Iceland is working on banning Internet pornography, calling explicit online images a threat to children.
'"There is a strong consensus building in Iceland," Halla Gunnarsdottir, an adviser to the nation's Interior Minister, told England's Daily Mail.
 "We have so many experts, from educationalists to the police and those 
who work with children behind this, that this has become much broader 
than party politics.
"At the moment, we are 
looking at the best technical ways to achieve this. But surely if we can
 send a man to the moon, we must be able to tackle porn on the 
Internet."
Such a step is somewhat 
surprising among Western nations that, for the most part, champion 
free-speech rights. But the move wouldn't be unprecedented in the island
 nation.
Iceland has had laws 
banning the printing and distribution of pornography for years, but 
those laws haven't been updated to include the Web. And two years ago, 
the nation's parliament banned strip clubs, saying they violate the 
rights of the women who work in them.
Iceland would become the first Western democracy to try and block pornography online.
Interior Minister 
Ogmundur Jonasson has appointed committees to study the best methods for
 keeping young people from seeing explicit images and videos on 
computers, game consoles and smartphones.
The options being 
considered, according to the Daily Mail, include blocking the IP 
addresses of known porn sites and making it illegal to use credit cards 
from Iceland to subscribe to X-rated sites.
"This move is not 
anti-sex. It is anti-violence because young children are seeing porn and
 acting it out," Gunnarsdottir said. "That is where we draw the line. 
This material is blurring the boundaries for young people about what is 
right and wrong."
Attempting a total block
 of porn sites somewhere like the United States, with its legions of 
public and private portals onto the Web and the millions of software 
engineers who likely would spring into action to find workarounds, would
 be nearly impossible.
But Iceland has a 
population of 322,000 -- roughly the same as St. Louis, Missouri. That, 
and its remote location 1,300 miles off of the coast of Europe, would 
make jamming or blocking Web traffic to certain sites easier, if that 
was the route the government there chose.
The move is, 
predictably, drawing fire from Web-freedom advocates, including some in 
Iceland who agree with Jonasson on most issues.
"Since he claimed office
 as minister, Jonasson has brought forward progressive legislation and 
has shown that he can be a man of principles and courage. For that, I 
truly respect him," Birgitta Jonsdottir, a member of Iceland's 
parliament who represents part of Reykjavik, wrote in an editorial for London's The Guardian.
"But he is way off track in his attempts to place a shield around Iceland in order to 'stop porn' from entering the country."
A member of the 
parliament committee studying the issue, Jonsdottir says a porn ban has 
"near zero" chance of passing parliament and that she's working to find 
other ways the government can help protect children from Web porn.
"Introducing censorship 
without compromising freedom of expression and speech is like trying to 
mix oil and water: It is impossible," she wrote. "I know my fellow MPs 
can often turn strange and dangerous laws into reality, but this won't 
be one of them."






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