Japanese Government to Regulate Online Communication 143
Chris Salzberg writes "The Japanese government made major moves this month toward legislating extensive regulation over online communication. In a series of little-publicized meetings, two distinct government ministries pushed ahead with regulation in three major areas of online communication: web content, mobile phone access, and file sharing. Content regulation will cover anything on the web, including personal blogs and web pages. Upcoming mandatory filtering of mobile phone access is targeted at users under age 18, and will cover chat rooms, forums, bulletin boards and social networking services. File sharing legislation will initially target illegal downloads, but, according to critics, may ultimately broaden to include streaming media from sites such as YouTube."
sony (Score:2)
Before anyone cries censorship (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Before anyone cries censorship (Score:5, Insightful)
Anonymous accusations have no credibility, it would show some maturity in society to just ignore them instead of suing their anonymous authors.
Anonymous deth threats have no more credibility.
Racist rethoric is, as far as I know, free speech.
Posting of financial and medical records are possible only if someone has made a criminal incompetence in a bank or at a medical database. You should sue them instead.
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[1] Just in case you're American, she was a former prime minister of Pakistan[2]
[2] It's near India.
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If you're a controversial (or at least targeted) political figure then I guess it doesn't make a difference whether or not you get anonymous online threat of assasination, because you are in danger literally every day. 1984-type environments don't solve that, and it is rather naive to think otherwise. If you're not a targeted political figure/notable person and you are getting anonymous death threats online, you should probably ignore them. Or I will kill you.
Also, the OP defeat
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Apples and oranges (Score:1)
You know... credible as in I and those other 10000 people could be sued and sentenced? Or even investigated.
Imagine it like this...
Say Benazir Bhutto got a anonymous death threat, and police started arresting random people during her political rallies because they "looked suspiciously like someone who might be writing and send
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Substitute credible with believable in that sentence - they're more or less synonyms. It doesn't make any sense, does it? It doesn't mean liable. Hint - generally it's not a good idea to use words when you don't know what they mean.
Credible in the sense that it was threatened, and then it happened. I suppose you'll have no objection to providing your full real name, address, employer and children's schools. Let's have photos too.
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Believable [reference.com]
Close only counts in horseshoes throws.
Notice the "Capable of being believed; plausible." line. Or the "to have confidence in the truth, the existence, or the reliability of something, although without absolute proof that one is right in doing so" line?
You saying that you are wearing a red shirt right now is believable.
Getting that claim confirmed by an independent, known to be honest and unbiased source would make that claim credible.
Back to anonymous.
Above mentioned death threats don't b
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Whichever organization killed her probably announced their intention to do so beforehand.
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Tell that to Benazir Bhutto[1].
[1] Just in case you're American, she was a former prime minister of Pakistan[2]
[2] It's near India.[3]
[3] That's in Asia. [4][8]
[4] East of Europe[5], North of Africa[6]
[5] You know, England, France[7], etc
[6] Where Florida hurricanes[11] and black people come from.
[7] Ballet, Dijon mustard, and
[8] Still not getting it? The Eastern hemisphere[9]
[9] The other side of the world[11
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>
>>Tell that to Benazir Bhutto[1].
>> [1] Just in case you're American, she was a former prime minister of Pakistan[2]
>> [2] It's near India.[3]
> [3] That's in Asia. [4][8]
> [4] East of Europe[5], North of Africa[6]
> [5] You know, England, France[7], etc
> [6] Where Florida hurricanes[11] and black people come from.
> [7] Ballet, Dijon mustard, and
> [8] Still not gettin
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Afraid to say anything for fear someone will (purposely) misconstrue it and we go to jail.
Nice try, and thanks for the fear mongering, you condescending bitch.
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Anonymous deth threats have no more credibility.
Tell that to Benazir Bhutto[1].
You make a compelling argument there. Death (not deth) threats should always be taken seriously regardless if it's anonymous or not. This should have been investigated and the poster taken to the looney house.
[1] Just in case you're American, she was a former prime minister of Pakistan[2]
[2] It's near India.
Thanks for the Geography lesson. Believe it or not, some of us have moved past Geography 101
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You want to own the internet? first let a bunch of loonies roam it spewing falsehoods and bothering people. I guess many of them could be reported to their ISP and blocked before they learn about anonimity. Then, make some media fuss to augment the perceived scope of their actions, and then, legislate for generic censorship to "save the internet".
