Porn stats make mockery of AU censorship laws

Australia hosts more porn pages than any other country in the region despite strict laws designed to restrict adult content.

A survey by Secure Computing found that sites in the .com.au domain played host to 5.6 million separate pages of pornography. Only Germany, with over 10 million pages, and the UK, with 8.5 million, came higher in the list. Secure Computing derived the figures by identifying adult pages listed in its SmartFilter database. A surprise inclusion was the tiny Pacific island of Niue, which came fourth and hosted just under 3 million pages.

Australia's high ranking comes despite Net censorship laws formalised in 1999 and designed to restrict the proliferation of adult content. Under those laws, ISPs hosting "objectionable" content can receive takedown notices from the Australian Broadcasting Authority.

While sites in the .com.au space do not have to be physically hosted in Australia, such domain names can only be obtained by businesses registered in or active in Australia, and the site name must derive from the business name or a product sold by it. In practice, such rules are hard to police. For instance, the domain hotsex.com.au is registered to a company called Lion Global.

Sites on .com domains, which are believed to comprise the vast majority of porn sites, were excluded from the survey since their location is difficult to identify. It is generally believed that the US is the world's biggest producer of adult content.

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Talkback 2 comments

    Why should anyone be surprised, especially since the law was introduced during the reign of Ludite Alston who didn't & probably still doesn't have a clue how the Internet functions. Dizzy Dazza was another MP put in charge of the communications portfoAnonymous -- 30/06/04

    Why should anyone be surprised, especially since the law was introduced during the reign of Ludite Alston who didn't & probably still doesn't have a clue how the Internet functions. Dizzy Dazza was another MP put in charge of the communications portfolio he knew nothing about! Another wasted effort and a law they can't police effectively. I'll bet they'r still scratching their heads wondering what they can do about it.

    This is meaningless. It ignores the .com domain, on which the vast majority of porn is stored, and merely identifies porn sites that have an identifiable country domain such as .au. This doesn't mean the content is actually hosted in that country either. Anonymous -- 30/06/04

    This is meaningless. It ignores the .com domain, on which the vast majority of porn is stored, and merely identifies porn sites that have an identifiable country domain such as .au. This doesn't mean the content is actually hosted in that country either. We're betting there are not 3 million porn pages actually hosted in Niue, for instance, they just have lax laws on buying domain names.
    On the other hand, it's just the sort of "proof" Johnny and his crew need to start another moralistic porn crusade. Thanks Secure Computing!

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