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Censorship Your Rights Online

Australian Gov't Censors Censored 163

According to this Wired article, the Australian Broadcasting Authority, which has been working to censor its citizens since 1995, got its site defaced by a cracker on Friday. The site was taken down for half a day for repairs. Among the messages left: "People only now can get connectivity the USA has enjoyed for years. And now one of the greatest resources we have for free speech and free learning will be stifled by a vocal minority with no understanding of the underlying technology." For info on the situation, visit Electronic Frontiers Australia.
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Australian Gov't Censors Censored

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  • ... and the number one difference between Australia and the US - "we tell our citizens we're censoring them!"
  • "You can't [^%$#($^] censor me," the cracker wrote.

    You sure about that... uh... Ned?

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Earlier, when Slashdot posted an article about the Australian government being able to survey and tamper with files to prevent detection of the surveilance, I asked, "How much do you trust the government?" What I meant to say was that sometimes the government needs to take measures to protect its citizenry and how much does the citizenry trust its government to do exactly that? Well, I may eat my words yet. If this is another example of Australia government and regulations at work, I think the Aussie's may have reason to distrust their government.

  • by hernick ( 63550 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @08:27AM (#1469049)
    If a cracker, who admitted also being a heavy drug user, is portrayed as the type of person that does not want censorship, I believe that it can only hurt the case of the others that are opposed to censorship.

    I wonder how this censorship thing will turn out ? I believe that they have a similar system in Singapore. Does anybody know how well it works down there ?

    As has been said multiple times, it is impossible to censor the internet and block someone who knows what he's doing. I'd expect the ISPs to comply, but anybody with basic technical expertise would probably get an offshore shell account and run a proxy there. It might actually be an incentive for the young to learn about tunneling technologies that would allow them to bypass censorship. What do you think ? Will people even bother to learn, or will we see Australian-Censorship-Bypass-HOWTO along with a full range of new software to help in the process ?

    However, if means to bypass censorship became too widespread, the governement could take action by limiting access to the ressources using to bypass censorship. Imagine if they placed Australia behind a filtering proxy that only let HTTP connections through, and required a permit to open any other port ?

    But most likely the governement will just realise that censorship is not enforceable, and either just let the law in place, without a major effect (anyone who wants access to censored things will get access, one way or another) or they will simply notice that and repell the law..

    It will be interesting to see how it turns out.
  • by Mr. White ( 22990 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @08:27AM (#1469050) Homepage Journal

    Attrition mirror of the site [attrition.org].

    Also, an article on this incident from Australia ZDNet [zdnet.com.au].
  • by rde ( 17364 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @08:28AM (#1469051)
    The Australian government has announced the composition of the board of NetAlert, a "community advisory" body responsible for researching filtering tools and educating parents about Internet access.

    Ironically, this is (IMO) just what's needed. Imagine a world where informed parents used filtering software that they controlled. The EFA call this "another example of the paternalism exhibited by the current government", but if implemented correctly -- with the emphasis on education -- then this could very well be a Good Thing.
  • by Money__ ( 87045 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @08:30AM (#1469053)
    . . .It's amazing how little hackers have to say after working so hard to say it.
  • The Australian government seems a little too much like Big Brother to me. I for one will not bow down and submit to anyone who wants to force-feed me what they want to see. Their reply to Wired is funny: "Last time we didn't shut down the site, but just altered the page," she said. "This time we shut the site down for security reasons." Their site was cracked twice before they even got the picture? How many times will it take before they realize that people don't want or need babysitters?
  • Somebody was quick enough to mirror the defaced site at http://cartman.ip.versatel.net/~ben/aba/ [versatel.net]
  • by retep ( 108840 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @08:33AM (#1469056)

    You have to wonder if the only reason the Australian Broadcasting Authority is trying to promote censorship is just to stay around and "be usefull" All goverment organizations need to have a reason to be around, even if the reason is flimsy. Maybe censorship will be the "next big thing" for the ABA.

    This is kind of like how businesses look for new markets to expand into don't you think?

  • I can't decide how I feel about this sort of protest. Of course I think its funny, and on some level I think the ABA or whatever they're called deserve a taste of their own medicine. And it generates good publicity, but it is an inherently destructive practice. There is something to be said for a good old fashion mob carrying signs and shouting slogans. Of course the people who really care about internet censorship would never get of their collective asses an organize a protest. That shit is for hippies. right? wrong. cracking government websights won't generate sympathy with the general population. Getting shot with rubber bullets and tear gas will. So everybody get your pitch forks and torches. "We're here we're queer, we dont' want anymore bears" -Homer Simpson
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday December 11, 1999 @08:35AM (#1469058)
    YOU CANT FUCKING CENSOR ME... if a message wants to get out..it will..leave it up to the au gov to make sure we stay in te dark ages... people only now can get connectivity USA has enjoyed for years ...and now one of te greatest resources we gave for free speech and afree learning will be stifled by a vocal minority with no understanding of the underlying technology stand up now..and fight for your rights..if you want to be able to decide for YOURSELF what you can and cant read... i say once again.. ...LOUD and clear.. the internet is NOT a babysitter.. wou wouldnt let them roam the streets... dont let them roam the world... dont let your bad parenting spoil it for others... go buy a fucking clue.. ------ greetz and respect to the usuals.kat.etc.analognet. and barry heh... and a big FUCK YOU CNUTSUCKING SMEGWHORES to au gov.. clueless fucks... i digress.. adios... Ned R ----- p.s. admin.. dont bother.. you wont trace me... and im not coming back here.. my point is made.. if i get time one day ill secure it for you...luv and kisses.. Ned R ---pp.s My spelling sucked real bad cos i was high on methyldioxymethamphetamines and crack...
  • Another PS from me: I refer to the censorship laws that caused the hacker to protest in the first place. I do however think that what the hacker did was counterproductive.
  • Just smiling really big isn't going to keep the sharp knives away. Things may be to the point where there isn't any "worse": The .au government already has a stranglehold on Internet access, so why not piss them off? Appeasement is a really poor strategy, after all. Saying to an oppressive government "Just take a few of our liberties" is like saying to Hitler "Just invade Poland, okay?"

