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The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany

Germany is on the verge of censoring its Internet: The government – a grand coalition between the German social democrats and conservative party – seems united in its decision: On Thursday the parliament is to vote on the erection of an internet censorship architecture. The Minister for Family Affairs Ursula von der Leyen kicked off…

  • Markus Beckedahl

Germany is on the verge of censoring its Internet: The government – a grand coalition between the German social democrats and conservative party – seems united in its decision: On Thursday the parliament is to vote on the erection of an internet censorship architecture.

The Minister for Family Affairs Ursula von der Leyen kicked off and lead the discussions within the German Federal Government to block Internet sites in order to fight child pornography. The general idea is to build a censorship architecture enabling the government to block content containing child pornography. The Federal Office of Criminal Investigation (BKA) is to administer the lists of sites to be blocked and the internet providers obliged to erect the secret censorship architecture for the government.

A strong and still growing network opposing these ideas quickly formed within the German internet community. The protest has not been limited to hackers and digital activist but rather a mainstreamed effort widely supported by bloggers and twitter-users. The HashTag used by the protesters is #zensursula – a German mesh up of the Ministers name and the word censorship equivalent to #censursula.

As part of the public’s protest an official e‑Petition directed at the German parliament was launched. Within three days 50,000 persons signed the petition – – the number required for the petition titled „No indexing and blocking of Internet sites“ to be heard by the parliament. The running time of an e‑Petition in Germany is 6 weeks – within this time over 130,000 people signed making this e‑Petition the most signed and most successful ever.

During the past weeks, protests became more and more creative – countless blogs and twitter-users followed and commented the discussions within governments and opposing arguments. Many mainstream media picked up on this and reported about the protest taking place on-line. A working group on censorship was founded and the protest coordinated with a wiki, mailing lists, chats and of course employing twitter and blogs. One website „Zeichnemit.de“ created a landing page explaining the complicated petitioning system and making signing the petition easier and more accessible for non net-experts.

Over 500 people attended the governments official press conference on the planed internet censorship – a number of whom used this occasion to demonstrate and voice their concerns. In fact, demonstrators began attending some of the Minister von der Leyens public appearances, carrying banners and signs to raise attention to the stifling of information freedom in Germany.

The net community did not only oppose the governments plans, but also made constructive suggestions how to deal with the problem of child pornography without introducing a censorship architecture and circumcising constitutional freedoms. The working group on censorship demonstrated the alternatives for instance by actually removing over 60 websites containing child pornographic content in 12 hours, simply by emailing the international providers who then removed this content from the net. The sites were identified through the black lists of other countries documented on Wikileaks. This demonstration underlines the protesters main arguments: instead of effectively investing time and efforts to have illegal content removed from the internet, the German government is choosing censorship and blocking – an easy and dangerous way out. The greatest fear of the protesters is that once in place, the infrastructure will be used to censor other forms of unwanted content, not only child pornography. German politicians already seem to be lining up with their wish-list of content to be censored in future – the suggestions ranging form gambling sites, islamist web pages, first person shooters, and the music industry cheering up with the thought of finally banning pirate bay and p2p.

You can find a detailed linklist of the zensursula-debate here (in german).
Thanks to Geraldine de Bastion for the translation.

Über die Autor:innen

  • Markus Beckedahl
    Darja Preuss

    Markus Beckedahl hat schon 2003 in der Ur-Form von netzpolitik.org gebloggt und hat zwischen 2004 bis 2022 die Plattform als Chefredakteur entwickelt. Seit 2024 ist er nicht mehr Teil der Redaktion und schreibt einen Newsletter auf digitalpolitik.de. Kontakt: Mail: markus (ett) netzpolitik.org, Presseanfragen: +49-177-7503541 Er ist auch auf Mastodon, Facebook, Twitter und Instagram zu finden.


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142 Kommentare zu „The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany“


  1. Sven Finke

    ,

    Very nice blogpost! I would really appreciate if the plans to integrate this kind of censorship would be critizized not only by germans, but also by people of other countrys.


  2. Kann dieser Text unter Angabe der Quelle kopiert und auf unserer Website gepostet werden? Ich war schon dabei, die Problematik mal auf englisch aufzuarbeiten – danke Geraldine für die Arbeitsersparnis!


