UPDATE 11.55pm: SA Attorney General Mick Atkinson has backed down and will repeal the ban on anonymous internet comments.

It is self-evident that websites can be used by imposters and small-time fraudsters to create a false reflection of public opinion on political issues. But there’s no excuse for the South Australian government’s breathtaking censorship tactics ahead of the state election.

Climate-change comments from the same reader under different identities

Sure, anonymous comments are a problem. There’s a guy posting on the Punch lately who has assumed 21 different identities in four days. He first came on the radar at the weekend after he left a tell-tail trail by posting two similar comments in quick succession. He could have been immediately banned but was given rope.

On a single thread he posted under the names Ronnel, James, Wendy, Rachel, Brad, Jan, Bill, Roger, Janette, Francis, Annie, Randall, Brendon, Judith and Connie. Though I’ve never met him I have an unusually clear picture of what he looks like, which is as follows.

He’s bald, wears socks with sandals and lives with his mum. He surfs the internet from his bedroom, where on the wall is a pennant hung on an angle commemorating North Melbourne’s 1975 Grand Final win. He eats tinned asparagus and has a haphazard collection of Star Wars action figures in which the prize item is a Millennium Falcon but its radar dish broke off years ago.

His way of operating is simple: he invents a name and fakes an email address, writes a short line of text expressing his dismay at environment science scandals and then links to a climate-sceptic blog.

Just speculating here, taking a wild guess, but how’s this for a theory: his intent is to give the appearance of elevated public alarm at climate change science, hoping if more people see scepticism expressed they too will come around to this view.

Now while we might be on to Roger-Judith-Brendon-Annie you can safely assume that he’s not the only person out there who makes multiple comments on websites under assumed identities.

(Oh, and the reason know it’s the same person: all the activity is from the same IP address.)

But while this Brad-Bill-Janette is an extreme example, he’s the type of person the South Australian government is worried about with its new laws requiring a name and postcode for every person leaving comments on online forums during the forthcoming state election campaign.

Like it or not, the ability to remain anonymous when expressing views on the internet is one of the things that makes it a force for democracy. It allows the free exchange of honestly-held opinions by real people without fear of reprisal by their employers, government services, or anyone else.

Now sure, there are malicious troglodytes engaging in political guerrilla warfare on websites. On The Punch we would prefer if everyone commented under their own names.

But an article just yesterday by journalist Zoe Taylor about her tragic experiences with repeated miscarriages drew a range of responses from women who had similar stories to tell but had been suffering alone. Should we be asking them to supply full names and postcodes?

Every day on The Punch we have contributions from a range of informed, connected, articulate members of The Punch who share their often brilliant thoughts and opinions on issues daily under assumed identities because their jobs would be at risk if this were not the case.

Laughably South Australia’s Attorney-General Michael Atkinson tries to claim that the new laws don’t impinge on freedom of speech.

“The AdelaideNow website is not just a sewer of criminal defamation, it is a sewer of identity theft and fraud,” Mr Atkinson said.

The most derisory thing about this statement is the assumption that somehow if people are stopped from sharing their opinions, they will cease to have them in the first place.

If CentralDistrictsFan67 is sharing an opinion on AdelaideNow, it’s a good bet he’s sharing it with people down in the pub too.

In the modern age politicians have no option but to get used to listening to statements that used to be only whispered behind their backs.

There’s a sad irony in Atkinson’s actions, given he is a former journalist with the Adelaide Advertiser and a long-standing critic of apologists for communist regimes who used censorship to suffocate dissent.

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79 comments

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    • Eno says:

      05:58pm | 02/02/10

      LOL! I too operate under a “false” name - but only the one of them so I can talk to people I know from this forum.. I feel sorry for the people that feel that saying the same things 17 times under the same name feel they have a life..

      ..we won’t mention the paid offsiders in this thread though shall we??

    • notmyrealname says:

      05:59pm | 02/02/10

      This law is a real disgrace. Will they next require that you have a license to setup a blog or webpage? Maybe they should actually harness this new technology, like asking for anonymous comments on policy ideas.

    • Hilton says:

      06:01pm | 02/02/10

      I can’t decide which is more disturbing, that fact that this idea was supported by both sides of politics, or that it was even floated in the first place!

    • Julie Coker-Godson says:

      02:12pm | 03/02/10

      I’m with you on that comment Hilton.  “Disturbing”:  that’s the word!  I blog under my own name because that is my preference but I would never support this idea.