    -----------

  • I've been following this whole Australian censorship thing here on slashdot and from other news sources and I'm concerned to say the least. I do not know very much about Australian law, but the question is how did it get to this? It's certainly not something I would expect from a country like Australia. Here in the US we've been enjoying our relative freedom on the internet with few government regulations but if this can happen in Australia, who knows what they can pull over us . Most people only hear on the news about internet porn, tie ins to columbine, and bomb recepies, and in the name of protecting the children they will agree to anything. There have been some boneheaded rulings by the US courts as well as some sane ones so it's hard to say where this is going.

    "The price of freedom is eternal vigilance"
  • by Raleel ( 30913 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @08:41AM (#1469062)
    I saw this yesterday, and the first thing I thought was "How in the hell did he manage to spell methyldioxymethamphetamines while on them?"
  • While the ABA may have good intentions, aren't they forcing content providers with "questionable" material to locate outsite au. Will it not eventually get to the point where any content provider, regardless of what the content may be, will host outside of au for convenience and to avoid any possible future problems.

    I agree with some earlier posts: educate the childred and monitor what they view. Don't treat the Internet (computers, TV, etc) as a "babysitter".
  • What's so evil about the word 'fuck' anyways?
  • by retep ( 108840 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @08:44AM (#1469065)

    As has been said multiple times, it is impossible to censor the internet and block someone who knows what
    he's doing. I'd expect the ISPs to comply, but anybody with basic technical expertise would probably get an
    offshore shell account and run a proxy there. It might actually be an incentive for the young to learn about
    tunneling technologies that would allow them to bypass censorship. What do you think ? Will people even
    bother to learn, or will we see Australian-Censorship-Bypass-HOWTO along with a full range of new
    software to help in the process ?


    Censorship bypassing information is available at 2600 Australia [2600.org.au]

  • I think that was a joke.

    Jamie McCarthy

  • ) "How in the hell did he manage to spell methyldioxymethamphetamines while on them?"

    This comment sounded to me like a use of irony itself... I mean, crack??
  • Imagine a world where informed parents used filtering software that they controlled.

    That's the way it should be done, but do you honestly think that will happen anytime soon? Besides, parents can't just slap a program on there and expect it to do all the work for them - they should be there when the kid is on the net.

    Besides, a smart kid will eventually figure out how to bypass the program and look at whatever he wants to. It's a lot harder to do that if Dad or Mom are sitting there watching.



  • Where this is going: the only way we will know is by keeping up on laws and law procedure regarding the internet, technology, censorship and other pertinent issues. In fact, even keeping on less pertinent issues is sometimes a good thing, considering the tendancy of politicians to pork barrel laws into bills they know the public doesn't really care about. Maybe the hacker had idealistic notions about getting the word out, but in the society we live in, his/her actions were more counterproductive than useful. Much as we might not like our governments and laws, they are the established method for societal change and the protection of society. If we don't like the laws, it is our social obligation to use the laws to get them changed. In other words, stay informed and get involved in a way that promotes the technology community as intelligent and capable of ruling ourselves with logic and an eye towards the good of all. That's the one way we can control where these issues head.

  • by jd ( 1658 ) <imipak@ y a hoo.com> on Saturday December 11, 1999 @08:55AM (#1469073) Homepage Journal
    At least the Australians are willing to call a spade a spade (or, at least, a digging implement of ancient origin).

    On the other hand, REGARDLESS of whether the Australian Government has any right to do this (rights are culturally-based and what may be a truism in the US may be a pathetic joke elsewhere), I'm not sure I'd trust a censor to be competent if they can't even manage a website.

    In fact, it sounds like they farmed out most of the work. A bit like the British Government, with Group 4. That turned into a bit of a fiasco, too. If you can't do the work, you shouldn't be taking it on.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    it works for most of the more famous ... erm ... pr0n sites.

    a boatload of bootleg sites have yet to be filtered.

  • He didn't admit it to it. I think it was a self-ironic piss-take thing, that only junkies want no censorship. He'd have been doing well if he managed to crack the page while he was on all that shit.

  • hernick wrote:


    "I wonder how this censorship thing will turn out ? I believe that they have a similar system in Singapore. Does anybody know how well it works down there?" [emphasis mine.]


    Well, depends what you mean by 'how well it works.' Mainstream Singaporean users cannot legally access many things that users in the US and many other places can. I think it's been discussed on Slashdot before, but I really don' know anything about the means used to implement the censorship, or if it's simply a matter of law, unlike what the ABA would like, which is prior review / approval of all materials. Someone from Singapore can probably enlighten us.

    But you said how well it works ... so what's the standard you would use to say whether it worked "well" or not? Whose objective? The broader question is "Is it right?" rather than "How well does it work." Like "How well would a large bandana work for strangling an infant?" The answer might be "Pretty well, friend," but that's an incomplete response to the question the question raises.

    Or then again, maybe you just meant "How effectively are people actually blocked from the info. the government would like to block?" in which case I apologize. :) The answer there would probably have to be "Very, for the technically uninformed, and Not at All for wizards."


    timothy
  • Besides, parents can't just slap a program on there and expect it to do all the work for them - they should be there when the kid is on the net.
    That's not practical. In order to be sure that little johnny isn't downloading naughtiness, s/he would have to be sitting beside the sprog for every second of its time online. Monitoring software has its problems, but if used responsibly is still the best solution.

    Will it happen? Probably not, but it has the advantages of being a solution that's effective and implementable. So it's likely to happen if politicians decide to do what's best for everyone. Improbable, but it does happen occasionally.
  • by nconway ( 86640 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @09:15AM (#1469080)
    Anyone notice this in the Wired article:

    "You can't [Censored] censor me" the cracker wrote

  • So a cracker changed their website! How helpful is that as a protest? Comparing it to Linux advocacy, it's similar to flaming a company who you would like to change their mind regarding Linux support...

