Article written by Lauredhel

Lauredhel is an Australian woman and mother with a disability. She blogs about social justice, reproductive justice, freedom from violence, the use and misuse of language, medical science, being disabled, her garden, and whatever else pops into her head.

Lauredhel also blogs at FWD/Forward (feminists with disabilities), scribbles at her personal dreamwidth journal Selective and Arbitrary, and co-moderates Hollaback Australia. She joined Hoyden About Town in 2007.

40 responses to “Net censorship roundup: Fielding and Xenophon want filters to include legal material”

  1. James

    The whirlpool thread has been a hotbed of discussion, featuring lots of Mark Newton.

  2. Ben Grubb
  3. Ce n’est pas une image « Balneus

    [...] "Net censorship roundup: Fielding and Xenophon want filters to include legal material" at Hoyden About Town (2008-10-27) [...]

  4. Rayedish

    This being the second blog that I have read on this topic tonight, I was moved to act. I have written to both my local member and to Stephen Conroy and exercised my democratic right to express my dismay.

  5. Dave Bath

    The Senate Inquiry into the Communications Legislation Amendment (Content Services) Bill 2007, and submissions to it (including the efa.org.au), are pertinent and cover a lot of the issues. Presumably Labor Senators on that committee (who complained about inadequate consultation in their minority report) are aware of what was in the submissions and have come to grips with the basic problem.

    Oooh…. their problem now is not logic, it’s Fielding and Xenophon.

    Hmmmm. Perhaps kissing a*se should be considered pornographic and banned.

  6. Skreee

    So, theoretically, if this comes to pass, you couldn’t get information about how to find a clean and responsible tattoo and piercing parlour? How nuts is this?! Gah!

  7. Fine

    Thanks for keeping us up to date on this one, Lauredhel. It’s such insanity.

  8. Cara

    Whoa, they’re openly admitting now that they have an interest in censoring completely legal material created by consenting adults? I mean, I was always sure it was their intention, but I’m not sure whether it’s a good sign (because now the public might find out and get pissed) or a bad sign (because it means they feel comfortable enough to come out with it) that they’re actually saying this stuff out loud now. In any case, it’s scary.

  9. hexy

    Fetishes such as body piercing, application of substances such as candle wax, ‘golden showers’, bondage, spanking or fisting are not permitted.

    Wow.

    There goes my ability (and that of all my co-workers) to make a perfectly legal living.

    hexys last blog post..Links: Clean Feed, NT intervention, abortion in Victoria

  10. Mindy

    So frustrating. I support the blocking of child pron, but from what I’ve read this filtering isn’t going to be effective against it anyway. *headdesk*

  11. Su

    Tim Dunlop wrote a piece at surfdom back in January where he noted that Conroy is labor’s “numbers man” in the senate so I think it is just possible that he is canvassing the mandatory black list just to keep Fielding sweet, with no intention of following through. On economics alone it would be disastrous – to slow connections at a time of economic downturn would enrage pretty powerful business lobbies I would have thought. No gov in its right (hive)mind would do that.

  12. Mindy

    Stephen Conroy should be funding these.

    cat
    more animals

    Admin magic please? [done ~L]

  13. Australian Internet Censorship in the Media: EFA Chair on the Morning Show at Hoyden About Town

    [...] For background and further reading, see my censorship links roundup here. [...]

  14. Beste

    I see Deborah Robinson has made been commenting at whirlpool

    Thanks Ken – most enlightening.

    Yes, the government is making it mandatory without the option of opting-out but for a very good reason – x rated porn is illegal in Australia! I completely forgot about this.

    So the way I see it is, for those opposed to ISP filtering to even stand a chance of stopping it, you’ve got to change the laws making x rated porn illegal in this country first. Anyone here prepared to take this on?

    It’s about time the law caught up with the Internet and yes, this is just the beginning but I don’t think that’s necessarily a bad thing. You can’t break the law off line, neither should you be allowed to do so online.

    I’m going to take down all references to CP80 and ISP filtering from my website today. I don’t see any need to keep debating the issue with you when those who oppose the ISP filter can’t possibly win.

    I don’t need to defend ISP filtering – it’s just bringing the Internet in line with the laws of the land and unless you’re prepared to change the law, you can’t win this one fellas.

    So good luck with trying to stop ISP filtering of illegal content in this country – you’re going to need it.

  15. Mindy

    X-rated pron is legal in Canberra, and I think in the NT unless the laws have changed recently. You aren’t supposed to take it across state lines, but I’m not sure that it is that actively policed in private homes. Bit like the internet really.

  16. Websinthe

    Thanks for the round-up link.

    Deborah Robinson’s response has only made me more inclined to keep on this.

  17. Fine

    It’s not true to say X rated porn is illegal in Australia. As Rebekka has pointed out, it’s legal to produce it and sell it in the ACT.

  18. Fine

    OK, this from the Age in 2004.

    “Under existing laws, it is illegal to sell non-violent erotic films in Victoria, but it is legal to buy and possess them.”

  19. James

    Xenophon seems to have recanted –

    Thank you for your email to Nick Xenophon regarding internet clean feed. Nick shares your concerns that the technology being advocated by the government may not work. There is a real danger based on trials of the technology that have been undertaken that banned sites will get through the filter and sites that were not intended to be banned will be blocked. He will continue to investigate this matter and decide on what he believes is the appropriate course of action in due course.

    There’s a wiki gathering responses from all members of parliament. OCAU’s wiki also has an extensive roundup of media articles and links.

  20. Hoyden About Town

    [...] Latest internet filtering links, as added to my Australian Internet Censorship Links Roundup: [...]

  21. The Seventh Down Under Feminists’ Carnival « Ideologically Impure

    [...] censorship in Senate Question Time today as well as here, here, here and here, and a round-up here. If we reflect on the fact that early “anti-obscenity” laws in the US, for example, [...]

Switch to our mobile site