| 8th February |
|

DVDs, Blu-Ray, VOD, Sex Toys & Lingerie...
All at great
low prices!
mi-porn.com |
| Ireland points out that ISP's aren't the best organisations to decide which websites to block, and the inevitable safety first over blocking will result in damage to innocent parties Permalink full story: Internet Blocking in UK...Government push for ISPs to block porn
|
See article
from newswire.xbiz.com
|
The
Internet Service Providers Association of Ireland (ISPAI) is knocking Britain's
new plan that requires surfers to select whether or not they want internet
blocking, calling it nothing less than censorship.
The ISPAI said the responsibility should lie with parents
policing what their children view on the web and not the
business of the U.K. government. ISPAI's Paul Duran told the
Irish Independent:
If Internet service providers are
dictating what can be accessed, then that could be seen as
nothing less than censorship. Essentially we would be
deciding what would be the inappropriate material. That
should be left to the parents or guardians.
The ISPAI represents 20 ISPs in Ireland including Eircom, O2,
Vodafone and UPC.
Critics of the British move said there are a number of
practical issues that are being overlooked and need to be
addressed. The restrictions could lump in websites that do not
contain sexually explicit material.
Digital law expert JP McIntyre said:
Many of these blocking issues are easy
to circumvent, but what they do tend to do is damage people
who have been wrongly blocked. You'll find that shops
selling things like lingerie get blocked by these filters,
Very often there are no appeal
mechanisms or they are very hard to use and in the meantime
people find that their businesses are suffering because
people can't access their sites and they don't know why.
Children's Minister Frances Fitzgerald refused to comment on
whether there were any plans to persuade Irish ISPs to adopt the
British model.
|
| 7th February |
|
|
| TalkTalk to mandate that new subscribers select whether or not they want ISP level website blocking Permalink full story: Internet Blocking in UK...Government push for ISPs to block porn
|
See article
from guardian.co.uk
|
From
the end of next month new subscribers to TalkTalk broadband will be unable to
activate their internet connection until they specify any categories of website
access that they would like to block.
The TalkTalk ISP has defined nine categories of websites,
including porn, dating, gambling, gaming, suicide, social
networking and weapons + violence, that can be blocked.
Subscribers will be alerted automatically either by email or
text if the controls are subsequently changed.
TalkTalk already provides subscribers with the opportunity to
block access to websites through its HomeSafe service, but
currently they not prompted to choose website blocking and the
default is for no sites to be blocked. So far 240,000
subscribers have elected for website blocks to be imposed.
The children's minister, Tim Loughton, praised TalkTalk and
said he hoped other internet service providers would offer
similar services shortly:
Through the UK Council for Child
Internet Safety we are working with industry and charities
to provide tools and information to inform parents and help
keep children safe online.
Meanwhile a little propaganda for
cyberbullying parents
See article
from scotsman.com
Parents
who are not technology savvy are putting their children are at
risk from exposure to unsuitable content on the internet, claim
two studies.
The Child Exploitation and Online Protection (Ceop) Centre
and IT firm Westcoastcloud, have warned that not all parents
have put internet blocking controls on their computers.
Further, even the majority of those who have put controls in
place have not considered doing the same on other household
devices that access the internet.
A Mori poll, commissioned by Ceop, showed that about 8% in
the UK, aged between five and 15, are regular users of the
internet.
But the study from Westcoastcloud, a division of
Glasgow-based cloud computing specialist Iomart, revealed that
only half of parents have installed software to protect their
offspring while only one in four has installed similar
protection on the mobile phones, games consoles and television
services.
Technology has transformed people's lives both
collectively and individually, said Peter Davies, chief
executive of the Ceop Centre and the senior police officer
leading on child protection on the internet for the Association
of Chief Police Officers: But too often we see examples of
where the child is at risk because they make simple online
mistakes -- because they are lured in or push the boundaries too
far and risk their safety.
|
| 7th February |
|
|
| Google and Facebook remove content supposedly objectionable to religious and political leaders Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in India...India considers blanket ban on internet porn
|
See
article from
google.com
|
Google
India has removed web pages deemed offensive to Indian political
and religious leaders to comply with a court case that has
raised censorship fears in the world's largest democracy.
A New Delhi court gave Facebook, Google, YouTube and Blogspot
and other sites two weeks to present further plans for policing
their networks, according to the Press Trust of India.
Google India did not say which sites were removed but had
said it would be willing to go after anything that violated
local law or its own standards.
Indian officials have been incensed by material insulting to
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, ruling Congress party leader
Sonia Gandhi and religious groups, including illustrations
showing Singh and Gandhi in compromising positions and pigs
running through Mecca, Islam's holiest city.
Communications Minister Sachin Pilot said that anyone hurt by
online content should be able to seek legal redress, he said.
The government has warned it has evidence to prosecute 21 sites
for offenses of promoting enmity between classes and causing
prejudice to national integration.
|
| 7th February |
|
|
| Ministry claims to have blocked nearly 1 million porn websites Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in Indonesia...Indonesia passes internet porn bill
|
See article
from thejakartapost.com
|
Indonesia's
Communications and Information Ministry claims it has blocked nearly
1 million sites that carry pornographic content.
Communications and Information Minister Tifatul Sembiring said the
censorship of porn sites was in line with the government's commitment to
provide safe sites accessed by Indonesians and build a more positive
character for the nation.
We've blocked more than 983,000 porn sites. We will keep on doing it,
Tifatul said during a seminar on the Healthy and Safe Use of the Internet.
Tifatul added that the censorship would in turn improve people's ethics in
using the Internet for positive purposes.
|
| 6th February |
|
|
| Parliamentary Committee find that ISPs should monitor the internet for websites radicalising religious extremists Permalink full story: Glorification of Censorship...Climate of fear caused by glorification of terrorsim
|
See article
from scotsman.com
|
Website
should be monitored and material that promotes violent extremism should be
removed. A nine-month inquiry by the Commons home affairs select committee
concluded the internet is a fertile breeding ground for terrorism and
plays a part in most, if not all, cases of violent radicalisation.
