can stop individual URLs, IP addresses, but we can't stop peer-to-peer nor virtual private network-type traffic."

Trials concluded last month and Enex has submitted the test results to the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy.

Opposition communications spokesman Nick Minchin slammed the government for the delay and said it had produced "nothing" since the filtering policy was first announced in the run up to the 2007 federal election. "This procrastination is unbelievable," Senator Minchin said. “They should release the report now. There seems to be a systemic problem with Senator Conroy and deadlines," he said. "Until today, we still don't even know what the criteria for the trials are."

"Senator Conroy doesn't seem to be able to handle a small trial. How on earth can we expect him to handle a $43bn broadband project? This incompetence doesn't bode well for taxpayers," Senator Minchin said.

Originally the government wanted to bar every web page listed on a secret blacklist managed by the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA). The list contains a wide array of URLs that contain both illegal and prohibited content.

Senator Conroy has always stated that ISP filtering is no silver bullet and was not the only answer in tackling child pornography. He has pledged to make the report public in "due course".

Senator Minchin said the Coalition did not support mandatory internet filtering, but if legislation was the chosen route, it would study it carefully before making a decision.

The controversial filtering plan has been slammed by several quarters including privacy advocates, child protection groups and advocacy organisation GetUp.

Their main concern is the mandatory nature of the program which forces ISPs to play ball. Most argue that a voluntary approach by industry is the way to go.

Related link: Internet filtering a farce: Minchin - Sept 2, 2009

It wasn't as if it wouldn't work. And blocking IPs/URLs at the point of entry is sure to work without harming network performance substantially. But. If it takes a year, $300,000 and a lot of too'ing and fro'ing to just get preliminary test results, I think the patient is not looking at a very healthy life.

If their arguments are true to be believed. Its only about blocking extreme nasties. Not that there are many just those considered too nasty for Aussie's to visit. Who knows what those sites my do to us!?!

If that is the case, with $300,000 already spent (that a few years of my salary wasted!), the actual investment for what they say is a small percentage of nasties out there, is going to be a very very costly exercise.

Please don't waste my money Senator Conroy. I work hard for it. I would rather see it go toward an old-age pension increase; or a new dining table for The Lodge - seriously - at least they would have more purpose and use!

Thanks but no thanks Senator Conroy - but I have a mummy already :) I don't need someone watching over me while I browse the WWW. And, it doesn't really matter, we will just work around your silly notions.

Sylvestor
www.twitter.com/Sylvestor

Filed under  //  Censorship   Conroy   Filter   Internet   Minchin   NBN  
Comments (0)
Posted 5 months ago

internet filter australia - Google News

Could Internet filtering cause more harm than good?

ZDNet - Zack Whittaker - ‎Sep 16, 2009‎
With the United Kingdom and New Zealand with independent filters in place, and Australia potentially soon after, Internet censorship is becoming common ...

PM's site suffers Anonymous DDos attack

Computerworld Australia - ‎Sep 9, 2009‎
The disabling follows a 'Declaration of War' against the Australian government by Anonymous as a reprisal for its role in establishing an Internet filter. ...

The Australian Internet Filter project in place by the current Federal Government (under Senator Conroy) is a touch topic for some. Basically its about censorship. Applying a model of "rating" web content against a set of criteria that determines whether or not Australian web users should have access or not.

This would be unbelievably difficult, without resorting to automation. Currently a panel of "censors" determine ratings on other media here in Australia. They watch, listen, play, read etc then determine what rating the content should have.

On the web, this would be impossible. There is just too much!

So the focus is narrowed.

Across the media, the loudest voices talk about "child protection". Filtering out the nasty child-abusive-paedophillic websites that are not so nice. They aren't very nice, I agree. I don't condone that sort of activity one bit.

But. If this internet filter is about child protection then I am concerned.

How much money has been and will be spent on this?

How much money and resources could be redirected to the real issue? Police, Child Protection authorities, Health, Families, Education to help stop the problem at the root rather than band-aid it and claim success.

Senator Conroy. Is this the man you want protecting YOUR children? He seems to want to. Is this right? I don't have all the answers. But I have my concerns.

What do you think?

Sylvestor
www.twitter.com/Sylvestor

Filed under  //  Censorship   Conroy   Google news   Internet Filter   Kevin Rudd   NBN  
Comments (0)
Posted 5 months ago

Funds wrangle hits NBN rollout

Funds wrangle hits NBN rollout

Mitchell Bingemann | July 07, 2009

THE spearhead of the federal government's $43 billion national broadband project appears to have been blunted as the likelihood of construction starting in Tasmania this month slips away while government costing negotiations drag on.

When the government announced on April 7 it would scrap the original national broadband network tender and replace it with a state-owned enterprise that would construct a fibre-to-the-home network, Tasmanian residents were tipped to be the first to get a taste of the new super-fast network.

At the time, federal Communications Minister Stephen Conroy said negotiations had begun between the federal and Tasmanian governments and a construction timeline would soon be finalised.

Although negotiations were expected to be finalised in the months after the April announcement, the government said construction of the network would begin this month through the state government-owned power utility, Aurora Energy.

Politically, it was a smart move. Despite its small and compact geography, Tasmania has the lowest percentage of broadband coverage in Australia, at about 38 per cent, and was seen as the perfect testbed for the ambitious national rollout.

But three months later Tasmanians are still twiddling their thumbs while the government continues to drag its feet in negotiations with Aurora and the state government.



It would seem that NBN is not exactly about doing things 'fast'. Wasting literally millions of dollars on a process that cost all Australians equally millions of wasted dollars.

Wake up! This Government is NOT intent on providing quality service - just more spin! What was deemed as "our future" will simply go on being the funding black-hole it started out to be.

Let's not hold our breath for super-fast-internet provision! Oh wait, don't we already have broadband? Oh that's right! YES! Stop wasting MY taxpayer dollars KRudd!

Sylvestor
www.twitter.com/Sylvestor

Filed under  //  Broadband   Communications   KRuddonomics   NBN   Senator Conroy   Tasmania  
Comments (0)
Posted 8 months ago