    1. @ Jon Silva (4): Alle Texte auf Netzpolitik.org stehen unter CC-BY-NC. Also verbreite das gerne weiter.


  3. Von der Leyen, nicht van der Leyen.


  4. […] -> Netzpolitik.org: The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  5. icorn

    ,

    Kleine Korrektur: In englischen gibt es keine Tausender-Punkt, sondern ein Tausender-Komma. Die Zahl im Artikel genannten Zahlen „130.000“ und „50.000“ lesen sich für Amis wir „130“ und „50“.

    Also bitte ändern in „130,000“ und „50,000“.


  6. david

    ,

    Habe gerade auf abgeordnetenwatch bosbach eine Frage gestellt.
    Mal schauen ob und wann die durchkommt:

    Sehr geehrter Herr Bosbach,

    im “Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger” behaupten Sie niemanden zu kennen, der Internetsperren auf andere Inhalte als dokumentierten Kindesmissbrauch ausweiten will.
    Darf ich daraus schließen, dass Ihnen Herr Strobl nicht bekannt ist?
    Oder handelt es sich vielmehr um eine nicht erwähnenswerte Einzelmeinung?

    Wie kann Ihre eigene Aussage
    „Ich halte es für richtig, sich erstmal nur mit dem Thema Kinderpornografie zu befassen, damit die öffentliche Debatte nicht in eine Schieflage gerät“
    anders verstanden werden, als dass zummindest Sie persönlich sehr wohl für eine Ausweitung sind?
    Dementieren Sie, diese Aussage getätigt zu haben?
    Oder handelt es sich auch hier um eine unwichtige Einzelmeinung?

    Wie stehen Sie zu der gestrigen Pressemitteiung Ihrer Partei laut der die SPD Gefahr gelaufen wäre
    „Straftaten im Internet Vorschub zu leisten, von der Vergewaltigung und Erniedrigung kleiner Kinder bis hin zu Urheberrechtsverletzungen in breitestem Ausmaß gegenüber Künstlern und Kreativen.“
    es sei denn sie sie unterstützt ein Gesetz dessen
    „Zugangssperren im Internet müssen und werden einzig und allein auf kinderpornographische Seiten beschränkt bleiben.“
    Sehen auch Sie den eklatanten Widerspruch in diesen beiden Aussagen?
    (Die erste ist übrigens sehr ungünstig formuliert, sie suggeriert, dass Urheberrechtsverletzungen schlimmer sind als Kindesmissbrauch.)
    Falls nein, warum werden Urheberrechtsverletzungen in dieser kurzen Mitteilung dann überhaupt erwähnt?
    Falls ja, darf ich Ihre heutige Aussage dann so verstehen, dass Ihnen dieses Dokument in dem Moment nicht bekannt war?
    Oder handelt es sich bei dieser offziellen Pressemitteilung schon wieder um eine unwichtige Randmeinung?


  7. English, very good … ich geh dann mal die Studis hier in Griechenland informieren. Die und ein Teil der quer aus Europa stammenden Erasmusler sind immer sehr interessiert an politischen Irrfahrten dieses Kalibers …


  8. […] Artikel zum Thema: Demos der Piraten Zensiert zurück The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany Offener Brief des AK Zensur an die SPD Details des Kompromisses zum Kinderporno-Sperrgesetz auf […]


  9. Fabian

    ,

    „…the suggestions ranging form gambling sites, Muslim web pages, “killer games”, and the music industry cheering up with the thought of finally banning pirate bay and p2p. …“

    „Muslim web pages“? Didn’t you mean „Islamist web pages“? That’s not the same thing.


  10. holzi

    ,

    „Killerspiele“ sind auch so eine tolle Erfindung der deutschen Politiker. Diesen begriff gibt es sonst auch in keinem Land :)


  11. Eine schöne Zusammenfassung.

    Nur als kleiner Einwand:
    „the suggestions ranging form gambling sites, Muslim web pages,“

    Muslim ist hier in gewisser Weise unzutreffend. Die Rede war von islamistischen Webseiten, also „islamist“ im Englischen.
    Islamistisch bezeichnet hierbei die extremistische Ausprägung der Religion. Ein Muslim hingegen ist jeder Angehörige der Islamischen Religion im Allgemeinen. Der obige Artikel suggeriert also, das nicht nur extrmeistische Seiten gesperrt werden sollen, sondern jegliche Seiten, die von einem Muslim betrieben werden.
    Und soweit geht noch nicht mal die Union.