ISPs should be more active in monitoring sites and the
government should work with them to develop a code of practice
for removing material that could lead to radicalisation, the
report said.
The inquiry found that the internet played a greater role in
violent radicalisation than prisons, universities or places of
worship, and was now one of the few unregulated spaces where
radicalisation is able to take place.
But it added that a sense of grievance was key, and
direct personal contact with radicals was a significant
factor. The government's counter-terrorism strategy should
show the British state is not antithetical to Islam, the
committee said. Keith Vaz, its chairman, said:
More resources need to be directed to
these threats and to preventing radicalisation through the
internet and in private spaces. These are the fertile
breeding grounds for terrorism.
The July 7 bombings in London, carried
out by four men from West Yorkshire, were a powerful
demonstration of the devastating and far-reaching impact of
home-grown radicalisation.
We remain concerned by the growing
support for non-violent extremism and more extreme and
violent forms of far-right ideology.
He added that a policy of engagement, not alienation
would prevent radicalisation and called for the government's
counter-radicalisation strategy Prevent to be renamed Engage.
Nick Pickles, director of civil liberties and privacy group
Big Brother Watch, said:
Whatever the reason for blocking online
content, it should be decided in court and not by
unaccountable officials.
There is a serious risk that this kind
of censorship not only makes the internet less secure for
law-abiding people, but drives underground the real threats
and makes it harder to protect the public.
|
| 6th February |
|
|
| European Advertising Standards Alliance define new rules to inform web surfers that adverts they see are determined via snooping Permalink full story: Bad Phorm...Serving adverts according to internet snooping
|
See article
from independent.co.uk
|
When
new rules governing the way companies collect and use data about our movements
online come into force, a little i symbol will appear on screen to reveal
adverts generated by cookies. Many internet users find these digital
devices, which are used by websites to create personal profiles based on use of
the Internet, intrusive.
The data is used for Online Behavioural Advertising, allowing
companies to direct their display adverts at individuals who,
through the websites they have visited, have indicated an
interest in certain goods or services.
The warning system, to be introduced by the European
Advertising Standards Alliance and the Internet Advertising
Bureau of Europe, will allow users to opt out of all Online
Behavioural Advertising.
Similar measures introduced in the US had shown that users
were often reassured about the use of cookies and chose to
redefine their advertising profiles so they more accurately
reflected their interests. Some web names, like Yahoo!, have
already begun using the triangle icon on a voluntary basis in
Britain but from June all ad networks will be required to
display the symbol or face sanctions.
|
| 5th February |
|
|
| British MPs note their concern about Google's plundering of private data Permalink full story: Bad Phorm...Serving adverts according to internet snooping
|
See article
from parliament.uk
|
A
small group of British MPs have signed up to an Early Day Motion
voicing concern that Google are set to plunder user data for advert serving
purposes.
The primary sponsor is Robert Halfon and the motion reads:
That this House
-
is concerned at reports in the Wall
Street Journal that Google may now be combining nearly all
the information it has on its users, which could make it
harder for them to remain anonymous;
-
notes that Google's new policy is
planned to take effect on 1 March 2012, but that this has
not been widely advertised or highlighted to Google's users
and customers, who now number more than 800 million people;
-
and therefore concludes that Google
should make efforts to consult on these changes and that the
firm should be extremely careful in the months ahead not to
risk the same kind of mass privacy violations that took
place under its StreetView programme, which the Australian
Minister for Communications called the largest privacy
breach in history across western democracies.
The motion has been signed by
- Campbell, Gregory: Democratic Unionist Party Londonderry
East
- Campbell, Ronnie: Labour Party Blyth Valley
- Caton, Martin: Labour Party Gower
- Clark, Katy: Labour Party North Ayrshire and Arran
- Connarty, Michael: Labour Party Linlithgow and East
Falkirk
- Corbyn, Jeremy; Labour Party Islington North
- Halfon, Robert; Conservative Party Harlow
- Hopkins, Kelvin; Labour Party Luton North
- McCrea, Dr William; Democratic Unionist Party South
Antrim
- Meale, Alan; Labour Party Mansfield
- Morris, David; Conservative Party Morecambe and
Lunesdale
- Osborne, Sandra; Labour Party Ayr Carrick and Cumnock
- Rogerson, Dan; Liberal Democrats North Cornwall
- Vickers, Martin; Conservative Party Cleethorpes
- Williams, Stephen; Liberal Democrats Bristol West
|
| 5th February |
|
|
| EU rapporteur resigns over being railroaded to get restrictive copyright treaty passed before the public realises what it entails Permalink full story: ACTA...Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement
|
See article
from publicaffairs.linx.net
|
The
European Parliament rapporteur for ACTA, Kader Arif, resigned just hours after
the EU signed the controversial intellectual property treaty.
In a translated statement, Arif denounced the process leading
up to the ACTA signings as a masquerade.
I denounce in the strongest possible
manner the entire process which has led to the signature of
this agreement: failure to address civil society, lack of
transparency since the beginning of the negotiations,
successive reports of the signature of the text without any
explanation, sweeping aside of the views of the European
Parliament expressed in several different resolutions.
Arif said that he had come under pressure to rush through the
ratification process so as to keep ACTA out of the public eye.
As rapporteur on this matter, I was
contronted by unprecedented manoeuvres by the right of the
Parliament to impose an accelerated timetable with a goal of
passing the agreement quickly before public opinion could be
alerted.
The rapporteur closed his statement by expressing the hope
that his resignation would lead to greater public awareness of
the treaty.
