Saturday 9 May 2009

Dodo duds again, ACCC pounces and ISPs have started to filter the Australian Internet


On 7 May 2009 Computer World reported:

Dodo has been ordered to refund customers after charging almost double fees for plans advertised as free.
The discount telco was slapped with the penalty following an investigation by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) of its '"Free $29.90 Mobility Cap Plans" which promised customers a free Eee-PC, fuel or cash.
The regulator found the telco had deceived customers by advertising the gifts as free when comparable standard plans were up to $30 a month cheaper.......
Dodo has been
blamed for a record spike in telecommunications complaints to the industry regulator, and was slapped with a $147,000 fine last last year for breaching the Do Not Call register.

According to the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman 2008 Annual Report:

• We received 149 742 complaints, an almost 50 per cent increase on the year before.
• Each complaint raised one or more issues. This year we dealt with 268 645 issues
– a 61.0 per cent increase on the year before.
• Landline service issues increased by 77.7 per cent.
• Mobile service issues increased by 58.3 per cent.
• Internet service issues increased by 32.3 per cent.
• 91 per cent of the people who complained were consumers.
Eight per cent were small businesses.

Trying to decide on your next Internet provider?
Whirlpool hosts a number of forums and a
Broadband Choice ISP Directory.

ISPs you might want to avoid just now because they are
gearing up for the Rudd Governmnet live trial of its mandatory national censorship scheme:
Nelson Bay Online, OMNIConnect, Primus Communications, Highway 1, Netforce, Webshield, Optus and Tech2U (most will be starting to filter by 8-11 May 2009 and last already filtering).

An idea whose time has come?


After chocking on fumes behind an old slow ute on the road this week, my thoughts turned to new vehicles.

I was pleased to note that US Democrats are considering a cash for clunkers program.
The US House proposal doesn't go far enough but the Senate version is much better in that the replacement car must get 25% more mileage for fuel consumed than the clunker it replaces.

Australia does not appear to be giving serious thought to a buyback of old energy inefficient cars scheme.
Instead the Rudd Government plans to give billions to the big car manufacturers in the hope that they will increase the production of green cars.

For every litre of petrol used in a motor vehicle 2.5 kilograms of carbon dioxide is released from the exhaust according to an Australian Energy Web Fact Sheet.

Perhaps it is time that the Federal Government considered a true consumer-driven response to greenhouse gas reduction and ran a pilot program of 'cash for clunkers' in Australia.

Here is an NRMA list of fuel efficient car makes and models based on a 5.5 litre per 100kms threshold:


