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Piracy Australia The Internet

Australia Pushes Ahead With Website Blocking In Piracy Fight 100

angry tapir writes As part of its crackdown on unauthorized downloading of copyright material, the Australian government will push ahead with the introduction of a scheme that will allow rights holders to apply for court orders to force ISPs to block websites. (Previously Slashdot noted that the Australian government had raised such a scheme as a possibility).
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Australia Pushes Ahead With Website Blocking In Piracy Fight

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  • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Wednesday December 10, 2014 @09:28PM (#48569295) Journal

    Look up "proxy", you simpering halfwits.

    • Re:Fucking Morons (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Mr0bvious ( 968303 ) on Wednesday December 10, 2014 @09:42PM (#48569343)

      They were considering punishing users (three strikes and you're out type shenanigans) but their popularity is sinking fast and I see this as an alternative that they're thinking "We know it won't work, and the public know this so they won't care, but we can say we're doing something to the interested industry lobby groups."

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

        You underestimate them. They want to become like the UK, where companies can block anything they don't like with a High Court order. As well as torrent sites many UK ISPs also block proxies and sites selling fake goods. The list is ever expanding. Since many of these sites are based outside the UK or run as non-profit they can't easily challenge the blocks.

        Basically, corporations now have the power to censor the internet in the UK. That's what they want in Australia too. Just wait, they will soon be blockin

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Don't worry, this is Australia... They'll just make it illegal to pay for an encrypted anonymous proxy or vpn service ;)

    • No, why? Let them do their thing, man! It's just another challenge to overcome. I don't see the problem.

      And don't call them halfwits... The halfwits and corrupt bastards are the people that vote for them. There is nothing halfwitted about winning...

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )
      Simpering halfwits? Look up "they control the routers in and out of the country" you simpering no-wit.
      • and how is that supposed to stop someone routing through a vpn or proxy? or are you suggesting they will go on a mad campaign to block the thousands if not hundreds of thousands of ways around it, not even chinas great wall has managed that.

        • Proxy - very easy - see the games network providers have played with DNS for an example of redirecting anything on a port to where you want it to go. If you think because I mentioned DNS it can't be done on another port then look up "transparent proxy" for a http example, or those fucking insane https "accelerator" boxes where users give their banking details to whoever owns and manufactures the "accelerator" boxes.
          VPN - there's a move to restrict those as part of the current mess that's being complained a
  • by GloomE ( 695185 ) on Wednesday December 10, 2014 @09:32PM (#48569305)
    This way they will end up with actual evidence of how useless these schemes are.
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      I for one am looking forward to .gov.au sites being blocked by court order because they contain copyright images being used without permission. [Rights holders, start your inspections now!]

    • by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Thursday December 11, 2014 @02:24AM (#48570363)

      Never underestimate a government's ability to keep doggedly charge forward with a policy even in the face of obvious failure. After all, we've been conducting a "war on poverty", "war on drugs", and more recently, a "war on terror" for many years without effective results. No, they'll just claim that they're not getting enough funding to do a proper job, or that new laws are needed to close loopholes.

      • After all, we've been conducting a "war on poverty", "war on drugs", and more recently, a "war on terror" for many years without effective results.

        What do you mean without result? The divide between rich and poor people is getting bigger every year, drug lords are making humongous amounts of money, because they're selling something that's in high demand, but unregulated and illegal, ensuring very healthy profit margins and for the war on terror, looking at the revelations of torture recently, Al-Qaeda couldn't have done a better marketing campaign themselves, which means more terrorists, which means more profits for arms manufacturers regardless which

      • by Anonymous Coward

        After all, we've been conducting a "war on poverty", "war on drugs", and more recently, a "war on terror" for many years without effective results.

        I can tell you the current Australian government has a "make more poverty" policy rather than a "war on poverty" policy.

        • I can tell you the current Australian government has a "make more poverty" policy rather than a "war on poverty" policy.

          Yes, blocking pirate movies is among the least offensive things this government has done since coming to power.

      • More like "War on Poor People/Pensioners","War on Small Business", "War on Manufacturing", "War on Wind Farms", "War on Students".

