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Colin Jacobs in, on and about the Internet
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Aug 26

The internet election

Posted by Colin in Uncategorized on August 26th, 2010 | 1 Comment

This election, online issues finally got the attention they deserve. And the situation is here to stay.

I’m not talking about which party had the most Facebook followers or made the most gaffes on Twitter. (Julia Gillard and Family First, respectively). Serious issues around internet governance and our internet future came into play, and by all accounts will continue to be significant as the situation plays out this week.

The first issue that affected the election Labor’s mandatory internet censorship policy, which is 3 years old and counting. Throughout that time, I believe the accepted wisdom amongst the scheme’s proponents – the most notable being of course Senator Conroy – was that it would be unpopular with a handful of geeks but would appeal to the wider audience of mums and dads in the electorate.

If this was indeed the strategy, I think it backfired. Although it’s based on mainly anecdotal evidence, I believe many internet users had their political consciousness awoken by this attempt to slap censorship on the country’s net connections. When this issue was important to people, it didn’t just put them slightly off-side, but made them hopping mad if not lifelong skeptics of the ALP. Over time I have spoken to MPs and parliamentary staffers of all stripes, and I’m pleased to report that many people did indeed contact their elected representatives and let the opinions be known. For some MPs, this amounted to a veritable flood, and the issue was absolutely on their radar…

Keep reading over at EFA

Jul 28

Data retention TV spot

Posted by Colin in Uncategorized on July 28th, 2010 | No Comments

I did a short spot on Channel 7′s “The Morning Show” (which was helpfully  captured by a supporter on the web).

The issue surrounds this story that details how the Government have been secretly lobbying ISPs to come up with a new and far-reaching data retention system. This would oblige ISPs to preserve logs all all activities – up to and possibly including things like proxy logs that would detail web browsing history – in case they are needed in a criminal investigation.

What I didn’t get to say on the spot below – which was cut shorter than I expected due to a story about Orlando Bloom’s honeymoon – is that the real privacy risks come from the potential for data breaches and possibly rogue employees. Once these large databases exists, there can be no guarantee about what will happen with them; history has shown us that. Therefore the onus is on the Government to demonstrate why they would be necessary. Rather than do that, they have conducted the discussions in the utmost secrecy, and journalist Ben Grubb’s FOI request yielded a ridiculously paltry result – apparently due to fears  of sparking a “premature unnecessary debate”.

Can debate about a far-reaching policy like this ever be unnecessary? Is it premature when the Attorney-General’s department is already in meetings with your ISP?

@coljac’s recent tweets

  • Isn't issuing a denial giving tacit permission to the media to report personal matters? #qanda 4 days ago
  • @13tales I'm not at all down on languages at all. I just don't think "more languages = success in Asia" is a coherent policy. 1 week ago
  • @swearyanthony I learned how to say 'comrade' when I was in Pyongyang. It's 'dongmu'. But i wasn't there on greens business... 1 week ago
  • @kaelalou was just an example about the undifferentiated push for Asian languages without a reason - that would make sense to students. 1 week ago
  • @13tales I speak Chinese and think its wonderful. But how many of us negotiate trade deals? How to motivate kids to learn en masse? 1 week ago

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