More interestingly, O2 has not blocked access to its own site. That would be silly. It has, however, blocked access to http://www.giffgaff.co.uk, one of its competitors.
I've seen it claimed that it's blocked access to the Conservative Party's web site. Based on all this, that's a block I'd like to see remain in place.
That will almost certainly be O2's whitelist opt-in blocklist option, which only allows access to sites that have been explicitly flagged as safe. This is not the blocklist that you'd be signed up to as the default option.
"What is Porn Anyway?" is a philosophical question. So you're actually misfiring in your claim of irrelevancy.
OP opened a can of worms. Seriously. (No, really: seriously.)
Arguing that it's art? That it is in itself valuable to culture as "low art" is? This isn't a question restricted to the UK, and it's one we need to get philosophically astute about pretty fast. So, again: Porn is not the problem — you are.
Whatever it is, analogies to automobile accidents and art, in any sense, is a stretch beyond palatability, and makes this entire discussion look entirely intellectually one-sided. I think such talk is a disservice to the discussion, and maybe porn should be blocked on those grounds alone, for I am quite sure OP's aesthetics are common.
The uncontroversial answer to "what is porn anyway?" that underpins the UK ban is "something children shouldn't watch".
This is ostensibly a "think of the children" move, it has nothing to do with aesthetics or art, low or high. In reality, it's probably also an old school conservative play to "clean up" the filth.
The uncontroversial answer to "what is porn anyway?" that underpins the UK ban is "something children shouldn't watch".
On the list of things children should not watch people having sex should really not be close to the top. It is just sex. After breathing, drinking and eating it is one of the most natural and common activities on earth. A coyote trying to smash a bird with an anvil seems a way less appropriate thing for children to watch.
Also, in a thread about censorship: an accidental showing of a half-covered nipple on terrestrial broadcast TV would not result in a half million dollar fine and many many years of legal action. (I think the original fine was eventually overturned, but only because the FCC had changed a policy before taking action??)
US TV shows have to censor their language unless they're broadcast on cable or satellite.
I never thought about which countries are producing all the porn. I tried to find some numbers but it turns out to be quite hard. I still found some interesting numbers [1] although they do not really answer what I was looking for, which country is producing how many hours of porn every year.
There may be a point on optionally blocking pure, meant to be porn, sites. But when you block wikipedia, youtube, art galleries, xkcd, social sites and so on because it could show somewhere some skin or talk about life as it is, you are forcing people to skip your filters in the best case, and get disconnected to good part of the digital world in the worst with all that could come after that.
One of the reasons I use AAISP: they provide a nice clean connection with no mucking about.
That and a bunch of other technical reasons too: proper dual-stack IPv4/IPv6 across the board (they've provided IPv6 for a decade while many UK ISPs don't even have solid plans to support it soon), fully delegated rDNS for the addresses (both IPv4 and IPv6) I am assigned and so forth.
Also excellent support when something goes wrong as I experienced when BT's vDSL box died. Unlike some ISPs I could mention, after making sure I'd done all the relevant tests so knew what the problem was rather than guessing they both handled nagging BT for me and kept me well informed (all comms were visible from my login on their control panel) of that process. When a friend had similar trouble (there was a spate of those units overheating, to the point where BT eventually started proactively swapping out those installed between certain dates) it took much longer to get resolved as he was passed from pillar to post.
Caveat for balance: there are other ISPs that people describe in similarly positive terms for much the same reasons, of course. Unfortunately, like with AAISP, you do pay a bit extra for the better service.
Why block porn? The cynical answer is this: Government is about power, and power is about sex.
Boiled down to it's raw animal fundamentals, having power is about being able to maximise your reproductive chances and suppress the reproductive chances of lesser males.
As a result, the powerful will always impose a (hypocritical) morality on the weak. Even if it just provides a symbolic victory over their libido, it plays an age-old role in cementing the pecking-order of society.
>Boiled down to it's raw animal fundamentals, having power is about being able to maximise your reproductive chances and suppress the reproductive chances of lesser males.
So blocking porn minismises the reproductive chances of lesser males? So you feel that watching porn would enhance their reproductive success?
I didn't say it was anything more than a symbolic act, or perhaps an unconscious throwback to a primitive sociological drive. I seriously doubt that those who crusade for a restrictive moral code have the self-awareness to recognise their motivation for what it is.
Lesser males having their reproductive chances lessened?
In the UK no substantive government moves have yet been made (open to correction) against those usually unemployed feckless not over-bright males who casually father many children by a number of different women.
Stop for a second and re-read what you just wrote. Think about the feelings and motivation that led to you writing what you did. Put practicality to one side too; Try not to get distracted by the myriad justifications and nuances of the debate itself, and think about why you hold these beliefs. Does it stem from somewhere cold and rational? Or does it feel "right" on some biological level? Why do you feel the way that you do? Is it too early for me to point to your writing and say "QED"? What do you think?
you're supposed to be spending your time meditating on the false dichotomy of divide and conqueror, daydreaming about "if only the other political side ...". Or viewing the output of one of the few remaining media international megacorps who have purchased the .gov. Daydreaming about the women on /r/gonewild is not effective indoctrination and is not profitable for those who own "our" culture.
This whole thing feels like a way to embarrass people into accepting a filter on pornography, while including non-porn content in the filter at a later date.
Once any type of filtering is set up it opens the floodgates for what content can or will be filtered. Imagine how easy it would be to filter out anti-government content when the response is merely "oops, must be a bug with the filter".
How can you even be sure that the opting out will still truly allow you access to the full, unfiltered internet?
> How can you even be sure that the opting out will still truly allow you access to the full, unfiltered internet?
We already know that opting out of this filter does nothing about other filtered content - stuff the IWF has filtered will be hard to find; stuff that courts have ordered ISPs to filter (at the request of the companies asking for the court order) will be harder to find.
Dear UK government: You are putting your technological expertise against a horde bored, horny 14 year old kids. Your abject failure will amuse the world.
You miss the point. They don't care about a 10% of elite children which will find ways around it, they want to censor and restrict the majority.
Also, quite importantly it's about delegitimising and criminalising whatever future content that might make them uncomfortable. It ensures that if you do get around the filter you are de facto purposefully breaking the rules (and can be judged as the miscreant you reveal yourself to be.)
