Won’t someone think of the children, although only the children of ALP members of Parliament, because even some of the kiddy groups can see that the Government’s Great Firewall of Australia is nonsense.

via SMH:

Support for the Government’s plan to censor the internet has hit rock bottom, with even some children’s welfare groups now saying that that the mandatory filters, aimed squarely at protecting kids, are ineffective and a waste of money….

Holly Doel-Mackaway, adviser with Save the Children, the largest independent children’s rights agency in the world, said educating kids and parents was the way to empower young people to be safe internet users.

She said the filter scheme was “fundamentally flawed” because it failed to tackle the problem at the source and would inadvertently block legitimate resources.

Furthermore there was no evidence to suggest that children were stumbling across child pornography when browsing the web. Doel-Mackaway believes the millions of dollars earmarked to implement the filters would be far better spent on teaching children how to use the internet safely and on law enforcement.

“Children are exposed to the abusive behaviours of adults often and we need to be preventing the causes of violence against children in the community, rather than blocking it from people’s view,” she said.

“The constant change of cyberspace means that a filter is going to be able to be circumvented and it’s going to throw up false positives – many innocent websites, maybe even our own, will be blacklisted because we reference a lot of our work that we do with children in fighting commercial sexual exploitation.”….

James McDougall, director of the National Children’s and Youth Law Centre, expressed similar views to Save the Children.

He said the mandatory filters simply would not work and children should be able to make decisions for themselves. Concerned parents could easily install PC-based filters on their computers if they desired, or ask their internet providers to switch on voluntary filtering.

Hey hey, ho ho, Senator Conroy has to go, hey hey, ho ho….

Tasmania

admin —  November 29, 2008 — 3 Comments

Port Arthur: nice
Tasmanian Devil Park: overpriced
Salamanca Markets: crafty
Getting caught in a snow storm on Mt Wellington: priceless, given Ive only seen snow twice before

PS WordPress iPhone app isn’t half bad either. Pics to follow tomorrow, after Crowded House tonight

Brilliant. Watch it while you still can.

Bailouts

admin —  November 25, 2008 — 7 Comments

So the US Government bailed out Citibank. Add them to the long line of bailed out companies. They’re still blueing over the auto industry, but the likely outcome is more taxpayer dollars spent.

I know I’m not alone in thinking this, but has the world gone crazy?

Since when were Governments in the business of propping up failed companies?

If my business goes bankrupt next year, will the Australian Government bail me out?

I like the line from Romney on the auto industry: Chapter 11 bankruptcy is there for a reason. Why not use it.

A note of the political side: this is socialism at its worst coming from mostly the right, not the left, Australia and the UK excepted (although the UK is probably center right).

Big companies get tax breaks when times are good, but when times are bad the same taxes they avoided paying are used to prop them up.

The heads of the three US automakers flew to talks on a bailout in their private jets. Say no more.

I understand and respect the need to avoid a repeat of the Great Depression, but the message this sends to every person in small business who does it tough is beyond disgusting.

We live in strange times.

Syndication Offer

admin —  November 24, 2008 — 4 Comments

The Huffington Post has an interesting way of syndicating some content. The short version is they run the first three or four paragraphs of a post on their site, then end it with “read more here xyz.” I’m not sure if it’s under legal agreement or not, and as a rule I don’t like running that much text from another site on The Inquisitr.

However, if you’re a tech site and you would be cool with us doing something along those lines, email me duncan at nichenet.com.au . We wouldn’t run everything, but on occasion we’d like to run the intro to a post similar to what The Huffington Post does. I can’t promise millions of page views, but we’re pretty close now to some high numbers so you might get some half reasonable traffic from the post + link.

Online Ubiquity

admin —  November 24, 2008 — 4 Comments

I’m not quite sure when it happened. Maybe it was when I imported a Chumby so my alarm clock became internet enabled. Maybe it was when we purchased the Macbook for my son + wife (she occasionally brings home a work Windows laptop) so we have 3 laptops in the house (the netbook EeePC is in a draw, too hard to type on, and a pain for WiFi at times) and every night at 9 or 10pm both of us are in bed online. But maybe it was when I hacked the Apple TV (again, the last time it got wiped with an update after 2 days) so our Apple TV now offers more than iTunes + YouTube, and now offers Boxee (which is beautiful) but better still XBMC, which has a pile of plugins for popular streaming sites.

I believe we may have reached online ubiquity.

Louis Gray yesterday wrote that every night he sleeps next to his iPhone. Every night I sleep next to a Macbook Pro, my iPhone and an internet enabled alarm clock, and that’s just my side of the bed. She who must be obeyed has a Blackberry, an iPhone, and a MacBook. My son’s room has an internet enabled DVD player and Wii. The lounge room has an Apple TV. Sadly the Bluray isn’t internet enabled. My office has a variety of things, including a wireless printer, network drive and Mac Pro. Sadly the kitchen doesn’t have a permanent internet enabled device, but I haven’t started looking for Christmas presents yet.

We’ve all but stopped watching broadcast TV. As I type this, my son, home from school is watching YouTube videos on the Apple TV. When my wife gets home if we watch something tonight, the toss up will be bed on a laptop or Apple TV in the lounge room, and the odds of us watching broadcast tv are about twice a week, if that now Australian Idol is finished for the year.

Online ubiquity

Free Labour

admin —  November 18, 2008 — 5 Comments

I’m quite bewildered at these multi-million dollar sites/ blogs that get thousands of people writing for them for absolutely nothing. I’m not sure if I’m troubled because of the financial dimension (exploitation) or I’m simply troubled because I’m jealous and I wants me some of that. Hmmmmmm……

Drew’s Strands Tattoo

admin —  November 18, 2008 — 3 Comments

I love Drew. Here’s a guy who always puts his 110% into everything he does, and he does it so well at the same time.

More on the Strands blog here.

It could be worse…like New Zealand

Via SMH

Navy closes for Christmas

NAVY chiefs battling a staffing crisis have taken the unprecedented step of ordering a two-month shutdown over Christmas, and have told personnel with child-care problems that they can work from home.

The navy has also ordered all ships not deployed on operations home for Christmas to try to combat a 2020 shortfall in trained personnel.

In addition, the number of sailors forced to stay on board ships docked in their home port on “duty watch” as sentries will be reduced from previous levels of 15 to 20 people to a skeleton staff.

On the bright side, docked ships still look scary, even if there’s no one to drive them 🙂

Take on Me A-ha

admin —  November 17, 2008 — 4 Comments

…and the sea will grant each man new hope, as sleep brings dreams of home.

Memories of my youth: Take on Me: A-Ha