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Communications Minister, Senator Stephen Conroy, is embarking on a mad venture to spend tens of millions of dollars to cripple Australian Internet speed and increase consumer costs through conducting deep packet inspection to filter out "objectionable material" from Australian homes. The filter will be mandatory; there is no opt-out; in other words, the State will determine what adults are allowed to see or read - I'm sure we feel a lot safer now. Electronic Frontiers Australia have put together an informative website and action plan. Parody and ridicule is a fair option in these circumstances. I have written a fairly blunt (and open) letter on the subject to the Senator.

Michael ran another excellent session of Middle Earth Role Playing on Friday night. On Sunday after I followed up with the final session of Dyksund Caverns for RuneQuest's Shadows on the Borderland (I must write a more comprehensive review), which involved negotiations with mad ghosts (with one possessing a PC), discovering that they trapped in the caverns and their supply team had been eaten by ogres, finding a magic crystal that was powering a dormant demigod, launching an attack on a homestead inhabited by said ogres and ogre children (nasty little buggers; rather like the Children of the Corn) and giving chase to a number who escaped into the wilderness (for future plot developments - bwahahaha!). A good roleplaying session involves all the players throughout the session, provides both motivations and conflict (internal and external) for all the characters and occurs within a plausible (albeit often exotic) setting with a consistent sense of narrative flow. Most of my gaming sessions manage to do this reasonable well; this one however worked extremely well. I have also been working an article "Improving Mongoose's RuneQuest" for The Grimoire, which is initially inspired by a thread I started on rpg.net with the title Armour in Mongoose RuneQuest Considered Harmful.

The new rodents have settled in and are proving themselves to be a source of great amusement with 'Trouble' proving to be most social. Most things workwise are just fine, although I'm having a small war getting the Shibboleth module for Drupal to play nice, and ditto for the source version of SciLab. On a health-related issue, I seem to have acquired (goodness knows how) a minor case of pyelonephritis, which I do not recommend to anyone; antibiotics have been prescribed and blood tests are pending.

Date: 2008-10-20 11:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com
Not only will you get a cookie cut reply, they will probably count it as a letter in support of the proposal.

Politicians don't get humour, unless it is obvious abused hurled against their opponents.

As a whole, they really are quite a stupid breed of person.

Date: 2008-10-21 01:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rogue-scholar.livejournal.com
I figured as much, sadly. I'm optimistic that someone will notice they're being made fun of; in any case I'm hoping they'll have got plenty of letters from objectors, such as your own fine contribution. Won't make a jot of difference, of course - what is it with Communications Ministers and breathtakingly bad ideas?

Oh, I forgot to say: get well soon! Everyone I know seems to be getting sick this week, myself included, but yours sounds nastier than the average 'flu.

Date: 2008-10-21 10:32 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com
Although it is possible the electoral/ministerial office staff will get it. I can imagine the following conversation.

Minister: "Look at this one Jeeves! At last, a letter which completely supports my plan!"

Jeeves: "Ahh, Minister I'm afraid that might be a parody."

Minister: "A parody? What's that?"

Jeeves: "Er, it involves stating a proposal in such a way so it seems foolish, thus implying support for the opposite case."

Minister: "What? Says one things and means the other? Quick, get 'em on the 'phone. A career in politics for sure!"

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