  12. Hoffentlich kommt das Ding durch. Zensur ist der falsche Weg. Es gibt sicherlich viele andere Wege, die erfolgreicher sind um was gegen Kinderpornografie zu machen…


  13. […] netzpolitik.org: The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  14. Killer games = ‚first person shooters’


  15. Nice, this is exactly the same thing they are trying to introduce in France with the LOPPSI (censorship of CP).


  16. david

    ,

    ich würde an eurer stelle in den ersten absätzen deutlicher formulieren, dass es nicht bei kipo bleiben wird

    dass kommt kaum rüber und damit könntet ihr einige leser schon am anfang verlieren


  17. „Germany is on the verge of censoring its Internet: The government – a grand c…“…

    Germany is on the verge of censoring its Internet: The government – a grand coalition between the German social democrats and conservative party – seems united in its decision: On Thursday the parliament is to vote on the erection of an internet ce…


  18. Joe Hallenbeck

    ,

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?gl=DE&hl=de&v=3ZuIgoQhOIM

    At 6:48 it fits exactly:

    „With the first link the chain is forged.
    The first speech censored, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied chains us all irrevocably“


  19. […] Netzpolitik.org steckt dahinter…cool.. […]


  20. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  21. […] English article about the censorship. Post about stopping internet censorship plans of german politicians. Der Blog Netzpolitik.org hat […]


  22. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  23. […] Verfassungsfeinde! Alle kommen und mitmachen! Mittlerweile kriegt man auch international mit, was hier im Land der Dichter und Denker so abgeht, thanks for that. Gerade aus dem Grund sollte man sich nicht in seiner Bude vorm Schirm […]


  24. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  25. […] via The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org. […]


  26. DO EVERYTHING YOU CAN TO STOP THIS GERMANS!!

    THEY TRIED WITH AUSTRALIA AND COULDNT PASS IT, STOP THEM!

    IF THEY ARE TOO LAZY TO CORRECTLY REMOVE SITES, FIND NEW PEOPLE WHO WILL!!


  27. BAReFOOt

    ,

    Nun. Das heisst, es gibt Krieg, Frau Zensurula. Klar und einfach. Oh, und wir haben schon Proxy-Server im Ausland angemietet. In einem zivilisierteren Land… sowas wie Nordkorea. :P


  28. Nett: der Post wird auf BoingBoing erwähnt und verlinkt ^^
    (Schönes Bild im Titel: Germany to build the Internet Berlin Wall; wir lernen halt nicht aus Fehlern)

    http://www.boingboing.net/2009/06/16/germany-to-build-the.html


  29. Die Story ist mittlerweile auch auf Slashdot angekommen.


  30. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany – Germany is on the verge of censoring its Internet: The government – a grand coalition between the German social democrats and conservative party – seems united in its decision: On Thursday the parliament is to vote on the erection of an internet censorship architecture. […]


  31. […] This week, the German government have finalized plans set to go into effect on the 18th which will censor the internet for the German people. This is a step in the wrong direction. I mean seriously, what is up with […]


  32. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  33. […] site netzpolitik.org has some more info on this whole dilemma (in english). Other bloggers also write heavily about it, however in […]


  34. […] real, but its spreading. Recently Germany became the next country caught in the death knells of internet censorship. Take into account the middle east who have been at the forefront of internet censorship along with […]


  35. What the hell. What will happend if somebody cuts the internet there. Will the internet become a private service???.…come on.…


  36. […] Germany Prepares to Censor Internet June 16th, 2009 | Author: admin The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org […]


  37. Internet censorship in Germany will be a very good thing for the USA. All the most creative Germans will leave and come here to the USA!