    By attacking someone, you don't change their mind, unless you fight and win. I tend to think it's hard to do that with their website. They'll fix it, prosecute the attackers, and get pretty pissed off. Will that make them reconsider? No way!

    It would be more useful if the Australian public politely but firmly demanded what they want to achieve. Add in support by the net at large, just like when the Communications Decency Act was fought with black backgrounds, then awareness would be raised. Once the general public is informed and against the net censorship, the government has to give in, or it shows that it's not a government by the people but over the people.
  • The nature of the internet is being able to access and put data up all over the world. Sometimes more physically than normal. Most in the hacker world know this, often using over seas servers to post their pages to circumvent US copyright laws, especially when they are used to silence people's voices. Australia will find their citizens doing the same thing, getting their message across on over seas servers. Even if they passed laws to the contrary it would have a hard time forcing actions about data stored in say the US.

    SilverFate
    [Y]our wisemen don't know what its like to be thick as a brick - Ian Anderson, "Thick as a Brick"
  • Looking at the history of any frontier we have breached in the past yeilds some possibly interesting insight into what is one of the current hot topics: regulation of the internet.

    I see a couple of things that are distinguishing the internet from other frontiers we (as the human race) have settled... the first and foremost being the very nature of the internet. It is still very much in the process of defining itself. Kinda hard to regulate what doesn't yet exist. It is also an intangible territory. You can't physically go to a place on the internet to arrest someone.

    I think that at best, this ordeal with Australia is a horrible botch job by the government. But at the same time, I do not hold any illusions about any government's ability (or lack thereof) to regulate and/or censor the internet.

    The frontier is as of yet untamed. The thing that is making this situation so attention getting is the amount of access the general populace has to an untamed frontier. Please don't get me wrong, I am not in favor of any type of regulation that I have seen or heard of yet. Not even close. But the reality is that it is coming, whether we want it or not.

    We will always have outlaws, vigilantes, g-men, consumers, tourists, celebrities, etc... in any environment. And as the majority of the population moves in, they are going to want to feel secure as they are fascinated by this new media.

    The fun has only just begun.
  • There are two big reasons why such actions are totally ethically wrong, here they are.
    1. (scholarly) The Australian government is violating their side of the social contract. They are taking away the liberties of citizens. Only citizens have the ability to surrender their individual liberties, that is the basis of the American Constitution and most modern democracies.
    2. (personal) The internet is about exchanging infromation and ideas. The Australian government is denying people outside their country the ability to access information. This is because by denying people the freedom to display information, you also prevent people from reading that information because it is not displayed for them to access. In the end information is stored and processed the same way. There is no practicle diffrence between porn in Australia or online human rights protests in China.

    SilverFate
    Who are the Brain Police? - Frank Zappa
  • by Anonymous Coward
    This seems to me to be a minority of the people trying to eliminate material they deem offensive. This seems to me what led to the down fall of society in Bradbury's 'Farenheit 454'. For more about this phnomenon read Bradbury's postface in the most recently published editions, it describes how it has happens in reality.
  • What is keeping other governments from following suite, like the US. Please don't say the constitution, because a lot of people would end up in jails and censored before it got to the courts.

    SilverFate
    Mother should I trust the governmnet? - Roger Waters, "Mother"
  • by Denor ( 89982 ) <denor@yahoo.com> on Saturday December 11, 1999 @09:52AM (#1469091) Homepage
    It seems to me that every time I see a cracker take down a webpage and put up in its place a political statement of his/her own, it's littered with swearing, and poor grammar. More likely than not, an attack like this isn't going to affect anyone. People straddling the fence on this issue before will take one look at the website and say "This kind of thing should be censored!" -- which is exactly what we don't want.

    What's the point in cracking something if you're going to do more harm than good?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    proxy servers... all isps must install proxy servers and you can only access the proxy servers... and they have this list of sites that must be censored and blocked....
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Yes, the poor old British Empire.

    The roots of which gave freedom-loving people everywhere the Magna Carta, leading to the USA's Bill of Rights and Constitution, although freedom in the USA has been rather trampled, in recent times, by special interest groups/lobbies.

    Is Australia's problem some kind of vestige of being a "Prison Colony?" Did they never guarantee a basic offer of free speech?

    Sad to see Australia, so long known for its freedom-loving ways and liberalism, sink so low.

    The "TV Generation" just doesn't seem capable of standing up and demanding their rights like previous generations.

    Hopefully, the Internet Generation will do better at shutting down censorship (and other freedom-stifling) laws.

    Is defacing webpages a shadow of things to come?
  • Please don't say the constitution, because a lot of people would end up in jails and censored before it got to the courts.

    The First Amendment is very strongly worded.

    Censorship before publication is called prior restraint, and it is VERY difficult to get a US court to issue such an order. You have to prove that irreperable harm will occur on publication.

    There have been innumerable attempts to get newspaper stories surpressed. Very few have been successful.

  • How about the US and Canada put tech trade sanctions on australia until their government gets the idea. Hell if push comes to shove I suppose the pres (once clinton is out) could order customs to sieze *all* australian goods coming into the US until the au gov stops shafting its people. Hit them in the pocket book and eventually they will get the idea
  • no, Armed Revolution = Leninism.
  • their laws and meaningless and irrelevant so just ignore them :)
  • Be a bit easy on them. They are overreacting in reguard to the petrified posters. After that story, a lot of people probably will try to moderate down anything that remotely looks asinine or inflammotory. That's no excuse, I know, but maybe they will calm down in a couple of days.
  • If the censorship continues unabated, I believe Australians will fall behind the rest of the world in useful computer knowledge:

    a. ) Because computers will be less fun to use, unless you happen to be Ned Flanders ("500 channels, locked out!")

    b. ) Useful computer information will end up being on pages that get banned if the filters are shockingly primative and block out large numbers of sites. People will have less pages to look at, and since I don't trust filters (would I be able to get to freedomforum.org, which occaisionally has stories about First Amendment cases involving lewd and lascivious content? How about any other sites with storis like that, what triggers the filters?) I'm assuming useful pages will be chucked out with porn.