The target was never bored, horny 14 year old kids -- it was the likes of WikiLeaks/Snowden sympathizers.
Currently, military personnel and other public servants are barred from viewing any and all 'classified' content (WikiLeaks/Snowden material). This restriction will now be applied on a national level resulting in a variety of news websites being rendered inaccessible.
It's not if but when the censorship will be applied across the world. It's coming to nations whom are regarded as shining beacons of democracy (especially all of whom are in the sphere of US influence), and such censorship policies will be as untouchable as our ever-growing war budgets.
No politician wants to be the one responsible for tragedies resulting from rolling back censorship in the same manner no-one wants fingers pointed at them for reducing the defence budget.
> The target was never bored, horny 14 year old kids -- it was the likes of WikiLeaks/Snowden sympathizers.
This is stupid to such a level you should delete your account immediately. How exactly could optional ISP filters possibly ever target people who know about computers to any reasonable degree.
It won't be applied nationally, and you're busy predicting the future when you don't even understand the present.
If someone posts nonsense, then no possible response can ever be seen as non-insulting. What was posted was grade A total nonsense. So I can't see how I can tell the poster this without being insulting.
Please don't get confused, I'm referring to normal people rather than the technologically adept.
Is it so difficult to acknowledge that the blow-back from Snowden's documents would've been diminished had the news been prevented from reaching normal people?
The nations look at China and see a populace that is pacified whom dare not speak against the government, and they see the Great Firewall as something to marvel in its pervasiveness. America's rivalry is turning to jealousy, and they see themselves as hindered by policies that China is unaffected by (free speech, freedom of association, etc).
Oh yes, it starts as ThinkOfTheChildren... but then it's an opt-out process. They know people will feel kinda embarrassed to call their ISP and say "I want porn". And of course, this filter will eventually expand to cover more than that. And now, you have those in power censoring the internet in a China-like fashion, but the masses assume it's just porn. Maybe at first they'll put up an error message from the ISP that "This site is blocked by porn filter" but that would make some people curious and ask questions. So eventually, it'll just 404.
>>This very broad, default censorship is disturbing for at least two reasons. First, because many people will be unaware that this kind of "mature content" censorship is taking place at all, and therefore won't ask for it to be stopped. And secondly, even if they are aware, the fact that asking for the filter to be lifted could be seen as tantamount to wanting to access porn -- something that many will understandably be reluctant to have noted down on their Internet access record -- means that they will simply put up with a limited feed
If this goes live, at least, maybe, there still will be a bit of good side to that - admitting the fact one's watching porn won't be considered too embarrassing. :)
> They know people will feel kinda embarrassed to call their ISP and say "I want porn".
Some ISPs have been filtering "adult" content for some time.
Turning it off is simple - you visit a page and have a credit card checked (no charge to you); or you ask for content lock to be turned off.
The filters are so poor that most adults ask for them to be removed.
Asking for the filter is not saying "I want to see porn", it is saying "I want to visit a bunch of normal sites that you are wrongly filtering" and they know this.
Not true. I can't find the blog, but there was a guy who had a filter like this on his mobile device that blocked alternative news sources. You could not go to a webpage, you had to call. And the person that he called repeated asked "To confirm, you want to be able to access adult content".
He tried to reason with them that the news site wasn't a porn site, but still he had to say something to the effect of "Yes, I wish to access explicit content on my mobile".
I really wish I could find this blog. Been looking for it for months to be prepared to reply to a comment such as yours.
They were totally going for the squeamish factor. The only way was to call and request that you want pornography & other explicit content. Something the average person would at least hesitate to do.
> I really wish I could find this blog. Been looking for it for months to be prepared to reply to a comment such as yours.
The only time I've ever seen a system like that was in hypothetical arguments. Are you sure you saw a real conversation or a fake one designed to create discussion?
This sounds like an obvious social engineering hack waiting to happen, merely register "nude-hacker-news-pics.com" and put up a page promising to merely test a credit cards number, and to be certain you're an adult, maybe your mom's maiden name and social security number and DOB and a dr license # and ...
Well, maybe you need a better domain name, but the overall hack idea is good.
>> "They know people will feel kinda embarrassed to call their ISP and say "I want porn""
I'm against these filters but that's not how it works. Filters are only added to new accounts. I've been through this with a provider who has offered the feature for a while. When I was signing up they asked something like, "Do you want our child protection/home safety filters enabled". I said no. So really it isn't embarrassing and it's easy to choose to have them not enabled. I doubt the ISP's would sink to the level of referring to them officially as 'porn filters' and requiring customers to disable 'porn filters'.
> They know people will feel kinda embarrassed to call their ISP and say "I want porn"
I called my Canadian cable company on some trivial matter. The end of the call went something like: "We've got a great deal on the kids TV channel package. Do you want to sign up?"
"I live by myself. Not interested."
"Oh, in that case, I can give you a deal on our adult channels."
Moral of the story: the call centre staff couldn't care one way or the other - they're just doing their jobs. Call 'em up and get the stupid filter removed.
The same way there are leaks of who subscribes to the adult cable channels?
Regardless, if there is to be a filter service I guess it's good that it covers a lot more than just porn. So what if the list is leaked? People probably just want unfiltered access to news sources.
(Which sounds like a modern day version of the "I just buy it for the articles" Playboy defence.)
I'm not familiar with the case, but the article seems to imply that they tried to claim the porn films on expenses (along with a lot of other dodgy expenses).
Yeah. In fact, historically some of the UK mobile providers used their Internet filtering to direct users to their own for-pay porn of which they got a cut.
From TFA: " I don't mind certain art, like films or computer games being censored"
Right. He doesn't mind censorship, he just disagrees with where the line is drawn. Which is what a lot of debate seems to boil down to these days: we don't care about anything unless it affects us personally.
And, as others have said, trying to keep teenage boys away from porn can only fail in the most spectacular way possible.
It has nothing to do with blocking porn and has more to do with creating a database of people who have no fears of making it known that they don't want filters on the Internet connection.
Of course later on they government can label them has people who are happy to view porn or visit terrorist websites.