  38. […] Davin on Jun.16, 2009, under Technology, The Web Germany is on the verge of possibly censoring it’s internet access for all german citizens thi.… This is a touchy slope as the main intent of the movement is to block out access to child […]


  39. […] and the music industry cheering up with the thought of finally banning pirate bay and p2p. (original link) ? […]


  40. […] grande coalizione del governo tedesco sembra compatta nell’usare metodi di censura digitale per oscurare siti di pedopornografia e simili. Detta così sembra una cosa buona, se non fosse che il metodo utilizzato, ovvero la […]


  41. […] 16, 2009 · No Comments Netzpolitik June 16, […]


  42. OT: Irgendwie lustig, dass mich englischsprachige Freunde drauf aufmerksam machen, dass ich im letzten Foto rechts mit meiner Kamera zu sehen bin.


  43. he Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org…

    Germany is on the verge of censoring its Internet: The government – a grand coalition between the German social democrats and conservative party – seems united in its decision: On Thursday the parliament is to vote on the erection of an internet ce…


  44. „circumcising constitutional freedoms“?


  45. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany: Gute Idee von Markus Reichweite und damit die Öffentlichkeit zu Zensursula zu erhöhen. In einem englischsprachigen Text fasst er die Entwicklungen der letzten Wochen und Monate zusammen. […]


  46. Von der Leyen, nicht van der Leyen..


  47. […] net. The sites were identified through the black lists of other countries documented on Wikileaks. (netzpolitik.org) […]


  48. […] This article may be a little sensationalistic, but I think it’s worth a read. The unfortunate thing is that many do-good politicians are pushing strongly both here in the US and abroad (but most especially abroad) to censor Internet services in the name of protecting children. Sure, it sounds like a great idea–but the Aussies are already well aware of what a move like this does to the utility of the Internet. Late last year, there was talk about the Aussie filters being too ambitious, and they were. If I recall correctly, many sites (including Wikipedia) were affected due to simply mentioning a banned term. […]


  49. […] dazu: Arbeitskreis gegen Zensur Information on German internet censorship architecture in English Stasi2.0 • Zensur • […]


  50. Anne P. Mitchell

    ,

    I’m pretty sure that you mean „circumscribing constitutional freedoms“, not „circumcising constitutional freedoms.“

    Although it *does* make for an interesting metaphor.

    Anne

    Anne P. Mitchell, Esq
    CEO/President
    Institute for Social Internet Public Policy
    http://www.ISIPP.com 
    Member, Cal. Bar Cyberspace Law Committee
    Professor of Law, Lincoln Law School of SJ


  51. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  52. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org (tags: internet kipo zensur zensursula censorship polizeistaat überwachung) Verlinke diesen Post: […]


  53. […] from: The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org […]


  54. […] Slashdot we learn that Germany is the latest country to consider a censorship regime that would create a blacklist of sites that ISPs would be required to block. As with most such […]


  55. […] Slashdot we learn that Germany is the latest country to consider a censorship regime that would create a blacklist of sites that ISPs would be required to block. As with most such […]


  56. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org: “” […]


  57. […] Razlog? Dječja pornografija. Naravno, nitko zdrav nije protiv suzbijanja pedofilskih sadržaja na internetu, ali cenzura interneta je kriv pristup jer može poslužiti za zlouporabu. Danas pedofilija – sutra torrent stranice, nasilne video igre, itd. I evo nas možda malo-pomalo rame uz rame sa zemljama manjkave demokracije iz uvoda posta. Protivljenje donošenju takvog zakona raste iz dana u dan, što na internet, što u stvarnome svijetu čemu svjedoči i internet peticija sa zasad 130 tisuća potpisa koja možda, kao i sve ostale takve, nikad nikome ne pomogne, ali ne može ni odmoći. Ono što može pomoći je ukazivanje na alternativne mogućnosti rješavanja problema dječje pornografije na internetu poput radne grupe o internet cenzuri koja je u 12 sati maknula 60 stranica s takvim sadržajem tako da nakon što su one identificirane, poslan je jednostavan mail njihovim web host providerima i one su maknute. Opširnije… […]


  58. […] Slashdot we learn that Germany is the latest country to consider a censorship regime that would create a blacklist of sites that ISPs would be required to block. As with most such […]