This agreement could have major
consequences on the lives of our citizens, and yet it seems
that everything is being done to ensure that the European
Parliament will have no voice in this chapter. Thus, today,
in handing back the report that I have been in charge of, I
hope to send a strong signal to alert public opinion to this
unacceptable situation. I will not participate in this
masquerade.
|
| 2nd February |
|
|
| ATVOD bluffs that hardcore might seriously impair under 18's that see it Permalink
|
See
article from
atvod.co.uk
|
ATVOD
have announced a determination that all internet hardcore must be locked
behind paywalls, that in practice can only be unlocked by credit cards, even
debit cards won't do. I wonder percentage of customers are banned from
watching porn because they haven't got a credit card or else would rather
not use it).
And as far seriously impairing under 18's, I guess they will
all have been seriously impaired already. And will continue to
be seriously impaired to the benefit of foreign websites. The
'experts' are hardly convinced that the depiction of anything so
natural to every person's life can be considered seriously
impairing anyway. And the government seems to have asked ATVOD/Ofcom
to bluff it out until more specific legislation can be drawn up.
(See
morally impaired plot).
And do any of these censors ever consider the serious
impairment to our children caused by poverty. They seem so keen
to add the mass of expensive state control freakery and yet it
is suffocating Britain's ability to earn any money.
Anyway ATVOD have release the news article:
ATVOD Rules That Adult Website Must Block
Access To Children
ATVOD publishes determination that adult video on demand
website Bootybox.tv had breached statutory rules
requiring video on demand providers to ensure that under 18s
cannot normally access hardcore pornographic content
The Authority for Television On Demand (ATVOD)
has today published its determination that the provider of the
online video on demand service Bootybox.tv was in breach
of a statutory rule which requires that material which might
seriously impair under 18s can only be made available if access
is blocked to children.
The Bootybox.tv website offered users access
to explicit hardcore porn videos which could be viewed
on-demand. The content of the videos was equivalent to that
which could only be sold in licensed sex shops if supplied on
DVD.
Responding to a complaint from a concerned
father, who had discovered that his son had visited the site,
ATVOD found that the website broke the statutory rules in two
ways. Firstly, it allowed any visitor to the website
unrestricted access to a selection of hardcore pornographic
video promos/trailers featuring real sex in explicit detail and
featured a large still image of explicit sex on the homepage.
Secondly, access to the full videos was open to any visitor who
paid a fee. As the service accepted payment methods -- such as
debit cards and prepaid vouchers -- which can be used by under
18s, ATVOD ruled that the service had also failed to put in
place effective access controls in relation to the full videos.
ATVOD followed up its ruling with an
Enforcement Notification, requiring the provider of Bootybox.tv
to either remove the hardcore porn content from the service or
put it all behind effective access controls which will ensure
that only adults can see it. The service has now ceased
operating.
Speaking today at a conference at the House
of Lords on ATVOD's role in child and consumer protection, ATVOD
Chief Executive Pete Johnson will say:
UK providers of hardcore pornography on
demand must take effective steps to ensure that such material is
not accessible to under 18s. Asking visitors to a website to
click an 'I am 18' button or enter a date of birth or use a
debit card is not sufficient -- if they are going to offer
explicit sex material they must know that their customers are
18, just as they would in the 'offline' world.
Last week, ATVOD followed up its ruling with
a seminar for providers of adult content on video on demand
services. The seminar was designed to ensure that such providers
fully understood their obligations under the statutory rules and
to make clear that ATVOD would take action in relation to any
other providers found to be in breach of the rule.
|
| 31st January |
|
|
| Open Rights Group reveal media industry proposals to hobble internet searches that reveal copyright infringing material Permalink
|
See article
from openrightsgroup.org
|
We
wrote last year, many times, about the discussions being hosted by the
Department for Culture, Media and Sport between rights holders and various
intermediaries - which to normal people means companies like Internet
Service Providers and search engines. One of the most recent roundtables saw the
group of rights holders present search engines with a paper on how they should
help tackle copyright infringement.
After two Freedom of Information requests,
we have received the
proposals [pdf]. Here's the summary of what the rights
holders were asking for:
-
Assign lower rankings to sites that
repeatedly make available unlicensed content in breach of
copyright.
-
Prioritise websites that obtain
certification as a licensed site under a recognised scheme
-
Stop indexing websites that are subject
to court orders while establishing suitable procedures to
de-index substantially infringing sites
-
Continue to improve the operation of the
notice and takedown system and ensure that search
engines do not encourage consumers towards illegal sites via
suggested searches; related searches and suggested sites
-
Ensure that they do not support illegal
sites by advertising them or placing advertising on them, or
profit from infringement by selling key words associated
with piracy or selling mobile applications which facilitate
infringement.
The minutes from the meeting suggest that
the search engines were not impressed, and promised to write
their own proposals to be discussed at a future meeting.
...Read the full article
Offsite: Google grilled by parliamentary
committee
31st January 2012. See article
from blogs.ft.com
Google
was dragged over the coals by a British parliamentary committee,
as the technology company's approach to removing illegal content
from its search results again came under scrutiny.
Several members of the joint committee on privacy and
injunctions, chaired by John Whittingdale MP, repeatedly
attacked Google's representatives as they set out how the search
engine seeks to balance legal challenges with freedom of
expression.
Ben Bradshaw, Nadim Zahawi, and Lord Mawhinney, all
criticised Google for what they saw as its failure to help
victims of invasion of privacy, by removing all links to content
which a judge has ruled to be illegal in the UK.
...Read the full article
|
| 30th January |
|
|
| Tor website blocked by O2 and 3 mobile networks Permalink full story: Internet Blocking in UK...Government push for ISPs to block porn
|
See article
from openrightsgroup.org
|
Open
Rights Group and Tor have established that UK mobile networks
such as Vodafone, O2 and 3 are blocking UK users' access to
Tor's primary website (meaning the Tor Project
website, rather than connections to the Tor network) on pre-paid
contractless accounts.