It is a way of creating a database of people who can be labelled in a negative manner in relation to some government agenda.
I used to get pretty upset at these constant news reports of expanding Internet censorship. Then it occurred to me that it simply means that the reactionary forces are (finally) starting to see it as a threat. And that is a good sign.
Stop calling it a "porn filter". It's censorship of the internet.
If it was actually a "porn filter", its purpose would be to filter pornographic material. In reality, there is a list of categories to be censored, and porn is only one of them. Focusing on the words "porn filtering" was a deliberate strategic move by the government, because it makes it more difficult to oppose convincingly.
Those of us who oppose censorship are playing into their hands by referring to this issue using the favourable terms coined by the government. We should all stop referring to it as "porn filtering" and start referring to it as "internet censorship".
The Internet Watch Foundation can't tell anyone to do anything. It's just a private company based in Cambridge:
Company No. 03426366
Status: Active
Date of Incorporation: 29/08/1997
Some organisations ( fewer than 100 ) have entered into voluntary commercial contracts with the IWF that oblige them to self-implement the list provided by the IWF.
They're "voluntary" in the sense that the Government told them to voluntarily filter internet access according to the IWF list, or the Government would pass a law forcing them to do so and it'd be a lot worse for them than just playing along.
Both distributing child pornography and distributing content in violation of copyright are explicitly against the law. Distributing "normal" porn is not. I think there is a qualitative difference between attempting to prevent illegal activity and attempting to prevent legal activity that some vague authority out of the public eye just doesn't like, and I'm not sure it's helpful to equate the two cases in a debate like this.
> and attempting to prevent legal activity that some vague authority out of the public eye just doesn't like, and I'm not sure it's helpful to equate the two cases in a debate like this.
...and that's why the IWF / court ordered filters are not optional, while the 'porn filter' is.
The thing is, you can't just censor it away until it's gone. It doesn't fight the root of the cause and in the long run will only hurt the society as a whole.
We all know that it doesn't matter how illegal something is; if it can be found, the person looking for it will find it. That's especially true for the internet. Obstacles always bear the chance of making it worse for the wrong people.
The thing is, you can't just censor it away until it's gone.
To play devil's advocate for a moment: how do we know that?
I'm guessing you and I are both liberally inclined in our politics from the very fact that we're having this conversation. Probably we are both naturally sceptical of any form of censorship.
However, objectively, it is clear that some children really are being exploited in horrible ways to produce the kind of material that we sometimes hear about in the news. If a responsibly operated system for limiting its distribution could have a significant actual benefit in terms of reducing the incentive to create that material in the first place, I don't think a principled "absolutely no censorship allowed" argument is sufficiently powerful to dismiss the alternative out-of-hand.
To make these kinds of policies, I think you have to look at the big picture, and the merits of both positions, and ideally hard evidence about the likely outcomes of each outcome. Even then, you are almost always choosing the least of evils in such a situation, because there will be real and legitimate concerns about any policy you might finally adopt.
It doesn't fight the root of the cause and in the long run will only hurt the society as a whole.
I am absolutely in favour of going after the root cause of abuses, or any other criminal activity. But when you're talking about legislation and law enforcement, I think you have to take a pragmatic view and accept that you aren't going to be able to protect every vulnerable person overnight by magically eliminating all sources of evil in the world, no matter how noble your intentions.
If a responsibly operated system for limiting the distribution of things like child pornography can reduce the amount of exploitation going on in the meantime, at a direct cost in terms of limiting the freedom of expression of those who would distribute such material and an indirect cost of requiring a technical mechanism for censorship and the risk of that mechanism being abused for other purposes, I think it is still reasonable to consider it.
Then again, I also have strong views on the need for accountability in public office. In particular, I believe that betrayal of the public should be considered a high crime. If you're going to give that much trust to anyone then the penalties for abusing that trust must be severe, and anyone who tried to censor other material using this sort of system should expect to be caught and should be facing significant jail time and a ban on holding public office. If any government isn't willing to accept that responsibility and transparency and oversight, then my view on whether they should be trusted with the kinds of system we're discussing swings sharply against them.
We all know that it doesn't matter how illegal something is; if it can be found, the person looking for it will find it.
No, we don't know that. This is my point.
Obstacles always bear the chance of making it worse for the wrong people.
Yes they do, and that is why those obstacles must have credible oversight to ensure they operate responsibly and severe penalties for anyone who abuses them. But that doesn't mean we shouldn't consider taking the chance anyway, depending on what is at stake.
Vodafone has had something similar for mobile for years, no? I bought a UK SIM a while back for when I'm in the UK, and discovered that they have some sort of filter enabled by default that blocks all 'adult' content.
The quality of that filter is so absurdly low, that it actually blocked a ton of irrelevant stuff (such as random PDF email attachments, word documents, a ton of FB and Twitter images, etc.). My smartphone was pretty much transformed into a brick, and became an annoyance to use. Also took them nearly 20 minutes to remove it, when I finally went to a shop to get it removed.
I hate filters, because they actually don't filter properly.
> Vodafone has had something similar for mobile for years, no?
Virgin too, I had one of their PAYG SIMs for a while and you had to opt in to have the filter turned off (which was a faf IIRC).
The content that it blocked for me was the national lottery web site (presumably gambling was one of the filtering criteria), but the holding page presented when you visited a blocked site carried adverts which amusingly enough at the time were for what was essentially sex chat lines... I've still got a screen grab of it somewhere.
I'm fairly sure that's exactly what would happen if they made this mandatory.
Obviously a lot of people do enjoy watching porn on-line, and personally I have no problem with that (with the usual caveats about consenting adults etc.). Some of those people will be shy about admitting it, but plenty won't care.
Moreover, even those who don't watch porn on-line have several good reasons to opt out: support of civil liberties, technical concerns over whether any filter will actually work properly, objections to the general "nanny state" trend and absolving parents of responsibility for properly supervising their own children, and the list goes on.
I think enforcing these kinds of measures will just make Cameron and Perry look even more out of touch than they already do.
Leak the list of course, and use it as a weapon against anyone in politics or the public eye. Much as you can fire any public schoolteacher seen consuming alcohol in any form, now any librarian or political opponent will be attacked for being "on the list". May as well wear a scarlet letter "P" on your 3-piece suit.