  59. […] as, in the words of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, “creating tension”. Germany is possibly facing internet censorship and could heed a lesson from all of this going on in […]


  60. […] Jun.17, 2009 in information Via Slashdot we learn that Germany is the latest country to consider a censorship regime that would create a blacklist of sites that ISPs would be required to block. As with most such […]


  61. […] Thank’s a lot @netzpolitik.org for this wonderful summary. […]


  62. […] via The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org. […]


  63. […] Source:http://netzpolitik.org/2009/the-dawning-of-internet-censorship-in-germany/ Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)New French law on Internet piracy meets skepticismFinding Your Tribe […]


  64. […] the internet providers obliged to erect the secret censorship architecture for the government. The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org You think this is funny,YOU THINK THIS IS NOT BEING DONE FOR YOU I am tired of your denial.wake […]


  65. […] looks like Germany has plans to begin censoring the Internet. With a rallying cry of “child pornography!”, the Federal Office of Criminal […]


  66. Laws such as this only draw the ire of the internet community, and are often primary reasons for the changing of politicians through voter shift during the next election … then again, the massive activist demonstrations might change their minds before they commit political suicide …


  67. […] Per contrastare la pedopornografia in Germania stanno pensando ad una legge che blocchi e censuri contenuti su Internet. Proprio mentre Clay Shirky afferma che i cellulari, Twitter e Facebook faranno la […]


  68. […] LATER: Note that not just Iran is censoring the internet. Germany wants to, seeking a censorship infrastructure that can be used for one purpose today, another tomorrow. Oh, […]


  69. […] View original post here:  The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org […]


  70. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org Germany is on the verge of censoring its Internet: The government – a grand coalition between the German social democrats and conservative party – seems united in its decision: On Thursday the parliament is to vote on the erection of an internet censorship architecture. (tags: censorship Zensur Merkel Deutschland Diktatur dictatorship CDU SPD Wählerbetrug Steuerverschwendung Bundestagswahl Politikverdrossenheit Staatsverdrossenheit Behörden Parteien) […]


  71. I’m glad the Germans are on the ball. Not long before it happens in England and across the EU.


  72. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany Germany is on the verge of censoring its Internet: The government – a grand coalition between the German social democrats and conservative party – seems united in its decision: On Thursday the parliament is to vote on the erection of an internet censorship architecture. […]


  73. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany — 9:52am via Google […]