    • Shane From Melbourne says:

      06:14pm | 02/02/10

      ALP Staffers, Liberal Party Staffers, National Civic Council campaigners, astroturfers for big business, you find them all here at the Punch. I credit australians with a high ability to detect “a spiel” to use bush jargon, when they hear one. Of course, with the kind of crap coming from both party leaders, this is pretty much all the time.

    • Bob says:

      06:15pm | 02/02/10

      Michael Atkinson puts small furry animals up his backside.

      Go on Michael, come and get me.

      The stupidity of this is that none of these real names and postcodes can be verified and it is a simple task to spoof IP addresses or go via a proxy. Unenforceable legislation that displays the governments total ignorance of technology as well as civil rights.

    • 192.168.1.2 says:

      11:12am | 03/02/10

      Not only that - anybody having a cheap internet account would have a dynamic ip address - the one being visible will be the nat’ted address, which is the same for all these people and will only tell them which isp is being used.

    • The real 192.168.1.2 says:

      01:01pm | 03/02/10

      hey that’s my ip address too!

    • Lej says:

      06:16pm | 02/02/10

      This piece is prejudiced. Tinned asparagus gets an unfair rap.

    • Mick says:

      09:11am | 03/02/10

      Comment of the day right there folks!

    • sam says:

      10:57am | 03/02/10

      Lej = Mick

      Check the IP addresses…

    • Roger of Redfern (not my real name) says:

      06:32pm | 02/02/10

      There is a very easy solution: have the community regulate.  Allow other readers to vote up or down a post based on how they react to it.  The community will find the “Brad-Bill-Janettes” and vote them down the order.  Good posts must be allow to float to the top.  Decentralising the control to the community doesn’t work perfectly, but it has much less risk than centralised censorship.

    • Brett says:

      09:59am | 03/02/10

      Actually that a very good idea. There’s this great porn site called videobox, where you can leave comments. All the punters get a chance to vote for the best comment. This way we can watch public opinion on any issue.
      Just as long as the site stays honest.

    • Sir Richard Branson says:

      01:06pm | 03/02/10

      @Brett, url please? That sounds like a good “virgin” of democracy to me.

    • Eric says:

      06:38pm | 02/02/10

      One of the main problems with commenting on The Punch as it exists now, is that there is no software to verify identity. Any commenter can choose to appear under any screen name, and the only way to discern impostors is by IP address - which is only available to moderators, and even then only if they take the time to check. Even that can be spoofed.

      Consequently, commenter identities can be tampered with. That’s one of the reasons I don’t use my real name. If I did, it would be trivial for an enemy to post a comment designed to discredit me, by falsifying my name. I’ve seen this happen before.

      One way to mitigate this problem is to provide user accounts, which are unique and consistent. That’s pretty common on many websites, and doesn’t violate anonymity. It doesn’t fix all the problems, but it does help.

    • James says:

      09:04am | 03/02/10

      Works for the Guardian.  I second Eric’s suggestion.

    • ArbitraryString says:

      01:21pm | 03/02/10

      It’s a much more secure environment when the readers know that anybody could be posting under any name. That renders the name as non-unique and thereby effectively an anonymous post. That way when I attack Islam, I can be more or less sure that I won’t be killed because someone took my posting name as my real name. Blogs and comments are most secure without registration procedures and user accounts (eg. like the Guardian as per James’ post), just don’t use your real name and don’t give away too much information about your real life.

    • V says:

      06:57pm | 02/02/10

      I think the manifesto at this website elegantly explains why we must protect anonymous speech. http://www.zerohedge.com/about

      Particularly this bit:
      “like the economist magazine, we also believe that keeping authorship anonymous moves the focus of discussion to the content of speech and away from the speaker- as it should be. we believe not only that you should be comfortable with anonymous speech in such an environment, but that you should be suspicious of any speech that isn’t.”

    • Roy Crabb says:

      08:09pm | 02/02/10

      It seems that a certain opposition party’s supporters are the ones who are the most calling foul.  But then they are the ones who like to hide behind a false name, to gutless to use their own.  Newspapers have required true names during elections, whats the diference?

    • Chase Stevens says:

      08:24pm | 02/02/10

      I’ll not be conforming to these laws. I’d rather go to prison, I say that literally.

    • UseR2006 says:

      05:22pm | 03/02/10

      They wouldn’t send you to jail, just smack you with a fine and tell you not to do it again. and even then you could appeal the fine, or better yet take the law to the high court which it would almost certainly fail.

      He’s only repealing the law anyway because both sides of the govt in SA have been caught trying to slip in a law which only benefits them.

