Vortex wrote:China manages (sort of) to control its networks.
It's effective - my daughter worked in China and says that the normal person has NO idea of what REALLY happens outside china.
I think Australia planned a similar control of ISPs ... and everyone, quite rightly, had a good grump.
However NOW many people will SUPPORT blocks/walls etc on the web.
Would you be happy having queued for half an hour only to find that you can't use your credit card because of "those bloody hackers"?
Intelligent traffic management by ISPs could track and block all sorts of activity. The hardware (Deep Packet Inspection) is already there in many cases.
Legal rather than technical changes will also help: "So you set up a bot for use by the protestors? That's illegal - have this £5000 fine."
Example of possible pain coming: I use various private TCP & UDP protocols between various sites - I now imagine that ISPs might start blocking my 'unexpected' traffic, which will be a royal nuisance.
Sure, we will never block all protestors ... but the ISPs, governments etc now have an excuse to get their toys out of the cupboard.
One thing: hardly anything is truly anonymous on the Web. If you send a blackmail email, however cunningly routed, you will probably be caught. At the moment this takes quite a lot of time and so would not be done for trivial cases. However the combination of enhanced laws plus better tools to find the sender of emails or the operator of a DDOS bot PC will take a fair number of protestors off line.
The side effect of this will be increased control and monitoring of OUR Web use.
Ignoring the validity of WikiLeaks / Payback, all this is a total dog's breakfast which will eventually affect us all.
The average person in China is really not interested in what goes on outside China. They have a different view. But it's easy enough in China to find stuff that you want to (on different domain names), where that stuff was originally posted on blocked sites.
Australian governments are something else. Let's not go there.
I don't agree that many will support blocks/walls. Many will support better protection of *crucial* information (i.e. protecting the systems that info is on - which most governments are so bad at). But that's exactly what a lot of us would want. And many will now understand that not all secrets are really secrets.
DPI is already installed at most if not all ISPs. Perhaps the last to install here was O2 (beginning of this year). They already do 'traffic shaping', they already discriminate against particular protocols, often for straight commercial reasons. The issue of net neutrality was already being played out both here and in the US long before WikiLeaks released any footage from Iraq.
Increased control and monitoring? Have you been watching government (this one, the last one, the American one) plans on a whole range of fronts long before this happened? It's been going on for years, and shows no sign of abating in the face of reduced budgets. I won't provide a long list of acronyms. (And when the ISPs squeal 'we can't because it's too difficult/will cost us too much', the government handily says it will do it all for them. Nice.) Collecting information, monitoring and controlling is what government agencies always end up wanting to do.
At least there are now consumer lobby groups on both sides of the pond that aim to defend our interests in these areas (and who are also against DDoS and similar). Perhaps worth signing up to them?
And again, WikiLeaks is nothing to do with Payback. Different people. Not sure why you keep conflating the two.