  74. […] Source | See also under Internet: Twitter emerges as news source during Iran media crackdown | UK plans to integrate ‘cybersecurity’ centre with US, Canada | Prepare to be boarded! Pirate Party wins entry to European Parliament | Stockholm Court: Pirate Bay Judge ‘Unbiased’ | Time to slay Canadian file-sharing myths | CRTC keeps new media exempt from broadcasting regulation | Canadian copyright lobbyists leaned on “independent” researchers to change report on file-sharing | China begins internet ‘blackout’ ahead of Tiananmen anniversary | UK chases Obama on cybersecurity | Cybersecurity Is Framework For Total Government Regulation & Control Of Our Lives | Think tank plagiarizes, pulls report on Canadian piracy | Obama Set to Create A Cybersecurity Czar With Broad Mandate | Next up for France: police keyloggers and Web censorship | France passes ‘three strikes’ Internet surveillance law | Canadian Parliament Threatens People For Posting Video Of Proceedings Online | EU wants ‘Internet G12′ to govern cyberspace | UK Home Secretary has secret plan to surveil, ‘Master the Internet’ | UK wants industry to track Internet users as plans scrapped for state database | Fredericton police arrest well-known N.B. blogger on legislature grounds | Pirate Bay lawyer calls for retrial after judge confirms ties to copyright groups | Jail terms for Pirate Bay founders, appeal in works | French legislators reject internet piracy bill | Put NSA in Charge of Cyber Security, Or the Power Grid Gets It | Electricity Grid in U.S. Penetrated By Spies | Pentagon spending millions to fix cyberattacks | Aussies Announce $31B National Broadband Network | Britons block Google Street View van | Should Obama Control the Internet? | Cybersecurity law would give feds unprecedented net control | Munk Centre researchers discover botnet, call for international cyberspace ‘legal regime’ | Google Street View comes to Canada | In Australia, censored hyperlinks could cost you | ISOHunt points out Google, Yahoo torrent engines too | Obama Administration Claims Copyright Treaty Involves State Secrets | Internet ad tracking system will put a ’spy camera’ in the homes of millions, warns founder of the web | French government accused of ‘Big Brother’ tactics over internet piracy | Australian web censorship plan to begin trial despite house opposition | Time to regulate online content, cultural groups tell CRTC | Facebook’s Users Ask Who Owns Information | Do We Need a New Internet? | New law to give police access to online exchanges | Chinese Learn Limits of Online Freedom as the Filter Tightens | Britain unveils plans for nationalized internet service | Google plans to make PCs history | EU Police set to step up warrantless hacking of home PCs | Defense Contractors See $$$ in Cyber Security | UK Culture secretary wants international age restrictions for web | Protests in Australia over proposal to block Web sites | Latest Round of Closed-Door ACTA Copyright Negotiations Wrap Up | China restarts online crackdown | CRTC Internet regulation proposals take shape | Cyberbullying verdict turns rule-breakers into criminals | Felony hacking precedent not set in case of Myspace cyberbully | Myspace terms of use could become fulcrum for destruction of online anonymity in precedent setting case | Bell can squeeze downloads, CRTC rules | Australia to Implement Mandatory Internet Censorship | Microsoft patents web moderator robots, forbidden phrases to be memory-holed | CRTC to consider Internet regulation, invites public comment | RCMP to helm a Canadian “cyber-security strategy” | Is an Internet tax coming? | Italian Judge: Blogs are Illegal | Digital rights groups sue for access to secret ACTA treaty | Berners-Lee W3C Consortium to ‘Authorize’ Website Content? | Digital issues deserve spot in election campaign | Critics waging a cyber offensive to fight copyright changes | Law Professor tells tech conference: plans to shut down Internet already on deck | Bell continues throttling Internet, proposes bandwidth caps for resellers | Rogers Looks For New Ways To Annoy Customers, Hijacks Failed DNS Lookups | MySpace signs up to OpenID scheme | Vint Cerf blasts ISPs for choking off internet infrastructure | Bell’s internet throttling illegal, Google says | Canadian Industry Minister lies about Canadian DMCA on national radio, then hangs up | The Canadian DMCA: Check the Fine Print | Government ready to drop copyright bomb | Transparency needed on ACTA | Net neutrality bill hits House of Commons | Revamped copyright law targets electronic devices | New Attempt to Align Canada’s Copyright Act with USA Coming Soon | CRTC revisits Internet oversight | Bell accused of privacy invasion | Canada Considering “Three Strikes and You’re Out” ISP Policy | Canadian DMCA To Be Introduced Tomorrow Morning? […]


  75. […] is about to demand censorship of the internet. I already wrote about that some time ago and Markus lately wrote a nice article in english, so if you’re interested, check it out. I really liked the different creative slogans and […]


  76. […] ist, wenn man einen Artikel über die Zensursula-Debatte auf englisch veröffentlicht, jemand ihn nach französisch übersetzt und eine dritte Übersetzung dann auf deutsch […]


  77. Speechless…

    [Bundestag FAIL]

    The German Bundestag just waved through a law allowing the establishment of an internet censorship infrastructure in Germany. See this english article by netzpolitik.org for an overview if you haven’t heard yet what that whole Stop …


  78. […] If you need to catch up with the developments in Germany, netzpolitik.org has a good summary. […]


  79. […] know a good wall when we see it Jun.18, 2009 in information As of tomorrow a law will be in effect in Germany that allows the Federal Office of Criminal Investigation to block websites without any judicial […]


  80. […] file-sharing sites like Rapidshare into the blacklist is unclear at this point. However, a post on netzpolitik certainly highlights heavy resistance toward the legislation. As of this writing, a petition to […]


  81. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  82. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany   […]


  83. […] -> Netzpolitik.org: The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  84. […] LATER: Note that not just Iran is censoring the internet. Germany wants to, seeking a censorship infrastructure that can be used for one purpose today, another tomorrow. Oh, […]