Of course if you'll agree to support what we define as network neutrality, perhaps your name can accidentally not be included on "the list". Or we can charge an extra fee for an unlisted account much as the phone company used to charge extra money for an unlisted account.
Even funnier it would be a shame if your political opponent were added to the list, right? I mean, obviously no one would ever execute a pretexting attack to tarnish the good name of their political opponent, or perhaps the good name of a coworker aiming for the same political appointment as yourself.
All you really need to do is see how the Germans treated the Jews in the mid 30s. I'm not trying to be inflamatory, merely factual. I specifically listed the 30s not the 40s.
> All you really need to do is see how the Germans treated the Jews in the mid 30s. I'm not trying to be inflamatory, merely factual. I specifically listed the 30s not the 40s.
I feel the need to list the specific treatments we can soon expect, inspired by mid 1930s Germany:
A list will be created of people requiring special treatment by those in power, and a crowd of miscreants will enforce that treatment against anyone opposing it.
Those on the list will not be permitted to participate in the government, sensitive posts in the military, or to teach.
Those on the list will be publicly identified for ridicule. Would not be surprised to see a scarlet "P" on drivers licenses and such. After all, its "to protect the children". Some people are more equal than others.
At some point they'll be unable to hold certain non-public jobs; companies will be terrified to be identified as hiring people "on the list" so to limit liability they'll have to stop hiring.
Businesses opened and operated by people on the "scarlet P" list will be picketed. If you think I'm making this up, you probably think the Westboro Baptist Church is a made up story.
Political and family enemies will be added to the list, guilty until proven innocent of course.
"To save the children" maps of neighborhoods with "scarlet P" overlaid on homes on the list will be distributed, much as we already distribute predator maps in the USA.
Divide and conqueror, baby, divide and conqueror, thats what its all about.
Thats why I specifically listed the 30s not the 40s. I don't think we're quite up to lighting the ovens just yet, although I'm sure theres a segment of the population and a segment of .gov who wants it.
> "To save the children" maps of neighborhoods with "scarlet P" overlaid on homes on the list will be distributed, much as we already distribute predator maps in the USA.
Please see a doctor. You are experiencing paranoid delusions.
A delusion would imply a site like mapsexoffenders.com and a bazillion other online mapping competitors do not exist. I will give you an out, that your current locale might not release information like this to the public, but many locations do. Or you may simply not have known about these old, popular-ish, existing services. So much for claims of delusion.
If, however, that was a ridiculously bad attempt at an ad hominem, well, I'm sorry to say that was just pitiful. You can do better. I mean, even something like "your mom" would have outshined that. There's a level of disrespect beyond disrespect where not even putting in enough effort to be properly disrespectful is in itself disrespect squared, and from that point of view I can salute your effort, but still it wasn't very good. Practice practice practice...
You are claiming this will be implemented like a combination of 30s Germany and 00s USA. Despite the fact this is the UK and you have no evidence whatsoever for any of your wild predictions.
Seriously, see a doctor. Your statements are massively paranoid and not at all based in reality. If I wanted to say you were wrong because you were stupid I would. In this case you're just believing in wholly illogical things.
I think the root problem of our disagreement would be that you think I am making a formal engineering prediction and is therefore held to an extremely high standard, which is a wee bit higher than I was aiming (I was aiming for a little higher than "the green bay packers are going to the superbowl" but not too much higher).
On the other hand your outlook is falsification of a formal hypothesis merely requires repeating over and over "illogic" "paranoid" and such as though they're magic incantations which in and of themselves will convince others, which is highly unlikely. Practice argumentation and debate. Repeated incantations just don't work.
Needless to say we aren't agreeing on a mutually acceptable, and equally applied, level of "proof". Oh well. Makes for a boring debate if we can't even agree on the rules of the road (thats a pun, you guys drive on the wrong side of the road you see)
I also sense a bit of bias toward a belief that large groups of people tend to behave in a rational and logical manner, whereas my extensive observational experience and historical reading tends toward the exact opposite. Sure would be a nice planet if you were not completely incorrect!
So I apologize for implying you were an inexperienced troll, in that I missed the root cause that we have mutually dramatically incompatible outlooks on life (although note I'm a little more of a gentleman WRT not suggesting medical treatment).
So have a nice day, and good luck with the whole fascism thing, hope it works out for the UK better than famous historical examples and I hope their cultural phase ends better than some awful historical examples. I'm sure civilization will maintain itself despite people burying their heads in the sand when faced with what boils down to evil and/or a cultural/political hygiene issue.
> although note I'm a little more of a gentleman WRT not suggesting medical treatment
I'm not saying that to hurt you or your reputation. From my perspective your views are paranoid and illogical. From extensive experience debating people with similar beliefs I believe the best solution is to discuss your feelings with a doctor.
The chance of this system ever getting any further is incredibly small. The public backlash has been almost universal and the filters are already being exploited publicly. I honestly have no idea how you could rationally extrapolate 'scarlet P' letters stamped onto licenses.
LOL you must be a lot of fun at sci fi and alt history cons, or any time people start brainstorming about greatly extrapolated trends.
The 'scarlet p' is a literary allusion to a very old book of Hawthorne's, wikipedia link below. Some decades ago it was trendy to include it on the reading lists for school children, at least in the midwestern USA. As a piece of literature, its absolutely drowning in symbolism to the point of ridicule, although it certainly demonstrates the utter inhumanity of theocracy as a form of government, so its not all bad. Its has the virtue of brevity. And a scarlet "A" makes quite an appearance. There's worse ways to pass the time, than reading "the scarlet letter".
I'm less in favor of network blocking and more in favor of just making porn illegal. Establish civil and criminal liability for displaying it. Seize the assets of porn producers and burn them to death in an electric chair or whatever.
I have one simple question: why? For the children? For the fraction of performers involved in it involuntarily? Because you simply object to it yourself and want to force your morals on others? Because you're just trolling? Oh..
Does your definition of 'porn' include magazines like Cosmo?
Does your definition of 'porn' include medical materials?
Does your definition of 'porn' include religious texts?
