Media Release 13/08/07
On Thursday night last week The Australian Prime Minister John Howard announced a A$189 million package to deal with the growing problems of internet porn and dissemination of, and availability of, objectionable content to minors via Internet Service Providers (ISPs). The tough measures adopted by the Howard government to stamp out two evils – accessibility to hardcore porn and alcohol abuse in Northern Aboriginal communities – because of their injurious effect on the “public good” and links to child abuse, has been matched by his latest measures. Every Australian public library as well as individual family will be provided with free software to filter internet content to prevent children downloading pornography and other offensive material, service providers will work alongside the government to filter pornography at its source, a ‘black list’ of pornographic sites will be established, and privacy laws will be altered so that sex offenders cannot ‘hide’ on the internet and chatroom sex predators will be rigorously hunted down and prosecuted. In addition a seven-day-a-week hotline will help parents put filters on their computers to block material that is passed on to home computers via ISPs.
The Society is concerned over NZ’s internet problem: the ready availability of, and corrupting impact, of hardcore porn and gratuitous images of sexual violence, on children and young persons, in particular. Informed New Zealanders will be aware that such images have now entered NZ mainstream ‘arthouse’ film cinemas as a regular feature – R18 films such as “Baise-Moi” featuring a four minute rape and sodomising of a woman, and others containing gratuitous sexual violence like “Irreversible” – both hailed by the Chief Censor Bill Hastings, who passed them both for public screening, as a terrific antidotes to the problem of sexual violence in our country. The Society is particularly concerned about the corrosive and toxic nature of much Internet porn and sexual violence and its addictive impact.
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