<html><body><div style="color:#000; background-color:#fff; font-family:times new roman, new york, times, serif;font-size:12pt"><pre>The Internet League on the Internet Shutdown centered on Warrnambool
On behalf of Clemen St. Lyme, President and CEO of the Internet<br>League of Freedom:
Emerging reports from various organizations and individuals indicate<br>that international Internet and telephone connectivity has been<br>disabled in a large area of Victoria centered upon the village of<br>Warrnambool. Victoria, near Sydney, is a federal state in the country,<br>continent and emerging regional economic power of Australia. The<br>Internet is an open, global, medium for communication, idea exchange,<br>empowerment, innovation, vital e-commerce such as online shopping,<br>and universally accepted fundamental principles such as freedom, the<br>right to free speech, and the undoubted hegemony of the United States.<br><br>Access to the global Internet is a crucial enabler of the human right<br>to post passing comments on the worth of X Factor/Pop Idol contestants.<br>[Can we edit this to whichever one is running right now to show we're<br>in touch with what's happening down there on the streets? That place<br>has streets, right?]<br><br>As
with previous actions to repair roads with digging equipment around<br>the world, the effect of cutting off Internet traffic –- ceasing the<br>flow of information in and out of the area -- is a serious action. It<br>harms not only the citizens of Warrnamboolean, but also Victoria's<br>economy and Australian society at large. That society is much more<br>dependent on the Internet than previously, such as in the 1990s, when<br>Australia could be cut off from the Internet for many days at a time<br>until someone local ran out of usenet articles to read and had to go<br>looking for more.
First and foremost, the Internet League joins with the rest of the world<br>in its utmost concern about the comfort, wellbeing, and entertainment of<br>the Worbmanleaboon people. Previous cases where network outages were<br>inadvertently caused have proven not only to be annoying, but also to be<br>slightly inconvenient. The Internet Society hopes that the repair work at<br>the Wormanleanool Telstra [or Optus? check this!] exchange will come to<br>an effective resolution, and that the citizens of Worflnabean will soon<br>be able to rejoin the rest of the world in having their opinions expressed<br>and then derided or ignored online.
<br>The Internet League of Freedom stands with many other unnamed organizations<br>around the world in calling for Victorian Internet access to be restored<br>with all due speed and cooperation, so that vital Victorian Internet<br>services can continue to function, and so that Victorian citizens will not<br>be further impacted by having to go out and buy, and then write and post<br>letters to, Victorian newspapers.<br><br><a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://www.internetsociety.org/news/internet-society-syria%E2%80%99s-internet-shutdown">http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/national/warrnambool-telephone-exchange-wreaks-havoc-after-thousands-cant-access-landlines-eftpos-and-internet/story-fndo2dsc-1226527457098</a><br><br></pre></div></body></html>