UK Government Seeking To Expand Scope of 'Voluntary' Website Blocking 75
An anonymous reader writes "The UK Internet Watch Foundation, which already works with most consumer broadband ISPs to block websites that contain child sexual abuse content, could soon see its 'voluntary' remit extended to include internet sites that contain 'violent and unlawful' content."
I knew it (Score:5, Insightful)
This is exactly why we should not allow internet censorship at all; the more sites are already censored the easier it is to add another one to the list.
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This is exactly why we should not allow censorship at all
FTFY
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censorship is never for protection of citizens or "protecting the children". It's for protection of business models and corruption. Someday people might learn this. Voluntary censorship is no different.
Re:I knew it (Score:4, Insightful)
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In much of the EU, hate speech is indeed illegal. This is because they experienced first-hand the destruction that would happen if revisionism, racism and incendiary rhetoric were to take over political discourse.
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And once it is made illegal, then you get to start adding to the list of what is considered Hate Speech to include stuff such as whatever is said by someone whose philosophy or ideas you disagree with.
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Then it becomes used to silence things not illegal, just distateful - like Hate Speech.
Many types of hate speech are illegal in the UK. Incitement to religious hatred, for example. Makes it quite risky to criticise some religions, e.g. Mohammed was a paedophile (married Aisha and the marriage was consummated when she was age 9) and since paedos are generally hated and persecuted it isn't much of a leap to start hating those who hold him in high regard and seek to live their lives according to his example.
We need strong ground rules, aka a constitution. Unfortunately I can't see how we will ev
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Now, if I go home and use my own systems then
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Voluntary as in all the ISP have the option of opting in, they do not have to consult with their customers and if the ISP opts in then all the customers are blocked, and have no option but to go to another ISP
Also Voluntary as in and ISP who decides not to opt in will be hounded until they do ...
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http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1138427&cid=26967441 [slashdot.org]
Still true.
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I'm responsible for what is accessed through it regardless of whether I ask people to sign disclaimers and the like
If that's the law, then it is already broken, and likely deliberately so to coerce "voluntary" censorship. Or in more legal terms, that would mean that censorship is constructively mandatory.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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Last time I was bitching about the IWF's lack of transparency here, someone pointed out AAISP [aaisp.net.uk] as one ISP that doesn't subscribe to the IWF list. Unfortunately if I want more than 2Mbps, I have to use cable, so not an option for me.
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As it stands, are there any ISPs who don't subscribe to the IWF list? How hard would it be for one of us to start our own that doesn't subscribe to some unsupervised qango's blocklist?
Yes: my ISP, Andrews and Arnold Ltd. See http://www.aaisp.com/news-censorship.html [aaisp.com]. Getting fantastic 35Mbps (as measured by those speed test sites) FTTC as well!
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Just use Tor or any number of VPN services.
Actually I downloaded the Tor live CD the other day but was getting SSL certificate errors from the site so I'm not sure if I should trust it. There is a GPG key but I have not checked the ISO against it yet.
Re:I knew it (Score:4, Interesting)
What do you have to hide, citizen?
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You have to look at from a purely self serving government department point of view (The IWF is a government department in all but name). The more successful they are at their job, the less relevant they become, and they might need to scale back their operation (i.e. fire people) unless they find themselves more work to do. The devil makes work for idle departments.
So they're going to "grow their business" into general censorship in order to stay "relevant" and more importantly in order to keep getting paid.
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And it always starts with "for the childen" so that the law can pass in its first stage.
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This is exactly why we should not allow internet
Why doesn't the UK save some trouble ... (Score:4, Insightful)
... and just route all their traffic through China? DNS, traffic, all of it. The system is all set up and running, waiting for them to join.
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China are too open-minded and so don't censor heavily enough for the UK?
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Brits are heavy Google users and Baidu doesn't translate to English very well yet. But I hear that is changing soon, and the new English version BendOver.co.uk is set to release.
"Child sexual abuse content" (Score:2)
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That is a surprisingly rational way to refer to child pornography: it both describes the real problem (that children are being abused) and excludes things like "sexting" (at least as a descriptive term it does; I am not a UK citizen and I cannot comment on whether the government there considers a teenager taking a nude self-portrait to be "sexual abuse").
True but one good phrase does not excuse a fundamentally wrong organization. They decide what the public are not allowed to see or know about without any form of oversight. Who's to say they are not blocking other things they consider objectionable like communist websites, political forums, or news stories about royals, or themselves?
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For future readers, today's footnote-comment seems appropriate:
"The better the state is established, the fainter is humanity. To make the individual uncomfortable, that is my task. -- Nietzsche"
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This a quintessentially equivocating bureaucratic term. It both includes and excludes precisely nothing. It is general enough to be all encompassing, and vague enough to be selectively exclusionary. It will be used by the censors office essentially at will, and at random, to enable them to exercise their powers where and how they see fit and so none may gainsay them.