    • Lynda Dingle says:

      08:25pm | 02/02/10

      Unfortunately, our State Government has become somewhat paranoid of any criticism whether justified or not. They target anyone who criticises their actions. Just listen to talkback radio and the MPs come out of the woodwork blustering and postering defending their position! It is a sad day for South Australia that legislation passed 60 years ago has been resurrected and amended to suppress democratic thought. We are now living in 2010 - democracy. Or are we being taken back to a darker time of repression? We just might need a new slogan for South Australia - South Australia - The Medieval State. I have never witnessed so many blogs on AdelaideNow site opposing this suppresson of a right to voice one’s opinion. Bring on the election.

    • Perry White says:

      02:04am | 03/02/10

      You may be taken back to a darker time of repression… like 1996-2007, for example. Of course you remember; when as a matter of ‘national security’, criticising the government became ‘sedition’. Academic investigation for it’s own sake ( a cherished fundamental of education to Menzies) became ‘wasting’ taxpayer’s money… the list just goes on and on and on and on…Lest we forget.

    • Eric says:

      07:16am | 03/02/10

      Perry White: Exactly how many people were imprisoned for criticising the government under the sedition laws between 1996 and 2007? If these laws are so bad, why hasn’t the Rudd government tried to repeal them? Please enlighten me.

    • xiaoecho says:

      08:13am | 03/02/10

      Eric: The fact that the laws exist is enough. Why do you support the curtailing of freedom of expression?.  Please enlighten me. This issue is bigger than which party, red or blue, holds the reins of power.

    • Eric says:

      08:49am | 03/02/10

      I didn’t say I supported the sedition laws, xiaoecho. I’m just tired of hearing all the lies about Howard “suppressing dissent”. Howard didn’t suppress freedom of expression.

      Another myth is that Howard’s government introduced the sedition laws. In fact, the government only slightly amended a law that has been on the books since 1929. Yet Labor’s propagandists talk about it as if this was an unprecedented suppressive measure.

      It’s the Labor Party’s plan to censor the Internet that’s of much more immediate concern.

    • Perry White says:

      11:48am | 03/02/10

      @Eric
      Interesting that you focus only on the legal aspect, have information ‘ready to hand’ (apparently) and go on to refer to the ‘myth’ of Howard “supressing dissent”. The fact that the Howard federal Liberal government did everything in it’s power to silence dissent and cynically manipulate the apolitical mass is proven beyond all doubt. How long have you been working for the Liberal party?

    • Eric says:

      03:29pm | 03/02/10

      @Perry White: As I have proven with my factual post, the idea that Howard “suppressed dissent” is a lie.

      I note that you failed to answer my question. This shows that you cannot justify your arguments with facts - unlike myself.

      All you can do is parrot the propaganda you have been fed, and make mindless accusations. No, I have never worked for the Liberal Party. But even if I did, it would make no difference to the facts which I have stated.

      Independent observers are invited to research my statements above. They will find that I am right. I know this, because unlike Perry, I actually checked the facts for myself.

    • Perry White says:

      08:01pm | 03/02/10

      @Eric
      Do you think that a government so suspicious and paranoid of public dissent as to reinstate ‘sedition’ as a legal concept would actually publicise the numbers of people arrested under such legislation? What is ‘sedition’ proved to be contagoius? How many people do you think were arrested under the Nazi’s ‘Nacht und Nebel’ legislation? I see you utilse the ‘Howard years’ tactic of simply repaeting something over and over again, until it becomes the truth, at least in the mind of the public.
      What have you proven with your “factual post”; that the legislation already existed? All that demonstrates is that by that time the Howard government were so deep into essentially criminal activities (like invading soverign territories on manufactured premises)
      that they were prepared to do absolutely anything to prevent the truth becoming public knowledge. As for ‘parroting propaganda’ the jury is long since returned on the shameful realities of the Howard federal government and I think it’s you that still (sadly) labour under the delusion of neo-fascist… I’m sorry, neo-conservative propaganda. If the Howard government were such a gropu of ‘clean-skins’ why did so many elder-statesmen and women of Australian liberalism turn against them? How do you explain a political climate where Malcolm Frazer could be denounced as a ‘communist’ at a Liberal Party national conference if the Howard government were just another typical ‘Liberal’ government, with everything all ‘above-board’?

    • Lynda Dingle says:

      08:34pm | 02/02/10

      PS. I should have added that although Michael Atkinson refers to the AdelaideNow website as ‘just a sewer…......” he contributes to the site on a regular basis. Implication by association? Well, we are all in this sewer together, it’s just that some are more on the nose than others!!??

