bodies
This part of the Censorship guide
identifies some of the main players in the censorship game.
Australia
Within Australia the policy framework
for web censorship, like so much relating to the internet, has two
features:
squabbles between different federal and state/territory government
agencies
the imperative to be seen to be doing
something, resulting in what some criticise as gesture politics or
digital potemkin villages - initiatives that are packaged nicely but do
not address substantive issues.
The Commonwealth Department of
Communications, Information Technology & the Arts (DCITA)
- which embraces the National Office for the Information Economy (NOIE)
- concerns itself with 'policy' questions, sharing legislative
responsibility with the Attorney-General's (A-G's)
Department.
Day to day carriage is handled by specialist bodies
such as the Australian Broadcasting Authority (ABA),
the Office of Film & Literature Classification (OFLC)
- which concerns itself with ratings and has one of the more arid
government sites - and Australian Federal Police.
The
latter, understandably, have a strong ethos of digital 'stranger danger'
- give us more money, more cars, more computers to catch the villains
(tho their success hitherto is uncertain, to say the least).
NetAlert
is a community awareness body established by the federal government to educate
families about managing access to online content, research new access
management technologies and conduct "national
awareness campaigns to promote a safer Internet experience for young
people." It's based in Tasmania and will include a hotline,
modelled on the EU INHOPE initiative.
From 1 January 2000 the Australian
Broadcasting Authority (ABA),
under the BSA Act, has the power to regulate internet service providers
and content hosts in censoring prohibited (and potentially prohibited)
content.
ISPs are required to take "all reasonable steps"
- the nature of which is still contentious - in responding to ABA
directions to prevent end-users accessing 'X' or 'Refused
Classification' material.
other bodies
Non-government bodies of particular
interest in relation to online free speech and censorship are the:
Electronic Privacy Information
Center (EPIC),
leader in the field
Center for Democracy &
Technology (CDT),
another US body
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF),
one of the original US online lobby groups
Electronic Frontiers Australia (EFA),
its somewhat paler Australian counterpart
Watch on Censorship (WoC),
another Australian libertarian group
Global Internet Liberty Campaign (GILC)
Digital Freedom Network (DFN),
another US advocacy group
Internet Free Expression Alliance (IFEA),
a US-based body that opposes filtering technologies
Communications Law Centre (CLC),
as the name suggests, is an Australian body concerned with the Internet and other
communications law
the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU), playing
catch-up
The
EU-based INHOPE organisation is an
example of industry and community bodies underpinning government action
against child pornography.
Apart from community awareness, it operates a
hotline for reporting illegal online material. Its site provides a
useful starting point for study of hotlines.
The US task
force on Tools & Strategies for Protecting Kids From Pornography
& Their Applicability to Other Inappropriate Internet Content,
established by the National Research Council in 2000, continues its
investigations.
Meanwhile the
US Commission on Online Child
Protection (COPA
Commission), noted on the preceding page of this guide, will wind up
shortly after disappointing the filter lobby by failing to endorse the
hype about technological quick fixes.
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