Australia dan China tampaknya "melangga"r kredo hacker poin pertama (Levy 
1984), "Access to computers should be total & unlimited." 

Sementara poin keempat menyebutkan, "Mistrust authority; promote 
decentralization...."

Salam,
CA

Source: 
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1995615,00.html?xid=newsletter-asia-weekly

--begins--
First, China. Next: the Great Firewall of... Australia?

By Marina Kamenev / Sydney ​ Wednesday, Jun. 16, 2010 

The concept of government-backed web censorship is usually associated with 
nations where human rights and freedom of speech are routinely curtailed. But 
if Canberra's plans for a mandatory Internet filter go ahead, Australia may 
soon become the first Western democracy to join the ranks of Iran, China and a 
handful of other nations where access to the Internet is restricted by the 
state. 

Plans for a mandatory Internet filter have been a long-term subject of 
controversy since they were first announced by Stephen Conroy, the Minister for 
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, in May 2008 as part of an 
$106 million "cybersafety plan." The plan's stated purpose is to protect 
children when they go online by preventing them from stumbling on illegal 
material like child pornography. To do this, Conroy's Ministry has recommended 
blacking out about 10,000 websites deemed by the Australian Communications and 
Media Authority (ACMA) to be so offensive that they are categorized as 'RC,' or 
Refused Classification. 

(See pictures of Chinese mourning the loss of Google.)

The government won't reveal an official list of the URLs on the current 
blacklist, but Conroy's office says it includes sites containing child sexual 
abuse imagery, bestiality, sexual violence, detailed instruction in crime, 
violence or drug use and/or material that advocates the doing of a terrorist 
act. "Under Australia's existing [laws] this material is not available in news 
agencies, it is not on library shelves, you cannot watch it on a DVD or at the 
cinema and it is not shown on television," Conroy's office e-mailed in a 
statement. But in March 2009, when a 2,395-site blacklist was leaked to 
Wikileaks, an online clearinghouse for anonymous submissions, it seemed 
confusingly broad, containing, among others, the websites of a dentist from 
Queensland, a pet-care facility in Queensland, and a site belonging to a school 
cafeteria consultant. 

At the time, Conroy told the Sydney Morning Herald that any Australians 
involved in the leak could face criminal charges. "No one interested in cyber 
safety would condone the leaking of this list," he said. 

Since then, criticism of the proposed Internet filter has escalated. "Nobody 
likes it," says Scott Ludlam, a senator from the Australian Greens Party. 
"Everyone from the communications industry to child protection rights and 
online civil liberties groups think this idea is deeply flawed." Throughout 
2009 GetUp!, an internet-based political activism organization, launched an 
advertising campaign to raise public awareness about the government's proposal. 
(That July, the advertisement the group made was banned from screenings on 
Qantas domestic flights into Canberra.) In February, Anonymous, a community of 
Internet users, which include hackers, shut down the Australian Parliament's 
web site in their second attack against the filter, which they called 
"Operation: Titstorm" — a reference to the sexual content that the filter will 
be blocking. Save the Children has questioned the efficacy of the filter in 
protecting children, and in March, Paris-based Reporters Without Borders listed 
Australia as a country that's "under surveillance" in its annual "Internet 
Enemies" report, which rounds up the "worst violators of freedom of expression 
on the Net." 

(Comment on this story.)

But the most high-profile criticism of the filter has so far been from net 
giants Google and Yahoo. In March, Google wrote to the Australian government 
with concerns that the scope of the filter was too wide. The search engine also 
warned it may slow down search speed. "Filtering may give a false sense of 
security to parents, it could damage Australia's international reputation, and 
it can be easily circumvented," the California company wrote in a submission to 
Conroy's Department of Broadband Communications and Digital Economy. 

On June 6, the Australian government launched a police investigation into the 
activities of Google in Australia, accusing the company of collecting private 
information while taking photographs for their Street View Service, which 
offers a panoramic view of any catalogued street. In comments that he has 
denied were spurred by Google's complaints about his cybersafety program, 
Conroy has called Google's privacy policy "creepy," and described their 
collecting of unsecured private information as "the biggest single breach of 
privacy in history." Google has admitted to accidentally collecting fragments 
of data from unsecured wi-fi networks in its global operations. 

(See pictures of life at Google.)

Indeed, only a cluster of Christian groups and child safety advocates have come 
out as supporting the filter. In a June 5 poll conducted on the web site of the 
Sydney Morning Herald, 99% of the 88,645 people who responded to the survey 
said they were against the Internet filter. Nevertheless, Conroy told the 
Sun-Herald in May that the policy "will be going ahead.'' He also accused 
groups like GetUp! of deliberately misleading the public. 'We are still 
consulting on the final details of the scheme. But this policy has been 
approved by 85% of Australian internet service providers, who have said they 
would welcome the filter, including Telstra, Optus, iPrimus and iinet.'' Iinet 
have since denied that it ever approved the scheme. 

Many say the biggest problem with the plan is that it simply won't work. "I 
don¹t see the point of blocking a site that no one would have come across, and 
making the criminals aware of the fact they are being watched. I am much more 
interested in seeing the Australian Federal Police work with international law 
enforcement agencies in tracking the site," Ludham of the Greens Party says. 
Jarrod Trevathan, a technology lecturer and researcher at James Cook 
University, agrees. "Once people know their site is being blocked they will 
just open up another URL, and then the filter will have to block that URL. 
Eventually the blocked list will contain countless URLs which will drastically 
slow down the speed of the Internet." In May, ABC reported Conroy might 
consider, as part of his program, allowing child pornography websites to be 
temporarily left online to catch people maintaining or using them. 

Still, it's hard to see why the government is pressing ahead with a scheme 
that, in the view of many, will do more harm than good. "It's like trying to 
ban burglaries by banning pictures of crowbars," says Geordie Guy, vice 
chairman of Electronic Frontiers Australia, a non-profit national organization 
that has been vehemently opposed to the filter since it's conception. "You stop 
burglaries the same way you stop pedophilia — by catching the perpetrators. If 
the government closes these websites than the [Australian Federal Police] will 
find it harder to track the real criminals."
--ends--
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