  85. […] you are looking for more information on this unfortunate bill, netzpolitik.org recently published a well written recap. If you are in Germany, I would also strongly encourage you to support the German Pirate Party as […]


  86. Was ist illegal in real Welt, muss on internet auch illegal, und censored, sein. Child porn, violence promotion and celebration. Es is gut Krime zu punish, censor. in real welt, und auch on the internet. .….….….…… what is illegal in the real world, must be illegal, censored and prosecuted also on the internet. .. freedom of crime is the wrong kind of freedom. it is not the freedom of speech. .….… Browsers, PCs, laptops muss come with child protection filters PREINSTALLED and turned ON. Verified adult can later turn them off.


  87. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany – „Germany is on the verge of censoring its Internet: The government – a grand coalition between the German social democrats and conservative party – seems united in its decision: On Thursday the parliament is to vote on the erection of an internet censorship architecture.“ […]


  88. […] LATER: Note that not just Iran is censoring the internet. Germany wants to, seeking a censorship infrastructure that can be used for one purpose today, another tomorrow. Oh, […]


  89. […] bill drew strong protests from German Internet users including hackers, digital freedom activists, bloggers and social […]


  90. […] the party and cited (in German) the SPD’s recent approval to a highly controversial new law regarding control of Internet communication as the main reason or his change of mind: “Bit by bit the SPD developed from a civil rights […]


  91. […] Netzpolitik.org: The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  92. […] Netzpolitik.org: The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany […]


  93. Why do they have to punish the majority because a a few perverts. Hunt them down! Don’t tell me they can’t. If they can find a granny to prosecute for sharing a few mp3’s they can find these scum also. The problem is most of our „politicians“ are perverted scum as well.


  94. Steffen

    ,

    Remember, remember, June 18th 09
    The censorship treason and plot
    Oh I know of no reason
    Why the censorship treason
    Should ever be forgot.


  95. […] Heute mal drei Kreuze… Filed under: Miscellaneous — ajdotnet @ 8:39 pm Note: Since this post is about German politics, it’s consequently in German. In case you’re interested follow this link: http://netzpolitik.org/2009/the-dawning-of-internet-censorship-in-germany/ […]


  96. Myron Kuziak

    ,

    I am more than willing to comment on the actions of the new Hitlers, the new Stalins and the new Ayatollahs running Germany.

    Censorship of the Internet or any other medium of communication is totalitarianism, no matter whether it is cloaked in goody-goody motives. It is not very surprising, coming from Germany, where it is a criminal offence to „slander the state“. This concept, itself, is fascist. Perhaps it is no wonder that Fascism sprung out of the German State in the 1930’s.

    This kind of fascism is constantly trying to emerge from within hard-won, but fragile, political developments of democracy, for the police, the State, the church and other elements of power and „authority“ are constantly trying to undo democracy and restore autocracy and arbitrary dictats of the power-hungry. Naturally, they must disguise their actions as being beneficial and protective of some motherhood issue or value, such as the protection of children.

    Other ways and means could be devised to protect children or other persons deemed to need protection, but it is easier to censor and prosecute and destroy freedom of thought and expression. Those concepts are part of the basis of any challenge to arbitrary power and thought-control and are therefore the most vulnerable to attack from the fascist mind and its power. Germany is not the only country to try and use censorship to assert control over freedom of expression and thought. Britain, Australia, Canada and the U.S., among the so-called democracies are working on the same sort of fascist controls. What is the real difference between these kinds of controls and those imposed by totalitarian regimes like China, Iran, Myanmar, Libya, North Korea and others of the ilk, except a matter of degree, but not of essence.

    I write this as a long-time lawyer, judge and supporter of the civil rights of ordinary people to live and work in a democratic country.


  97. We are having a similar problem in Australia.
    I think you are all doing the correct thing.
    However, I think the most important item is to get as many people to write to their political representatives as possible.
    Personally, by facsimile is best but email is also OK.
    A Petition is OK, Protest is OK – but imagine if every Political facsimile machine (and email box) in Germany was receiving faxes/emails from the members constituents about how they personally do not want to see this filter in place and if it is put in place then maybe next election we will be voting for someone else.