    I feel sorry for the people in Australia, I hope they vote for a less authoritarian government next chance they get... while they still have the right to vote, that is.

  • Wouldn't the WTO prevent that? ;-)
  • Imagine a world where informed parents used filtering software that they controlled.

    It COULD be a good thing if it was applied to children only, and had a way for their parents to override it if they chose to do so. Unfortunatly, they (the govt.) have chosen to apply it to everybody.

  • Australia is not the only country doing things like this, but they seem to be the most vocal about what they are doing. It is an unfortunate bretrayal of the government against its own people. I only hope they realize what information privacy and freedom mean to the people of Australia. They deserve more.
  • I've been told a story about the word "fuck", but I'm not sure it's true. In the old days, when men would cheat on their wive's, they'd be put in stockades. Above the stockades it would say For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge, and people would walk by, abbreviate the word, and say "oh, he fucked". I suppose that word could take different meanings after that, turning into a synonym for having sex, and then into all the other uses of the word today. But then again, maybe it's just a colorful story that was made up and passed around.
  • by quonsar ( 61695 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @12:06PM (#1469115) Homepage

    The internet is about exchanging infromation and ideas.

    The problem is that for too many people, this is not what the internet is about at all.

    I once posted a ZDNN Talkback that said:

    "Screw e-commerce. Let the moneygrubbers build their OWN e-commerce network. The Internet is an information resource and a "low barrier to entry" publishing medium that almost anybody can make use of. Let them turn something else into a vast wasteland of advertising and product hawking like television has become."

    I received a half dozen emails calling me a communist.

    The masses of braindead consumerbots in this country (USA) perceive everything in terms of its potential to be commercialized. The vision of shared human knowledge available to all via the internet is steadily being strangled by another vision: of hype and unlimited marketing opportunity.

    Want to see the future of internet? Turn on your television.

    'Scuse me, I have to puke now...

    ======
    "Rex unto my cleeb, and thou shalt have everlasting blort." - Zorp 3:16

  • he took the long form of my nick and made it shit :)...sides last i checked you can still spell on that shit :)

    anywho, i think he's definitely hurting the cause. Although I have no idea what would actually help it, but i'm sure that isn't the way. I like another person's post about allowing tunneling to bypass censorship, not exactly winning the "cause", but a temporary work around until all "hopefully" gets better.
  • It seems that the Australians cannot get past their ancestry no matter how they try. Australia's current inhabitants (the white one's at least) are descended from prisoners that were deemed too unsatisfactory to reside in English jails and were shipped to Australia. Considering that the continent was one big penal colony mainly populated by prisoners and their wardens, it is very interesting to note that the current population accepts (they do if not the government would be infringing on their privacy every other week...) almost any level of censorship or privacy invasion from their government.

    This is not meant as flame bait but instead is my personal observation. Please respond intelligently.

    PS: Wasn't it sad the way the cracker started his rant with such inspirational material only to end it with by the way I'm high on some crack. **sigh** He probably has reinvigorated the censorship board/committe??? and now they have a mental image of the kind of foul mouthed, drug addicts they want to "protect" the people of Australia from. They'll probably be handing his little rant out in leaflets with bold letters saying...This is the enemy... Save our children from him...

    Bad Command Or File Name

  • I find it most ironic that Sig 11's intelligent postings (very rare they are) are moderated down, but his standard karma-whore bullshit gets a five.

    ...which was the whole reason behind the 'karma-whore' posts, and which proves his point quite succinctly.

    ======
    "Rex unto my cleeb, and thou shalt have everlasting blort." - Zorp 3:16

  • It COULD be a good thing if it was applied to children only, and had a way for their parents to override it if they chose to do so. Unfortunatly, they (the govt.) have chosen to apply it to everybody.

    Information should *never* be filtered, especially information that children are getting. Allowing people to decide what other people get to know produces a closed minded society, and that is a Bad Thing(tm).

  • Well the second time it WAS hacked.

    The first time a TFC clan called Hate, Inc. pulled the site (which was a Team Fortress Classic news site) because they got upset about stuff posted about them. So they threw a tantrum and pulled it.

    First (non-hack): http://www.attrition.org/mirror/attrition/1999/12/ 01/tfcnews.com/
    Second (hack): http://www.attrition.org/mirror/attrition/1999/12/ 02/tfcnews.com/
  • >no, Armed Revolution = Leninism.

    George Washington was pink? Methinks you need to learn a little history. Technically all branches of Marxism are sopposed to advocate a violent overthrow of capitalism - and they aren't the only ones.In Zaire a pro-democracy revolutuion happened (although their leader seems to have changed his mind). Various Religous and ethnic groups kill each other incessently in attempts to replace the current government of whatever with their boys. Lenin is by no means the only who has advocated killing the government.

    >-- Buy Hitler Brand RAM At Your Local Computer Land! Turn All Your
    >Memory Into Random Ass Memory

    If its as big as his ego was I'll take eight.


    Nick, who is very sorry his mouse button slipped thusly creating a sucky post
  • To recap:
    1. The current Australian government is led by an {insert expletive here} who views the 50's through rose coloured glasses and would like nothing better than to impose his 50's Methodist morality on the rest of us.
    2. His government was trying to get a tax bill through the Federal Senate, in which no one single party has a majority.
    3. The government chose to deal with two independents, one who split with the opposition because he missed out on a promotion and narrowly escaped criminal charges because he was too sick to stand trial (but wasn't too sick to vote in Parliament - go figure). The other can only be described as a fundamentalist Catholic who has used his position to prevent government funding for abortions and prevent RU 486, the "abortion pill" from being used in Australia.
    4. Shortly before the tax bill was due to be debated, the Internet censorship bill was rushed through the Senate with virtually no debate. It was widely interpreted as an implicit inducement to our fundamentalist Senator.
    5. However, once he had achieved his goal of (theoretically, of course) stopping adults looking at porn, our friendly fundamentalist Senator turned around and voted against the tax bill, basically stabbing the government in the back!
    6. The Minister for Communications has been copping nothing but criticism for this law from the entire IT industry, but has made this monkey for his own back.
    7. The laws start to take effect from July next year. It's generally believed that either the laws will fall into disuse or will quickly be rendered totally unworkable by people submitting so many complaints the Broadcasting Authority won't be able to deal with the backlog.
    8. Meanwhile, Australian content providers have been gradually moving offshore.

