This can't be the way that Australia wanted it. One day after Google announced its decision to stop censoring its search results in China, the Australian government released the results of a public consultation on its own Internet censorship proposal. Predictably, Google has some objections (PDF), including its oblique comment that Australia's mandatory filtering scheme could 'confer legitimacy upon filtering by other Governments.'
'Australia is rightly regarded as a liberal democracy that balances individual liberty with social responsibility,' continues the Google filing. 'The Governments of many other countries may justify, by reference to Australia, their use of filtering, their lack of disclosure about what is being filtered, and their political direction of agencies administering filtering.'
Google is unlikely to come right out and compare Australia to China, but the implication is obvious—and has been made explicit by other groups. Reporters Without Borders said recently that Australia would 'be joining an Internet censors' club that includes such countries as China, Iran, and Saudi Arabia.'
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