The problem with banning 'porn' is you have to ban very very specific things (like photographs of coitus, or textual descriptions of intercourse) in order to enforce it - but what you're really attempting to control or prevent is perversion or pleasure other people take in something you don't approve of.
If you even glance over a list of fetishes you'd see there's no limit to the creativity of human sexuality. Pretty soon you're going to end up banning balloons, and a whole lot of other weird things that emerge. What about things like Bubbling (https://www.google.ca/search?q=mormon+bubbling) Is that 'porn' or not?
I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description ["hard-core pornography"]; and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so. But I know it when I see it... —Justice Potter Stewart, concurring opinion in Jacobellis v. Ohio 378 U.S. 184 (1964)
"Despite the woman’s mother explaining her daughter’s condition to police over the telephone from Italy, she was taken to a psychiatric hospital and sectioned under the Mental Health Act. Five weeks later, her daughter was removed from her womb without her consent."
Yes, they did. The woman had had two previous children this way and so they judged that it was much more preferable than to risk a breech and the health or life of both the baby and mother.
This is retarded. The decision was made 5 weeks before c-section, they could have send her home before that. What will be next? 'Voluntary' kidney donations while changing flights?
- there were other relatives who had rights and could take care of the baby.
- she was held for 5 weeks in the hospital before the baby was delivered, than deported!
- And on top of that there is gagging court order, so she could not ask for help, otherwise she would lose all chances to get baby back.
> If only people on HN could be downvoted for being completely and arguably wilfully ignorant about what they comment on.
I'm new to HN, so I recently had a good look at the rules governing it. They are a bit more complex than your average site, and bound to cause a bit of controversy.
In the HN FAQ:
> There are no down arrows on submissions. They only appear on comments after users reach a certain karma threshold.
I recently posted a comment regarding some hybrid C/C++ code:
A comment of mine was downvoted, which I was a bit surprised at, then was upvoted when other hackers responded to it. To be fair the comment lacked sufficient information, which I corrected with a follow up. I'm thinking that the hacker who downvoted it doesn't know that much C, so I am not that really that bothered about it.
The truth is, that pornography today is not the same as 10 years ago, today, porn is more about humilliation of women and really low depravation, psycological studies have found the high impact this is having on young citicens, the social future of the UK is in jeopardy, and this is what they are doing save it.
Author's statement: "Censorship is bad!"
Author's point 1: "Some censorship is okay! But this is more censorship than I personally agree with!"
If you hold the premise that minors must be protected against media by the government, then you can't possibly argue that this move is radical or illogical.
Most people in the UK are totally fine with some levels of censorship.
Ask them if they want a ban on people producing or distributing images of child sexual abuse and most people would say that they do want a ban.
Extend that to images of people having sex with animals and many people are happy with a ban, and some people saying that they agree it should be restricted to those over the ages of 18, and not accidentally available to anyone.
But when you ask someone in the UK if a TV show should receive a huge ($500,000) fine for an accidental < 1 second showing of a partially clothed nipple most people are going to laugh and say "no". (Unlike US FCC which imposed such a fine for Janet Jackson nipple slip. That fine was overturned 7 years later, but only because FCC had used new powers before taking action). Or if you ask whether it's okay for terrestrial broadcast TV shows to include nudity or swearing after 9pm most people are going to say it's okay. (Unlike US, where shows have to censor their language. See for example The Good Wife which parodied this situation with a street noise during a courtroom hearing. The noise was used to mask bad language.)
In the british movie adaptation of "1984" which was filmed in 1984, when he had sex with Julia, was that explicit enough to get the film blocked on the internet? Just idly curious. I haven't seen the film adaptation in probably 20 years (or more?) so I have to call out to the wider HN community.
I think the movie adaptation of 1984 would be a good idea to rally around. I say "idea" rather than "film" because I don't remember if the actual film is any good, but the idea of censoring 1984 "to save teh children" but primarily motivated to politically censor is too juicy to pass up.
>Of course, certain censorship is fine. I don't mind certain art, like films or computer games being censored, and think that it is key to keeping a powerful art community when protecting those from harmful images or powerful material.
The author hasn't made a distinction between restriction and censorship. Films unsuitable for children, say Sword of Vengeance have their availability to them restricted. On the other hand, I'm quite sure that the British release of Ichi the Killer has scenes edited from it, ie. it is censored.
I was wondering if this porn filter would block access to the works of the Chapman Brothers.
97 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 160 ms ] threadI've seen it claimed that it's blocked access to the Conservative Party's web site. Based on all this, that's a block I'd like to see remain in place.
[0]: http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/women-who-stray/201305/p...
OP opened a can of worms. Seriously. (No, really: seriously.)
Arguing that it's art? That it is in itself valuable to culture as "low art" is? This isn't a question restricted to the UK, and it's one we need to get philosophically astute about pretty fast. So, again: Porn is not the problem — you are.
Whatever it is, analogies to automobile accidents and art, in any sense, is a stretch beyond palatability, and makes this entire discussion look entirely intellectually one-sided. I think such talk is a disservice to the discussion, and maybe porn should be blocked on those grounds alone, for I am quite sure OP's aesthetics are common.
This is ostensibly a "think of the children" move, it has nothing to do with aesthetics or art, low or high. In reality, it's probably also an old school conservative play to "clean up" the filth.
On the list of things children should not watch people having sex should really not be close to the top. It is just sex. After breathing, drinking and eating it is one of the most natural and common activities on earth. A coyote trying to smash a bird with an anvil seems a way less appropriate thing for children to watch.
The UK has more of a problem with children watching the weird unrealistic sex portrayed by the US porn industry.
This.
Now, why is the US unique here?
US TV shows have to censor their language unless they're broadcast on cable or satellite.
[1] http://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/7668/is-the-inco...
That and a bunch of other technical reasons too: proper dual-stack IPv4/IPv6 across the board (they've provided IPv6 for a decade while many UK ISPs don't even have solid plans to support it soon), fully delegated rDNS for the addresses (both IPv4 and IPv6) I am assigned and so forth.