    • Steve Smith, 2100 says:

      08:42pm | 02/02/10

      In the whole scheme of things Bill-Roger-Judith-Connie is not worth the bother. A moderator for each blog/website should more than suffice for the obvious reasons you have mentioned.

      Apart from the obvious censorship issues, what about the waste of time in enforcing this law? Will we have people analysing data from The Punch etc, to confirm that S.Smith who wrote: “The Rann Government are wasting time and resources” at 2:40pm, postcode matches his IP address? As long as it does, can J.Smith say what he likes? And Internet is not confined to a state, what if S.Smith lives in 2100? What a waste of time!

      I really should mention the tens of thousands tweets and facebook status updates that happen every hour that dwarf the daily activity of online sites as mentioned in the article, but that’s too obvious.

    • Myriam Robin says:

      08:42pm | 02/02/10

      I broadly agree, but feel it necessary to point out that the new laws apply only to commentary on the upcoming South Australian elections, and expire the day after. Thus, postcodes and names would not be required to comment on stories of a sensitive personal nature.

    • Chase Stevens says:

      10:56pm | 02/02/10

      Except (according to news.com.au) they get to keep that info for six months.

    • fluffy (aka you guess ) says:

      08:59pm | 02/02/10

      i just couldnt be bothered changing my ip anymore…. although that too isnt too hard.. just cant be bovered. ( why does six seconds take so long? )

      i know im only semi anonymous..  at best.. but no way im ever going to give out my personal details to every website i get the urge to post comment on.

      its the spontaneous anonymity.. youll be called a retard faster on line.. than you could ever hope for in real life in the pub.. people are rude crude and to the point.. 

      without social consequences, such as a punch in the nose.. people say what they really feel..

      for better or worse.. i wouldnt have it any other way..

      if the attorney general cant handle the heat.. GTFO teh kitchen n00b!

      smile

    • Robert Smissen says:

      09:06pm | 02/02/10

      I’d like to see the “honorable” Mr. Atkinson back up some of his outrageous claims. His claim that “Adelaide Now website is a “Sewer of criminal defamation” could stand some examination, after all he himself is not above posting himself. Also Adelaide Now edits the comments, so surely they would allow any defamatory comments to be published would they? ?

    • Bob ( not my real name) says:

      10:34pm | 02/02/10

      It’s a disgrace . I might “know a teacher” who is employed by the SA Government and therefore who is bound by clauses that gag him/her except if spoken behind an Education Union position or medium. This person has nowhere to go to express free speech really under these circumstances. It is not as if the SA Government does much but fight and burden the rank and file teacher, and who will be able to voice dissent from poor, undemocratically developed policy?

    • stealthpooch says:

      11:13pm | 02/02/10

      What’s wrong with tinned asparagus?!

    • Julie Coker-Godson says:

      02:24pm | 03/02/10

      What’s right with tinned asparagus?!  YUK!

    • Five Foot Nothing says:

      11:28pm | 02/02/10

      The South Australian government have forgotten one tiny flaw in their quest for internet censorship - people can still fake their postcodes!

    • Nick says:

      01:32am | 03/02/10

      They’ve apparently backed down.

      Now if Conroy would do the same, and apologise for being an idiot, I might reconsider my vote.

    • Paris Dean (my real name) says:

      01:34am | 03/02/10

      Noone is being forced to disclose their name when they comment on an article about miscarriages.

      They were being forced to disclose their name when they entered as a commentator and participant in an election - it was a mere extension of the transparency framework that applied to all other mediums.

      As usual, the net libertarians have managed to whip up a frenzy about a bi-partisan piece of legislation designed to increase transparency.

    • silent elephant says:

      07:43am | 03/02/10

      Are people required to give their details when they partipate in talk back radio conversations? They can lie about their names just as easily as I will type the name of an alter ego. But we still put an email address when we comment, an IP shows them where we are…That’s enough transparency for me, thankyou.

      The success of the Internet is based, partly, on people being able to find the voice they would otherwise be afraid to use. While I don’t support everyone’s opinion, I support their right to say what they think without retribution by their employer or the Government.

      Instead of calling for transparency, perhaps you should be asking why others are searching for a mask.

    • Davy says:

      03:22am | 03/02/10

      It intrigues me why you think that a bald bloke with socks and sandals, who lives with his mum, would be on the side of no climate change. Doesnt sound like the sort of guy who works for big oil or coal.
      A very interesting attempt to discredit followers of climate scepticism.
      Surely if you search a little you will be able to spot the opposite, somebody who sends in multiple entries about how the world is going to burn and we will all be sucked into the firy pit of environmental eternal condemnation as our children are scorched by the toxic fumes like CO2.

