Tag Archives: acta

Australia goes cold on ACTA

WRC559.com
28/06/2012

This dead cat won’t even bounce properly

By Richard Chirgwin

Another bit of flesh dropped off the decaying zombie that is ACTA, with the Australian parliamentary Treaties Committee recommending that ratification be deferred – partly because of its near-collapse in Europe.

The committee states that ACTA should not be ratified until a range of conditions, including a cost-benefit analysis, are met.

Committee chair Kelvin Thomson says, in the committee’s media statement outlines concerns including: a lack of clarity in the text; insufficient protection for individuals; “and ACTA’s potential to shift the balance in the interpretation of copyright law, intellectual property law and patent law”.

He also notes the unfavourable reception that ACTA has received internationally. The ratification process in the EU, for example, has stalled. “The international reaction to ACTA, which, without exception, comes from countries which the Committee considers would have the same interests as Australia, must also be taken into consideration,” Thomson said.

As well as the call for a cost-benefit analysis, the committee says ACTA ratification should be delayed until the current Australian Law Reform Commission inquiry into copyright is completed, and the text of the treaty is clarified.

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SOPA OR CISPA – Internet Censorship Gets A New Name

from Joe Wright, Activist Post:

After nearly unprecedented pushback against bills SOPA and PIPA, their apparent defeat cannot yet be claimed. Most skeptics presumed that the defeat of the aforementioned would only serve to offer a compromised “SOPA light” at some point to circumvent criticism over government censorship. Well, it didn’t take long. In addition to OPEN and ACTA to combat supposed piracy issues in the U.S. and Europe respectively, we now have been presented with a full-on fascist template for Internet control where government and private corporations will work hand in hand under the very broad definition of cybersecurity.

Read More @ Activist Post

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Bye, bye, privacy. Canada introduces online-spying bill

Published: 15 February, 2012, 03:04
Pressforactivism.com

Move over, SOPA and say your prayers, PIPA. There’s a new bill in the works that, if passed, will pull the plug on how the Internet is used in Canada.

Lawmakers in the Great White North are debating a bill that will pulverize what’s left of online privacy for Canucks.

The Investigative Powers for the 21st Century Act (Bill C-51) is legislation that isn’t new to Canadian Parliament, but after a series of additions and other changes, lawmakers there are expected to begin discussion on it this week. If passed, law enforcement there will be able to monitor all Internet and telephone activity from anyone, anywhere in the country, without having to obtain a warrant.

According to the Calgary Herald out of the province of Alberta, a Conservative-majority government is likely to pass the bill.

Vic Toews, Canada’s minister of public safety, thinks the bill is necessary for the welfare of the nation. “We are proposing to bring to measure, to bring laws into the twenty-first century and provide police with the lawful tools that they need,” he pleads.

Opponents of Toews, however, say that the bill will do far more harm than good.

“I know the criminal justice system is constantly looking for information about criminals, child pornographers etc, but at the same time it seems like an invasion of everyone’s personal information,” University student Jared Exner tells CTV. He’s used the Internet his whole life and is aware of legislation already in place to thwart such things as child pornography. If Bill C-51 is passed, however, anyone operating on the Web or on a mobile device in Canada will be subject to instantaneous, no-questions-asked surveillance.

Towes insists that it’s an issue that’s either black or white. Canadians, says the minister, “can either stand with us or with the child pornographers.”

In an earlier form, the bill died in Parliament along with a provision that allowed “warrantless access” for authorities. A campaign managed to help kill that addendum, but it is back once again. If passed, authorities will be able to view anything, anytime, and some fear that it was install Big Brother over all too broad of a medium.

“It could include anything from email addresses to IP addresses and cellphone-identified numbers,” University of Ottawa law professor Michael Geist tells the Winnipeg Free Press. “The ability to use that kind of information in a highly sensitive way without any real oversight is very real.”

By forcing Internet and cell providers to handle IP addresses, profiles can be constructed of any Canuck that details practically every move they make online. Geist thinks of that as way too encompassing of a regulation and questions why it is even needed.

“One thing (the government) has never provided is the evidence to show how the current set of laws has stymied investigations or created a significant barrier to ensure that we’re safe in Canada,” he adds.

Others fear that if Canadian officials have the power to monitor in real-time without warrants, the all-watching eye will seemingly cease civil liberties.

“How can we trust them not to use private information to intimidate law abiding Canadians to protest a pipeline, or protest pension cut?” asks Francis Scarpaleggia, a Liberal MP for Lac-Saint-Loius. Like Exner, Scarpaleggia is opposed to the bill. New Democratic Party member and digital critic Charlie Angus also is against it, and warns Parliament that, if passed, it will turn each Canadian’s cell-phone into “an electronic prisoner’s bracelet.”

“I say to Vic Toews, ‘Stop hiding behind the boogey man. Stop using the boogey man to attack the basic rights of Canadian citizens,’” adds Angus. “Is Vic Toews saying that every privacy commissioner in this country who has raised concerns about this government’s attempt to erase the basic obligation to get a judicial warrant, is he saying that they’re for child pornography?”

Nearly 100,000 Canadians have so far signed a “stop online spying” petition started by openmedia.ca, a net neutrality lobby group.

Source

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SOPA & PIPA Was Just An Act.

WRC559.com
30/01/2012
 
 

As you are most aware already SOPA and PIPA were both halted from being brought into law in the uprising of a few huge giants on the internet including Wikileaks and Google its self, in an attempt to stop censorship on the internet. However what many don’t know is that many countries around the world are already censoring and shutting down / blocking access to certain websites. They are just pretty much throwing it in your face now, telling you that they have plans to censor the internet and curb internet Copyright…

 

Now ACTA / SOPA / PIPA are only names for what they plan to bring in, The darker deeper secret behind the internet is what some call Internet2. Built by the worlds biggest consortium of Universities the internet needs to be censored if not shutdown to protect national security. What they mean is we want to censor what information you have access to because we are F**kin* you over. Now a huge talk behind shutting down the internet lays behind civil unrest in a country as such what happened in Egypt. It’s widely unknown by many but every country has a “key” in which they can turn that will shut of the internet access, it’s called ISP’s, With tech giants such as OPTUS and Telstra in Australia it would not take much to curb the free access of information on the internet. In fact that is what is going to happen with many legislations coming into play in the coming future. To back it up NBN Co, is a huge backbone to the Internet2 consortium however. National Broadband Network sounds so much nicer in a way to get access to the internet to everyone’s house in Australia as they roll over to this complete control grid. Yes it sounds way to far-fetched as my viewers have told me many times. However information is widely available detailing their plans I am just putting it into an easier way to explain for you guys.

 

In the mean time, Share this link around – Get others politicily active and help others find out the truth behind the plans to shut down the internet. If you don’t not act against it say good-bye to your internet. Please remember… As goes for anything, they will introduce a legislation – Get the publics backlash – Forget about it for a while.. Then finally pass it in the attempt that you have forgotten about it. Well not here at WRC559.com. Join The Fight.

Just Say No To ACTA:

Beyond SOPA: The Past, Present and Future of Internet Censorship:


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