A real life bad example (Score:3, Informative)
Just recently in Melbourne a newspaper journalist lifted comments posted on a forum and reported them as fact in a sensationalised article, without confirming or verifying with the authenticity of the comments, when in fact some of the comments on the forum had been made as satire.
This was then published in Australia's highest selling newspaper.
People may write unsubstantiated rubbish, but as soon as some lazy journalist finds it and treats it is fact in mainstream media, it can be very damaging for an indi
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(A) That terrible person, posting Satire!
(B) That stupid journalist, not checking his/her facts!
I go for option (B).
Re:A real life bad example (Score:4, Interesting)
My guess is it's Andrew Bolt in the Herald-Sun, that guy has perfected willfull ignorance as a political tool.
In Melbourne there are three commercial TV channels, every night of the week two of them run current affairs style programs that are full of advertorials, miracle cures, and other sensationalist bullshit. They are often the prime targets in "Chaser's war on everything" (also from Melbourne).
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The reporter who wrote the article was actually Annalise Walliker about a dance party. http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22903261-2862,00.html [news.com.au]
Which included great "quotes" such as this gem
Ralph Wiggum reported slabs of Smirnoff spirit-based drinks were selling for $240, and cans of spirits for $10.
Which I find kind of Ironic when in university she conducted a survey about a problem with the community and journalistic credibility http://fifth.estate.rmit.edu.au/a-credibility-crisis.php [rmit.edu.au]
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As with the UK the best TV news, current affairs, and political satire comes from our two publicly owned stations, go figure!
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"Anonymous accusations have no credibility, it would show some maturity in society to just ignore them instead of suing their anonymous authors."
Come on. The whole problem is that society isn't mature. Would you really trust any future employer or potential girlfriend to look up your name and not even think "what if"? If someone did that to me, you bet I'd want to sue them.
While I don't necessarily support this particular legislation, I wouldn't have any problem with the government tracking down user
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The society is indeed not mature at all, but going the easy way just leads to Idiocracy. I guess you will have to explain to your employer or girlfriend what kind of merit these accusations have. And if that fails, nothing
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I will illustrate with an example.
I went to the doctor for a cold. Since I am a foreigner, I have to show my Foreigner Registration Card to see the doctor. This card has my work contact information on it. After my visit was over, the doctor contacted my work and told them I had visited and what I was diagno
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A lack of lawyers is no excuse. Of course, I'm just saying that because lawyers happen to be the US's #1 export to Japan.
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So if I were to submit a post accusing you of being a pedophile, siting names, dates, times and places of various misdeeds and degenerate behavior; but did so anonymously, then my accusations would have no credibility? It wouldn't matter that I was making it all up. If I sounded convincing enough for people to believe it then I'd be willing to bet you'd soon chang
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Then that's already adequately covered under laws against burglary and data theft. I'm not sure why you think adding yet another law (and one which has enormous additional consequences, at that) would add more protection for the victim in that case.
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It's not the government's job to protect you from your own stupidity.
Where from did you get that crazy idea? Of course it is the job of the government to protect people from their own lack of knowledge or experience (that what you so arrogantly call "stupidity"). That is why there are so many regulations and safety laws. Without them, you would have to be a chemist and a microbiologist to avoid getting sick from your food. You would have to be a mechanic not to get killed by a random malfunction of your
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Suggest you head out to your nearest City center and try that out. If you are in the South, you'll have no problems, sure, but try it in the North and you'll find yourself talking to a nice chap with a badge. There is a common misconception about 'freedom of speech' meaning you can say anything you like, but you best have some damn fine rhetoric if the speech you are making also disturbs the peace. The oft-used example of this misconception, which
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You completely missed the point of my post. Yvanhoe was dismissing Anonymous threats and accusations. I pointed out just how stupid that was and gave concrete examples of where threats and accusations must be taken seriously, regardless of their source. Try reading them properly and engaging your brain!
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(its a pita ass... I did exactly that the other week there
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Clever.
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Aniue
Clever.
Indeed, and much better-sounding than what Orwell's translator actually used, which was something sterile (like idai na kyoudai) that didn't capture the 'closeness' of the English original at all. Want to have a go at a revised translation? In Japan, this book needs all the publicity it can get.
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In those countries many times things are not decided until a high enough court hears it and lower courts tend to enforce laws passed by the governing body (said governing body doing things it knows will get shot down yet do it anyway, usually because of funding). Unfortunately we see that as every new technology comes out
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When a government decides what communication is allowed and what communication isn't and then actively prevents disallowed communication, that is censorship. It doesn't matter what the communication is or what excuses are used to justify the policy - government controlled filters are censorship, and censorship is evil.