      Let me guess….This guy will be wearing a long white robe made of hemp fibre (might as well use the whole plant). He wont be wearing any sandals because he doesnt quite know what to make them from. (cant use oil products or animal products).
      He will live with his 5 wives and 17 children on a multiple occupancy at Nimbin. All paid for of course by centrelink.
      The only way he will post is on the centrelink computer on the day he collects his dole check from Lismore. This is how you will find him as all his posts will be on the same day and within 1 hr of each other.

    • Craig Lambie says:

      08:02am | 03/02/10

      Although I don’t really care who people are, I often read posts by the same people across several different Punch posts, and I appreciate the intelligence of some posters over other more ranty types.
      The only real way to determine which posts are genuine would be to publish the IP address of people, that way we can all see if the ID of the person is the same or not.
      Another option might be to have people vote on comments, like on Facebook; Like… and maybe dislike.  It is quite common on a few sites I read (not blogs) and it then puts the comments highest ranked at the top, which would be nice, as I like to read comments, but when there is more than 4-5 I often skip over them all, as unimportant…

      So my challenge to Punch, is to make your comments system a little more democratic.

    • Bob says:

      08:21am | 03/02/10

      All this crap about fake emails and using fake names is just that crap If you want do do that its just as simple as displaying a fake ip so simple to do. When the news sites wont post a political comment just send it to the minister I do that often no big deal we are entilted to go the sorce and bypass the media if you want if you have something to say and the news sites wont post it sent it to the minister

    • Liz, yes my real name! says:

      08:39am | 03/02/10

      Atkinson is a dead loss but we know him.You just can’t make those assumptions about anonymous posters, all your prejudices are showing mate!
      We supposedly have democracy in this country and can go straight to the Minister which I often do.Our pollies are more accessible than any in the world.If you want something fixed don’t whinge and moan go straight to whoever can fix it.
      Censorship is always a thorny one but Atkinson is out of line.

    • Ben says:

      08:39am | 03/02/10

      Does it really matter if people use false names, nom de plume, or pseudonym? There is obviously a fairly longstanding history of their use and it would seem that the ideas are the important things to get at.
      It seems that many want to verify identity so that they can ‘pidgeon hole’ the author and dismiss their ideas on the basis of that person’s alleged ‘bias’.

      This is typical of the relativist world we live in where the person is more important than the idea. It doesn’t seem to have occurred to many people that everyone has live experiences and beliefs that consciously or sub-consciously influence their intellectual responses. Does this mean that these ideas should immediately dismissed? Obviously not.

      For instance, personally I find the posts of the ‘eric’ to be mind boggling repetitive, mostly disagreeable and entirely counter productive to the cause he so passiontely espouses, but there is no denying that he gets me thinking about even if only to mutter to myself about what a lunatic he is!

      However, it would be equally undesirable if people started posting under the pseudonym of a certain mustachioed Australian corporal and teutonic political leader or other similarly offensive poses which serve no subtantive purpose.

      The solution is simply for the administrators of blogs to be vigilant in blocking posts which on balance do not further the discussion.

    • Paul says:

      09:05am | 03/02/10

      @eric you still banging on about the harmlessness of a piece of sedition legislation that has blood all over the origins of it in Victorian England? The acid test is:  Howard bothering to meddle with an ancient obscure piece of sedition legislation - for no particular reason - (and Labor supporting it by default) -is the intention pro or anti- freespeech? And precisely how does Howard modified Sedition legislation benefit a modern 21st century democracy Eric?  Also, someone needs to tell Chairman Rann that George Orwell’s 1984 book was supposed to be fiction not a documentary.

    • Roger-Judith-Brendon-Annie says:

      03:31pm | 03/02/10

      We live in a share house and use the same internet connection

    • James says:

      04:02pm | 03/02/10

      And use the same links, and opinions.

    • Zeta says:

      09:13am | 03/02/10

      The first time I ever used the internet was in 1996, at a library. You had to book a few days in advance in 30 minute blocks. There was this huge sign above the work station with the rules you were supposed to follow, number 1 was ‘Do not use your real name, do not provide any personal information to others online’.

      Fast forward a decade, and we have Facebook, the most ubiquitous web application in history, and it’s biggest requirement? Revealing your real name and personal information. What changed? The internet isn’t any safer. Why should we give up our real names and identities? So they can be used by corporations to direct ads at us?

