Download - Mandatory ISP filtering and the rule of law
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Mandatory ISP filtering and the rule of law
Nicolas Suzor24 March 2009
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Many concerns with Labor's proposal
Technical feasibility and efficacy Uncertain definition and application Constraints on freedom of speech Economic efficiency Lack of clarity, transparency and due process
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The rule of law
… an essentially contested concept ...
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The rule of law: A legal restraint upon the exercise of power
Government is bound by the law as it stands The law ought only to be changed through
legitimate means
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A legal restraint upon the exercise of power
Labor does not have a majority in the upper house Needs the support of the opposition or the
crossbenchers
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A legal restraint upon the exercise of power
“the Minister is still looking into whether the filter would require
legislation, or could be implemented through other means.”
ABC News, “Senate poses tough hurdle for internet filtering plan”http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2009/02/27/2503830.htm
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Non-legislated filtering: 'voluntary' filtering schemes
Voluntary does not mean 'opt-in'.
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Non-legislated filtering: 'voluntary' filtering schemes
Over 90% users blocked in UK (IWF blacklist) 99% in Denmark (DNS blacklisting) Finland (DNS blacklisting) All major Canadian ISPs (URL blacklisting) Some implementation Norway, Sweden,
Netherlands , Switzerland, Italy Irene Graham,”ISP 'Voluntary' / Mandatory filtering”
http://libertus.net/censor/ispfiltering-gl.html
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A voluntary scheme in Australia?
Would require support from Internet Industry Association (IIA)
Or a replacement of the IIA Code of Conduct with an 'industry standard' Legally difficult; disallowable; requires 'deficiency'
Or judicial action Unlikely given current law
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'Voluntary' schemes
Bypasses democratic legislative process Same result, less transparency and oversight Conflicts with values of the rule of law:
laws ought to be legitimately made and enforced
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The rule of law: A requirement of formal legality
“public, prospective laws, with the quality of generality, equality of
application, and certainty” Brian Tamanaha, On the Rule of Law, p 119
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Formal legality and the blacklist
Unlike classification of books and broadcast media, the ACMA blacklist is secret.
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Formal legality and the blacklist
Blacklists leak.
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Formal legality and the blacklist
Senator Conroy threatened Australians who were caught distributing the leaked blacklist with criminal prosecution:
“ACMA is investigating this matter and is considering a range of possible actions it
may take including referral to the Australian Federal Police. Any Australian involved in making this content publicly
available would be at serious risk of criminal prosecution.”
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Formal legality and the blacklist
We are not allowed to examine the blacklist.
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Formal legality and the blacklist
We are not allowed to link to URLs on the blacklist.
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Formal legality and the blacklist
The ideal of rule of law involves clear, published, understandable laws.
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The rule of law: “a rule of law, not man” (sic)
government “shielded from the familiar human weaknesses of bias, passion, prejudice, error, ignorance,
cupidity, or whim.” Tamanaha, On the Rule of Law, 122.
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The rule of law and the need for transparency and oversight
We should expect certain standards of accountability
The blacklist is developed and enforced in (relative)secrecy.
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Formal legality and the blacklist
Unlike print and broadcast classification regimes, there are no methods of review and no oversight
provisions.
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Formal legality and the blacklist
These problems are compounded where responsibility for creating and maintaining the
blacklist is outsourced.
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Formal legality and the blacklist
Democracy requires public scrutiny.
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The rule of law
A formal process for implementing laws.
Clear, published, understandable laws.
Accountable and responsible enforcement.