Sunday, 19 October 2008

Tweed River Art

Bill, by Robert Hannaford, winner of the 1990 Doug Moran National Portrait Prize

Tweed River Art Gallery

Want to know what Rudd is actually promising the bankers and how much of your money will be protected?


Here are the bills currently before the Australian Federal Parliament as markets around the world continue to yo-yo alarmingly:

Financial Claims Scheme (General Insurers) Levy Bill 2008
C2008B00246
Date Published: 16/10/2008
http://www.comlaw.gov.au/ComLaw/Legislation/Bills1.nsf/all/search/DF25DBE18DB54CA5CA2574E300081FA3?OpenDocument

Financial System Legislation Amendment (Financial Claims Scheme and Other
Measures) Bill 2008
C2008B00244
Date Published: 16/10/2008
http://www.comlaw.gov.au/ComLaw/Legislation/Bills1.nsf/all/search/601F2E6D69AD9839CA2574E30006F1B1?OpenDocument

Saturday, 18 October 2008

ACT Elections Virtual Tally Room and NSW By-elections Virtual Tally Room: 18 October 2008

Because more than a few people on the NSW North Coast have family in the Australian Capital Territory or other parts of New South Wales, here are links for the online tally rooms:

*ACT Electoral Commission 2008 Tally Room
2008 Election page


*NSW Electoral Commission 2008 Virtual Tally Room

State By-elections day - Port Macquarie, Ryde, Cabramatta and Lakemba
Polls close at 6pm and preliminary counting results should begin to post sometime after 6.30pm.

*Antony Green's elections coverage (including live results) here.

Stephen Conroy lies and Kevin Rudd supports these lies with his silence

Did anybody bother to count the number of times that the Federal Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, Stephen Conroy, assured Australians that they would have the option of 'opting out' of any Internet ISP filtering scheme the Rudd Government foolishly put in place?

Hands up the number of people who telephoned the Minister's office and were also told that they could 'opt out' of ISP filtering?

Well it seems as though we have all been lied to by an arrogant Labor minister in an increasingly paternalistic Rudd Government.

Global Voices Advocacy on Friday:

The issue of internet censorship generally involves countries deemed non-democratic or "repressive" (something I discuss in my new book, The Blogging Revolution.) We regularly read reports about the regimes in China or Iran blocking countless "subversive" websites for overtly political gain.

Alas, a growing number of nations in the West are examining the possibility of censoring sites that allegedly harm society. France and Germany are leading the way and the United States is not far behind.

We can now add Australia to the list.

Computer World reported on 13 October 2008:

Australians will be unable to opt-out of the government's pending Internet content filtering scheme, and will instead be placed on a watered-down blacklist, experts say.

Under the government's $125.8 million Plan for Cyber-Safety, users can switch between two blacklists which block content inappropriate for children, and a separate list which blocks illegal material.

Pundits say consumers have been lulled into believing the opt-out proviso would remove content filtering altogether.

The government will iron-out policy and implementation of the Internet content filtering software following an upcoming trial of the technology, according to the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy.

A spokesman for Communications Minister Stephen Conroy said the filters will be mandatory for all Australians.

"Labor's plan for cyber-safety will require ISPs to offer a clean feed Internet service to all homes, schools and public Internet points accessible by children," Marshall said.

"The upcoming field pilot of ISP filtering technology will look at various aspects of filtering, including effectiveness, ease of circumvention, the impact on internet access speeds and cost."

Internet Service Providers (ISPs) contacted by Computerworld say blanket content filtering will cripple Internet speeds because the technology is not up to scratch............

Newton said advisers to Minister Conroy have told ISPs that Internet content filtering will be mandatory for all users.

The government reported it does not expected to prescribe which filtering technologies ISPs can use, and will only set blacklists of filtered content, supplied by the Australia Communications and Media Authority (ACMA).

EFA chair Dale Clapperton said in a previous article that Internet content filtering could lead to censorship of drugs, political dissident and other legal freedoms.

"Once the public has allowed the system to be established, it is much easier to block other material," Clapperton said.

