Taking on The Man - BitTorrent fight heats up
Dec 3, 2008 6:56 PM | 1 Comment

Anti-censorship protests planned


Speaking of ISPs as traffic cops, the movement against the government’s censorship scheme seems to be gathering steam. I’ve had my inbox inundated with calls to action against the proposed filtering scheme. Nocensorship.info, getup.org.au and others are organising protests against the proposed scheme. Nocensorship.info is even organising a street protest for December 13 (it’s a Saturday) and there are rally locations in all the state capitals.

I have no idea what kind of turnout they will get – but it’s probably enough to bring the issue to the attention of the evening news (which will undoubtedly do a horrible job of explaining the problem). But it will be something at least, and it will raise pressure on Conroy to drop the plan, which can only be a good thing.



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Comments: 1
gyro666
Jan 12, 2009 6:06 PM
...."I think AFACT would love to set itself up as judge, jury and executioner....people are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Therefore, iiNet has no right or authority to take punitive action against them merely on the say-so of a copyright agency like AFACT. "

I totally agree with your comment, and would add the contention that this scandalously vexations litigation is couched in is a monopolistic greed, with little or no other tangible benefit to the consumer.

I find it increasingly infuriating that we, the average consumer, are constantly being manipulated by a growing proliferation of self serving organizations professing to be doing "a public service"

If the likes of AFACT, and Senator Conroy continue unimpeded in their efforts to disassemble the internet, it can only embolden other self serving groups to take action, and who knows where it will end.

Since there is no human rights legislation in this country, the bottom feeding parasitic lifeforms in the legal profession can satisfy themselves they are acting with impunity by not impinging on any individuals rights, because WE DO NOT HAVE ANY.

Just consider for one second, if all the money spent on legal action was put towards REDUCING PRICES, it would make it less economical to pirate the content they so vigorously defend, and then both parties can dispensary up their own orifices with no reason to exist.

There has never been a more urgent need for the silent majority to speak up, and silence the cynical overly vocal minorities that seek to impose themselves on every aspect of our lives.
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