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You would have a point if it weren't for the weirdness that Bart and Lisa Simpson cartoon porn also counts as child porn many places.
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To be fair, she is his sister. Even in Arkansas we frown on that.
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China's censorship is far from all powerful. It's as leaky as a sieve, and that's is good enough.
Most people WILL use their ISPs DNS, so when the censorship extends even further, and it will, your fellow electorate will be fully stupefied by it.
Is this something to ignore?
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No need, It can just be circumvented by not using your ISP's nameservers. Nor is circumventing it illegal. Not that I look up any controversial material I need my own recursive nameserver for other reasons. I think I'll just ignore it instead.
You can be sure that, once people become accustomed to censoring websites for the children and "violent" websites, the next step is making it illegal to circumvent. Protecting the children is good, right? So obviously circumventing it is bad. The (mostly false) logical steps from "circumvention of a law" to "breaking it" is too easy in the lawmaker's mind.
Wouldn't it be easier, safer, and better to just fight it now, before it gets that far?
Next step (Score:2)
Next it will include content that "paints the government or government officials in a bad light."
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Six words (including two abbreviations) and two dates: Parkins v Scott (1862), Thorley v Kerry (1812).
potentially quite a good thing to at least look at (Score:1)
do you all realize this is a specific developmental level? a level which, even in the developed world only perhaps 60 or 70% of adults reach? and outside the developed world, far fewer?
an attribute of this particular developmental level is a capacity to internally generate ethical judgement. in other words, rat
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Nice one! :-) But I think a far better solution is to protect society from 'underdeveloped' people by locking them up.. I mean, what the hell.. If we're going to delve into the absurd here, may as well go all the way
Re:potentially quite a good thing to at least look (Score:4, Insightful)
If we accept this argument, we must then accept that these people cannot be relied upon to participate properly in a democratic system without supervision, and it's a short step from there to disenfranchising the whole lot of them altogether.
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and guess who the powerful people are? by and large, the rational people, the critical thinkers. developmental level is a very big factor regarding how likely we are to occupy a position of power an
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before everyone cries censorship, i think it's worth pointing out that everyone here reading this is likely to be a rational thinker,
I would dispute that premise. For example I have read many posts here that support religious views. Then again they may have all been trolls...
60 or 70% of adults reach?
That number sounds too high, however it may just be my confirmation bias kicking in. Do you have anything to support those numbers?
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I would dispute that premise. For example I have read many posts here that support religious views.
Okay, everybody but you. Is that better?
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Join the Open Rights Group (Score:1)
If this angers you then join the Open Rights Group [openrightsgroup.org] (the UK equivalent of the EEF).
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While I love the cause of the Open Rights Group, it appears to be all talk and no action. It's great to make an animation against the extension of copyright term on sound recordings and "show your MEPs". They'll look at it. And do what they want anyway.
The ONLY way to stop this nonsense is to rally the people, as in the general public. How is this to be done? By letting the genie out of the box. For sound recordings, the genie is still in the box. How to let it out?
Find pristine vinyl recordings that ORG be
Block the movie studios and book stores (Score:2)
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Because there are a lot of fictional works and movie depictions of Rape, Murder, Robbery and other "violent and unlawful" stuff. Movie trailers and excerpts of books are often online at studio and store sites. I think they call it advertising.
Actually, according to this article [cnn.com] which I read today, the UK government is completely banning the movie Human Centipede II because of violent content. It will not even be legal to view the movie in your private home on DVD.
Internet Watch Foundation “Crapland” c (Score:2)
The Internet Watch Foundation’s “Crapland” child-friendly Internet theme park has gone bust after only three days.
An information board at the entrance depicts the classical painting Smell The Glove by Scorpionaggio [newstechnica.com] (courtesy National Portrait Gallery) and welcomes the visitor on a “flight of the imagination, travelling down the magical pathways that teenagers have used to get their porn for centuries,” and which have been specially opened up for the lucky children invited to co
Secret (Score:1)
The biggest issue I have with the IWF is that they don't even display a blocking message. Their firewall software just returns a fake error message. They are effectively filtering UK internet without anyone knowing. Most people have no idea who the IWF are or realise that most UK internet connections are censored.
Huh? (Score:2)
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News video of police violently suppressing peaceful protest. It doesn't get any more violent and unlawful than that.
Get the Real Criminals! (Score:2)
This is major b.s. they should be THANKFUL when some dumbass posts such content on the web so they can use it to track down the originating perpetrators of the ACTUAL CRIME and arrest them.
Why stop there? (Score:1)