MakeModelVariantBody StyleEngine DisplacementYear
AudiA3Sportback 1.9 TDi e (8P)5 door hatchback1.9TD2008 - current
CitroenBerlingoII HDi (M59)2 Door Panelvan1.6TD2008 - current
CitroenC3HDi Exclusive5 door hatchback1.6TD2007 - current
CitroenC4SX 1.6 HDi5 door hatchback1.6TD2006 - current
CitroenC4SX 1.6 HDi EGS5 door hatchback1.6TD2007 - current
DaihatsuCharadeAll3 door hatchback1.0L2003 - 2005
DaihatsuSirionAll5 door hatchback1.0L2002 - 2005
Fiat500Lounge3 door hatchback1.3TD2008 - current
Fiat500Pop3 door hatchback1.2L2008 - current
Fiat500Pop3 door hatchback1.3TD2008 - current
FiatPuntoDynamic5 door hatchback1.3TD2006 - current
FiatPuntoEmotion5 door hatchback1.9TD2006 - current
HondaCivicHybrid (7th gen)4 door sedan1.3L hybrid2004 - 2006
HondaCivicHybrid (8th gen)4 door sedan1.3L hybrid2006 - 2007
HondaCivicHybrid (8th gen MY07)4 door sedan1.3L hybrid2007 - current
HondaInsightHybrid3 door hatchback1.0L hybrid2001 - 2004
Hyundaii30SX CRDI (FD)5 door hatchback1.6TD2007 - current
Hyundaii30SLX CRDI (FD MY09)5 door hatchback1.6TD2007 - current
Hyundaii30SLX CRDI (FD)5 door hatchback1.6TD2007 - current
Hyundaii30SLX CRDI (FD MY09)5 door hatchback1.6TD2007 - current
Hyundaii30cwSX CRDI (FD)4 door wagon1.6TD2009 - current
Mercedes-BenzA180 CDIAvantgarde5 door hatchback2.0TD2008 - current
Mercedes-BenzA180 CDIClassic5 door hatchback2.0TD2008 - current
Mercedes-BenzA180 CDIElegance5 door hatchback2.0TD2008 - current
Peugeot207XT HDI3 door hatchback1.6TD2007 - current
Peugeot207Le Mans HDi3 door hatchback1.6TD2008 - current
Peugeot207XT Touring HDi4 door wagon1.6TD2007 - current
Peugeot307XS HDI5 door hatchback1.6TD2005 - 2008
Peugeot307XS HDI 1.6 Touring4 door wagon1.6TD2005 - 2008
Peugeot307XSR HDI5 door hatchback1.6TD2005 - 2005
Peugeot307XSR HDI Touring4 door wagon1.6TD2005 - 2005
Peugeot308XS HDI5 door hatchback1.6TD2008 - current
RenaultKangooIntegral (X76)2 door van1.5TD2008 - current
SkodaRoomster1.9TDi (5J)4 door hatchback1.9TD2007 - current
SmartCity CoupePulse2 door coupe0.7TP2003 - 2004
SmartCabrioletPulse2 door cabriolet0.7TP2003 - 2004
SmartFortwoCoupe2 door coupe0.7TP2004 - 2008
SmartFortwoCabrio2 door cabriolet0.7TP2004 - 2008
SmartFortwo4512 door coupe1.0L2008 - current
SmartFortwoTurbo (451)2 door coupe1.0TP2008 - current
SmartFortwoCabrio (451)2 door convertible1.0L2008 - current
SmartFortwoCabrio Turbo (451)2 door convertible1.0TP2008 - current
SmartRoadsterAll2 door convertible0.7TD2003 - 2007
ToyotaPriusHybrid5 door hatchback1.5L hybrid2003 - current
ToyotaPriusI-Tech Hybrid5 door hatchback1.5L hybrid2003 - current
VolkswagenBeetleTDI3 door hatchback1.9TD2005 - current
VolkswagenGolf1.9TDI Comfortline5 door hatchback1.9TD2004 - 2008
VolkswagenGolf1.9TDI Trendline5 door hatchback1.9TD2004 - 2008
VolkswagenGolf1.9TDI Edition5 door hatchback1.9TD2008 - current
VolkswagenPoloTDI5 door hatchback1.9TD2005 - 2008
VolkswagenPoloPacific TDI5 door hatchback1.9TD2008 - current

Conroy's brown shirts are at it again............

Last Monday from Electronic Frontiers Australia*:
"Today EFA’s hosting provider received a Final Link Deletion Notice from ACMA, requiring us to remove a link to a page that contains images of aborted foetuses from our website. We have complied with this notice because it exposes our host to fines of up to $11,000 per day that we do not remove the link."
Advice to EFA on Twitter is to create another page with a new link to this essentially political content website, as the received Link Deletion Notice only applies to the EFA page specifically mentioned in that Australian Communications and Media Authority notice.

Whack a mole, whack a mole, whack a mole..........

* Electronic Frontiers Australia Inc (EFA) is a non-profit national organisation concerned with the protection and promotion of the civil liberties of users of computer based communications systems and of those affected by their use. EFA was established in 1994, is independent of government and commerce, and is funded by membership subscriptions and donations from individuals and organisations with an altruistic interest in promoting civil liberties

Friday 8 May 2009

Even in paradise housing is a problem


Whenever visitors to the NSW North Coast talk about their holidays here they speak of how lucky we are to live in all this scenic diversity and of course we are.

However, the beautiful settings often hide from view realities that we share with other parts of New South Wales.

Although homelessness is relatively low compared to the metropolitan centres, by December 2008 rents were between $195-$285 per week for a 2 bedroom flat and between $300-$370 for a 3 bedroom house, with Richmond-Tweed separate house rents being the highest in the state outside of Sydney and Northern Rivers vacancy rates being comparable with Sydney.

Housing stress continues to be an issue according to the Northern Rivers Social Development Council, with around 40,000 people in the Page and Richmond electorates having disposable household incomes below the NSW median point.










Northern Rivers Social Development Council Dec 08 regional housing data
Click on graph to enlarge

Housing affordability is a big issue for many North Coast pensioners and the rising number of unemployed.
One has to hope that in Tuesday's federal budget, the Treasurer has taken note of concerns that any increase in the pension base rate may be eaten up by immediate rent increases.

Turning full circle........


The Daily Examiner is developing a bit of a reputation for having an erratic approach to what letters to the editor it actually prints in its letters column.

Some regular correspondents get to bore on and on with the same inevitable punchline, while other more infrequent letter writers sometimes can't get a word in for long periods.

One such writer was contacted by the newspaper recently and asked to give a quote or two about his recent sporting successes.

I'm told he took great delight in telling the journalist that when The Daily Examiner started to publish his letters he would talk about his own sporting activities.

A politically incorrect look at Influenza A (H1N1)....

David's humour found at Care2

Thursday 7 May 2009

Waving a flag for the good economic news


A fall in unemployment, 237,300 new jobs in April and fairly decent overall retail trade figures since December last year.
Am I allowed to wave a flag in celebration? For a steady-handed Australian government and a sensible business sector which for the most part ignored the media hype about our imminent destruction in the global financial crisis and Opposition hysterics about stimulus packages.

Maudie's Ex
Yamba

Guest Speak is a North Coast Voices segment allowing serious or satirical comment from NSW Northern Rivers residents. Email ncvguestpeak at live dot com dot au to submit comment for consideration.

Does Malcolm Turnbull have any credibility left?

Image from ABC TV 7.30 Report

According to Peter Martin writing on his blog today:

WAYNE Swan and Kevin Rudd have received a ringing endorsement of their $20 billion series of "cash splashes" as new evidence points to a four month-long shopping shopping spree unmatched in the developed world.

Retail sales figures for March point to a jump of 2.2 per cent in seasonally-adjusted spending, more than offsetting a dive of 2 per cent in February.

Since the first stimulus payout in December Australian retail spending has climbed an extraordinary 4.5 per cent, a result unmatched in the United States in which spending slumped 2.5 per cent, New Zealand in which spending slumped 1.7 per cent, and Canada and Japan in which spending slumped 3.1 per cent.

Only in the United Kingdom among other developed countries did spending increase in those four months and that was by 1.6 per cent, less than half of the Australian boost...


Leader of the Opposition Malcolm Turnbull's smug and misleading contribution on ABC TV 7.30 Report last night in which he:

a) called Kerry O'Brien a liar

MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well, Kerry, I don't think - you clearly haven't read the speech or ...

KERRY O'BRIEN: I did. And I watched most of it.

MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well I don't think you have.


b) went on to deny any effectiveness of the cash payments in the first Rudd Government stimulus package

MALCOLM TURNBULL: Kerry, there are no - Kerry, there is nobody - nobody has contended that anything more than 20 per cent of the December cash splash was spent. So 80 per cent was saved. The more that is saved, the less impact it has. It was only a week or so, wasn't it, that the International Monetary Fund's chief economist made the point that cash splashes are not effective because in times like this they tend to be saved? That's exactly what I said last December.

KERRY O'BRIEN: The Reserve Bank Board governor said as recently as yesterday, "The stance of monetary policy together with the substantial fiscal initiatives will provide support to domestic demand over the period ahead." By "fiscal initiatives supporting domestic demand" he's obviously referring to Mr Rudd's stimulus package?

MALCOLM TURNBULL: Well, Kerry, you can say that.

KERRY O'BRIEN: No, no, I'm not saying it. The Reserve Bank governor said it.


c) then managed the biggest porkie of the interview

MALCOLM TURNBULL: Yeah, Kerry, if I was Prime Minister today ...

KERRY O'BRIEN: Yes.

MALCOLM TURNBULL: ... more Australians would be employed, the economy would be stronger and general debt levels would be lower. And that is because we would not have spent money so recklessly and so ineffectively, so debt levels would be lower; we would not have talked up inflation and interest rates in 2008, so the economy would be stronger; and it follows, therefore, there would be more people in work and government revenues would be higher.

As ordinary workers and small business find it increasingly difficult to obtain credit, which bureaucrats still have those government credit cards?


MORE than 100,000 federal bureaucrats have been issued taxpayer-funded credit cards, posing a growing accountability nightmare for the Rudd Government ......A recent Auditor-General's report highlighted more than 268 instances of fraud or misuse of Government credit cards said Adelaide Now on 27 March 2009.

After coming to office the Rudd Government issued 240 new credit cards in the Foreign Affairs and Trade portfolio alone.

Heaven knows how many there are in the Department of Human Services, the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission - all of which were audited according to the ANAO 2007-08 annual report.

As for other federal portfolios and state government departments................

Australian Defence White Paper 2009 - having a bob each way


The community consultation report preceding the Defence White Paper 2009 had this summary of the Australian-United States Alliance:
The Panel found that there is general public acceptance that the US Alliance is critical to Australia's security and that the assistance of the US would be necessary to defend Australia against a direct attack by a major power.
There is also an increasing appreciation of the high- end capability benefits that Australia derives from this relationship.
A number of people commented that, although Australian governments have made relatively limited ADF contributions to Coalition operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, Australia would be expected to make a much larger contribution to any high intensity conflict in the Asia Pacific region and continue to take the principal role in our immediate region.
Various individuals and groups opposed certain aspects of the Alliance, particularly: Australia's support for the US-led invasion of Iraq; Australia's association, through our Joint Facilities at Pine Gap, with the US Missile Defence program; the increasing financial burden of maintaining interoperability with high end US capabilities; and that ADF acquisition of high end capabilities was seen to be indicative of Australia's intent to continue to support high intensity, US led, conflicts.
Some also hold the view that Australia's support of certain US policies such as the war in Iraq and missile defence has diminished Australia's international reputation and, in the views of some people, made it a target of terrorism.
These observations should be contrasted with the views expressed by a large majority of Australians of the continuing value of the Australian / US relationship. 2

As a society we continue to have a bob each way on the subject of Teh United States of Big Bullies and Rapacious Spivs.

Key findings in the community consultation phase are here and final version of the white paper Defending Australia in the Asia-Pacific Century: Force 2030 is here
The final version holds few surprises and continues to see the United States as our saviour in times of trouble while broadly committing to the usual uncritical support of US foreign policy.

Like the Americans our defence force types are looking to create a cyber warfare capability, but my personal favourite is this wee bawbee which ticks off on many Howard-era dog whistles:
1.10 We have also seen the more evident emergence over the past decade of new areas of risk, such as cyber warfare, space warfare and the remote possibility that weapons of mass destruction (WMD) might be borne directly to Australia by long-range ballistic missiles launched short of a nuclear war - more of a risk during the Cold War - or by terrorist groups that might seek access to such destructive weapons.

And the irony of this statement does not go unnoticed given that the Rudd Government has this week deferred the proposed national emission trading scheme:
4.63 The main effort against such developments will of course need to be undertaken through coordinated international climate change mitigation and economic assistance strategies,and concerted international action to assure energy supply and distribution, which will need to be at the forefront of Australia's policy responses.