Minchin calls Conroy on late ISP filter

By Liam Tung, ZDNet.com.au
02 September 2009 12:46 PM
Tags: conroy, iinet, isp, minchin, optus, censorship, filter

Communications Minister Stephen Conroy has hit back at Shadow Minister for Communications Nick Minchin's call for the Federal Government to end its ISP-level filtering "farce".

Conroy hit back at Minchin's criticisms of the government's plan. "Nick Minchin and the Liberal party should explain why they don't support using the latest technology to restrict access to child abuse content and other Refused Classification material," he said.

Minchin today launched a renewed attack on the government's live ISP (Internet Service Provider) filtering trials, announced in February this year, for being late, having unclear objectives and being too small to provide meaningful data. The largest of the nine ISPs that have participated in the live trials include Primus, Unwired, Optus.

"Almost two years after coming to office with a plan to censor the internet, Senator Conroy has not even managed to release results for long overdue filtering trials, let alone come close to actually implementing this highly controversial policy," Minchin said in a statement today.

The initial closed tests revealed improvements in filtering technologies, but also showed significant limitations. The closed tests were followed by live tests, which have covered nine ISPs and are expected to conclude by the end of this month.

"It is time for Senator Conroy to end this farce and produce his long overdue trial results for independent assessment. It is looking increasingly like the minister knows his mandatory internet censorship plan is simply unworkable, but is too embarrassed to admit it," Minchin said.

Minchin has seized upon questions over what exactly is intended to be filtered by the proposed system. iiNet, one of the largest ISPs to have flagged its intent to join the study, pulled out in March this year, with its managing director Michael Malone criticising the government for being too vague about its aims.

"Huge doubts also continue to surround the type of content Labor wants to filter and how it will compile a blacklist which would form the basis of its filtering regime," said Minchin.

Advertisement

Talkback 2 comments

    Going nowhere Anonymous -- 02/09/09

    As much as i want this heavily publicized so the word gets out, it's not going to make any difference whatsoever. It has become blatantly obvious the Government has no intention of listening to public opinion or experts within the industry. This is a terrible idea and will do nothing to assist the future of Australian telecommunications.

    KRudd has an agenda and is going to stick with it no matter what.

    Conroy is deceitful and must go Anonymous -- 03/09/09

    It's a true indication of the person that the Minister for Communication has to stoop to the lowest level of ad hominem straw-person abuse as a pathetic charade to attempt the slightest justification for the stupid filter concept.

    Senator Conroy might not be the brightest match in the box, but after nealy two years as comms minister he must be aware that Conroy's Catastrophe will not work to "restrict access to child abuse content" or for any other valid reason. The current so-called trial is a bad joke with the minister's minders probably having written the media releases long ago.

    Senator Minchin may seem to be a poor choice as the shadow comms minister, and he was previously part of the cheer squad that egegiously sold off Telstra with the network monopoly intact. But he is dead right about Conroy's Great Australian Rabbit-proof Fence - it's a cheap political stunt of no value whatever except to introduce secret political censorship (and to possibly scam a few votes from the well-meaning but technically clueless ACL).

Add your opinion

Latest Videos

Blogs

  • Darren Greenwood Telecom NZ savings damage prospects
    If Telecom NZ wants to have any of the NZ$1.5 billion the government intends to spend on its new broadband network, it had better think long and hard before offshoring 1500 jobs.
  • Array iiNet: The whys and what nows
    Last week the Federal Court ruled that internet service providers are not responsible for copyright violation by their customers. This is an important decision not just for iiNet, which spent around $4 million defending the case, but for all ISPs in Australia and, indeed, globally.
  • Array Govt, hurry up with releasing data
    A programmer scraped data from the My School website to make some really cool heat maps showing regions of smart schools — no thanks to the government, which didn't supply the data in any useful kind of format.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured