顯示具有 WhatsApp 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章
顯示具有 WhatsApp 標籤的文章。 顯示所有文章

2026年6月16日 星期二

數位安全的遮羞布:誰才是真正的受益者?

 

數位安全的遮羞布:誰才是真正的受益者?

首相最新的「澳洲加強版」數位安全政策,簡直是一場政治表演的傑作。表面上看,這一切都是為了保護大眾免受網路陰暗面的侵害,但只要你稍微了解權力是如何自我延續的,就會發現條款中的細節簡直寫滿了算計。該政策大方地豁免了 WhatsApp 和 Signal 等私人通訊軟體,這哪裡是保護公民?這根本是在保護政府自己的地下管道,以及最核心的選票命脈。

歷史一再提醒我們,當政府宣稱要「淨化」網路空間時,他們通常不在乎環境是否真的變乾淨,他們在乎的是誰握有麥克風。藉由打擊公開的社群媒體,同時對加密通訊軟體網開一面,政府創造了一種極其便利的雙重標準。公開辯論——民主運作的生命線——被「安全」之名給掐死;而那些政府高層、遊說團體與金主之間的密謀,卻在加密通訊的掩護下運作得更加順暢。

更別提這項政策提出的時機。選舉將至,年輕人的選票永遠是最大的變數。年輕世代的政治觀點與動員,多半發生在那些私密的群組與加密訊息中。政府無視這些真正孕育政治變革的平台,卻大張旗鼓地整頓公開網站,這分明是一場戰略性的佯攻。他們用「維護數位道德」的姿態去安撫那些充滿焦慮的中老年選票,同時確保自己的選舉機器能暢通無阻地在私下操弄輿論。

說穿了,這根本與「安全」無關。這是在打造一個環境:讓政府的聲音能暢通無阻地灌輸給公眾,同時讓公眾組織反對聲音的能力遭到扼殺。這是一筆極其冷血的交易——當你賦予國家定義何謂「不安全言論」的權力時,他們就會確保自己的權力穩固是唯一安全的事。在數位政治這場遊戲裡,如果你不是那個制定規則的人,你通常就是那個被收割的韭菜。


The Digital Safety Charade: Who Actually Gets "Protected"?

 

The Digital Safety Charade: Who Actually Gets "Protected"?

The Prime Minister’s latest "Australia-plus" digital safety policy is a masterpiece of political stagecraft. On the surface, it’s all about shielding the vulnerable from the dark underbelly of the internet. Yet, the fine print is a glowing neon sign for anyone who understands how power preserves itself. By explicitly exempting private messaging apps like WhatsApp and Signal from these new safety mandates, the administration isn’t protecting citizens; they are protecting their own backchannels—and, more importantly, their hold on the electorate.

History teaches us that when a government claims it wants to "clean up" the digital square, it rarely cares about the purity of the environment. It cares about who owns the microphone. By targeting public-facing social media platforms while leaving the encrypted fortresses of WhatsApp untouched, the policy creates a convenient bifurcation. It silences the chaotic, often messy public debate that democracy thrives on, while keeping the government’s direct line to its political base—and the private scheming of the donor class—entirely shielded from oversight.

But let’s look at the timing. With an election on the horizon, the youth vote is always the volatile variable. Younger demographics live, breathe, and radicalize in the crevices of private group chats and encrypted messaging apps. By "regulating" the public web while ignoring the very apps where the next political mobilization is happening, the Prime Minister is performing a strategic feint. It’s a classic move: pretend to be the stern arbiter of digital morality to please the older, more anxious voting blocks, while keeping the digital "dark web" of political organization wide open for the campaign machinery to manipulate.

Ultimately, this isn't about safety. It’s about creating a digital environment where the government’s own messaging reaches the public unimpeded, while the public’s ability to organize a coherent counter-narrative is throttled. It’s a cynical trade-off: give the state the power to define "unsafe" speech, and they will ensure that their own survival is the only thing truly safe from criticism. In the game of digital politics, if you aren't the one setting the rules of the game, you’re usually the one being harvested.