    This is a very strong motivator for politicians.

    First they worry about getting elected again – then they worry about everything else.


  98. […] MÁS TARDE: Adviértase que no sólo Irán está censurando internet. Alemania quiere hacerlo y quiere poner en marcha una infraestructura de censura que pueda utilizar para unos propósitos […]


  99. […] Public Project Lead Markus Beckedahl, whose seasoned blog coverage is keeping the public abreast of Germany’s dawning internet censorship and other pressing political topics. Also joining us is Klas Roggenkamp from the German political […]


  100. […] Public Project Lead Markus Beckedahl, whose seasoned blog coverage is keeping the public abreast of Germany’s dawning internet censorship and other pressing political topics. Also joining us is Klas Roggenkamp from the German political […]


  101. […] The Internet War started. Cenzorship hits mainstream politics in US, UK, UK,  Germany, France, Netherlands, Australia, Iran and Sweden attacking even the foundational  […]


  102. I am surprised to know there exists internet censorship in germany too. I always think internet cenship only in saudi arab,china and iran.,etc.


  103. […] ‘watched’, sensured, or otherwise restricted.  I’m sorry but what is going on in Germany, Iran, and a slew of other countries in regards to internet sensureship throws up a lot of red […]


  104. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany : netzpolitik.org (tags: censorship germany zensur zensursula) […]


  105. […] a recent (and misguided) move by German politicians to censor the Internet in Germany in order to combat child pornography led over 130,000 German Internet users to sign a petition against this plan and galvanized the […]


  106. […] Glück geben aber nicht alle auf: Netzpolitik.org hat einen Beitrag mit den wichtigsten Punkten auf Englisch verfasst, um das Ausland auf die geplante Netzzensur in Deutschland aufmerksam zu machen. Marita Wagner […]


  107. […] of the internet as most Germans. German authorities sense the dangers behind this new freedom and invent more and more innovative tools to prevent us from the dangers of the web. And Vodafone was among the first brands to willingly support German authorities in filtering […]


  108. […] data retention laws, forcing companies to keep information on their customers. Just recently, the German government proposed giving itself the power to censor the […]


  109. […] Heute mal drei Kreuze… By alexander Note: Since this post is about German politics, it’s consequently in German. You may find a similar obituary here. Background information can be found here. […]


  110. […] The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany – On Thursday the parliament is to vote on the erection of an internet censorship architecture. […]


  111. truthman

    ,

    There is a better way! Countries should work together and find the makers and distributors of child pornography world wide and send teams of mercenaries to kill them. Not child molesters unless they refuse to get help but unscrupulously child pornographers that make money on this disgusting, child and society destroying crap. Mission: find and destroy this sub-human scum!


  112. […] makes university now too expensive for some people), and a proposal which will give the government censorship control on the internet (we are the “technology generation”) are just a few […]


  113. […] fassen die Zensursula-Proteste in einem englisch-sprachigen Artikel zusammen: The Dawning of Internet Censorship in Germany. Das wird ein guter Lasttest für den Server, denn der Artikel kommt parallel auf Digg, […]


  114. […] governments of  Germany and Australia have made progress on the idea of internet […]


  115. […] El comienzo de la censura de internet en Alemania [eng] http://www.netzpolitik.org/2009/the-dawning-of-internet-censorship-…  por Torosentado hace 1 segundos […]


  116. […] Censura de Internet en Alemania […]


  117. […] down “over 60 websites containing child pornographic content in 12 hours,” according to netzpolitik.org, a German forum for online free speech. The protesters argued that the BKA was being lazy as well […]


  118. […] year, there was a great movement within net-communities to stop Internet-filters in germany. Some of these attempts were successful: We stopped the law. Now we have to look closely and be […]


  119. […] took down “over 60 websites containing child pornographic content in 12 hours,” according to netzpolitik.org, a German forum for online free speech. The protesters argued that the BKA was being lazy as well […]


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  121. […] políticos o empresarios. De ahí el miedo y los esfuerzos para cambiarlo, algunos bajo excusas aceptables otras ridículas y ambas dan para el mismo chiste. No recuerdan que aunque lo consigan aparecerá […]

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