Also excellent support when something goes wrong as I experienced when BT's vDSL box died. Unlike some ISPs I could mention, after making sure I'd done all the relevant tests so knew what the problem was rather than guessing they both handled nagging BT for me and kept me well informed (all comms were visible from my login on their control panel) of that process. When a friend had similar trouble (there was a spate of those units overheating, to the point where BT eventually started proactively swapping out those installed between certain dates) it took much longer to get resolved as he was passed from pillar to post.
Caveat for balance: there are other ISPs that people describe in similarly positive terms for much the same reasons, of course. Unfortunately, like with AAISP, you do pay a bit extra for the better service.
Boiled down to it's raw animal fundamentals, having power is about being able to maximise your reproductive chances and suppress the reproductive chances of lesser males.
As a result, the powerful will always impose a (hypocritical) morality on the weak. Even if it just provides a symbolic victory over their libido, it plays an age-old role in cementing the pecking-order of society.
So blocking porn minismises the reproductive chances of lesser males? So you feel that watching porn would enhance their reproductive success?
I think he's making an abstract argument about the symbolism of blocking access to sexuality.
Once any type of filtering is set up it opens the floodgates for what content can or will be filtered. Imagine how easy it would be to filter out anti-government content when the response is merely "oops, must be a bug with the filter".
How can you even be sure that the opting out will still truly allow you access to the full, unfiltered internet?
We already know that opting out of this filter does nothing about other filtered content - stuff the IWF has filtered will be hard to find; stuff that courts have ordered ISPs to filter (at the request of the companies asking for the court order) will be harder to find.
Also, quite importantly it's about delegitimising and criminalising whatever future content that might make them uncomfortable. It ensures that if you do get around the filter you are de facto purposefully breaking the rules (and can be judged as the miscreant you reveal yourself to be.)
Currently, military personnel and other public servants are barred from viewing any and all 'classified' content (WikiLeaks/Snowden material). This restriction will now be applied on a national level resulting in a variety of news websites being rendered inaccessible.
It's not if but when the censorship will be applied across the world. It's coming to nations whom are regarded as shining beacons of democracy (especially all of whom are in the sphere of US influence), and such censorship policies will be as untouchable as our ever-growing war budgets.
No politician wants to be the one responsible for tragedies resulting from rolling back censorship in the same manner no-one wants fingers pointed at them for reducing the defence budget.
This is stupid to such a level you should delete your account immediately. How exactly could optional ISP filters possibly ever target people who know about computers to any reasonable degree.
It won't be applied nationally, and you're busy predicting the future when you don't even understand the present.
Is it so difficult to acknowledge that the blow-back from Snowden's documents would've been diminished had the news been prevented from reaching normal people?
The nations look at China and see a populace that is pacified whom dare not speak against the government, and they see the Great Firewall as something to marvel in its pervasiveness. America's rivalry is turning to jealousy, and they see themselves as hindered by policies that China is unaffected by (free speech, freedom of association, etc).
http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2013/12/20/bt-gives-parents-tool-t...
http://www.darkpolitricks.com/2013/07/uk-internet-filter-wil...
http://www.techdirt.com/blog/wireless/articles/20130107/1119...
>>This very broad, default censorship is disturbing for at least two reasons. First, because many people will be unaware that this kind of "mature content" censorship is taking place at all, and therefore won't ask for it to be stopped. And secondly, even if they are aware, the fact that asking for the filter to be lifted could be seen as tantamount to wanting to access porn -- something that many will understandably be reluctant to have noted down on their Internet access record -- means that they will simply put up with a limited feed
(Not that I say censorship is good by any means.)
Some ISPs have been filtering "adult" content for some time.
Turning it off is simple - you visit a page and have a credit card checked (no charge to you); or you ask for content lock to be turned off.
The filters are so poor that most adults ask for them to be removed.
Asking for the filter is not saying "I want to see porn", it is saying "I want to visit a bunch of normal sites that you are wrongly filtering" and they know this.
I really wish I could find this blog. Been looking for it for months to be prepared to reply to a comment such as yours.
They were totally going for the squeamish factor. The only way was to call and request that you want pornography & other explicit content. Something the average person would at least hesitate to do.
The only time I've ever seen a system like that was in hypothetical arguments. Are you sure you saw a real conversation or a fake one designed to create discussion?
This sounds like an obvious social engineering hack waiting to happen, merely register "nude-hacker-news-pics.com" and put up a page promising to merely test a credit cards number, and to be certain you're an adult, maybe your mom's maiden name and social security number and DOB and a dr license # and ...
Well, maybe you need a better domain name, but the overall hack idea is good.
I'm against these filters but that's not how it works. Filters are only added to new accounts. I've been through this with a provider who has offered the feature for a while. When I was signing up they asked something like, "Do you want our child protection/home safety filters enabled". I said no. So really it isn't embarrassing and it's easy to choose to have them not enabled. I doubt the ISP's would sink to the level of referring to them officially as 'porn filters' and requiring customers to disable 'porn filters'.
I called my Canadian cable company on some trivial matter. The end of the call went something like: "We've got a great deal on the kids TV channel package. Do you want to sign up?"
"I live by myself. Not interested."
"Oh, in that case, I can give you a deal on our adult channels."
Moral of the story: the call centre staff couldn't care one way or the other - they're just doing their jobs. Call 'em up and get the stupid filter removed.
Regardless, if there is to be a filter service I guess it's good that it covers a lot more than just porn. So what if the list is leaked? People probably just want unfiltered access to news sources.
(Which sounds like a modern day version of the "I just buy it for the articles" Playboy defence.)
That's a totally different kettle of fish.
It's a bit different with this Internet filter.
Right. He doesn't mind censorship, he just disagrees with where the line is drawn. Which is what a lot of debate seems to boil down to these days: we don't care about anything unless it affects us personally.
And, as others have said, trying to keep teenage boys away from porn can only fail in the most spectacular way possible.
Of course later on they government can label them has people who are happy to view porn or visit terrorist websites. It is a way of creating a database of people who can be labelled in a negative manner in relation to some government agenda.
If it was actually a "porn filter", its purpose would be to filter pornographic material. In reality, there is a list of categories to be censored, and porn is only one of them. Focusing on the words "porn filtering" was a deliberate strategic move by the government, because it makes it more difficult to oppose convincingly.
