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November 26, 2006 |

Canandian ISPs work to stop porn sites

By Alex Zaharov-Reutt





Canada has started up ‘Project Cleanfeed Canada’ to stop porn websites from loading on Canadian users’ computers.

        

Cybertip.ca, Canada’s national tipline for reporting child sexual exploitation, with a richly resourced website of information, has launched Project Cleanfeed Canada, based on the successful UK launch of their own Project Cleanfeed in 2004.

Working with major Canadian ISPs such as Rogers, Telus, Bell Canada, Shaw, SaskTel, MTS Allstream and Videotron, 500 and 800 offending sites will be blocked from access by their Canadian customers.

The system works through reports from the public on sites considered offensive or illegal, and along with sites they have discovered themselves, Cybertip.ca will rate the sites and inform ISPs of which sites and IP addresses need to be blocked.

The system is still some weeks away from actually starting up, with some ISP participants scheduled to come onstream in a 3 month timeframe, and others longer after that who are the smaller ISPs that didn’t join in the first wave of the service becoming available.

There is some concern that the system won’t solve the problem, as people actually seriously interested in finding and distributing child porn won’t be doing from publicly accessible websites, but those with a password protected entry in an area of a website which for all intents and purposes looks like a completely different site altogether.

The detection of these types of camouflaged sites needs continual law enforcement investigation into the underbelly of the online world, while Cybertip.ca also has a never ending battle on its hands to educated parents, children and Internet users in general about safety on the Internet.

Cybertip says that the IP addresses of people who either inadvertently landed on one of the blocked pages, or sought out the content, won’t be tracked by the participating ISPs. They say it’s not going to be used to monitor who’s doing what, just to prevent people from accessing the sites in Canada, whether by accident or on purpose.

Some people worry that, while the blocking of child porn websites is very desirable for the online and real world safety of our children, that this technology might also be used in the future to arbitrarily block access to websites that the government of the day doesn’t want their people to have access to.

Clearly, any site can be blocked if child porn websites can be blocked, and it’s de rigueur in some countries around the world.

China is a well known example for having the ‘Great Firewall of China’ blocking access to all kinds of sites, both good sites and bad ones that should be blocked. They have also blocked global news websites with the most recent episode being with the Wikipedia on, Wikipedia off, then on, and back off again story of the past couple of weeks and well into the past.

We applaud Cybertip.ca’s initiative in getting this project up and running. It’s already in the UK, and is likely being considered by other Commonwealth countries such as Australia and New Zealand, with something similar no doubt underway in the US and other countries as well.

In Australia, visit the NetAlert website for local information on how to best protect yourself and your family from today’s online dangers.

Related:

  • AOL, AT&T join child porn battle
  • Porn industry revenue sliding thanks to the Internet
  • Australia moves forward with ISP porn filter
  • Online porn piracy fought in same way as RIAA fights music piracy
  • Firefox 3 refuseniks blame porn bookmarks fear




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    5 Responses to “Canandian ISPs work to stop porn sites”

    1. Jerey:

      I’m all for blocking harmful websites, but it should be up to the internet user to moniter and filter their internet use. While the idea behind the cybertip program is good, it is problematic to block any type of information. All in all a good step, but maybe in the wrong direction.

    2. Terry:

      Its great that a pro-active step is being taken to help protect children from exploitation, however to include websites that some may find “offensive” is a terrible idea because it carries the risk of impeading a persons right to free speech. FOR EXAMPLE, Based on this step … someone can create a website about atheism which a religious person finds offensive. That person can then report the website as being offensive and subsiquently have it banned in Canada.

    3. Holy Flusher:

      With so many websites using a shared host, blocking Ip addresses will also potentially block hundresds of other sites.

      Many websites share the same ip address, even if the sites are not related, like with a godaddy shared hosting package.

      I’m all for blocking the most repugnant content, but once the mechanism is in place it can easily be abused to block competitors sites, and sites that are not illegal or immoral at all.

    4. Larry:

      There should be an effort made to stop the production of childporn. Stopping the viewing of childporn doesn’t help the children being desroyed making it.
      If the production of childporn cannot bbe stopped, keeping it from being viewed is just another empty government intrusion into a free internet .

    5. Billy:

      Hi all,
      Who's your favorite porn star or nude model and why?
      My favorite nude model right now is Kyla Cole from the Czech Republic because she is perfect in every way and I love her brown hair/blue eye combination.
      My favorite porn star is Teagan Presley because she's just hot and dirty.

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