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to make up false accusations about others, post their financial and medical records online, their bank account numbers, spew racist rhetoric, make death threats, etc.
One of these things isn't like the others! ;)
How in the bloody hell can you compare spewing racist rhetoric and posting medical records? If someone from the KKK or Kill Whitey wants to blather on and on about the evil black/white race, let him - it's cheap entertainment. No one with a double digit IQ will take them seriously.
Hell. The Creationist nutjobs are a helluva lot more dangerous than any racist I've come across - but I still would protect their right to make an ass of themselves.
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Simple. What if people post realistic-looking records of you, making you appear as an international sex predator or other criminal?
What if this has real consequences, such as this information gets sent to your work supervisor, to all your friends, to your university?
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Short-term and limited to few single occurrences I agree this to be disasterous. I can't imagine anything better than such stuff happening all the time, though. Being presented with tons of contradicting information from sources of different credibility would force the public to actually begin rating their sources and stop accepting random, unauthorative data as truths.
Si
Nonsense. Censorship to close the society. (Score:2, Informative)
Nonsense. Dangerous nonsense.
You don't attack subcultures with censorship. This is about ethnic cleansing before the old guard leaves the Diet. Anyone trying to close a society does the same things, censorship is just one of the steps taken.
It's part of the Lock Down of Japan that is underway. If you don't believe that, you 1. don't live here and 2. don't understand the xenophobia the government is in the process of stoking up.
- Fin
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But that bit about the xenophobia is true. I've noticed it. You'd think that they'd want to encourage immigration with their population declining and all that...
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But that bit about the xenophobia is true. I've noticed it. You'd think that they'd want to encourage immigration with their population declining and all that...
That's why robots are so big over there. Once a large segment of the population is made of robots, it becomes easy to check whether the robot is Japanese by checking its serial number.
And the apparent slow return to the 1920s mentality over there is indeed a bit disturbing. Especially when you see how that turned out (not really taught in western schools for some reason despite it being a large part of WWII)...
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If somebody posts your financial and medical records online, do you think they can "go ahead and do that"? Should you be prepared for the consequences and just accept your fate that others can do whatever they want to you?
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But I agree with you on that- no one else should be posting your data. However, you should never be in a position where you do not trust whomever else has access to your financial/medical records or suspect that said people may post them online for revenge or for fun or whatever. Something's broken if that is the case, and probably the person that st
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Also, death threats don't kill anyone, bothering to police them is a waste of time.
uh, that's called "freedom" in some places (Score:2)
hint: the new Samizdot is likely to be podcasts, not flimsy typewritten pages passed from hand to hand in a corner of the subway station. to find that, you'll have to also allow no-knock searches at 2 am, jackbooted police thugs, and firing squads.
now, are you ready for the whole bill of goods?
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But then another country, usually some European nation, Japan or China comes along and proposes to do the same exact thing and suddenly people are quick to defend them.
To be honest, I don't think this is going to be noticed the way it might be in the US. Many countries in Asia are already nanny states
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Do you think these laws the best solution? (Score:2)
I agree that that's a problem, but why is this the best solution? Don't you think they can do better?
Anonymous posts can be traced if they're bad. Financial and medic
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Re:Before anyone cries censorship (Score:5, Funny)
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Not a day goes by when I don't see some high school girl's underwear (or more when they don't wear them) just by driving to work.
The problem lies with the girls themselves, competing to see who has the shortest skirt, loosest *ahem* socks, etc...
All in all, Japan is not a bad place to live...
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And I thought Nagoya was pretty hight on the short skirt ranking. (actually, the skirt are not that short, it's just the girls that button them pretty high... close below the brassiere, if any.
Good thing, in winter lots of case of frozen lips... good for the business when you're a gynecologist...
Re:Before anyone cries censorship (Score:5, Informative)
I'd stop taking everything you hear reported in sensationalist or biased media at face value before you go off Japan-bashing.
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I have blooody lived for 7 years in japan. Would you like pics of the crowd surrounding the girls selling their photo albums? I took some. Not of the girls. But the crowd surrounding them. I understand about advertisers. This is a recent trend. Instead of talking of your experiences 2 years go, why not walk down this week to akiba?