Those of us who oppose censorship are playing into their hands by referring to this issue using the favourable terms coined by the government. We should all stop referring to it as "porn filtering" and start referring to it as "internet censorship".
The Internet Watch Foundation already tell ISPs to block child pornography, and the court system can tell ISPs to block file-sharing/streaming sites.
It is a myth that the internet is uncensored in the UK at the moment.
Company No. 03426366 Status: Active Date of Incorporation: 29/08/1997
Some organisations ( fewer than 100 ) have entered into voluntary commercial contracts with the IWF that oblige them to self-implement the list provided by the IWF.
...and that's why the IWF / court ordered filters are not optional, while the 'porn filter' is.
We all know that it doesn't matter how illegal something is; if it can be found, the person looking for it will find it. That's especially true for the internet. Obstacles always bear the chance of making it worse for the wrong people.
To play devil's advocate for a moment: how do we know that?
I'm guessing you and I are both liberally inclined in our politics from the very fact that we're having this conversation. Probably we are both naturally sceptical of any form of censorship.
However, objectively, it is clear that some children really are being exploited in horrible ways to produce the kind of material that we sometimes hear about in the news. If a responsibly operated system for limiting its distribution could have a significant actual benefit in terms of reducing the incentive to create that material in the first place, I don't think a principled "absolutely no censorship allowed" argument is sufficiently powerful to dismiss the alternative out-of-hand.
To make these kinds of policies, I think you have to look at the big picture, and the merits of both positions, and ideally hard evidence about the likely outcomes of each outcome. Even then, you are almost always choosing the least of evils in such a situation, because there will be real and legitimate concerns about any policy you might finally adopt.
It doesn't fight the root of the cause and in the long run will only hurt the society as a whole.
I am absolutely in favour of going after the root cause of abuses, or any other criminal activity. But when you're talking about legislation and law enforcement, I think you have to take a pragmatic view and accept that you aren't going to be able to protect every vulnerable person overnight by magically eliminating all sources of evil in the world, no matter how noble your intentions.
If a responsibly operated system for limiting the distribution of things like child pornography can reduce the amount of exploitation going on in the meantime, at a direct cost in terms of limiting the freedom of expression of those who would distribute such material and an indirect cost of requiring a technical mechanism for censorship and the risk of that mechanism being abused for other purposes, I think it is still reasonable to consider it.
Then again, I also have strong views on the need for accountability in public office. In particular, I believe that betrayal of the public should be considered a high crime. If you're going to give that much trust to anyone then the penalties for abusing that trust must be severe, and anyone who tried to censor other material using this sort of system should expect to be caught and should be facing significant jail time and a ban on holding public office. If any government isn't willing to accept that responsibility and transparency and oversight, then my view on whether they should be trusted with the kinds of system we're discussing swings sharply against them.
We all know that it doesn't matter how illegal something is; if it can be found, the person looking for it will find it.
No, we don't know that. This is my point.
Obstacles always bear the chance of making it worse for the wrong people.
Yes they do, and that is why those obstacles must have credible oversight to ensure they operate responsibly and severe penalties for anyone who abuses them. But that doesn't mean we shouldn't consider taking the chance anyway, depending on what is at stake.
The quality of that filter is so absurdly low, that it actually blocked a ton of irrelevant stuff (such as random PDF email attachments, word documents, a ton of FB and Twitter images, etc.). My smartphone was pretty much transformed into a brick, and became an annoyance to use. Also took them nearly 20 minutes to remove it, when I finally went to a shop to get it removed.
I hate filters, because they actually don't filter properly.
Virgin too, I had one of their PAYG SIMs for a while and you had to opt in to have the filter turned off (which was a faf IIRC).
The content that it blocked for me was the national lottery web site (presumably gambling was one of the filtering criteria), but the holding page presented when you visited a blocked site carried adverts which amusingly enough at the time were for what was essentially sex chat lines... I've still got a screen grab of it somewhere.
Obviously a lot of people do enjoy watching porn on-line, and personally I have no problem with that (with the usual caveats about consenting adults etc.). Some of those people will be shy about admitting it, but plenty won't care.
Moreover, even those who don't watch porn on-line have several good reasons to opt out: support of civil liberties, technical concerns over whether any filter will actually work properly, objections to the general "nanny state" trend and absolving parents of responsibility for properly supervising their own children, and the list goes on.
I think enforcing these kinds of measures will just make Cameron and Perry look even more out of touch than they already do.
Of course if you'll agree to support what we define as network neutrality, perhaps your name can accidentally not be included on "the list". Or we can charge an extra fee for an unlisted account much as the phone company used to charge extra money for an unlisted account.
Even funnier it would be a shame if your political opponent were added to the list, right? I mean, obviously no one would ever execute a pretexting attack to tarnish the good name of their political opponent, or perhaps the good name of a coworker aiming for the same political appointment as yourself.
All you really need to do is see how the Germans treated the Jews in the mid 30s. I'm not trying to be inflamatory, merely factual. I specifically listed the 30s not the 40s.
Wow. I have nothing to say but wow.
A list will be created of people requiring special treatment by those in power, and a crowd of miscreants will enforce that treatment against anyone opposing it.
Those on the list will not be permitted to participate in the government, sensitive posts in the military, or to teach.
Those on the list will be publicly identified for ridicule. Would not be surprised to see a scarlet "P" on drivers licenses and such. After all, its "to protect the children". Some people are more equal than others.
At some point they'll be unable to hold certain non-public jobs; companies will be terrified to be identified as hiring people "on the list" so to limit liability they'll have to stop hiring.
Businesses opened and operated by people on the "scarlet P" list will be picketed. If you think I'm making this up, you probably think the Westboro Baptist Church is a made up story.
Political and family enemies will be added to the list, guilty until proven innocent of course.
"To save the children" maps of neighborhoods with "scarlet P" overlaid on homes on the list will be distributed, much as we already distribute predator maps in the USA.
Divide and conqueror, baby, divide and conqueror, thats what its all about.
Thats why I specifically listed the 30s not the 40s. I don't think we're quite up to lighting the ovens just yet, although I'm sure theres a segment of the population and a segment of .gov who wants it.
Please see a doctor. You are experiencing paranoid delusions.
