Factsheets

Your Internet filtering FAQs

Oct 29 01:58pm

- With no response so far from Senator Stephen Conroy,Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, we went to the experts to find out your most frequently asked questions about the government's internet filtering plan.

Liam Tung from ZDNet has been talking to ISPs and IT industry professionals about the filters and their impact. >> Read ZDNet's story here

Share your opinion on our Soapbox here

1) How would ISPs be affected by filtering?

Until ISPs actually test the filters, which is the next stage the government wants to address, it is not fully known how it would impact them.

It could be expected that ISPs would need to redesign networks to enable content to be filtered in the way the government wants. High-end filters suitable for an ISP are also very expensive to maintain.

There is also concern that filters would have a negative effect on network performance, however no one knows yet to what extent this would occur or how much this would affect end-users in terms of slowing down access to the Internet.

2) How popular is Peer to Peer sharing in Australia - and is this on the increase?

Peer to peer or "P2P" services such as BitTorrent are popular in Australia, as they are in the rest of the world. In discussions I have had with a network engineer at the ISP Internode, general P2P traffic represents between 35 to 55 per cent of an ISP's network traffic. It is the most intensive protocol used today.

Its use is on the increase because people find it handy to share files across, whether that's sound, images, videos or documents. While it has become associated with sharing illegally downloaded music files, it is also used for legitimate business and general purposes, for example sharing movies, games, and documents.

3) How does ZDNet gauge the general mood for this legislation (are most for or against and why)?

Most people from what I can see are against mandatory ISP filtering. The arguments are both ideological and technical.

On the ideological front, people do not want the internet to be censored or controlled by a government. This type of filtering has been associated with "only the most repressive regimes in the world," according to the Internet Industry Association.

Readers have also said that the government only wants to be seen as "doing something good" to tackle the issue of child pornography; and that filtering would do nothing but ruin the internet for those users who haven't done anything wrong.

On the technical side, current filtering technologies cannot deliver the government's desired "clean feed". There are two parts to the clean feed: identifying content deemed inappropriate and then blocking that content.

While the filters recently tested could detect and block content on standard web traffic - called "HTTP" protocol - none of the technologies tested could inspect content on instant message or peer to peer networks, which make up the bulk of an ISP's traffic and can be used to share what the government deems inappropriate content.

No one seems to be arguing against the idea of protecting children, but there are strong arguments against doing it with technology. Most believe that educating children to make mature choices would produce the best result.

 

 

12 Comments Report Abuse
1. d_potter09 - Oct 29 03:56pm
Why would the government censor the internet,
1) we are now becoming to much like china with the government decided what is right and what is wrong on the internet
2) this is one of the few free media's that are left in this world, and now the government want to take it away.
IS THAT NOT WRONG?
2. d_potter09 - Oct 29 03:59pm
By the way as well, is this not becoming a big brother system of government, now don't get me wrong Kevin Rudd has done a lot for this country, but deciding what we see is wrong!!!!
3. bronxtan - Oct 29 04:31pm
The Government fears what it cannot control nor understand. We have an incompetent communications minister with no qualifications what-so-ever in this field. Child porn does not exist on the Internet, it is punishable by death in some countries. This material is shared via secure networks.
4. blastwave@rocketmail.com - Oct 29 04:34pm
"The press is easier to strangle than to look in the eyes."
-- Winston Churchill

"Fear of corrupting the mind of the younger generation is the loftiest of cowardice."
-- Holbrook Jackson

"Censorship, like charity, should begin at home; but unlike charity, it should end there."
-- Clare Booth Luce
5. fsxt99 - Oct 29 05:03pm
Koshie and Conroy are tools if they think it would stop the perverts.
All this will do is drive them deeper underground and harder to find like the so called family in SA .
How about this for an idea....get the internet up and running like they promised in the election runup,
6. robmader - Oct 30 10:42am
Dont forget that available "filters" are easily bypassed via VPN - encrypting the data. This makes it harder for the police to track and near impossible to prosecute.

Nice one Conroy, make it harder to find and prosecute...
7. as.dolan - Nov 03 09:31pm
All news sites will be blocked due to filtering of words. That means we will loose freedom of speech. A lot of good education sight that help teenaged with problems will be blocked as well as the subject they talk about will be filtered. This has not been through threw. It will only stop the people
8. wisawooo - Nov 13 09:02am
i find it quite ironic how the governement wants to filter what happens on the internet, yet for some people in some places cant even get it in the first place because telstra is unwilling to expand or upgrade lines so people can actually get the internet.
9. gregaus123 - Nov 13 01:32pm
Well the kids wont be affected because they are still waiting for the laptops rudd promised before the election anyway so why bother filtering the internet if they cant even use it?
10. gregaus123 - Nov 13 01:33pm
""The state must declare the child to be the most precious treasure of the people. As long as the government is perceived as working for the benefit of the children, the people will happily endure almost any curtailment of liberty and almost any deprivation." – Adolf Hitler"
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