Calls to introduce a licensing system to police the
Internet on behalf of a powerful UN agency represent the latest salvo
in a long-running battle to kill free speech on the web and bring an
end to the powerful digital democracy that has devastated the carbon
tax agenda of the UN by exposing the Climategate scandal.
UN International Telcommunications Union secretary general Hamadoun Toure told the World Economic Forum in Davos this past weekend that global treaties need to be enacted in the name of stopping cyber warfare.
Craig Mundie, chief research and strategy officer for
Microsoft, told fellow globalists at the summit that the Internet
needed to be policed by means of introducing licenses similar to
drivers licenses – in other words government permission to use the web.
“We need a kind of World Health Organization for the Internet,” he said.
“If you want to drive a car you have to have a license
to say that you are capable of driving a car, the car has to pass a
test to say it is fit to drive and you have to have insurance.”
Andre Kudelski, chairman of Kudelski Group, said that
people should be forced to “have two computers that cannot connect and
pass on viruses”. Since using the Internet requires a computer to
connect to a network, it seems unclear as to how this would work
without blocking off entire areas of the Internet altogether.
Globalists are invoking the threat of cyber attacks by
nation states in order to accomplish their real agenda of stifling and
regulating out of existence the last true outpost of free speech – the
Internet. The establishment is furious at the level of influence
individuals and small political groups have been able to wield by means
of the world wide web, particularly over the last few years.
Climategate is a perfect example of the power of the
digital democracy that authoritarian enemies of free speech want to
crush. The Copenhagen global warming conference was completely
devastated by the Climategate revelations which appeared just days
before elitists convened to ram through their CO2 scam. As a result of
bloggers feverishly pursuing the Climategate story, the entire
foundation of the UN’s IPCC has been totally eviscerated and the global
warming hoax is on its last legs.
The power to cripple entire branches of their control
freak agenda within a matter of weeks has the globalists hopping mad,
which is why their mission to eliminate real free speech on the web is
accelerating.
“Don’t be surprised if it becomes reality in the near future,” writes ZD Net’s Doug Hanchard.
“Every device connected to the Internet will have a permament license
plate and without it, the network won’t allow you to log in.”
The graphic below illustrates how you would be blocked
from using the Internet if your device had not obtained government
permission to access the network.
Another method would be to make the use of fingerprint
scanners that are included on a lot of new computer models mandatory.
You would have to register your fingerprint at a central government
data center and then scan each time you want to access the Internet.
Misbehave online and your access will be denied.
“One thing is for sure,” concludes Hanchard, “A lot of
money is going to be spent trying and sooner or later, everyone may
have to pay with an Internet cop instant messaging you – “license and
registration please”.
It seems certain that cyber security problems will be
exploited or even manufactured to justify the move to Internet
licensing. Authorities need to create a strong pretext to justify
measures that would otherwise be rightly rejected for what they truly
represent – government regulation and censorship of the web that would
outstrip anything the Communist Chinese have attempted.
Internet censorship bills currently working their way into law in
the UK, Australia and the U.S. legislate for government powers to
restrict and filter any website that it deems to be undesirable for
public consumption.
In the UK, legislation slated as the “Digital Economy Bill“,
currently being debated in the House of Lords, would allow the Home
Secretary to place “a technical obligation on internet service
providers” to block whichever sites it wishes.
Under clause 11 of the proposed legislation “technical obligation” is defined as follows:
A “technical obligation”, in relation to an internet
service provider, is an obligation for the provider to take a technical
measure against particular subscribers to its service.
A “technical measure” is a measure that — (a) limits the speed or
other capacity of the service provided to a subscriber; (b) prevents a
subscriber from using the service to gain access to particular
material, or limits such use; (c) suspends the service provided to a
subscriber; or (d) limits the service provided to a subscriber in
another way.
In other words, the government will have the power to force ISPs to
downgrade and even block your internet access to certain websites or
altogether if it wishes.
The legislation comes in the wake of amplified UK government efforts to seize more power over the internet and those who use it.
Mandelson also wants to impose harsh policies, via the Digital Economy Bill, that would see users’ broadband access cut off indefinitely,
in addition to a fine of up to £50,000 without evidence or trial, if
they download copyrighted music and films. The plan has been identified
as “potentially illegal” by experts.
The legislation would impose a duty on ISPs to effectively spy on
all their customers by keeping records of the websites they have
visited and the material they have downloaded. ISPs who refuse to
cooperate could be fined £250,000.
As Journalist and copyright law expert Cory Doctrow has
noted, the bill also gives the Secretary of State the power to make up
as many new penalties and enforcement systems as he likes, without
Parliamentary oversight or debate.
This could include the authority to appoint private militias, who
will have the power to kick you off the internet, spy on your use of
the network, demand the removal of files in addition to the blocking of
websites.
Mandelson and his successors will have the power to invent any
penalty, including jail time, for any digital transgression he deems
Britons to be guilty of.
Despite being named the Digital Economy Bill, the legislation
contains nothing that will actually stimulate the economy and is
largely based on shifting control over the internet into government
hands, allowing unaccountable bureaucrats to arbitrarily hide
information from the public should they wish to do so.
Mandelson began the onslaught on the free internet in the UK after spending a luxury two week holiday at Nat Rothschild’s Corfu mansion with multi-millionaire record company executive David Geffen.
The Digital Economy Bill is intrinsically linked to long term plans
by the UK government to carry out an unprecedented extension of state
powers by claiming the authority to monitor all emails, phone calls and
internet activity nationwide.
