Delicious/delimiterau
- Earning billions and getting taxed a pittance
- Dell chief defends transfer pricing
- Qantas tech exec shifts to Jetstar
- Zurich Australia leads regional thin client push
- Early investors drop Facebook
- Victoria kills HealthSMART IT project
- Woz not great - mUmBRELLA
- Santos' thin client starts big-data plans
- Nokia Lumia 800 revs up at Bridgestone
- Telstra privacy breach was 'one little oops'
Posts Tagged ‘senate estimates’
News, Telecommunications - Monday, March 12, 2012 12:08 - 54 Comments
Interpol filter causes sharp drop in offensive requests
news The implementation of a limited Internet filter at Telstra has caused a dramatic and rapid drop in the numbers of attempts by the telco’s customers to access child abuse materials online, statistics released by the Australian Federal Police have shown.
In July last year, the telco, along with Optus and one other smaller ISP, CyberOne, implemented a filtering system which blocks their customers from accessing a list of sites which contain “worst of the worst” child pornography, as defined by international policing agency Interpol. Developed as a collaboration between the telcos, the Internet Industry Association and the Australian Federal Police, the project was seen as a more limited industry response to rival the Federal Government’s controversial mandatory Internet filtering scheme, which covers a much wider range of content.
- Evidence that NBN Co is evil
- Has the Coalition concluded its Quigley witch-hunt?
- Senate Estimates: Some things never change
- Is the Coalition’s Quigley obsession
a ‘McCarthyist witch hunt’? - Conroy trusts public’s “common sense” on filter
- Quigley slams “futile” wireless NBN debate
- Oh dear: Conroy claims “nude DSL” is taking off
- Conroy must apologise to Google for appalling attack
- Quigley clarifies Senate NBN profit ‘misconceptions’








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