According to preliminary trials, the best Internet content filters would incorrectly block about 10,000 Web pages from one million.

But wait for it - here's the anomaly according to The Australian:

THE federal Government says it may be flexible with mobile internet providers in its mandatory ISP filtering policy....

Telstra spokesman Andrew Maiden said network filters were becoming increasingly difficult for carriers to install as more phones had the smarts needed to let users explore beyond the confines of their carrier's "walled garden", where content was much easier to control.

ZNet reported last Tuesday:

Internet service providers (ISPs) are sitting on the fence on whether to participate in the government's upcoming live trial for ISP-level filtering of undesirable internet content, with their involvement depending heavily on the terms of the trial.

Communications Minister Stephen Conroy is set to kick off the expressions of interest process for the live trial before the end of this month, following the completion earlier in the year of testing and review of content filtering software, the results of which were published in July. He faces concerns on costs and performance consequences of filtering measures.

NB:

* Don't bother trying to access Senator Conroy's January 2008 media release in which he promised the 'opt out' feature in his Internet censorship proposal - you will receive a 404 notice and immediately be re-directed to http://www.minister.dbcde.gov.au/ and surprise, surprise, media release 70 is no longer to be found.

Nor can one find his reported media release of 30-31 December 2007 on the same subject.

* No Clean Feed (which protests Minister Conroy's plan) is currently receiving complaints that the NSW Government is blocking its website. I can verify that entering this site will frequently see Internet Explorer close it within a minute.

If Stephen Conroy holds dual citizenship - it's time Kevin Rudd advised this little dictator to go home before he loses the electoral base the Prime Minister needs to get re-elected in 2010.

NSW Tree Farmer of the Year hails from the North Coast

Old Bonalbo farmer Rod Stanford didn't realise managing a plantation would grow into such a major commitment, but his hard work has paid off, not in timber just yet – that will take another 15 years or so – but in the form of a prestigious award.
On Monday Rod was presented with the NSW Tree Farmer of the Year award from the Australian Forest Growers, who said Rod's management of the plantation was an example to other farmers of how to do it right.
Rod's 110-hectare farm is home to a plantation of three select eucalypt species – an ironbark, a red mahogany and a white mahogany. He has planted trees in steep and difficult areas that are less suitable for agriculture and as a result has begun to halt erosion as well as provide habitat for a range of native wildlife from wallabies to squirrel gliders. He also holds field days to share his ideas and knowledge with his neighbours and encourage sustainable plantation management.

Well done and well deserved, Rod.

An alternative view of the earth and a new word

Most dastardly quotes of the week + The hoi polloi assess 'Truffles' Turnbull

“Obviously we want to work towards alleviating the pressure on the Australian people,” Mr Joyce told 2GB Radio today. “I do have a concern that if you pay people in lump sums it can end up against the wall, and we don’t want that.“People go to work every day to pay their taxes, and they don’t like seeing it end up in poker machines or plasma TVs.”
Senator Barnaby Joyce, Nationals leader in the Senate, quoted in The Australian last Tuesday on the subject of the December lumpsum payments.

But Senator Joyce said the money could be wasted on Christmas presents..."I'm worried about when big chunks of money turn up in one fell swoop just before Christmas, because a couple of weeks later you see a lot of Australia's $10 billion scattered around the floor with 'Made in China' on the back."
Senator Barnaby Joyce quoted in News.com.au on the same subject.


Portrait of the dozy dastard from the National Museum of Australia

What can't Malcolm do?

Not only did Malcolm Turnbull think up "all the good ideas" (October 16) that Kevin Rudd has being putting into action lately, he also invented the internet, Microsoft and Google, put unmanned spacecraft on Mars, walked on the moon, cured cervical cancer and won World War II singlehandedly.
Not bad for a bloke who started out in life as the son of poor black sharecroppers born in a cardboard box on the lip of an active volcano outside downtown Vaucluse.

Ross Sharp of Toowong (Qld) in The Sydney Morning Herald yesterday