Bigoted? Again... I have lived in japan for 7 years. All in all, it is an awesome place to live. And it has less rape crimes than usa.... or anywhere else. All I am
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All in all, it is an awesome place to live. And it has less rape crimes than usa . . . it has to first take care of the social mentality first. Else it is all hypocrisy.
Perhaps it's that very duality within culture that keeps society safe. That is, pedophiles can distract themselves with an aknowledgement and fiction of the forbidden instead of having to let it brew in secret and then actually DO those things. Those staged photos of an acted rape on the inside cover of a magazine show a woman suffering so a real one doesn't have to.
If their culture changed overnight to reflect western attitudes of "think of the children", personally I think similar sex crime statistics wo
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Maybe the only difference to European/American society is, that they're doing it out in the open? There have been a few arrests for child porn in my area lately, and from the things that are said about those, they just replaced public places like train stations with more private ones. You can't "cure" pedophiles by telling them that it's forbidden.
Besides, I couldn't care less about children seeing other (drawn) children their age naked.
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Maybe it's just me, but wasn't there a *reason* for child abuse being illegal? There was, and the reason was that it actually hurts actual children - not that it offends your (or anyone's) personal taste.
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I guess that means that the true enterpreneur spirit is still alive and well in Japan ;).
Seriously, doesn't US have the child beauty contests as well ? Doesn't really seem that different to me...
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But... if you brainwash some kid into doing something that is still a sort of exploitation... is it okay then? I am not commenting on the pedophilia itself. Rape of kids is wrong. Everyone agrees there. And then there are those who argue that even if you get consent from a kid... it is still wrong...because what do the kids know? And then there are those who point out that hey.. the age of consent is different in different places... in a cert
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We aren't talking about kids, we're talking about teenagers. And while social conditioning - to respect the capitalist virtue of utilizing any and all earning potential, in this case - can certainly be considered a kind of brainwashing, one could as well ask: is it exploitation to hire someone to work, since they've been brainwashed to believe that bank robbing is not an acceptable way of gettin
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Sadly, creditability is a moot point for much of the world. Critical Thinking is not taught to school children, only the rote memorization of (often trivial) facts. Carry those learning habits into adulthood and it is no wonder that the gossip culture is booming in most industrialized cultures? A rumor doesn't have to be true it just has to be repeated.
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No, I think that rumors also require a certain negative content to grow legs.
Credibility? (Score:2)
(And there is a lot more 'wildly inaccurate' out there.)
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And for the record posting yo
I am going to join (Score:2, Insightful)
From what I read, I kind of skimmed over the article, this is more of internet regulation law, then internet censorship law. I think some from of such law should exist.
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Green grass and fences. (Score:2, Insightful)
Hmmm. Is this the point were everyone brags at how much better broadband is overseas?
Interesting (Score:1)
Just a question, can this ban or monitor IRC?
Turning Japanese (Score:1)
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Advice for all governments (Score:4, Funny)
However (Score:3, Insightful)
Several different issues, no laws yet (Score:2, Interesting)
I read the article and after you get passed the first part and down to the "steps" listed you will see that there are several different issues here, but no laws (that I can tell).
1) The web.
For the web content it looks like they want to be able to filter at will anything the independent body deems "harmful" but don't forget that they will have to prove its harmful and be able to justify their decisions. I am sure that they will see a lot of input from the educational institutions and rights groups on t
Godzilla & UFOs (Score:1)
Why 18? (Score:2)
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What is the criteria (Score:2)
How do they figure out if a transfer is illegal? Surely people transfer copyrighted materials for many legal reasons. This is always the big problem with these schemes.
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Internet filtering doesn't work (Score:1)
-A portion of the material they filter is safe, ie. not supposed to be filtered
-A portion of the material they should filter goes by unfiltered
-The filters can be bypassed with the same services a lot of Japanese (and Chinese) Internet users have used for Internet anonymity for a while now
The first point makes for angry customers who one day can't visit their favorite (safe) pages anymore.
T
"anything on the web" (Score:2)
communicate with numbers, not words (Score:2)
A personal webpage is something you purposefully visit, not something that is being broadcast to you. You have to explicitly request a file from my webserver to get to my personal webpage, which means that you agree to an implied agreement that you do so out of a desire to learn more about me as a person. Therefore, if something I say makes you feel offended, you should simply stop visiting my page. It is as if you ask a person "what do you think about Bush?" and he says "he is a *beep*". If you are a B
Beware those ..... (Score:2)
For in their heart's they dream themselves you Master"
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