Tor helps people stay anonymous online. Some examples of how
it has been used include those trying to avoid oppressive state
censorship in places such as Iran, through to abuse victims in
the UK.
There is a
blog post by Jacob Appelbaum with more technical details
about the blocking on UK mobile networks over at the Tor blog.
Searching for torproject.org reveals that it is
blocked because it falls into the category of anonymiser.
(Orange also say that they block content that falls into the
anonymiser category - but it does not seem that Tor is
blocked on Orange.) It's unlikely that mobile operators are
targeting Tor, and more likely that anonymisation tools
generally are blocked.
It was initially established that Tor was blocked initially
through the new tool blocked.org.uk. openrightsgroup.org
are asking for help in monitoring how blocking on mobile
networks works by reporting when you come across incorrectly
applied blocks.
Open Rights Group will be meeting with mobile operators over
the next few weeks to talk about making sure that they can both
help parents manage their children's mobile Internet use and
avoid clumsy implemented blocking. Some are better at aspects of
this than others (Orange provide an overview of the categories
they block, for example.) But none implement a transparent and
clear policy that puts users in charge.
|
| 30th January |
|
|
| EU proposes a bag of worms that will only be untangled by incredibly expensive lawyers Permalink full story: The Right to be Forgotten...Bureaucratic censorship in the EU
|
See
article from
arstechnica.com
|
European
Union Justice Commissioner Viviane Reding has proposed a sweeping reform of the
EU's data protection rules, claiming that the proposed rules will both cost less
for governments and corporations to administer and simultaneously strengthen
online privacy rights.
The 1995 Data Protection Directive already
gives EU citizens certain rights over their data. Organizations
can process data only with consent, and only to the extent that
they need to fulfil some legitimate purpose. They are also
obliged to keep data up-to-date, and retain personally
identifiable data for no longer than is necessary to perform the
task that necessitated collection of the data in the first
place. They must ensure that data is kept secure, and whenever
processing of personal data is about to occur, they must notify
the relevant national data protection agency.
The new proposals go further than the 1995
directive, especially in regard to the control they give
citizens over their personal information. Chief among the new
proposals is a right to be forgotten that will allow
people to demand that organizations that hold their data delete
that data, as long as there is no legitimate grounds to hold it.
This is the so-called right to be
forgotten. The proposal does not create a right to be thrown
down the memory hole or rewrite the past; news reports and
similar material would be a legitimate reason to retain personal
information, and this would override a demand to have data
deleted. But sites like Facebook---which has had difficulties
with the concept of deletion---and Google would likely be
required to purge any such personal data should someone demand
that they do so.
...Read the full
article
Offsite: Google exec questions
Reding's Right to be forgotten pledge
See
article from
theregister.co.uk
Google's
privacy policy counsel in Brussels, Marisa Jimenez, expressed
concern about some of the passages written under article 17 of
the proposed regulation. She said Reding's so-called right to
be forgotten on the internet plans have, in part, been
welcomed by Google.
But she noted that the current text submitted by the European
Commission is incredibly complex and thereby open to any number
of interpretations by data protection authorities and companies
that could be expected to comply with the rules, if passed by
the European Parliament in their current form.
Here's what Reding's proposed regulation currently states on
the right to be forgotten:
Article 17 provides the data subject's
right to be forgotten and to erasure. It further elaborates
and specifies the right of erasure provided for in Article
12(b) of Directive 95/46/EC and provides the conditions of
the right to be forgotten, including the obligation of the
controller which has made the personal data public to inform
third parties on the data subject's request to erase any
links to, or copy or replication of that personal data. It
also integrates the right to have the processing restricted
in certain cases, avoiding the ambiguous terminology
blocking.
...Read the full
article
|
| 30th January |
|
|
| Inside China's censorship machine Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in China...All pervading Chinese internet censorship
|
See article
from fullcomment.nationalpost.com
by Rebecca MacKinnon
Consent of the Networked available at
UK
Amazon for release on 31st January 2012
|
In
fall 2009, I sat in a large auditorium festooned with red banners and watched as
Robin Li, CEO of Baidu, China's dominant search engine, paraded onstage with
executives from 19 other companies to receive the China Internet
Self-Discipline Award. Officials from the quasi-governmental Internet
Society of China praised them for fostering harmonious and healthy Internet
development. In the Chinese regulatory context, healthy is a
euphemism for porn-free and crime-free. Harmonious implies
prevention of activity that would provoke social or political disharmony.
Related
China's censorship system is complex and
multilayered. The outer layer is generally known as the great
firewall of China, through which hundreds of thousands of
websites are blocked from view on the Chinese Internet. What
this system means in practice is that when one goes online from
an ordinary commercial Internet connection inside China and
tries to visit a website such as hrw.org, the website belonging
to Human Rights Watch, the web browser shows an error message
saying, This page cannot be found. This blocking is
easily accomplished because the global Internet connects to the
Chinese Internet through only eight gateways, which are
easily filtered. At each gateway, as well as among all
the different Internet service providers within China, Internet
routers --- the devices that move the data back and forth
between different computer networks --- are all configured to
block long lists of website addresses and politically sensitive
keywords.
...Read the full article
|
| 29th January |
|
|
| Tunisia is set for another court hearing in a legal action demanding a block on porn websites Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in Tunisia...Blogs and websites banned in Tunisia
|
See article
from groundreport.com
|
Once
again, in the post Ben Ali era, censorship and freedom of speech
(or lack of), is at the centre of debate. The reason this time
is the ongoing saga of a legal action lodged by three lawyers
against the Tunisian Internet Agency (ATI)) calling upon it to
block pornographic websites.
Early next month, the ATI, will appeal to the Court of
Cassation's (the highest court of appeal) verdict issued on May
26, 2011, by a court in Tunis ordering the agency to block
access to pornographic content on the web.