        But of course, the fact that this government has announced an intent to do this is almost certain death for the idea. They are so disorganised and so incompetent that they could never get it done.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Slippery Slope meet the Australian Government. This is going to be a wild ride all the way down.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re "Slippery Slope meet the Australian Government. This is going to be a wild ride all the way down."
      Yes the tracking of ip and files would be legal.
      The linking of an ip found to an isp and account would be legal.
      Sending a letter would be legal.
      Requesting who got the letters as part of discovery would be a free reverse look up to start finding accounts and files.
      Every step of keeping a web history would be legal for the security services, police to any court requesting or allowing discovery on the le
      • That VPN you suggest was already on the radar before this was announced. The Australian Government has been discussing blocking VPNs to stop those "cheaters" who are using Netflix etc instead of the local, very expensive, Fox cable network. The owner of that network, Murdoch, has been a cheerleader for the current Government so long as they do exactly what he wants.
  • took a few minutes to circumvent the block yesterday
    justfuckingoogleit

    https://proxybay.info/ [proxybay.info]

    take your choice

    • As of now, none of these work for me. Even over VPN.
      • by muphin ( 842524 )
        thats because TPB was raided and is now down, same with EZtv.it
        • by Khyber ( 864651 )

          You fucking idiot, TPB was back online within the hour it got raided.

          Magical things, 'mirror servers' can be. Perhaps you should fucking learn to utilize them.

          • Except that isn't the case. As reported on TorrentFreak those mirrror servers do let people access some of the older content but they aren't updated with new content. So they will become ever more useless if the main system isn't brought back online.
            • by Khyber ( 864651 )

              TorrentFreak doesn't run one of these mirrors - I do. I see all of the new content, including Windows 10 build leaks.

              Perhaps you should listen to someone actually involved with the stuff instead of a sensationalist reporting site.

          • by Fusen ( 841730 )

            Why are you so angry? Also, The Pirate Bay isn't "back" as per https://torrentfreak.com/can-p... [torrentfreak.com] - "Update: Just to be clear, thepiratebay.ee, thepiratebay.cr, thepiratebay.mobi and others are mirrors not affiliated with the original site. They serve old content (no new uploads) and are not TPB resurrections. If the site reappears it will be on the original .se domain."

            • by Khyber ( 864651 )

              "Update: Just to be clear, thepiratebay.ee, thepiratebay.cr, thepiratebay.mobi and others are mirrors not affiliated with the original site. They serve old content (no new uploads)"

              Except that is wrong. .cr has ALL the latest shit.

              Quit listening to sensationalist TorrentFreak, whom knows nothing about TPB. I run one of those mirrors. It's showing all new content down to fucking Windows 10 build leaks, and has been as of ONE HOUR after the primary site went down.

              You do understand that the only thing TPB lost

    • They aren't blocking anything yet, piratebay was offline because it was raided.....again.

  • I don't think this is half bad. Copyright holders need to go to court, rather than allowed to go straight to the ISP under previously proposed schemes.
    Of course this is ignoring other possible agendas... and we know the block is useless anyway, but that isn't the point.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The Australian federal government has already proven their departments can't be trusted when it comes to blocking sites e.g. they incorrectly blocked an IP address responsible for hosting multiple sites. They can't be trusted when it comes to limiting the scope of blocking. I don't see any information giving the web-site holder the option to contest the charges; defend their ability to stay online; or protect innocent sites caught up in a block whose scope is too wide

      The government is also proposing graduat

      • "The rights holders also expect the ISPs to foot all or part of the bill". From the FA "Cost of the scheme should be divided "fairly" between ISPs and rights holders." WTF - "fairly"??? Why is this the ISP's problem? What does it have to do with them? Why should they foot any part of the bill?
        • ISPs will have to foot part (probably the largest part) of the bill because of "campaign contributions", or whatever the correct term for legal bribery is Down Under.
    • Yes. Of all the plans floated so far (by either of the major parties over the past decade or more) this is the least worst.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Well, they could prevent all downloading of copyrighted material by blocking all sites with copyrighted material on them. That'd work...

  • Good luck with that (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 10, 2014 @09:47PM (#48569369)

    Australian here.

    This is all pretty hilarious, since Australian's are already being encouraged en masse to take up VPNs to get around geoblocking etc.

    http://www.choice.com.au/reviews-and-tests/computers-and-online/networking-and-internet/shopping-online/navigating-online-geoblocks/page/how-to-circumvent-geoblocks.aspx

    (Choice being one of the leading consumer advocate groups in Australia).