    Isn't politics fun?

  • The united states was founded on revolution. It seams as though everyone forgets that. (this is aimed at the US, not AU). By taking away our free speech and guns, the government takes away that very thangs that created the government. Now I'm not advocating an overthrow of the US government, but mearly pointing out a fact. When the government DOES try to take away our firearms, then mabey it is time to overthrow the government. Infact, I would think that it is the responcibility of the citizens to do this. While the post I am replying to seams inflamitory, it has some real truth at the end... I wouldent laugh while shooting, but I sure as hell would shoot.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Actually, I'd rather see us (Australia) have trade sanctions against the USA. We keep getting ripped off by the US with their tariffs and subsidies, and we import heaps more from the US than we export (so trade sanctions will hurt you more than us :-).

    Plus the US has supported many a totalitarian regime, and behaved as a generally aggressive lout. Atleast our government stupidity is mostly about inflicting problems on the people who elected the gov't rather than other people who get no say in the issue.
  • by Black Art ( 3335 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @01:17PM (#1469129)
    I am glad to see the hack (though he could have used a spell checker). I doubt it will make a dent in the clueless moralists who want to rule the hearts and minds of Australia though.

    Control freaks are everywhere. Right now, they are just looking for an excuse. In Australia, the excuse in porn. Now how they figure that pictures of nekid people having sex is "harmful" is beyond me. Maybe if you believe that it will cause you to burn in Hell from the threats of an Angry God. (Personaly I believe that that God is more of an overactive imagination and neurotic pychosis than any actual being.) But those who confuse their religion with reality will take it at face value and go along with it, no matter how absurd the rule set.

    What it comes down to it that the "problem" of porn gives them an excuse to control the views of others. Directly by requiring preapproval of what they can and cannot say, or indirectly by hiding other viewpoints from them. (Note that this excuse could be "bomb making materials", "drug information", or "crush videos". It does not matter. It just has to be a threat that people react emotionally to. (Because when emotion is involved, people stop thinking rationally.))

    It is too bad that the average person in Australia does not see through this smoke screen. Just goes to show how passive people have become.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Yet again, the ./ers see ignore the actually issue - of a web site hack, and then look at the hacked people and pass judgement. Only a brave few condemned the hacker, and then only for being counterproductive. Does one have a "right" to alter information on another's computer?
  • The basic premise of the book was not that a minority of people got their ideas pushed through, but that, even more sadly, a majority of the people became unthinking drones because they liked it. The ignorant majority started objecting to all this tough "reading" they had to do when there was TV easily available, and the mandate to burn books was supported by the populace. That's what made the story so poignant.

    My only complaint about Bradbury is that he frequently made the popular mistake of blaming technology for social idiocy. There's nothing wrong with TV technology - the ability to transmit pictures and sound is immensely useful. The fact that it is usually used for inane dreck is not the 'fault' of the technology.

  • by Microlith ( 54737 ) on Saturday December 11, 1999 @02:02PM (#1469133)
    Well, no, but I have an argument for him.

    1) He did not kill the main page entirely, just appended his message. No business lost, no *REAL* damages. Like protestsers in front of a store. They'll distract you, slow you down, maybe stop you, but they haven't physically damaged anything. And they can't be sued for *damages* from lost sales.

    2) It isn't tresspassing because it's THEIR fault he got in. Their site was insecure, and he found a way in. Like having a fence, but having a HUGE hole in it, and trying to sue for tresspass after finding someone inside. They really have no case. Now if said fence was solid, and had concertina wire on top, that's another story.

    He's not a problem, 'cept for the fact he admitted he was high as hell while doing it...
  • He cut and paste from the purchase order that he sent to his drug dealer.

    I once broke the Z key on my keyboard, and added a couple of lines to my startup-sequence so my computer would always boot up with "z" on my clipboard. So I could easily type it whenever I wanted to, even though I couldn't really type it, if you know what I mean.


    ---
  • The internet is a set of media for communicating. Whether one communicates for the purpose of sharing ideas, chatting with friends, or making a buck is a choice that should be left up to that person. "eCommerce" (an incredibly silly name) doesn't stop any other kind of communication on the internet.
    Or, more succinctly: the evil green paper won't contaminate you though the wires.
  • GST comes into effect in July. Censorship begins January 1, 2000, AFAIK.
  • Sounds like the aussies need to get rid of their government... oh wait, they don't have firearms!

    You don't need guns to get rid of the government. All you need is another election. It is the people who decide who will be the government.

  • Lets be clear about this, cracking webpages is legally wrong, and under Australian law, unauthorised access to a government computer system is punishable by 25 years in the pokey, BUT if you feel strongly enough about an issue, that's a risk you'ld have to take.

    Ideally, the government would have listened to the people, but they didn't, so the people's next step has to be civil disobediance. The people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world are usually the ones who do ;)
  • That's only a good thing if you agree with the idea that parents should be able to control everything their children see. If some ultra-fundamentalists refuse to let their kids read science textbooks or visit science websites because they're "evil," is this ok simply because they're the kids' parents?
  • You see, the real plan is to convert all of AU into a penal colony. Yes, such irony, but hell - they would have the monitoring capabilities to do it.

    USA isn't far behind -- they're just better at hiding it. (Oh yes, those pesky guns the citizens own...we'd better do something about that...)