      BTW, Zeta is not my real name.

    • Harvey'sBrotherGreg says:

      09:29pm | 03/02/10

      I’m calling your bluff, I bet it is your real name. I’ve deduced your address from my personal database of punch posters. I’m sending you the latest Harvey Norman catalogue next week. Hope you don’t mind. grin

    • E says:

      10:18am | 03/02/10

      It would be interesting to get a list of names from the same IP, so we could piece together the spin matrix, can the Punch provide this service? Obviously keep the IP’s anonymous, but group the names which share the same one.

      E is my real name, really, it is.

    • Grant says:

      10:29am | 03/02/10

      I am glad hat the Punch has taken an interest in this long developing issue of censorship in Australia.

      This particular restriction is a subversive form of censorship parading as a way to keep people honest. 

      The Rann Labor Government has crossed the line of what is considered a unviersal right to free specch in a western democracy, it represents an intolerable restriction on freedom of expression; and we simply cannot accept the censorship of the free exchange of ideas.

      Some people will feel uncomfortable posting political comments as they might work in the public service or political sphere, or in an area where political opinion is sensitive or do not want people at their workplace knowing their political persuasions.

      And even to the extent where a person might be concerned about another person taking offence with their point of view and easily using their full name and postcode to obtain an address from google.

      Anonymity allows people to post their true opinions on an issue without fear of reprisal.

      The State Labor Rann Government and in particular SA Attorney General Micahael Atkinson has sought to censor political comment, and also passed legislation on the censorship of covers on R18 movies in video stores by blacking them out.  In addition, rejecting an R18 rating scheme for interactive media (computer games).

    • sam says:

      11:02am | 03/02/10

      You could require that commenters confirm their email address through a link (can be bypassed by setting up more email accounts but would make it a pain in the ass), or force registration before commenting (# of comments would decrease), or publish the IP address like wikipedia does (again, it can be circumvented but it makes it a pain in the ass).
      Or the voting on comment quality by other users is a good idea too.

    • Tim says:

      11:03am | 03/02/10

      Isn’t it possible to have multiple people commenting on a story from the same IP address if they are on the same network?

    • Seth Brundle says:

      02:09pm | 03/02/10

      I was about to make this point.  In my house alone I have up to 4 people sharing the same internet connection, via different computers.  They will all have the same IP address for any comments they post.
      If I didnt apply wireless security (many people don’t) then my neighbours could also post comments from the same IP address

    • Trude says:

      11:12am | 03/02/10

      The sad thing is that Atkinson like all of those who can’t handle criticism (many politicians in this group) is missing out on a great tool to get a feel for how the public actually think.

      Yes there are trolls making comments, but they are few. Atkinson and other politicians could be using this tool to guide them on where ‘Jo Public’ wants them to go, instead Atkinson has taken insult at comments and tried to dictate to everyone just so he could get revenge on the few who hurt his feelings.

      The safety of innocent people could’ve been endangered, such as victims of crime who are now silent voters, giving their real name and postcode could’ve helped their abusers find them. And of course the weirdos who insist that everyone else should think as they do would’ve been able to track down those who don’t think the same as them and harass or even harm them.

      Personally after seeing this irresponsible, petty, mean, dictatoral behaviour I would like Mr Atkinson to stand down from his position. He is not mature or balanced enough to hold such a responsible position.

    • Mark says:

      11:13am | 03/02/10

      I have to agree with Lej - I love tinned asparagus!

    • Jay says:

      11:43am | 03/02/10

      Why cant part of the IP just be displayed to avoid mutliple fake users? Although you can get IP hiding programs out anyway but these can usually be detected as fake anyway….there are several democratic alternatives to what the government proposed

    • Don Clark says:

      12:23pm | 03/02/10

      A number of apposite comments for once, though some sadly technically adrift.

      Matching IP addresses can’t tell you much on a network. And many home users will have the default budget option: a dynamic IP. So if they’re switching off at the wall, next time they switch on, presto, new IP. Not much help there.

      The weekend sockpuppet was pretty obvious, to any but the least discerning reader. But what does that tell us? Among other things, that the standard of moderation on The Punch is an open invitation to such abuse.

      Further, on matching IP with Postcode, singularly unhelpful. From time to time, depending on ISP, wholesale-supplier, connection speed and network load, my/our shared connection has seemed to come from Broken Hill, from Wollongong, from Alice Springs and even more obscure dots on the map.