The ATI, which lost an appeal on August 15, 2011, claims that
the filtering of pornographic websites listed by Smart Filter
could not be carried out for the five Internet service
providers.
The Tunisian Internet Agency, wanting to put an end to its
old image as an Internet censor during the rule of Ben Ali,
prefers to raise the awareness of Internet users, and especially
parents by giving them practical tips on the use of parental
control software instead of blocking websites.
|
| 27th January |
|
|
| Birmingham councillor dreams up a wheeze to use club licensing requirements to restrict what lap dancing clubs can put on their websites Permalink full story: Lap Dancing in Birmingham...Fun on Broad Street
|
See article
from birminghammail.net
|
Birmingham
City councillor Nigel Dawkins has called for the sex
establishments not to be allowed to use pornographic images on
their websites.
Since last January, lap dancing clubs have had to apply for a
Sexual Entertainment Venue licence. The committee has the power
to refuse the licences and set the conditions under which they
have to operate.
Dawkins said he wanted another condition put on the licences:
I think we should make it a condition
that on their websites they do not use porn to advertise
their clubs because they are using pornography to sell their
business and that's a scandal, he said. They wouldn't be
allowed to use these images on their windows, but they are
free to use them on their websites.
Licensing committee chairman, Councillor Bruce Lines
said they had no powers over the internet. But the committee
agreed to ask its officers to prepare a report for a future
meeting on the possiblity of restricting how clubs advertised
themselves on their websites.
|
| 27th January |
|
|
| EU signs up to the ACTA committing to action against copyright infringement Permalink full story: ACTA...Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement
|
See article
from publicaffairs.linx.net
|
The
European Union and 22 Member States have officially signed the
Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA). The UK was among the signatories who
gathered in Japan to sign the controversial intellectual property treaty.
The signatories commit to a raft of controversial
intellectual property enforcement measures, including rules
outlawing DRM circumvention, introducing criminal enforcement of
intellectual property rights, and passages which have been
interpreted as turning ISPs into an unofficial copyright
police force.
The treaty still requires ratification by the European
Parliament. The final vote is scheduled for June.
|
| 26th January |
|
|
| Polish demonstrations against the country signing the US led anti-piracy treaty Permalink full story: ACTA...Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement
|
See article
from warsawvoice.pl
|
Thousands
of demonstrators have taken to the streets of Polish cities, some of them
hurling stones at police, in protest at an international copyright treaty
criticized as a clampdown on freedom of speech on the internet.
In the city of Kielce around 700 people protested. Some of
them threw bottles and stones at police, damaged cars and
partially blocked traffic.
In the largest demonstration, in Cracow, 15,000 people took
to the streets in a largely peaceful protest. Demonstrators
chanted Down with censorship while some had a piece of
tape inscribed with ACTA glued over their lips.
ACTA is the acronym for the international Anti-Counterfeiting
Trade Agreement, which Poland was to sign in Tokyo on Thursday.
|
| 24th January |
|
|
| Pakistan starts blocking porn websites Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in Pakistan...internet website blocking
|
See article
from newspakistan.pk
|
Pakistan
has begun to implement a long threatened block on internet porn.
The Pakistan Telecommunications Authority has provided a list to
the ISP's in Pakistan to block the frequently accessed adult
sites. It is believed that more web pages will be added to the
initial banned list of 1,000 websites and as many as 170,000
websites may be banned in the near future.
The currently blocked websites redirects the users to a new
page with the following error message, This page is blocked
due to restrictions enforced by the Pakistan Telecommunications
Authority (PTA).
|
| 22nd January |
|
|
| China expands programme to register users posting to Twitter like website Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in China...All pervading Chinese internet censorship
|
See article
from nytimes.com
|
China
will expand nationwide a trial program that requires users of
the country's wildly popular Twitter like services to disclose
their identities to the government in order to post comments
online, the government's top Internet censor said.
Wang Chen of the State Council Information Office, said at a
news conference that registration trials in five major eastern
China cities would continue until wrinkles were worked out. But
he said that eventually all 250 million users of microblogs,
called weibos in China, would have to register, beginning first
with new users.
Wang indicated that under the program, users could continue
to use nicknames online, even though they would still be
required to register their true identities. The reasoning seems
to be to limit the spread of malicious rumors, pornography,
scams and other 'unhealthy practices' on weibos, which have
become a major source of news for many Chinese.
|
| 21st January |
|
|
| The next one sided talk shop in a series of Westminster Forums Permalink (14 days only)
|
See
article from
westminsterforumprojects.co.uk
See
agenda [pdf] from
westminsterforumprojects.co.uk
|
Next
steps for protecting children online
Thursday 26th January
This seminar will bring together key perspectives from
policymakers, interest groups and businesses on next steps for enabling
children to surf the web, access online communities and partake in
culturally rich content without exposure to age restricted products,
explicit content and potential personal danger.
It is scheduled following the report to Ministers of the
Parliamentary Inquiry into Online Child Protection - delegates will assess
the practical options for providing what the Culture Secretary has called an
active choice about using parental controls, such as age verification
tools, website monitoring and methods of filtering content used by online
services - and review next steps for policy.