    We've been shafted by geoblocking / staggered releases (or non releases) and exclusive licensing locking up shows/movies for so long, that 'pirating' is basically a cultural norm here. People from all walks of life, from every cultural background do it. Louise CK explains it fairly well:

    http://www.kotaku.com.au/2014/06/louis-ck-explains-why-all-australians-pirate-things/

    We've already got 'mum and dad' users who know about VPNs (they don't know exactly what they are or how they work, but they know that they are a good idea).

    In other words, Australia as a nation is much better equipped to circumvent such trivial 'blocking' than your average nation.

    Also funny is the government's mandate to ISPs and content providers- they've got 120 days (over a holiday period too) to agree on something that has been argued about for the last...5 years.

    Expect this to fail spectacularly at every level.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 10, 2014 @09:51PM (#48569397)

      Here's some of the Louis CK transcript for those interested:

      "Like when I was in, ah, Australia, everybody told me that they watch my show. And uh... I figured that they must be getting old versions of it 'cause it doesn't air there - but they were watchin' the show like, the week before because the whole country... pirates, there."
      *interviewer laughs*
      "Here, weirdos pirate... there's not that many pirate here,"
      "Yeah..."
      "...but in Australia, Moms and Dads pirate video. Because we're not... letting them buy it. Because we're keeping it from them."
      "Oh yeah, really? Yeah?"
      "We have shows that have been on the air here for like, three years? And we won't even give them-- if they're given the option? Like... everybody in the world is like, "Take my fucking credit card and just let me have the thing and I'll pay, but if you're gonna be a pain in the ass... FUCK YOU, I can steal ALL of it! So the whole country of Australia rips TV. So when I learned this, so when I put my beacon special, one of the big important things to me was that it was globally available, right away... and they're happy to buy it. Right? So I told FX they should sell my show on my website. And they said that we can't do that because we can't let other countries see it before..."
      "Oh boy..."
      "And I'm, but the-- what they're doin', all those companies and this... piece of shit fuckin' company,"
      *interviewer laughter*
      "--that we're talkin' on right now? Is they're keepin' money out, it's a cage it's keepin' money out, it's not keepin' it in, right? They think they're keepin' money in, but they're keepin' it out."

      • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

        they don't want other countries to get it before through internet because they want to sell the show to the TELEVISION NETWORKS of the other countries. that's why they can't sell them online to anyone who wants to buy them.

        not to the viewers. but to the television networks - and they make those networks bid stupid amounts of money for the shows. they don't want to piss them (murdoc in case of australia?) off because of this lump sum money exchange program they got going on, with this lump sum money exchange

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 10, 2014 @10:33PM (#48569579)

    Blocking piracy websites isn't the endgame here. The bigger picture here is using the guise of piracy and the clout of media rights holders to force all ISP's to implement a system capable of blocking the whole of Australia from accessing specified content. Pair this with enforcing all records to be held for a minimum of two years and the Australian government has just staged a coup on the online community. With these two moves they can block and track anything in the future as they introduce ever restrictive laws. This isn't a move to prevent piracy, it's a thinly veiled step towards government enforced censorship of the entire internet within the country, and the Trans-Pacific Partnership will only hasten this.

    • No it is actually about selling out to donors who want copyright enforced brutally. You are looking for deep motives in a very shallow government. Murdoch wants this, Tony will provide.
      • Indeed. But that does not mean that phase 2 censorship will not come in soon afterwards.

        I think that the extent that Labor got burnt by the anti-censorship back lash will give the Liberals pause. Most of them don't know or care, but Turnbull does understand.

    • by jez9999 ( 618189 )

      This doesn't seem unqiue to Australia. It seems right in line with what The UK, France, the US, etc. are doing.

  • I'm convinced that all these hardline tactics by governments and corporations is only going to fuel a backlash which will be fought in the IETF Working Groups with the goal of end to end encryption and anonymization of all internet traffic. Oh I hope I live to see the day.
  • by ChunderDownunder ( 709234 ) on Thursday December 11, 2014 @01:07AM (#48570091)

    It all leads back to Rupert and his Foxtel service.

  • It has certainly stopped piracy dead everywhere else they've done it :|, Oh wait, the other thing, has had very little if any effect.
  • If the government and media companies REALLY want to stop piracy they need to make the content easier to legally acquire without needing to pay a lot of money for content you dont want. This applies to both new content and older content.

    Some examples of how the local industry makes it harder:
    1.Scorpion (2014 TV show). Channel 10 (local FTA network) aired up to episode 10 straight after the US airing. However, to see Episodes 11 and 12, you will have to wait for a few months. Episode 11 is already available

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