Access member only content, take part in discussions with comments on blogs, news and reviews and receive all the latest security industry news directly to your inbox. Join now for free.
Processing registration... Please wait.
This process can take up to a minute to complete.
A confirmation email has been sent to your email address - SUPPLIED EMAIL HERE. Please click on the link in the email to verify your email address. You need to verify your email before you can start posting.
If you do not receive your confirmation email within the next few minutes, it may be because the email has been captured by a junk mail filter. Please ensure you add the domain @scmagazine.com.au to your white-listed senders.
The Federal Government was pressing ahead with talks with the three ISPs that volunteered to participate in an internet filter.Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy deputy secretary Abul Rizvi told a Senate Estimates committee that it was talking to Telstra, Optus and iPrimus, which "indicated they will implement voluntary filters and talking to the industry body association for ISPs on what's needed for them to proceed".
The Government was also working to "provide assistance on the possible design" of a review of refused classification guidelines the Government said must be completed before it considered introducing mandatory ISP-level filtering.The public would also be asked to make submissions to the review, said Communications Minister Senator Stephen Conroy.The Standing Committee of Attorneys-General would handle the review overseen by the Minister for Home Affairs and Justice Brendan O'Connor. The committee was due to meet next month although it was unclear whether the RC review was on its agenda, The Australian reported.Senator Conroy said he was "reasonably confident" that the review would not be put on hold or delayed by objections from the states.He said the Government "sounded out" the states before announcing the RC review in July but denied it was proceeding only after assurances of a favourable outcome
"I wouldn't want to predict what the outcome would be," Senator Conroy said.He denied suggestions that mandatory ISP-level filtering was to "sit on the backburner for quite some time".
To begin commenting right away, you can log in below or register an account if you don't yet have one. Please read our guidelines on commenting. Offending posts will be removed and your access may be suspended. Abusive or obscene language will not be tolerated. The comments below do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of SC Magazine, Haymarket Media or its employees.