Obama Administration Against Australia Internet Filter

Australia Internet Filter

In a story widely covered by Gambling911.com and special correspondent Greg Tingle of Media Man Int., Senator Stephen Conroy, who is Australia's acting Communications Minister, is looking to move forward with attempts at censoring thousands of Internet websites including those related to online gambling.

"The Rudd Government's controversial internet filter legislation, with add on ‘blacklist' on the side, is still being drafted and is unlikely to be debated in parliament until at the middle of June and might be pushed back even further," Tingle says.  "Internet lovers, gamers, media - journalists, entrepreneurs and lovers or freedom of expression have been rejoicing and see the latest development as a victory of sorts in the internet control ‘war'."

And now it appears, US President Barack Obama has entered the fray, expressing discontent over Conroy's filtering frenzy.

David Olsen of Dynamic Business Worldwide:

"Coming off the back of Google's announcement they are no longer censoring their Chinese search engine, officials from Obama's State Department are mounting a diplomatic assault on internet censorship worldwide."

US State Department spokesman Noel Clay raised concerns about the proposed Internet filter.

"The US and Australia are close partners on issues related to cyber matters generally, including national security and economic issues," Mr Clay said.

"We do not discuss the details of specific diplomatic exchanges, but can say that in the context of that ongoing relationship, we have raised our concerns on this matter with Australian officials."

Conroy's ‘black list' had been leaked last year and included everything from a dentist's website to the online betting exchange Betfair, which operates legally in Australia.

Just last week, Google announced it will no longer be censoring its Chinese website.  Google has been highly critical of the Australian Internet filtering proposal. 

"Our primary concern is that the scope of content to be filtered is too wide," Google wrote in its submission, also suggesting the filter would slow browsing speeds.

"Some limits, like child pornography, are obvious. No Australian wants that to be available-and we agree," the Google submission said. "But moving to a mandatory ISP level filtering regime with a scope that goes well beyond such material is heavy-handed and can raise genuine questions about restrictions on access to information."

Alejandro Botticelli, Gambling911.com

 

Comments

Re: Obama Administration Against Australia Internet Filter

Thanks O. It's time to step up the attack against the proposed Australian internet filter. Charlie Coffee Sydney, Australia

Re: Obama Administration Against Australia Internet Filter

Seems like the Labor Govenment's days in office are numbered. They have lied to the people so much. Thank god for WikiLeaks.

Re: Obama Administration Against Australia Internet Filter

Didn't Wikileaks turn out to take a massive hit in the ass of the U.S. Who in the Aussie government will be next? Perhaps the current P.M would be a great place to start. Start at the top and watch Labor crumble like domino's.

It's not about CP

He doesn't want to talk about the blacklist because wikileaks, 4chan, and the church of euthanasia are on that list, in addition to a wide variety of non-illegal porn sites (such as bondage material) and online gambling sites. They would tell us "well it's a criminal website, probably related to child porn" when in fact they're censoring a variety of non-illegal content and political sensitive issues. Conroy is the Shah of the West.