      As for Don Clark, he’s a retired nobody and glad of it, all but invisible on the Web. Beholden to no party or parliamentarian, ever, he’s voted for a number of parties over the years. His income is well below the mean, he owes no money, does not drink latte or chardonnay, does not eat marbled fillet, and votes with his brain not his wallet. He decries poor and abusive posts from Left or Right but notes that the farcical standard of thought and evidence offered up by the mass of conservative posters helps their cause not one bit.

      And of those on the Left, a bare handful are posting consistently sound, reasoned, sourced posts from which much of use can be learnt.

      Finally, on the SA legislation, in truth it was never censorship, merely requiring the sort of details that newspapers have long required of letter-writers in the period after election writs have been issued. And no different from better-moderated forums, where a user mus first register with a valid email to ensure a “real” person will be posting, instead of a spambot.

      But all that is now academic, though you won’t yet read about it on The Punch. The SA Attorney General, as of first thing this am, has reconsidered his position and will be withdrawing the legislation. Queue the sock-puppets.

      Don Clark
      Full-time retired nobody

    • Slippery Slope says:

      02:21pm | 03/02/10

      “‘The SA Attorney General, as of first thing this am, has reconsidered his position and will be withdrawing the legislation. “

      Conveniently forgetting the bit where he says “After the election”

      The truth is, in this so called FREE COUNTRY of ours, this legislation should have never even reached the tables for debate in ANY PARLIAMENT in the first place!! Especially while politicians can make statements under parliamentary privilege which is gives politicians the right to make statements and absolving them from ordinary law

    • Don says:

      12:29pm | 03/02/10

      Erratum:  The Punch did in fact recognise the SA AGs change - though no readers appeared to note the update.

    • mike j says:

      12:36pm | 03/02/10

      Sockpuppets are nothing new to the internet, and nor are they particularly concerning in anonymous blogs, which always have a biased response sample anyway. If someone wants to waste their time spreading their message over a dozen posts, let them… it’s not going to make their opinion any more valid, or me any more inclined to agree with them.

    • NotMichaelAtkinson says:

      01:57pm | 03/02/10

      Pseudonyms are part of the cultural fabric of the internet and have been used since day dot.  Using your real name can open you up to phishing and other security attacks was well as data mining from advertising companies.

    • john says:

      01:59pm | 03/02/10

      Whats interesting is that the ferocity in which the media attacked SA labor over these new laws yet the majority of the major press in Australia have ignored Kevin Rudds internet censorship laws which are a far worse.

    • Seth Brundle says:

      02:16pm | 03/02/10

      Does anyone really think that comments posted on pages liike this are actually taken seriously by anyone?  Are they afraid the election results could be changed because “Ben Dover” posted lots of negative remarks?  It’s just entertainment.

    • Eric says:

      03:31pm | 03/02/10

      Paul, please name those people who have been prosecuted under this amendment to sedition legislation. Provide links to the details.

      You can’t, can you?

      That’s the acid test, and you fail it.

    • Brendan says:

      03:53pm | 03/02/10

      I find it very worrying that Atkinson admits to searching the electoral roll for the supposed non existant blogger. Why did he do that? Someone was critical of him so he goes searching for him? This is very threatening behaviour from an Attorney General. The fact that his search was completely half arsed and incompetent is a telling point but his lack off success lead directly to his reasoning for this legislation.

      This S.A. government is addicted to the taxpayer funded defamation lawsuit and the fear that brings to the average punter. Who is likely to blog/write anything even remotely defamatory or critical of these asshats if they legally force any writer/commentator to identify themselves.

    • Paul says:

      04:48pm | 03/02/10

      @eric epic fail mate - youre argument falls flat - Howard conspired and he had intent. Or Eric - was Howard just bored one day and thats why he changed an obscure law but didn’t use it? In the middle of a War?  Weird logic dude. Howard-kissing propaganda tis all.

    • Eric says:

      06:16pm | 03/02/10

      So, Paul, you failed to meet my simple challenge, to name those people who have been prosecuted under this amendment to sedition legislation.

      Says it all, really.

    • Don Clark says:

      06:43pm | 03/02/10

      Among other things I did say
      “‘The SA Attorney General, as of first thing this am, has reconsidered his position and will be withdrawing the legislation. “ And that is correct.

      However, Slippery Slope at :03:21pm | 03/02/10 chose that one point of mine to pick at this way:
      “Conveniently forgetting the bit where he says “After the election””
      Plainly trying to imply that I’ve set out to mislead readers. Not so.

