EFA Newsletter, December 2009

Last updated: Wednesday 23 December 2009 10:02 am

1. Filtering update

On Tuesday the 15th of this month, Minister Stephen Conroy called a snap press conference to announce that the live trials of ISP filtering were successful and that the Government was moving ahead with its mandatory filtering policy.

This means that at some point in the new year, legislation will be introduced in Parliament which will require all Internet service providers to begin filtering a list supplied by the Australian Communications and Media Authority within 12 months or face heavy fines. This filter will apply to all Internet connections in the country and will be mandatory.

Interest in the policy has been high in the Australian and international media and opposition is mounting. EFA has been spreading the word in the media (see below), and we are working on several campaigns to ratchet up the pressure on the Government next year. We will begin with the Internet Blackout campaign in January, with much more to come.

As usual, we can use your help. See below for some projects requiring enthusiastic volunteers. We also have an opening for a full-time campaign manager, so if you or somebody you know want to help us take the fight to Conroy, read on!

For more background on the filtering proposal, see efa.org.au or check out EFA's fact sheets at http://www.efa.org.au/mandatory-internet-filtering-fact-sheets/.

 

2. EFA in the media

The recent days have seen EFA make numerous appearances in print, radio and TV expressing why the Australian public should be leery of Conroy's filter. Our media activism is one of the best ways we can reach a broader cross-section of the Australian community and complement our direct campaigns both online and off. Here are a few articles you may have missed:

 

3. How you can help

We are currently working on a number of different campaigns, including:

 

We are looking for volunteers on each of these projects, and are continuously looking for new ideas to help progress the campaign. We are particularly looking for:

  • A web designer - see below;
  • A project manager - see below;
  • A developer to create a small web application to coordinate community activism by handing out timeslots to volunteers.
  • Writers to update the information on our websites, write opinion pieces, draft sample letters, write some simple fact sheets and talking points memos;
  • Graphic designers to create logos, postcards, posters, banners;
  • Event managers to take responsibility for organising national celebration events on Australia day.
  • Community managers, project managers, or anyone else with skills or ideas to help us organise this campaign.
  • People to collect signatures for a petition.
  • People to take delivery of a stack of postcards and distribute them to people who will write a message and post them back to us.

 

Steps you can take:

  • Contact us at email@efa.org.au with your ideas and feedback.
  • Send us feedback on the campaign, and where you'd like to see EFA target its resources.
  • Renew your membership or make a donation so that we can continue to fund our ongoing activities.
  • Suggest other ways we can step up the campaign.
  • Join our Alert mailing list, which we will use to call for specific action.

 

4. Campaign manager

EFA is looking to hire a campaign, community, and project manager for our campaign against mandatory internet filtering. The position will be a minimum three month contract, and the successful applicant will be expected to take charge of coordinating a number of different projects, including rebranding our nocleanfeed site to create a campaign hub, organising testimonials from key figures, coordinating online and paper petitions, soliciting donations and organising fundraising, coordinating with other interested industry and activist groups, commissioning television commercials, and providing focus to social media campaigns.

See our position description here.

 

5. Web developer for redesigned campaign site

We are looking for a professional web developer who can create a wordpress theme for our new campaign site. We are moving away from the 'nocleanfeed' branding towards a more positive and mainstream message. We are also updating our campaign site to better enable us to present up-to-date information and provide a coordination hub for the many different groups that are opposing mandatory filtering.

We are looking for a professional web designer, either paid or volunteer, to help us with this project. Please contact Colin Jacobs for more information.

 

6. R18+ for Computer Games campaign

The Commonwealth Minister for Home Affairs has finally released the public discussion paper on the introduction of an R18+ rating for computer games.

EFA intends to lodge a comprehensive submission and we have engaged a writer to lead the drafting of EFA's paper. Our submission is being made in conjunction with AusGamers and the group of volunteers who have joined our campaign mailing list. The draft structure of the submission will be opened for discussion over the New Year break, and the final draft will be presented for editing at the end of January, for submission by the end of February.

To become involved, please join our campaign list.

 

7. Updated privacy policy

We are updating our privacy policy for our websites. In order to better manage our campaigns, we will be introducing Google Analytics tracking. We will add the following to our privacy policy:

"We collect and compile standard web analytics data in order to better understand the traffic patterns and visitor behavior for our site. It is not used for any other purpose. In order to compile this information, we make use of Google Analytics, which means information about visitors to this site is stored by Google. We do not collate or access personally identifiable information, and we are confident that Google will not disclose information collected unless compelled by law."

If you have concerns, please see Google Analytics Terms of Service or investigate methods to block Analytics.

Additionally, we transitioned to a dynamic website powered by WordPress over a year ago, and it has come to our attention that some aspects of our privacy policy may have been misleading. Specifically, our policy stated that "Our site does not set or use cookies"; the new WordPress site, however, does set cookies to remember administrators and those who comment on the blog. We sincerely apologise to anyone who may have been misled by our privacy policy on this issue. We have updated our privacy to include the terms:

"Our site occasionally sets cookies, a standard web tool, in order to allow our software to recognise return visitors – for example, return commenters on blog posts."

8. Conclusion

I would like to thank you all for your support over the year, and would like to welcome
the new members who have joined in response to campaigning on mandatory ISP
filtering. Next year is shaping up to be a very interesting one indeed, and we hope
to be able to mobilise the help of our membership and other volunteers to bring our
message to the Australian people.

On behalf of the EFA Board, I wish you all the best over the holiday season.

Nicolas Suzor
EFA Chair