Web Professionals Join Fight Over Government Internet Monitoring Plan
Ismira Lutfia & Febriamy Hutapea | February 17, 2010
The Internet is now a part of daily life in Indonesia. (Antara Photo) Related articles
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359120That would be the same Kaskus, that until last year was happily providing porn? And then stopped when the government went ballistic about online local porn. Interesting volte face.
It's just going to be another 'regulation' created to get the government more money, isn't it? Allowed content is the "paid" one.
well I agree with darwis.he should be the next Ministry of Communication and Information Technology
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Local Web site managers have joined the chorus of objections to the
Indonesian Ministry of Communication and Information Technology’s draft regulation
to create a team to monitor online content, saying it would hamper the
development of local Internet service providers.
Andrew
Darwis, the founder of a local online forum called Kaskus, told the
Jakarta Globe on Tuesday that he was surprised the ministry was
drafting such a regulation, which he believed was “contrary to the
ministry’s encouragement to develop local content.”
Andrew
said the draft gave the impression that the ministry was “trying to
shift the blame to the Web managers” for any content determined to be
illegal.
“It is counterproductive to the ministry’s efforts in
supporting the development of local Web content,” Andrew said, adding
that he and his online community would deliver their feedback to the
ministry.
Satya Witoelar, the chief creative officer of
Koprol.com, a local micro-blogging site similar to Twitter, also said
the proposed regulation was “a threat to locally based Web sites, which
have become a tool for instant and real-time interactions online.”
Ministry
spokesman Gatot Dewa Broto said on Monday that the planned 30-member
Multimedia Content Team would act on public complaints of so-called
disturbing content, and would order Internet service providers to block
sites that it felt were displaying material banned under Indonesian
law.
He pointed out that the draft of the regulation remained open for public comment and debate until Friday.
A
recent spate of crimes targeting teenagers in using social networking
sites has raised questions over the need for better monitoring of Web
sites.
However, Andrew said that it would be impossible for
Kaskus moderators to control the content of every posting in the forum,
which has 1.4 million registered users to date.
“We have 30
posts every second and we would not have the manpower to filter them
all the time,” he said, adding that he hoped the ministry would invite
local Web site managers to discuss the formulation of the draft.
Andrew
added that the proposal would affect local sites more than the foreign
ones. “What if the illegal content comes from foreign-based Web sites
such as Twitter and Facebook?” Satya said. “Will the government take
action to ban them?”
Satya said the draft regulation was
“ironic,” comparing the situation to that in Singapore where freedom of
expression is tightly controlled but the government still encourages
citizens to develop local Web sites.
Agustinus Edy Kristianto,
the chief editor of Indonesian political and legal news site Primair
Online told the Globe that the proposed draft “seems to be similar to
the Internet policies in China that could threaten the development of a
Web-based creative industry.”
He said the draft should have a
“clear philosophical background” to justify it. “Was it drafted to
protect children from accessing disturbing content? The objective must
be clear,” Agustinus said.
He added that the ministry must
work with the private sector and human rights, media, freedom of
information and child protection activists to ensure that the
regulation will accommodate their perspectives.
“And it should
also avoid using ambiguous wordings that are liable for multi
interpretation since this will be a ministerial regulation that deals
with the technicalities in its field,” he said.
The Indonesian
Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) also rejected the draft
regulation, which it regards as an effort to control the content of
media and information in an authoritarian style. PDI-P chairman Tjahjo
Kumolo said it violated the 1999 Press Law, which guarantees media
freedoms and protection of the establishment of media.
Monday’s front page story on the Web monitoring regulation incorrectly identified blogger Enda Nasution as Enda Sumarsono.
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