SA backs down on unpopular censorship law

 

Anonymous comments allowed again.

The Attorney General Michael Atkinson has promised to repeal a law that banned anonymous comments made about election issues or people.

In a statement to South Australia news site Adelaide Now, Atkinson said "the blogging generation believes that the law supported by all MPs and all political parties is unduly restrictive... I will immediately after the election move to repeal the law retrospectively."

"This way, no one need fear now that they are being censored on the net or in blogs, whether they blog under their own name or anonymously," he added.click to view full size image

Atkinson's statement last night was followed by a tweet from SA premier Mike Rann, who said: "AG has listened. So no debate will be stifled. No political censorship of blogs or on-line comments whether named or anon."

The controversial law (PDF) seemed to require any comments about election-related issues or people to include the name and address of the person responsible for those comments.

Privacy, legal and security experts all agreed that the law was not only unenforceable, it might also have put voters at risk from cyber-criminals, who thrive from collecting personal information.

Before Atkinson's u-turn, legal expert Kay Lam-Beattie, principal of Idealaw, told iTnews that the law was confusing and its wording unclear.

Lam-Beattie said if the law had been fully enforced, it would have required publications such as iTnews.com.au to:

  • Get peoples' names and addresses if they're posting comments
  • Post relevant names and postcodes to individual comments.
  • Store those details for six months

Alternatively, the publications would have to block traffic from South Australia.


SA backs down on unpopular censorship law
"He has now changed his tune again, and based on feedback from Vickie Chapman, has said he will repeal it immediately. With any luck he has pissed off enough people that he will be gone soon ..."
By Daff42
 
 
 
Comments: 3
hamish
Feb 3, 2010 12:20 PM
"...block traffic from South Australia."

*tongue-in-cheek warning!* But would we really miss them?
Rhino
Feb 3, 2010 4:06 PM
So when he says "I will immediately after the election move to repeal the law retrospectively." So really what he is saying is "vote me back in and I'll repeal the law"

Isn't that blackmail, cause if he looses then there is no reason for him to do anything.

What a prick.
Daff42
Feb 3, 2010 5:54 PM
He has now changed his tune again, and based on feedback from Vickie Chapman, has said he will repeal it immediately. With any luck he has pissed off enough people that he will be gone soon enough, then he won't have to worry about this troublesome "blogging generation" that are giving him so much grief.
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