Sunday, 15 March 2009

Won't tell, na, na, na,na, na! says Garrett



Photograph from Google Images


Attempts by the Greens to obtain information on Japanese whaling gathered by the Australian patrol ship Oceanic Viking last year have been rejected.
The Environment Department has ruled that releasing images or data would "adversely affect the confidence Japan would have in our diplomatic efforts to achieve an end to 'scientific whaling' ".

Rather an interesting reason.

It would appear that Environment Minister Peter Garrett and his department are withholding information not because of something as important as national security or for operational reasons, but because the information and surveillance images would too graphically show just how 'unscientific' Japanese whaling in the Antarctic really is.

Bending over backwards would be a mild description of the Rudd Government's current attitude to Japanese demands.

Senator Conroy's Internet filtering gets another bad review


According to IT News last Thursday:

Cross "fighting terrorism" off the list of reasons Senator Stephen Conroy wants to introduce mandatory ISP-level Internet Filtering.

A new report penned by Tim Stevens and Dr Peter Neumann for the International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political Violence (ICSR) assesses the pros and cons of various types of Internet Filtering and finds them ineffective in the fight against terror.

"Most governments have focused on technical solutions, believing that removing or blocking radicalising material on the internet will solve the problem," the report states.

"Yet, this report shows that any strategy that relies on reducing the availability of content alone is bound to be crude, expensive and counterproductive."

The report went into some detail around the ineffective nature of most types of Internet Filtering.

IP filtering, in which the IP address of a questionable site is blocked, suffers from misfiring, the report said.

"Problems with this method of filtering arise because some web hosts - each with a single IP address - provide a variety of services or host many websites with different domain names, which means that all these acceptable services and sites will be blocked as well. While cheap and easy to implement, its propensity for 'over-blocking' makes IP filtering a very crude method of interdicting banned material."

In describing the role of the Internet, this report identifies what the Rudd Government (and government generally) probably fears most about cyberspace:


Reporters Without Borders is also less than impressed with the Rudd-Conroy censorship plan and in its 12 March 2009 document Internet Enemies has placed Australia on the group's watch list.

Bilambil Public School - online since 1998

I have discovered yet another Northern Rivers primary school proudly online, as part of the Aussie School House - Schools on the Web ACCE project.

Bilambil Public School, established in 1898, has a
great website and an impressive list of awards.

List of other participating schools can be found
here.
Picture of Bilambil area, Northern NSW

Stephen Mayne out of the barrier and racing

More freedom for The Mayne Report from 9 March 2009.

"The 4-year non-compete agreement with Crikey expired on Monday so we're now able to write about politics and media, plus send emails to more than 500 people at a time and freelance material anywhere we like. However, the focus will still very much remain on delivering a strong weekly corporate governance newsletter and this latest edition has plenty of juicy material."

Go, Stevo!