Keynote addresses
-
Lynne Featherstone MP, Parliamentary Under-Secretary
of State for Equalities and Criminal Information, Home Office;
-
Claire Perry MP, Chair, Parliamentary Inquiry into
Online Child Protection
-
Andy Baker, Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Child
Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (CEOP)
Other confirmed speakers include:
-
Jeremy Barlow, Relationship and Channel Manager, BCS,
The Chartered Institute for IT;
-
John Carr, Secretary, UK Children's Charities'
Coalition on Internet Safety;
-
Luc Delany, European Policy Manager, Facebook;
-
Susie Hargreaves, Chief Executive Officer, Internet
Watch Foundation;
-
Andrew Heaney, Executive Director, Strategy and
Regulation, TalkTalk;
-
Peter Johnson, Chief Executive Officer, The
Authority for Television On-Demand (ATVOD);
-
Claire Lilley, Senior Policy Analyst, NSPCC;
-
David Mahoney, Director of Content Policy, Ofcom;
-
Alison Marshall, Public Affairs Director, UNICEF UK
(UK Committee for the United Nations International Children's Fund);
-
David Miles, Director, Europe, Middle East and
Africa, Family Online Safety Institute;
-
Professor Andy Phippen, Professor of Social
Responsibility in Information Technology, Plymouth Business School,
Plymouth University;
-
Alexandra Scott, Senior Public Affairs Executive,
Internet Advertising Bureau (IAB)
-
Jonny Shipp, Head of Digital Confidence, Telefonica.
Chair:
-
Helen Goodman MP, Shadow Minister of State for
Culture, Media and Sport
-
Caroline Dinenage MP, Member, Parliamentary Enquiry
into Online Child Protection
|
| 20th January |
|
|
| Google India points out to the court that it is not responsible for the content of Google Inc. websites Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in India...India considers blanket ban on internet porn
|
12th January 2012. See
article from
timesofindia.indiatimes.com
|
Google
India has filed a petition in the Delhi High Court saying that
it does not exercise any control over content on YouTube,
Google, Orkut or Blogspot in India, and thus can't be summoned
to an Indian court in a criminal case against it related to
inflammatory images of Gods and Goddesses posted on some of its
websites.
The petition to quash a criminal complaint was submitted by
Google India's lawyers in the Delhi High Court.
The original criminal complaint was filed by editor of
Akbari, Vinay Rai last month. Google's India MD Rajan
Anandan has been summoned to appear in a lower court on Friday
in connection with this complaint.
According to the petition, Google India says that it has been
appointed just as a distributor of Google Inc.'s Adwords program
in India, and thus it's India MD does not control the Blogger,
Google or YouTube websites. Google India furthur says that sites
such as Orkut.com are owned by Google Inc, and thus it is not
even an intermediary' as defined in the Indian IT Act, and thus
can't be summoned to answer in any case regarding content.
Mukul Rohatgi, counsel for Google India, told ET that it's
humanly impossible to monitor or remove the content before it is
uploaded on the internet. My client Google India is different
from Google Inc, and does not have any control over the
platform. Google India is just an advertising and revenue
collection body.
Appearing for Vinay Rai, his counsel SPM Tripathi said that
according to IT Rules, 2011, the websites have to remove the
content within 36 hours of receiving a court order, which they
have not complied with. The content on the websites is
derogatory against Hindu, Muslim and Christian Gods and
Goddesses, and can spark a riot if publicised. It incites hatred
and enmity between communities and thus should be removed by the
parties.
Update: Delays in the case India v The
Internet
20th January 2012. See article
from zdnet.com
The Delhi High Court delayed hearings on petitions by
Facebook and Google to dismiss criminal proceedings against them
in the country's Web censorship case. The two Internet giants
are among 21 companies that have been asked to develop a
mechanism to block objectionable material in India, and the
Indian government has given the green light for their
prosecution.
Earlier this week, Facebook and Google told the Delhi High
Court they cannot block offensive content that appears on their
services. Although the case was originally filed in a lower
court, the companies have appealed to the Delhi High Court,
challenging the lower court's ruling asking them to take down
some content. The high court has now pushed back the case till
February 2, according to NDTV. If their petitions fail, the 21
companies will have to face trial in the lower court, which has
its next hearing scheduled for March 13.
|
| 20th January |
|
|
| South Korea to end compulsory registration of internet forum users Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in South Korea...Repressive new internet censorship law
|
See article
from koreaittimes.com
|
In
2003, South Korea's conservative Grand National Party (GNP) struck back from
losing a presidential race by enacting a new law which required online users to
verify their real identities before posting comments on election-related web
sites. The legislation's stated goals were to to promote responsible online
discourse and to protect the privacy of candidates, and it has accomplished its
purpose to a limited extent. Yet the greater underlying political motive is
clear to see --- the conservative party that relies on older, less
internet-savvy Koreans wanted to limit the influence of online media on election
results.
In 2007, an election year, the proliferation of anonymous online slander was the
stated cause for extending the real-name system to web sites with over 300,000
daily visits.
In 2009, the real-name system was extended to web sites that
received over 100,000 web sites per day. As of last year, this
law applied to about 150 South Korean web sites.
The government's efforts to control cyberspace have been
formidable, but as a result of the real-name policy, South
Korean web sites have become prime targets for hacking both from
in and outside of the country. The number of hacking incidents
reached a momentous level last year, as a series of high-profile
cyber-attacks made it clear that the real-name system was
untenable --- the most notorious case being SK Communications'
SNS Cyworld, which leaked personal information of over 35
million Koreans, more than half of the national population.
The South Korean government also suffered an embarrassment
when Google's YouTube refused to comply to the real-name
verification system in 2009. Stating that freedom of expression
must be upheld on the internet, Google disabled video upload and
comment functionalities from users accessing the site within S.
Korea. Yet users only had to change their country setting in
order to upload and comment on the site again, providing a legal
loophole which set-off a wide debate within the country. The
incident prompted the KCC to initiate a legal review, and after
mulling over whether to punish Google or not, decided to exempt
it from the real-name law, which added oil to the fire. Korean
companies that have had to comply to the law --- that had
incurred web development, monitoring, and security costs ---
cited discrimination that put them at a competitive disadvantage
to global companies.
On December 30, 2011, the KCC announced that it will phase
out the real-name verification system by 2014. This time, web
sites that do not remove resident registration IDs and other
sensitive information will be fined.
