This legislation allows copyright rights holders to seek Federal Court injunctions requiring Australian internet service providers (ISPs) to block access to overseas websites deemed to have the "primary purpose" of facilitating copyright infringement [1].
The bill's explanatory memorandum stated the site-blocking regime was estimated to cost the **entire Australian telecommunications industry** $130,825 annually to run [2], not individual customers as the claim suggests.
This cost would be distributed across all ISPs and potentially passed to consumers through general pricing, not as a direct $130,000 per-customer charge.
Regarding consumer contestation rights: The legislation did not mandate consumer advocates to be parties to court cases, and the bill explicitly limited who could apply to revoke blocks to the ACCC (competition watchdog), ACMA (communications regulator), site operators, ISPs, or rights holders [2].
While consumers and digital rights groups could theoretically appear as third parties, this would be costly, and there was no guarantee of being heard [2][3].
On political donations: Village Roadshow donated $227,500 to the Labor Party in 2013-14, significantly more than the $22,000 donated the previous year [4].
The company has donated approximately $6.7 million to major political parties over two decades, with contributions peaking during major copyright law debates [6].
The claim omits several critical pieces of context:
1. **Bipartisan support**: The legislation passed with bipartisan support from both the Coalition and Labor [6].
A Village Roadshow spokeswoman specifically noted that "the legislation referred to was passed with bipartisan support" [6].
2. **Purpose of the legislation**: The bill was designed to target overseas "piracy websites" with the "primary purpose" of copyright infringement [1].
Judges were required to consider whether blocking was proportionate, whether the site was hosted outside Australia, and whether it was "flagrantly" infringing copyright [2].
3. **Court oversight**: The legislation required Federal Court oversight for any blocking orders.
Rights holders had to prove the site's primary purpose was copyright infringement, and judges could consider public interest factors [2].
4. **ISPs not rights holders initiate blocks**: The legislation did not create a government-run "internet filter" in the traditional sense.
Rather, it created a court process where rights holders (not the government) could seek injunctions against ISPs to block specific sites [1].
5. **Village Roadshow donated to both parties**: While the claim focuses on Liberal donations, Village Roadshow was a prolific donor to **both major parties**, with significant donations to Labor as well [4][6].
The SMH and ZDNet articles are from reputable technology journalists (Ben Grubb and Josh Taylor) and appear factually accurate based on the parliamentary documents they cite.
しかし conjunctionShikashi : :
However:
- **SMH articles**: Mainstream media with factual reporting but potentially sensationalist framing (e.g., "internet filter" terminology)
- **ZDNet article**: Technical reporting focused on legal concerns raised by the Australian Digital Alliance, which represents copyright users and has an inherent bias toward open access
- **ITNews article**: Technology industry publication reporting on AEC donation disclosures
The sources accurately report the legislation's provisions but frame them critically, emphasizing concerns about lack of consumer representation and potential for over-blocking.
**Did Labor do something similar?**
**Yes - in fact, Labor's approach was significantly more extensive.**
Search conducted: "Labor government mandatory internet filtering Australia 2008-2013"
Finding: The Rudd/Gillard Labor governments (2007-2013) proposed and pursued a **mandatory internet filtering scheme** that was far more comprehensive than the Coalition's 2015 site-blocking legislation.
* * * *
The Labor plan would have required ISPs to filter all internet traffic against a government-maintained "blacklist" of refused classification (RC) material [7][8].
Key differences between Labor's approach and the Coalition's legislation:
1. **Scope**: Labor's plan would have filtered ALL internet traffic at the ISP level for all Australians.
* * * *
The Coalition's 2015 legislation targeted only specific overseas piracy sites through court orders [7].
2. **Mechanism**: Labor proposed automated filtering of content.
検索 nounKensaku 実施 nounJisshi : : 「 " Labor nounLabor government nounGovernment mandatory nounMandatory internet nounInternet filtering nounFiltering Australia nounAustralia 2008 noun2008 - - 2013 noun2013 」 "
The Coalition's legislation required judicial oversight and targeted only sites with primary purpose of copyright infringement [1].
3. **Timeline**: Labor pursued their mandatory filtering plan from 2007 until shelving it in 2012 due to technical concerns and public opposition [8].
4. **Both parties supported 2015 legislation**: Critically, Labor **supported** the Coalition's 2015 copyright site-blocking bill, making this a bipartisan policy rather than a Coalition-specific initiative [6].
However, the reality is more nuanced:
**Criticisms (accurate)**:
- The legislation did limit direct consumer contestation rights [2][3]
- No mandated consumer advocate in court cases [2]
- Village Roadshow did make substantial political donations, peaking during copyright debates [6]
- The $130,000 cost estimate (industry-wide) raised concerns about consumer internet pricing [2]
**Counterpoints and context**:
- **This was not a "Coalition internet filter"** - it was a court-based process for blocking specific overseas piracy sites, fundamentally different from Labor's earlier mandatory filtering proposal [7]
- **Labor supported this legislation** - it passed with bipartisan support [6]
- **Labor's earlier filtering plan was more extensive** - targeting all internet traffic with government-controlled blacklists [7][8]
- **Village Roadshow donated to both parties** - including $227,500 to Labor in 2013-14 [4]
- **Industry-wide cost, not per-customer** - the $130,000 was total industry cost, not an individual customer charge [2]
**Key context**: The framing as a "Coalition internet filter" designed to benefit Liberal donors is misleading because (1) Labor supported the same legislation, (2) Village Roadshow donated heavily to both parties, and (3) Labor previously pursued a far more extensive mandatory filtering scheme without similar donor allegations.
The core facts are accurate: the Coalition did introduce copyright site-blocking legislation, consumers had limited direct contestation rights, the estimated industry-wide cost was approximately $130,000 annually, and Village Roadshow made substantial political donations during this period.
However, the claim is misleading in three key ways: (1) it presents this as a Coalition-specific "internet filter" when Labor supported the same legislation and had previously proposed a more extensive filtering scheme, (2) it suggests Village Roadshow donated only to Liberals when they donated heavily to both parties, and (3) it misrepresents the $130,000 as a per-customer cost when it was an industry-wide estimate.
The core facts are accurate: the Coalition did introduce copyright site-blocking legislation, consumers had limited direct contestation rights, the estimated industry-wide cost was approximately $130,000 annually, and Village Roadshow made substantial political donations during this period.
However, the claim is misleading in three key ways: (1) it presents this as a Coalition-specific "internet filter" when Labor supported the same legislation and had previously proposed a more extensive filtering scheme, (2) it suggests Village Roadshow donated only to Liberals when they donated heavily to both parties, and (3) it misrepresents the $130,000 as a per-customer cost when it was an industry-wide estimate.