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Yea, I did it. No I wasnt high on crack or MDMA, I only had 1min to do the defacement once on the box. I scanned over the mispelled doc and though 'fuck it' That day I was cold tired and angry, and didnt particularly care if I made a few typos (which I do often) The first time I did that site, IIRC I didnt swear (or kept it to a minimum) and linked to other writers (EFA,2600au,Danny Yee, etc) that are far better writers than myself. My point was made, EFA,ISOCAU,2600AU all went down the legal pathway with this, and got exactly nowhere, they dont have the size to be taken seriously. Their efforts were well studied, and delivered flawlessly, the powers that be, were ignorant and foolish. The au gov has slowly been restricting the rights of its people. This current situation affects me DIRECTLY, and so I did the only thing I know how to do really well, I broke them. If you think what I did was wrong... thats fine by me, I didnt do it for you.
    I DID however get it into the public eye again, it has been on radio/tv/papers... even slashdot!@! heh. If i could do anything better/bigger/nicer I would. This _so_ isn't a fame hack, I am well known in the int underground, and for good reason did not use my handle or associate myself with anyone that knows me.. The name was made up on the fly.. For all i care 'Randalf splitzer' hacked the damn thing.
    Noone would give me a voice, so I made one for myself.
    And to the people who reply to this post flaming/napalming me, dont write me off in a sentence, be constructive... im constantly trying to improve myself, heh.
    amd ficksing my spelling wood be goud

    Adios,
    Ned Rubenschlachen
  • You know, that has got to be one of the most stupid arguments that I've ever seen.

    First load of crap: the convicts sent to Australia were not "deemed too unsatisfactory to reside in English jails". The reason they were transported was because there simply wasn't enough space in those English jails. The selection process was probably almost random.

    Second load of crap: The _vast_ majority of the current population of this country does not have ancestry that goes back to the convicts. For a start, something like one in seven were actually born overseas, and a vastly larger number would be second or third generation Australians. There was a massive push for immigration after the second world war, driven by the slogan "Populate or Perish" - we had a population of only about seven million at the time, and we were considered vulnerable to invasion because of that.
    In any case, trying to argue that because Australia started out as a penal colony it's obviously still made up of people who think like convicts is completely stupid. Hell, there were free settlers on the First Fleet! (if my memory serves me)
    And yes, I _can_ trace my ancestry back to a convict on the first fleet - I'm rather proud of it. It makes for a more interesting history in many respects than "My parents came out from England after the war".

    Third load of crap: "it is very interesting to note that the current population accepts ... almost any level of censorship or privacy invasion from their government"
    Australia is not the US. We do not have the same set of values as you people in the US have. One of the differences is that we are not as paranoid about our privacy as you are (though we don't accept absolutely anything). As an example of this, in Australia there were, at one point, more police wiretaps in one of our states in one year than there were in the whole of the US - in Australia we are prepared to accept things like wiretaps when they're used to protect more important freedoms, that we do care about. Freedoms like the right to not get shot.
    The idea that the police can listen in on our phone conversations does not frighten us. We think it's a reasonable price to pay for the much more effective policing that it enables. The case is similar with other forms of `privacy invasion'.
    Censorship is similar - we'll accept it if we think it's justified. As a case in point, one of those nuts who go around making a big thing out of saying that the holocaust didn't happen was refused a visa not that long ago. The vast majority of people thought this was perfectly reasonable.
    On the other hand, films very rarely get banned outright here, despite frequent protests by some people. For example, last year's version of Lolita wasn't banned, despite rather large outcry - it was a flop, because it wasn't a particularly good film, but it wasn't banned.
    It's the same with books and radio and television and so forth. Things have to be really bad, by the majority's standard, before it'll be censored.
    This internet censorship bill is an anomaly, one that's been allowed to continue so far largely because it doesn't affect many people yet. When it does, then people will complain, and the law will either be repealed or simply ignored (most likely the latter). The thing about this bill is that it reflects the wishes of only a small part of the population, and goes actively against the wishes of a considerably larger part (the largest group, those who don't have Internet access at the moment, probably couldn't give a damn either way). This bill's position is not tenable in this country - it lacks the majority/large minority support that is needed for something of it's nature to survive.

    To recap: your post is a load of crap. The moderator who moderated it up is a moron. You are possibly even worse. You know almost nothing about Australian history, the Australian people, Australian culture, and Australian politics - please, don't inflict your idiotic ideas on us any more.
    And finally, please refrain from assuming that because something wouldn't be accepted in the US, it is obviously fundamentally wrong, immoral, what have you. That's the kind of thinking that makes the rest of the world utterly loath the US and it's people.

    himi
  • A society that needs guns to get rid of their government is not democratic. Australia is democratic, ergo your argument is crap.

    Please, just because you lot in the US needed to fight a war against the British to gain your freedom doesn't mean that that's the only way to go about it. Australia didn't need a war - we just had to ask them nicely.
    Further, just about everyone in this country supported the new gun laws. Hmmm, majority support of a proposal . . . doesn't that sound like `Democracy' to you? And yet you find it easy to condemn it . . .

    Persoanally, I'll just vote aginst the idiots who came up with this legislation at the next election.

    Oh, and I hope I never meet you, because you're obviously some completely sick bastard. Anyone who laughs when they're killing someone goes down in my book as a dangerous maniac.

    himi
  • Sorry to be a bit off-topic, but in all these recent aussie related threads, ive seen a fair bit of disinformation posted regarding Australia. Specifically regarding it being a prison colony. In the 1700-1800's, Britain had a highly opressive legal system, a man could be arrested for taking an egg he found on the roadside to feed his starving family. This of course led to large overpopulation of british prisons. Most of these people were not real criminals. Anyway, so they started deporting them to thier overseas colonies, America, and Australia. Wasn't that one of the reason the americans were annoyed at the british, dumping the prisoners there? Anyway, since then there large immigrations of non-convict settlers from britain and after WW2, europe. Recently there has been an influx from asia too. So the stereotypes about Australians being decented from convicts etc are wrong, as the majority of people are not, and they werent really anyway... Anyway, censorship sucks, props to the cracker.
  • ...and THIS gets marked as flamebait?? Is this some moderator's idea of a twisted joke?
  • It's not "evil", it's just tasteless and offensive.