...Read the full article
|
| 19th January |
|
|
| Iran confirms death sentence for webmasters Permalink full story: Internet Death Sentence...Iran goes extreme over porn webmasters
|
18th January 2012. See article
from payvand.com
|
Ahmad
Reza Hashempour was arrested in 2007. A lower court had sentenced him to death,
and the Supreme Court this week upheld Hashempour's death sentence on charges of
membership in anti-religion and blasphemous websites.
During his four-year detention, Ahmad Reza Hashemour spent a
long time in solitary where he was physically and
psychologically tortured to make television confessions against
himself.
This is the latest injustice in the Mozelleen 3 case.
Many of the suspects in this case were forced to make television
confessions against themselves and to accept the charges leveled
against them. Several individuals implicated in this case
released open letters several months after their arrests,
speaking up about unbearable torture during their detention
period. Another suspect in this case, Vahid Asghari, was also
sentenced to death this week, after four years in prison.
Update: Death sentence confirmed for Canadian
website programmer
19th January 2012. See article
from xbiz.com
Website programmer Saeed Malekpour's death sentence for
developing and promoting porn sites has been upheld by Iran's
supreme court. The Iranian-born Canadian resident now faces
imminent execution despite a reprieve last June when the
sentence was suspended and set for judicial review after his
defense lawyers introduced expert evidence amidst an
international outcry for justice.
He appeared on state television confessing to a series of
crimes detailing his involvement with porn sites that led to his
conviction. But in a letter from his prison cell, the programmer
ultimately retracted his confessions and claimed he made the
statements under duress that included physical and psychological
torture and threats against his family.
Malekpour wrote:
Once, in October 2008, the interrogators
stripped me while I was blindfolded and threatened to rape
me with a bottle of water. While I remained blindfolded and
handcuffed, several individuals armed with cables, batons,
and their fists struck and punched me. At times, they would
flog my head and neck.
Such mistreatment was aimed at forcing
me to write what the interrogators were dictating, and to
compel me to play a role in front of the camera based on
their scenarios.
Saeed's lawyers were told that his death sentence will be
issued this week.
|
| 18th January |
|
|
| British engineer sentenced to jail for saying 'damned mosques' in exasperation at slow building process Permalink
|
See
article from
dailymail.co.uk
|
A
British engineer is facing a month in jail after he told colleagues in a
meeting, When will we finish with the damn mosques?
The worker, who has not been named, told an appeals court
that he did not mean to insult the Islamic religion.
The British engineer works at the parks and recreation
section of Abu Dhabi Municipality, and is appealing against a
one-month prison sentence imposed by the Court of Misdemeanours.
The slow completion of a Mosque in Abu Dhabi caused the British
engineer to make the statement that has landed him in court and
facing jail.
The engineer told the court he lost his temper during a
meeting because the project he was leading was progressing
slowly.
He was then reported to the police by his work 'colleagues'
for asking the offending question.
A decision on the appeal will be announced on 7th February
Update: Failed Appeal
8th February 2012. See article
from 7days.ae
A British engineer has lost his appeal for insulting Islam
after he used a derogatory word to ask co-workers when they
would be finished building mosques in Abu Dhabi. Abu Dhabi
Appeal Court ruled that the one-month jail sentence would stand.
The engineer, who was working for the parks and recreations
section of Abu Dhabi Municipality, had said he merely made the
comment during the meeting as he was keen to finish designing a
mosque garden.
The court heard he loudly asked colleagues the question,
inserting a blasphemous word before saying mosque. One of
his colleagues then complained to police. The man had previously
told the lower court that he did not intend to insult Muslims
and was merely emphasising his words to show how keen he was to
finish the project. He added that he respected the UAE and Islam
and never intended to show disrespect to the mosque on which he
was working.
He was appealing the one-month sentence imposed by the Abu
Dhabi Court of Misdemeanours.
|
| 15th January |
|
|
| Obama speaks out against part of the SOPA internet censorship bill Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in USA...Domain name seizures and SOPA
|
See article
from torrentfreak.com
|
The
White House just released a statement commenting on the pending
SOPA and PIPA anti-piracy bills in congress. While the Obama
Administration sides with the opposition by saying that
free-speech should be protected, censorship is evil, and that
DNS-blocking is a no go, the statement doesn't mean that the
bills are off the table.
Responding to two petitions signed by over 50,000 people
each, the Obama administration recited much of the criticism
voiced by SOPA/PIPA opponents. The Administration wrote:
Any effort to combat online piracy must
guard against the risk of online censorship of lawful
activity and must not inhibit innovation by our dynamic
businesses large and small. Across the globe, the openness
of the Internet is increasingly central to innovation in
business, government, and society and it must be protected.
To minimize this risk, new legislation
must be narrowly targeted only at sites beyond the reach of
current U.S. law, cover activity clearly prohibited under
existing U.S. laws, and be effectively tailored, with strong
due process and focused on criminal activity.
The only strong position the Obama Administration takes is
against DNS blocking. Here, the White House sides with many of
the tech experts, and against the MPAA, by concluding that
tampering with DNS poses a threat to the Internet.
In fact many of the lawmakers previously in favor of
DNS-blocking have suddenly started to back pedal. They probably
got a heads up and changed their tone before the White House
statement was released. SOPA author Lamar Smith said DNS
blocking would be removed from the bill until further notice.
|
| 14th January |
|
|
| Open Rights Group set up facility to monitor over blocking by mobile phone companies Permalink full story: Internet Blocking in UK...Government push for ISPs to block porn
|
Presumably these companies are open to be sued for lost
revenue when sites are affected by unjustified blocking
From
openrightsgroup.org
Report blocked websites at
blocked.org.uk
|
Open
Rights Group (ORG) are researching into the accuracy of the
website blocking employed by mobile phone companies. The group
wrote in its newsletter:
Last month, we asked ORG supporters to
help us find sites that were being blocked by the default
Adult filter on their mobile phones. Lots of you replied
and asked to get involved. And thanks to that extraordinary
team - we've launched a tool to report what sites are being
blocked and by whom.
