The NSW Department of Education and Training (DET) this week revealed plans to limit internet access on the laptops given to the state's senior students under the "digital education revolution" to a pre-approved list of websites.

Speaking at an Australian Information Industry Association lunch yesterday, Michael Coutts-Trotter, DET's director general and its chief information officer, Stephen Wilson, said the department's first priority in allowing students to take the laptops home was to prevent them being sold off.

"On our laptop model, the first question is how do you prevent them from being sold down at the pub," said Coutts-Trotter. "Well, you equip them in a way so they are only of use within a DET environment or are only of use for DET students or authorised users, such as staff."

"So yeah, that's what it would mean: that you would be coming into an authenticated environment from home," he said.

Later, chief information officer Wilson detailed the "unbreakable" filtering system that would control students' internet experience on the proposed laptops.

"Our internet filtering is unbreakable. We have a huge proxy array that does all the filtering. We've just brought that in-house and the reason we have done that is we want much tighter control over it," said Wilson.

DET has developed 98 categories of websites that are accessible to students. "Every internet site that's known is actually categorised. If it isn't known, it's blocked. If you go to a site and it's not categorised you can't get to it," he said.

"I know that the Commonwealth introduced an internet filtering initiative that a high school student broke, or claimed to have broken, very quickly. I just want you to understand ours is completely different. We're at the end of the pipe and nothing goes through that pipe that doesn't get filtered," he said.

The vision hinges on NSW acquiring an extra $245 million funding from the Commonwealth over the $197 million currently proposed, which it has claimed is necessary to deliver a laptop to every student in years nine to 12.

The proposal has outraged long standing e-business consultant and civil rights advocate, Roger Clarke.

"It would be bad enough of them creating a list of blocked sites, but the notion that they would only allow students access to that which has been approved is incredible," he told ZDNet.com.au today.

"What credibility can a government organisation and educational bureaucracy have with the people they're trying to communicate with when the students, through all of their own devices and through friend's devices, have access to the world," he added.

NSW is yet to release an official expression of interest for the laptops it wanted and Wilson said it wouldn't do so until an agreement had been reached with Canberra.

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Comments

1

europia - 28/10/08

pre approved means that every bit of information that contains a word of the english dictionary must be manually approved by a human. each single word in each single sentence. sentence by sentence. page by page. book by book. library by library. not to mention that websites arent static. so the approval has to be done daily. talking about job creation.
as if australia isnt a remote island already - now they want to link their minds out of the human pool. good luck drifting around the edge, who else would miss y'all but some dutch aussie-lovers?

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2

iii - 06/12/08

the blocking sites thing is stupid. almost everything is uncategorised and when i am researching something at school, almost all the sites i want to visit are blocked. i can't get most images for my assignments because it's blocked. blocking hotmail has also proved annoying because i often use email to transfer files home <> school and the det email is unreliable. so much for incredible.

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3

Gosh - 10/01/09

The dreaded white list...is very annoying

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4

agreee - 05/02/09

i reckon..!! blocking sites r so stupid,
y would they freaking block useful websites too?

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5

james - 13/02/09

Once someone has found out to hack it they will just post it on you tube and everybody will do it to there laptops!!!!hahahahahahahaha

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6

anonymous - 26/02/09

the DET can't block them. If they do, you simply get a corporate copy of Windows and install it. If they put a hardware block on them to prevent you changing the OS, you get Linux and break the hardware freeze...i.e. They can't block you from sticking what you want on them. Also, if they block them to DET network, how are they of any use when you leave school, seeing as your supposed to keep them...

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7

Anonymous - 11/03/09

Just install a linux distro or live cd it and the det restrictions are gone after all im using Ubuntu Linux at the moment on a school network and they dont know im here its called an anonymizer they will learn all about it from the smart seniors.

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8

when - 26/03/09

when do we even get these laptops the government is promising
ive only heard of one school and that only year 9s got them y would year 9s need them?

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9

ripprasternode - 17/09/09

These restrictions will make these computers worthless and they will be treated as such.
The feeling of ownership has been stripped from these students, promised a laptop but given a crippled netbook will leave them feeling cheated.

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10

ripprasternode - 17/09/09

As for "liberating" these computers... I don't know any reason this shouldn't work.

Get a new bigger hard drive,
Remove the old hard and ghost it onto a partition of the new one,
Install your own OS on another partition and dual boot.

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11

aaklssSSS - 23/09/09

>> Get a new bigger hard drive,
Remove the old hard and ghost it onto a partition of the new one,
Install your own OS on another partition and dual boot.

You can't. Hardware tracks changes and reports it, then renders it useless.

You can't use live CD's or usb sticks because (if anyone at the DET has a brain cell), USB will either be last on the boot list, or won't be there at all.

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12

HARLOW24 - 19/10/09

is there anyway to get passed the blocked sites

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13

lol - 05/11/09

lol dumb,these laptops have already been hacked aha. it only took a month.

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14

johnny - 23/11/09

I'd rather move to sweden right now.

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15

stupid things - 29/11/09

im on my laptop now o: answering all those people who thinks its easy to hack i'm telling you it ain't that easy for the average kid not even for the above average kid let alone all the idiots. If you try to change OS etc. the laptop (which i think is a waster of money) becomes completley unusable then you get to tell you computer guy. "Hey! i tried to hack my laptop and it stopped working can i have another one?"

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16

anony975 - 25/01/10

i suggest using the software they have on it, against them..
like flash, make ur own offensive content and distribute the non executable(project files) via thumb drive, I've a very strong feeling this will work.

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16

anony975 - 25/01/10

i suggest using the software they have on it, against them.. like flash, make ur own offensive content and distribute the non ... more

15

stupid things - 29/11/09

im on my laptop now o: answering all those people who thinks its easy to hack i'm telling you it ain't ... more

14

johnny - 23/11/09

I'd rather move to sweden right now. ... more

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