    One could also ask, "What's wrong with bringing up the subject of the size of one's penis at a dinner party?" It's the same sort of thing.
  • HELLO!

    Ok, this one fellow showed us the text the cracker had on the site, then some strange agenda pushing moderators (there are a few out there) mark it all over the board. So another person explains that it was from the original page, and another agenda pushing moderator takes him down.

    If you don't MetaModerate, please do and STOP these agenda pushing moderators.

    This is offtopic, but it is important.
    ---
  • It's reasonable to assume that as time goes on, the filtering technology will evolve along with everything else.

    I really don't understand the need to 'censor' porn on the net, though. The real key to eliminating porn on the net is at the cash register. Laws could be passed which make it illegal to bill people for services rendered. After a few credit-card-payment driven porn sites discovered that they can't enforce collecting a dime from anybody within certain localities, they themselves will block access to their sites from those localities.

    The average porn customer isn't going to fight a law which says he can't be forced to pay for the "goods."

  • Umm, yes, generally it is viewed as okay for parents to protect their children from influences they feel are harmful. That's been true for a long, long time. You aren't going to try to claim parents don't have the right (within reason, of course) to raise their children the way they want to are you?

    Gonna roll out government tanks to "force" them to expose their children to what you feel is they should see? How noble of you!
  • ironic..this is exactly how the australians are going to fight their government's censorship!
  • Yes, isn't the irony delicious?
  • There is a good deal of irony in discussing censorship on a highly-censored forum here, isn't there?

  • Hey, that's a great idea! Send in gunboats to force Australia to allow the credit-card billing of their citizens on porn sites.

    I imagine that 150 years ago when the British were sending gunboats into China, to force the Chinese to allow them to sell opium to the Chinese people, that some of the same reasoning was in force.

  • In theory this law is a great violation of our freedom of speach, and when I heard about it I was totally against it.
    A law such as this should never have been made.

    However.
    In practice, the law has been made, and if you read it you will find it is totally unenforcable.
    I don't expect my internet usage to be changed at all by it. In practice it means your ISP has to offer a program like NetNanny to you, and any site that gives kiddie porn without authentication that is found by an ABA member when he's trying to get to his farm animal porn can be forcibly taken down if it is in australia.

    I'm thinking we should just let the AU government do what they want in their little pseudo world they make for themselves because as John Howard (our current prime minister who was voted in even though over 50% of the country didn't like him [due to our fucked up method of voting it does matter where you live]) demonstrated the other day when he rushed authorisation for ASIO to look at and alter any information they see fit on my computer so they can forge enough evidance to make me guilty of any crime they like; THERE ISN"T A GOD DAMNED THING WE CAN DO ABOUT IT.
  • "Pick the cause before you pick the site you're gonna hack, and use a fuckin' spell checker!" --cDc, Defcon 7 [wired.com]
  • What was that saying again? Like those who don't know history are condemned to repeat it?

    Call me crazy ("You're crazy!") but this sounds to me very much reminicient of Prohibition here in the US in the 1920s (For those who somehow don't know, it was a constitutional amendment banning alcohol), which manged to do the following:
    1. Piss off a lot of people,
    2. Create an undergrould crime network the likes of which America had never seen before, and
    3. generally cause more alcohol abuse problems than it solved.
    If I was in a very amused mood I'd draw a lot of paralells between the two, such as noncompliant ISPs that can't take the hassle as opposed to speakeasies, offshore shell accounts as opposed to bathtub gin, and the like, but it's almost 0130 and I haven't had any coffee.
  • I dunno, there are certain things that I wouldn't want my five-year old child to see (assuming I had a five year old child).

    Let's face it, censhorship is a Bad Thing(tm), but exposing children to snuff movies is also a Bad Thing(tm). I think parents have a right to restrict kids from seeing certain things until the kids reach a certain age. Children don't automatically have a right to all information that's out there, for the same reason they don't have a right to vote, run for office, drive a car, own a gun, etc. Until they reach a certain level of maturity, they just aren't responsible enough to handle these things.
    ---
  • hmmmm......just reading that....i dont think the cracker was even an Australian.....

    I have never heard anyone here ever use the phrase 'buy a clue', or anything to that effect....

    not that the nationality of the cracker really means much anyway....but still.....

  • It's where and how it is said that matters. May be now you understand?
    This being true it should also be pointed out that the how was by vandalising someones website and the where is a target audence who would only use it to ferther the agenda the speaker seens to be against.
    In communicating an idea you need to carely pick your message method and audence. Only one or two of thies items will not do the job you need all three. A bad message falls on deff ears no matter what, a good message communication to deff ears dose nothing, a receptive audence lissening to a good message delivered badly will also get negitive results.
    In this example however the message, medium and audence were all a patheticly poor choice and as pointed out it took a great deal of effort to get the message in place. That effort could have been better spent picking a better message a better audence and a better platform.
    Instead he chouse this tactic and thats pathetic.
    If he had run for office (for example) he could have communicated his message to a very receptive audence on a podium. Even by losing he has made his feelings known and those that support the message may scare opponents into changing there toon.
    But this person opted for cracking into a server and puking... bad choice...
  • That has got to be the most ignorant generalisation I have ever seen.

    Saying it's not meant as flame bait doesnt forgive it either.

    Even if it were true that the continent was one big penal colony, what relevance does that have on the current population?, That was 200 years ago.

    Australia has an extremely broad range of cultures and peoples ('white' or otherwise), most of which had nothing whatsoever to do with convicts of any sort.

    I am not an Australian myself, but I am a New Zealander who has lived in Australia for 7 years now, and I can tell you that it is definitely too big and diverse a country to make insulting generalisations like that about.