We are getting regular reports and
testing blocks on every mobile network. We're seeing just
how bad mobile blocking is, and how bad the networks are at
dealing with complaints. Forums and joke sites get banned.
So do churches. Some MPs want to extend default adult
censorship to Internet at home as well: but we are already
seeing how bad it is on mobile networks. ORG has already
been invited to talk to O2 about their systems, as a result
of this campaign.
Report blocked websites at
blocked.org.uk
Meanwhile
thank to a reader who wrote to MelonFarmers:
Just to let you know; the mobile
network Three are blocking access to your site
through their 3G networks - The site works fine on Wi-Fi,
but on 3G you get asked to contact Three to get a pin to
unblock the site, as they have it listed as an Adult
content site.
They charge 99p to allow access to
adult sites (And it's not straightforward, takes a while to
find the right place to do it.).
They have also blocked Movie-Censorship.com,
same reason as above.
|
| 14th January |
|
|
| German courts decide that ISPs cannot be forced to block websites judged to be illegal Permalink
|
See article
from techdirt.com
|
Compared
with some European countries where courts are telling ISPs that
they must block access to certain sites (in Finland and the UK,
for example), news from Germany comes as a refreshing change.
The German newspaper Der Spiegel reported:
Deutsche Telekom must allow access to
online betting sites, even if they are illegal in Germany.
So ruled the Cologne Administrative Court.
This follows a decision in Dusseldorf at the end of last
year, where a judge had ruled that Vodafone and Telekom were not
responsible for the content of Web sites, because they played no
role in selecting material, and therefore should not be forced
to block access.
Moreover, the latest judgment can be used as a precedent in
similar cases, according to the Der Spiegel report.
|
| 14th January |
|
|
| Man extradited to the US over copyright claims about a website that linked to infringing TV content Permalink
|
Thanks to Nick
See
article from
belfasttelegraph.co.uk
|
A
British student can be extradited to the United States to face
charges of copyright infringement over a website he ran offering
links to pirated films online, a court has ruled.
Richard O'Dwyer, whose site TV Shack made more than
£150,000 in advertising
revenues, according to US prosecutors, is thought to be the
first person extradited to America on such charges. If convicted
in New York, he faces jail.
Speaking after the hearing at City of Westminster
Magistrates' Court, the 23-year-old said he felt like a
guinea pig for the US justice system. His lawyer argued that
his site hosted no illegal content, but merely directed users to
where it was held online, and said that his client would appeal
the ruling.
|
| 12th January |
|
|
| Reddit to go dark to protest SOPA internet censorship Permalink full story: Internet Censorship in USA...Domain name seizures and SOPA
|
See article
from arstechnica.com
|
On
January 18, the online community at reddit will go dark for 12
hours in opposition of the Stop Online Piracy Act now being
considered in the House and its companion PROTECT IP Act in the
Senate. Both bills would give copyright holders tremendous power
to have websites blocked, to get their advertising cut off, and
to shut down their credit card or PayPal payments.
reddit's community has been organizing all manner of
objections to the two bills, including a targeted (and
successful) boycott of GoDaddy, which supported the legislation.
This time, site admins decided to get involved in order to get
the word out to all of reddit's users.
Reddit explained:
Instead of the normal glorious, user-curated
chaos of reddit, we will be displaying a simple message
about how the PIPA/SOPA legislation would shut down sites
like reddit, link to resources to learn more, and suggest
ways to take action..
We're not taking this action lightly. We
wouldn't do this if we didn't believe this legislation and
the forces behind it were a serious threat to reddit and the
Internet as we know it.
|
| 9th January |
|
|
| Iran set to turn off internet access to the outside world Permalink full story: Iranian Internet Censorship...Extensive internet blocking
|
4th January 2012. See article
from payvand.com
|
A
member of Iran's Corporate Computer Systems reports that Iran
will be cut off from the World Wide Web once the country
launches its own national internet network next month.
Iranian media report that Payam Karbasi, the spokesman for
Corporate Computer Systems of Iran, said: With the launch of
the national internet, the internet providers can increase the
speed of access to their desired websites by two megabytes...
however, it will be just like a corporate network, which cannot
be accessed by outsiders, and some material cannot be accessed
through that network.
The national internet network will allow service providers to
decide which sites the users can be accessed speedily, which
sites will be provided at the lowest speed, and of course which
sites will be totally blocked.
In the past two weeks, Iranian internet users have reported
an extreme reduction in internet speed. While access to
government sites remains easy, using proxies to access blocked
sites only via the slow lane.
Karbasi said: Imagine there is a monitoring system that
checks all the internet packages and then allows it to pass
through or regards it unclean. Because of the high volume of
internet packages, they remain in a line-up in order to be
checked, and this causes the reduction in the speed of access.
With the launch of the so-called clean internet
network, Iranian authorities aim to separate Iran from the World
Wide Web in order to block access to supposedly immoral
content and maintain control of what Iranian users can access.
Update: Spy in the Caf
9th January 2012. See article
from rferl.org
Iran's
cyberpolice have issued new restrictions for Internet cafes that
appear to be part of the Iranian establishment's efforts to
impose further controls on the Internet.
According to the new rules, the personal information of
citizens visiting cybercafes, such as their name, father's name,
national ID number, and telephone number, will be registered.
Cafe owners will be required to keep the personal and contact
information of their clients and also a record of their browsing
history for six months.
Another new rule that has been announced requires cybercafe
owners to install closed-circuit cameras and keep the video
recordings for six months. The guidelines also say that
installing circumvention tools that allow access to banned
websites will be illegal at Internet cafes.
Deputy cyberpolice chief Mohsen Mirbehresi has said that
owners of Internet cafes should deny Internet access to those
who do not show their IDs. Internet cafes have 15 days to
implement the restrictions, which were announced on January 3.
|
|
|