If, however, that was a ridiculously bad attempt at an ad hominem, well, I'm sorry to say that was just pitiful. You can do better. I mean, even something like "your mom" would have outshined that. There's a level of disrespect beyond disrespect where not even putting in enough effort to be properly disrespectful is in itself disrespect squared, and from that point of view I can salute your effort, but still it wasn't very good. Practice practice practice...
You are claiming this will be implemented like a combination of 30s Germany and 00s USA. Despite the fact this is the UK and you have no evidence whatsoever for any of your wild predictions.
Seriously, see a doctor. Your statements are massively paranoid and not at all based in reality. If I wanted to say you were wrong because you were stupid I would. In this case you're just believing in wholly illogical things.
On the other hand your outlook is falsification of a formal hypothesis merely requires repeating over and over "illogic" "paranoid" and such as though they're magic incantations which in and of themselves will convince others, which is highly unlikely. Practice argumentation and debate. Repeated incantations just don't work.
Needless to say we aren't agreeing on a mutually acceptable, and equally applied, level of "proof". Oh well. Makes for a boring debate if we can't even agree on the rules of the road (thats a pun, you guys drive on the wrong side of the road you see)
I also sense a bit of bias toward a belief that large groups of people tend to behave in a rational and logical manner, whereas my extensive observational experience and historical reading tends toward the exact opposite. Sure would be a nice planet if you were not completely incorrect!
So I apologize for implying you were an inexperienced troll, in that I missed the root cause that we have mutually dramatically incompatible outlooks on life (although note I'm a little more of a gentleman WRT not suggesting medical treatment).
So have a nice day, and good luck with the whole fascism thing, hope it works out for the UK better than famous historical examples and I hope their cultural phase ends better than some awful historical examples. I'm sure civilization will maintain itself despite people burying their heads in the sand when faced with what boils down to evil and/or a cultural/political hygiene issue.
I'm not saying that to hurt you or your reputation. From my perspective your views are paranoid and illogical. From extensive experience debating people with similar beliefs I believe the best solution is to discuss your feelings with a doctor.
The chance of this system ever getting any further is incredibly small. The public backlash has been almost universal and the filters are already being exploited publicly. I honestly have no idea how you could rationally extrapolate 'scarlet P' letters stamped onto licenses.
The 'scarlet p' is a literary allusion to a very old book of Hawthorne's, wikipedia link below. Some decades ago it was trendy to include it on the reading lists for school children, at least in the midwestern USA. As a piece of literature, its absolutely drowning in symbolism to the point of ridicule, although it certainly demonstrates the utter inhumanity of theocracy as a form of government, so its not all bad. Its has the virtue of brevity. And a scarlet "A" makes quite an appearance. There's worse ways to pass the time, than reading "the scarlet letter".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Scarlet_Letter
Does your definition of 'porn' include medical materials?
Does your definition of 'porn' include religious texts?
The problem with banning 'porn' is you have to ban very very specific things (like photographs of coitus, or textual descriptions of intercourse) in order to enforce it - but what you're really attempting to control or prevent is perversion or pleasure other people take in something you don't approve of.
If you even glance over a list of fetishes you'd see there's no limit to the creativity of human sexuality. Pretty soon you're going to end up banning balloons, and a whole lot of other weird things that emerge. What about things like Bubbling (https://www.google.ca/search?q=mormon+bubbling) Is that 'porn' or not?
The SS forced c-section on pregnant woman and stole her baby. She was visitor, foreign citizen who stayed in UK just for a few days...
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/social-servic...
Hell if you bother to read even slightly then it's wholly reasonable: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/law-and-order/1049605...
If only people on HN could be downvoted for being completely and arguably wilfully ignorant about what they comment on.
Hang on! No they didn't --what--?
How hard is it to do trivial research?
- there were other relatives who had rights and could take care of the baby.
- she was held for 5 weeks in the hospital before the baby was delivered, than deported!
- And on top of that there is gagging court order, so she could not ask for help, otherwise she would lose all chances to get baby back.
Also there are other similar cases.
I'm new to HN, so I recently had a good look at the rules governing it. They are a bit more complex than your average site, and bound to cause a bit of controversy.
In the HN FAQ:
> There are no down arrows on submissions. They only appear on comments after users reach a certain karma threshold.
I recently posted a comment regarding some hybrid C/C++ code:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6949474
A comment of mine was downvoted, which I was a bit surprised at, then was upvoted when other hackers responded to it. To be fair the comment lacked sufficient information, which I corrected with a follow up. I'm thinking that the hacker who downvoted it doesn't know that much C, so I am not that really that bothered about it.
If you hold the premise that minors must be protected against media by the government, then you can't possibly argue that this move is radical or illogical.
Most people in the UK are totally fine with some levels of censorship.
Ask them if they want a ban on people producing or distributing images of child sexual abuse and most people would say that they do want a ban.
Extend that to images of people having sex with animals and many people are happy with a ban, and some people saying that they agree it should be restricted to those over the ages of 18, and not accidentally available to anyone.
But when you ask someone in the UK if a TV show should receive a huge ($500,000) fine for an accidental < 1 second showing of a partially clothed nipple most people are going to laugh and say "no". (Unlike US FCC which imposed such a fine for Janet Jackson nipple slip. That fine was overturned 7 years later, but only because FCC had used new powers before taking action). Or if you ask whether it's okay for terrestrial broadcast TV shows to include nudity or swearing after 9pm most people are going to say it's okay. (Unlike US, where shows have to censor their language. See for example The Good Wife which parodied this situation with a street noise during a courtroom hearing. The noise was used to mask bad language.)
I think the movie adaptation of 1984 would be a good idea to rally around. I say "idea" rather than "film" because I don't remember if the actual film is any good, but the idea of censoring 1984 "to save teh children" but primarily motivated to politically censor is too juicy to pass up.
The author hasn't made a distinction between restriction and censorship. Films unsuitable for children, say Sword of Vengeance have their availability to them restricted. On the other hand, I'm quite sure that the British release of Ichi the Killer has scenes edited from it, ie. it is censored.
I was wondering if this porn filter would block access to the works of the Chapman Brothers.
http://jakeanddinoschapman.com/