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Hosting company threatened with big fine over banned website blacklist

The Australian Communications and Media Authority has threatened to fine a data hosting company up to $11,000 per day for inadvertently revealing a website on the Government’s secret “blacklist” of banned websites. ย  Last week ACMA sent an “interim link-deletion notice” to data hosting firm Bulletproof Networks, after one of Bulletproof’s clients published a link […]
Patrick Stafford
Patrick Stafford

The Australian Communications and Media Authority has threatened to fine a data hosting company up to $11,000 per day for inadvertently revealing a website on the Government’s secret “blacklist” of banned websites.

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Last week ACMA sent an “interim link-deletion notice” to data hosting firm Bulletproof Networks, after one of Bulletproof’s clients published a link to an anti-abortion site on the ACMA blacklist.

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The link was posted on the forums of Whirlpool.net.au, one of the most popular forums in Australia that focuses on internet-related topics and has around 276,000 users. ย 

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The ACMA told Bulletproof it had one day to remove the link. ย ย 

“Bulletproof must comply with the interim link-deletion notice as soon as practicable, and in any event by 6pm on the next business day,” ACMA said.

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Bulletproof spokesman Lorenzo Modesto said the company complied with the notice and promptly asked Whirlpool to remove the link. ย 

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“The first thing we said was that we could put them in contact with the customer in question, because we’re a data hosting provider, but ACMA said they needed to speak with us.”

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Modesto said the group was surprised to receive the notice, and that if ACMA had dealt with Whirlpool directly it would simplify the process.

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“Our take on it was โ€˜we’re not responsible for the content’ but obviously we work with any request.

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“It seems like the relevant rules and legislation have been written in this way, and as a business content provider we’ll comply. But if ACMA spoke with Whirlpool it’d take a whole cycle of communication out of the process.”

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But ironically a notice from ACMA may have been the basis for the release of the banned website link.

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On 5 January an internet user known as “Foad” lodged a complaint with the authority regarding material on the anti-abortion website.

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As the blacklist’s main purpose is to block sites affiliated with child-pornography, Foad says he lodged the complaint to show how the blacklist may inadvertently block politically-based sites.

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The user received a reply from ACMA saying that it was “satisfied that the internet content is hosted outside Australia”, and publishes “potentially prohibited content” and had placed the site on its blacklist.

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Foad published ACMA’s reply, which contained the link to the website, on the Whirlpool forums. It is this post that triggered last week’s call for Bulletproof to remove the link.

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The “blacklist” of around 1000 sites is being used as the basis of the Government’s ISP-level filtering trial.

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