      Advertiser, this am:
      “ATTORNEY-GENERAL Michael Atkinson will move immediately to repeal controversial laws which sparked an outcry over censorship of the internet.
      After backing down late last night to say the laws would not be put into effect, Mr Atkinson told reporters he would follow the advice of Opposition legal affairs spokeswoman Vickie Chapman and use a section of the Electoral Act to immediately repeal the section.

      Earlier, Mr Atkinson said it would be repealed but could not do it until after the election and had promised that no action would be taken against internet users during the election campaign.

      But after comments from Ms Chapman that it could be done, Mr Atkinson said he had decided to act immediately and paid tribute to Ms Chapman for her suggestion.”
      http://www.adelaidenow.com.au/victory-atkinson-loosens-gag/story-e6frea6u-1225826104175

      Though the facts were readily available from the Advertiser, Slippery Slope has shot from the hip in trying to misrepresent the issue.  Too bad. Caught out in another example of sloppy thinking and sloppy checking.

    • Jay says:

      09:43am | 04/02/10

      Don, you seem like a very bitter person. Partly reminds me of old school teachers who’d put other students down for displaying their valid opinions in a derogatory manner, however this sock-puppet disliking chump will simultaneously project a writing style that seems to indicate a try hard intellectual narcissist retiared nobody that spends abnormal amounts of time writing lengthy cranky comments on news websites.

      Proud Sock-Puppet
      -Still contributing to society

    • agblaster says:

      11:19am | 04/02/10

      Pfft. I reckon Don made a good point.

      A poster with a “valid opinion” doesn’t need tricks like Slippery Slope’s. Bulldust like that is fair game. 

      Funny how good posts still get the nasty personal roughing up. Pity there aren’t a lot more posters like Persephone, Don and a few others. They keep posting calmly while the mud gets slung.

    • Jay says:

      10:41pm | 03/02/10

      I hope the Federal government is paying attention.  They are trying to slip in some sort of expandable censorship mechanism under the guise of “protecting the children”.  But the suspicion is they they really want get something in place “just in case”.  Their Labor colleague has basically let the cat out of the bag.  Should we trust the Federal Government any more than a state Labor government?

    • Cameron Price-Austin says:

      12:20pm | 04/02/10

      It essentially comes down to privacy. If I were to post a pro-choice comment on an abortion piece with my name and postcode, I’m leaving myself vulnerable to every nut job armed with a white pages and a firebomb.

    • Davido says:

      11:40pm | 04/02/10

      Firstly, I am against censorship and generally supportive of retaining privacy.

      Secondly, there is no right to privacy under OZ law. That is black and white law. There IS a derivative (i.e. implied) right to a freedom of political communication. But I would not be putting your mortgage on a court protecting that right.

      The Vic Human Rights charter will hopefully help protect your privacy from the acts of the government and its’ various bodies. Unfortunately that is pretty much irrelevant to this discussion.

      Finally, most of the arguments others make above are valuable: YET, I do not think you should be allowed to make ANY comments and hide behind another identity.

      For instance, should we allow people to defame and damage the lives of others simply so they can cower behind a shield of anonymity?

      Should someone be able to make terrible statements using an identity that could be confused with yours?

      Of course not. Unlimited anonymity would allow child molesters and the like to use the internet as their candy stores.

    • Rod Freeman says:

      02:51pm | 05/02/10

      So what, big deal if people have to put their name to their own words. Anonymous comments aren’t worth a pinch of salt. Those that think we have “free” speech in Australia after that Fredrick Toben matter are fooling themselves.

      Unfortunately we have ‘conditional’ speech in Australia.
      You may speak, but only on the condition you don’t offend anyone.

      Free speech would the freedom for Winston to say 2+2=4

      “It’s a funny thing about free speech: It can’t be just for your political friends. If freedom means anything, it is the one valuable gift you have to give to your worst enemies, in order to keep it for yourself.” Douglas Christie

      Rod Freeman

    • Jason says:

      12:28pm | 06/02/10

      I was asked by the Punch (after my first post) to use my real name and obliged.  Probably the only place online I would do that, but it seems well moderated and has some of the most entertaining discussions I’ve found.  It’s fun, and it’s stimulating and it gives lots of people a voice in a well read forum…(no I don’t work for the Punch)

      I do believe there is no shortage of “PR professionals” posting on popular news and blog sites, attempting to sway the public perception of issues by posing as the general population, but there are also plenty of pretty smart people with strong convictions who argue for what they believe without monetary or political reward.  Spend long enough reading the blogs and you figure out who is who.

 

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