Last year the government announced its intention to create a massive central database, gathering details on every text sent, e-mail sent, phone call made and website visited by everyone in the UK.
The programme, known as the “Interception Modernisation Programme”,
would allow spy chiefs at GCHQ, the government’s secret eavesdropping
agency, the centre for Signal Intelligence (SIGINT) activities
(pictured above), to effectively place a “live tap” on every electronic
communication in Britain in the name of preventing terrorism.
Following outcry over the announcement, the government suggested last April that it was scaling down the plans,
with then Home Secretary Jacqui Smith stating that there were
“absolutely no plans for a single central store” of communications data.
However, as the “climbdown” was celebrated by civil liberties advocates and the plan was “replaced” by new laws
requiring ISPs to store details of emails and internet telephony for
just 12 months, fresh details emerged indicating the government was
implementing a big brother spy system that far outstrips the original
public announcement.
Costing hundreds of millions in public funds, the system is already
being implemented by GCHQ with the aid of American defence giant
Lockheed Martin and British IT firm Detica, which has close ties to the
intelligence agencies.
A group of over 300 internet service providers and telecommunications firms has attempted to fight back over the radical plans, describing the proposals as an unwarranted invasion of people’s privacy.
Currently, any interception of a communication in Britain must be
authorised by a warrant signed by the home secretary or a minister of
equivalent rank. Only individuals who are the subject of police or
security service investigations may be subject to surveillance.
If the GCHQ’s MTI project is completed, black-box probes would be
placed at critical traffic junctions with internet service providers
and telephone companies, allowing eavesdroppers to instantly monitor
the communications of every person in the country without the need for
a warrant.
Even if you believe GCHQ’s denial that it has any plans to create a
huge monitoring system, the current law under the RIPA (the Regulation
of Investigatory Powers Act) allows hundreds of government agencies
access to the records of every internet provider in the country.
In publicly announced proposals to extend these powers, firms will
be asked to collect and store even more vast amounts of data, including
from social networking sites such as Facebook.
If the plans go ahead, every internet user will be given a unique ID
code and all their data will be stored in one place. Government
agencies such as the police and security services will have access to
the data should they request it with respect to criminal or terrorist
investigations.
This is clearly the next step in an incremental program to implement
an already exposed full scale big brother spy system designed to
completely obliterate privacy, a fundamental right under Article 8 of
the European Convention on Human Rights.
Australian communication minister Stephen Conroy said the government
would be the final arbiter on what sites would be blacklisted under
“refused classification.”
The official justification for the filter is to block child pornography, however, as the watchdog group Electronic Frontiers Australia
has pointed out, the law will also allow the government to block any
website it desires while the pornographers can relatively easily skirt
around the filters.
The list revealed that blacklisted sites included “online poker
sites, YouTube links, regular gay and straight porn sites, Wikipedia
entries, euthanasia sites, websites of fringe religions such as satanic
sites, fetish sites, Christian sites, the website of a tour operator
and even a Queensland dentist.”
The filter will even block web-based games deemed unsuitable for anyone over the age of fifteen, according to the Australian government.
The broad attack on the free internet is not only restricted to the UK and Australia.
The European Union, Finland, Denmark, Germany and other countries in
Europe have all proposed blocking or limiting access to the internet
and using filters like those used in Iran, Syria, China, and other
repressive regimes.
In 2008 in the U.S., The Motion Picture Association of America
asked president Obama to introduce laws that would allow the federal
government to effectively spy on the entire Internet, establishing a
system where being accused of copyright infringement would result in
loss of your Internet connection.
In 2009 the Cybersecurity Act was introduced,
proposing to allow the federal government to tap into any digital
aspect of every citizen’s information without a warrant. Banking,
business and medical records would be wide open to inspection, as well
as personal instant message and e mail communications.
The legislation,
introduced by Senators John Rockefeller (D-W. Va.) and Olympia Snowe
(R-Maine) in April, gives the president the ability to “declare a
cybersecurity emergency” and shut down or limit Internet traffic in any
“critical” information network “in the interest of national security.”
The bill does not define a critical information network or a
cybersecurity emergency. That definition would be left to the
president, according to a Mother Jones report.
During a hearing on the bill, Senator John Rockefeller
betrayed the true intent behind the legislation when he stated, “Would
it have been better if we’d have never invented the Internet,” while
fearmongering about cyber attacks on the U.S. government and how the
country could be shut down.
Watch the clip below.
The Obama White House has also sought a private contractor to “crawl and archive” data
such as comments, tag lines, e-mail, audio and video from any place
online where the White House “maintains a presence” – for a period of
up to eight years.
Recent disclosures under the Freedom Of Information Act also reveal that the federal government has several contracts
with social media outlets such as Youtube (Google), Facebook, Myspace
and Flickr (Yahoo) that waive rules on monitoring users and permit
companies to track visitors to government web sites for advertising
purposes.
The U.S. military also has some $30 Billion invested in it’s own mastering the internet projects.
We have extensively covered efforts to scrap the internet
as we know it and move toward a greatly restricted “internet 2″ system.
All of the above represents stepping stones toward the realisation of
that agenda.
The free internet is under attack the world over, only by exposing
the true intentions of our governments to restrict the flow of data can
we defeat such efforts and preserve the last vestige of independent
information. by Paul Joseph Watson, Alex Jones & Steve Watson
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