Some activists consider Australia's laws on Internet censorship to be amongst the most restrictive in the western world. However, the restrictive nature of the laws has been combined with almost complete lack of interest in enforcement from the agencies responsible. Some of the interesting exceptions include an attempt by then NSW Police Minister Michael Costa to shut down Melbourne Indymedia, a case in 2001 involving the US Secret Service that was eventually pleaded out, and an attempt by the FBI using the Australian Federal Police to censor a Victorian they alleged was posting threats to the US. A collection of both federal and state laws apply, but the most important is the federal legislation which came into effect on 1 January 2000. If a complaint is issued about material on the Internet, the ACMA is empowered to examine the material under the guidelines for film and video. If it is found that a) the material would be classified X18+, or b) the material would classified R18+ and the site does not have an adult verification system, or c) the material would be refused classification: • If the site is hosted in Australia, the ACMA is empowered to issue a "takedown notice" under which the material must be removed from the site. • If the site is hosted outside Australia, the site is added to a list of banned sites. This list of banned sites is then added to filtering software, which must be offered to all consumers by Internet Service Providers and the Australian Government. On 31 December 2007 the Telecommunications Minister of the newly elected Labor government,
Stephen Conroy, announced that Australia would introduce mandatory internet filtering. Once more the reason given is that mandatory filtering is required to "provide greater protection to children from online pornography and violent websites". As of November 2008, the plan includes two blacklists, one of which will filter illegal content according to internet content laws as well as other "unwanted" content, and the other will also filter content unsuitable for children. Internet users will be able to opt out of the secondary blacklist for children, but will not be able to opt out of the primary filter, sparking free speech concerns. No statement has been made about what content will be considered "illegal", or what Stephen Conroy means by "unwanted". Slated for blocking, should the "Clean Feed" Act be passed by Australia's Federal Parliament, is the website of Dr
Philip Nitschke's banned book,
The Peaceful Pill Handbook. The inclusion of Nitschke's euthanasia book's website came to light after the Government's list of would-be banned websites was leaked to
wikileaks.org.
The Peaceful Pill Handbook was listed on the leaked internet website blacklist, wedged in alphabetical order between the porn sites panty-ass.com and pickyourperversion.com. This produced a huge backlash from the community, including the Get Up advertisement Censordyne. Conroy eventually abandoned the proposal, saying that the relevant authority was already invested in ACMA, which didn't take any action in accordance. After the election of the Coalition government in 2013, one act was passed that allows the blocking of websites that host pirated content, if the content provider has contacted the Australian government about it and they have gone through the procedures set out through the act, then the website will be blocked under s.115a of the
Copyright Amendment (Online Infringement) Bill 2015. There has been two applications to Section.115a, one by Foxtel and another by Village Roadshow, which would prohibit an Australian pirate site from functioning and block The Pirate Bay respectively. The Federal Court has ruled that ISPs must block a range of torrent sites including
The Pirate Bay using either
DNS hijacking, URL blocking or some other mutually agreed method by ISPs and rights holders. There has been reports of individuals from Australia collaborating with Chinese
Great Firewall security officials and other officials from
Cyberspace Administration of China in implementing its data retention and filtering infrastructure and possibly obtained surveillance technology from China. On 20 March 2019 Australian telecom company
Telstra denied access to millions of Australians to the websites
4chan,
8chan,
Zero Hedge,
Voat,
Archive.today, and
Liveleak as a reaction to the
Christchurch mosque shootings. == Non-government forms of censorship ==