  • Off topic, but not being able to put "fucking" in a story is just another sign of what has been happening to wired since it became part of Lycos.

    Anyone who values free speach should say fuck at least twenty times a day :-).

    -
    We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.
  • I wonder what we will see in the US in 20 years time? I mean 70% of all black males have been in prison - or something like that anyway.

    Here.. some people have ancestors who were deported from England 200 years ago. I think we're over it by now - we just go and whip the Pom at cricket every couple of years and call it even.

    However, to say we accept censorship is like saying the USA accepted the Vietnam war. We don't - unfortunatly it doesn't effect enough people (yet) for it to be protested in large numbers.

    Believe me, this hack will be the first of many. If protests against the Vietnam war were on the street, then protests against Net censorship will be on the Net.

  • Some things are illegal. Some things are illegal while a large portion of the population thinks they should be. Some things are illegal while a small group of well informed persons thinks they should be. Some things are illegal while a small group of uneducated bastards thinks they should be. Which of the reasons do you prefere?

    But still, until it is illegal to talk about changing the law, it is better to shange the law than to break it.

    Why? Because, now the censors have an ultimate argument -- "Just look at what they've done. Those are the evil 'hackers', and we must protect our children from them!".

    Do never give politicians such arguments for free! You will allways regret it.
  • Australia isn't "run" by the British, we are a constitutional monarcy (similar to Canada) We haven't been run by the British since 1901.
  • You can't force them to expose their children to anything, but I don't think they should have complete control over what their children are exposed to either. *Maybe* up until their children are 10 or so, but not past that. The children should be able to find stuff out on their own. If they've been raised well up to that point, they'll be able to deal with the stuff they find.
  • Without commercialization of the Internet, you would't have been able to post a ZDNet Talkback -- ZDNet wouldn't exist! Without commercialization of the Internet, Slashdot wouldn't exist in its present form -- Rob, Hemos, et. al. would have to do "honest work". In fact, without commercialization in general, the computer that you use to post with would be priced out of your reach!

    The Internet is about exchanging information and ideas

    The thing you don't get is that the "information and ideas" that 90% of the people want are various forms of entertainment! That's why download.com gets a few more hits than, say, iww.org. That's why sex.com is just a leetle more popular than aynrand.org. Taking away the entertainment, and what do you have? ARPANET.

    Screw e-commerce. Let the moneygrubbers build their OWN e-commerce network.

    They are. It's called the Internet. Without those "money-grubbers", how much infrastructure do you think we'd have? Who'd know or even care what the Internet was?

    The Internet is an information resource and a "low barrier to entry" publishing medium that almost anybody can make use of

    Including anyone who wants to make a buck or two, but doesn't have the $$$ to put up a store front, or even advertise in the local paper. A "Money-Grubber".

    "Let them turn something else into a vast wasteland of advertising and product hawking like television has become."

    On my cable package, there are three "home shopping" channels, and three "artsy" channels (PBS, local access, and one from the local Univ.). I don't have to watch Home Shopping. Again, do you think that without commercialization, local access cable would exist? Hell, let's go back the the first broadcast medium, radio. One of the first radio programs was "The Westinghouse Radio Hour". You see, Westinghouse made radios, but there was no programming. So they gave people something to listen to on their new Westinghouse radios. Without "moneygrubbers", radio wouldn't taken off. Without radio (and the vast radio audience), no TV. So, where's your PBS now?

    What value does something have if it doesn't have value?
    Answer: None, obviously.

    What good is something if you can't get something from it?
    Answer: See above.

    "Value" is essentially "what this thing will get me". Nothing more. The Internet is obviously valuable, because many people have gotten many things from it. Some people get their message out. Some people show pictures of their dog. Some people get...something [purple.com] from it, even if nobody else gets it!

    Just because some people have gotten money from it, doesn't exclude you from getting what you want from it.

    The Internet is an infinitely renewable resource. No one has to be exposed to advertising and commercialisim if they don't want to be. You can rant and rail against commercialisim and share some human knowledge on your own web site, and it won't bother me a bit.

    Me, I'm gonna go to www.lickinlesbos.com.

    -----------

  • A society that needs guns to get rid of their government is not democratic. Australia is democratic, ergo your argument is crap.

    As a mild correction... I'm taking an implication here that you think the American populace needs guns to get rid of our government. We don't. Every four years we have a revolution; we see if the current Chief Executive has been responsive to the needs of the people, and if not, we throw him out.

    The American protection of firearms dates back to Revolutionary times, when it was felt that the best way to ensure that the government responded to the people's needs was to make sure the government would be too terrified of the people to not respond to their needs. Depending on what your political alignment is, this principle is either (a) an anachronism of a bygone time which permits barbarism in the present day, or (b) just as important today as it was in 1789.

    If the American people ever firmly and steadfastly believe that the answer is (a), the American people have the ability to amend the Constitution and cut out the Second Amendment. This has not happened yet, which makes me think that many more Americans feel (b) than the Gallup Polls suggest.

    Gun ownership in America is not a cut-and-dried legal issue. People who attempt to turn it into a black-and-white issue, without a proper appreciation of the historical, legal and political-philosophy principles involved, are dooming themselves to failure.

    Disclosure: I own firearms myself, and I believe (b). I hope that you'll agree that it hasn't addled my brain too badly. :)

    If anyone would like to talk further about this, my EMail address is up top and I encourage you to use it.
  • Highly censored forum? Give me a break. The way that Slashdot moderation works is far from censorship. If you set your threshold properly, you can read everything, even trolls and first posters.

  • What a silly idea. If customers can't be billed, and are denied access, they will not be very happy, and will likely seek and find ways to circumvent such controls. Figuring out exactly where someone is physically located at on the Internet isn't so easy. If people want porn, they will find a way to get it, illegal or not.

    Governments shouldn't be in the business of trying to legislate sexual morality anyway.

  • When it takes a decade to get through the appeals process, the first ammendment doesn't protect. You can lose your life in much much less time.

    There exist people willing to give their lives to such a cause, you know.

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