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Privacy

Canadian Bill C-416 to Require Wiretapping 228

Matthew Skala writes "Bill C-416, recently introduced in the Canadian Parliament, would if passed require Internet providers to provide wiretapping facilities to law enforcement — without a warrant, and with 'confidentiality' requirements reminiscent of the secret-spying cases we've seen recently in the States. This new Act is a reprise of last Parliament's C-74, which failed when the Government's term ended. Coming back as a Liberal "private member's Bill" in a minority government, it will have little chance of success without cross-party support; but with the Conservatives in charge, all bets are off if they can find a way to claim it's about terrorism or child pornography."
The Internet

FCC Votes Yet Another Study of Net Neutrality 102

yuna49 writes to let us know that the US Federal Communications Commission last week announced a Notice of Inquiry (PDF) into: "...the behavior of broadband market participants, including: (1) How broadband providers are managing Internet traffic on their networks today; (2) Whether providers charge different prices for different speeds or capacities of service; (3) Whether our policies should distinguish between content providers that charge end users for access to content and those that do not; (4) How consumers are affected by these practices." eWeek reports that the study is targeted at whether broadband providers are treating some content providers more favorably than others. Distinctly absent is any discussion about port filtering or other restrictions on Internet usage. The two Democrats on the Commission pressed for a broader "Notice of Rulemaking" to move more quickly towards a policy of non-discrimination. The Republican majority ignored these arguments and voted for an Inquiry, to which the Democrats acceded.
The Internet

Submission + - South Korean Government Blocks Porn Sites

Anonymous Coward writes: "Following the posting of a porn video on Yahoo! Korea widely used video sharing site, the South Korean government has decided to fight back against the spread of pornography on the internet. According to The Age : "The Ministry of Information and Communication already has blocked 211 foreign pornographic Web sites, mostly based in the United States, as well as all local porn sites. It plans to extend the crackdown to another 180 major foreign sites by May." Good luck with that one! Besides the waste of manpower and resources involved in blocking porn sites, there is something profoundly hilarious about this. The South Korean government is trying to plug the hole in the dam with its (sticky) finger. http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/biz/200703/kt20070 32620151011900.htm http://www.theage.com.au/news/Technology/South-Kor ea-widens-crackdown-on-foreign-pornography-Web-sit es/2007/03/26/1174761356172.html"

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