Two items of news from Australia which mirror similar stories from other countries in the West.
Kept under wraps until this morning [Mar 26], the site-blocking elements of the Copyright Amendment (Online Infringement) Bill 2015 are likely to please rights holders with their significant reach. The bill, which is set to cost telcos about $130,000 a year, contains no cap on the number of websites rights holders can request a judge to block in a single injunction.
Critics of the regime are likely to argue that having no cap on the scheme could result in what happened in India, where a number of legitimate websites were blocked, including Google services, when a judge agreed to block some 472 websites. An updated judgement fixed the error. But it appears consumers and rights groups won't be able to apply to a court to revoke blocks, as they are not listed as one of the types of parties that can do this.
The competition watchdog, the ACCC, and the communications regulator, the ACMA, are the only people envisaged by the government to be able to apply to revoke a block other than the people behind a blocked site, an internet service provider asked to block it, or a rights holder.
The Australian Parliament has passed a series of amendments to the country's Telecommunications Interception and Access Act 1979, requiring "telecommunications service providers to retain for two years telecommunications data (not content) prescribed by regulations". The Coalition government and Labor party joined forces to pass the laws, ignoring a number of last-minute amendments from the Greens and other senators.
The Register reports that Attorney-General George Brandis continues to misrepresent the data retention requirement:
Brandis told ABC Radio's AM program this morning that “nothing is different to the way it has been for the last 20 years or so”. Yet Telstra recently told a Parliamentary Committee that it doesn't record IP addresses or missed call records for users of its mobile networks. So Telstra is clearly being asked to do something new.
The AM interview we've linked to above is worth a listen because Brandis, six months into the metadata debate, still can't speak with authority on the subject. He jitters and struggles to articulate his position. At times he makes little sense, such as when asked why we need metadata retention when there are so many alternative communications media for ne'er-do-wells to use. His response is that criminals always break the law and will continue to do so despite the new legislation.
Left unsettled is the cost of metadata retention to ISPs, which recently led them to write an open letter to George Brandis. One report suggests a cost of AU$3.98 per subscriber per year.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 29 2015, @02:25AM
If they want websites blocked, there should be an actual court case, not just a judge approving of the censorship of a list of sites they hate. But due process is bad because it's inconvenient. Just like our rights vanish when they become inconvenient for cops, our rights also vanish when they become inconvenient to copyright thugs. The ends justify the means to them.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by anubi on Sunday March 29 2015, @02:32AM
And I bet they have convenient escape clauses that hold them harmless from blocking innocent websites.
Kinda reminds me of something I read in an old Charles Dickens novel about an elite who flat run over a child because he got in the elite's way.
The coalition between our Law-Makers and Lobbyists seem prone to do the same thing.
"Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]