While Telus cries foul over cable-cutting in its labour dispute, the company has been snipping a few virtual wires of its own.

…Specifically, the connections leading to at least two web sites critical of the company.

If you want to check out their perspective, and Telus is your Internet service provider, you won’t be able to access either Voices for Change or TelusScabs.ca.

(Fortunately – for now, anyway – you can still sneak around Telus’ little ad hoc firewall by visiting this proxy site… although it appears to have some glitches.)

This sets a godawful precedent, especially given the concentration of ownership in the telecommunications industry. Bell Sympatico, MSN or AOL Time Warner adopting similar policies would have serious implications for the Internet’s capacity to allow the free exchange of ideas.

Telus claims the policy is simply to defend their personnel and assets. But as the sole arbiter of what will and won’t be acceptable content in a pitched labour battle, the company is in a stunning conflict of interest. (Not to mention the much more basic issue of an ISP deciding what content its customers will and won’t be able to access.)

And from a public relations standpoint, Telus has — in the felicitous phrase coined by TechDirt — triggered a “Streisand Effect”: dramatically raising the profile of a piece of information by trying to suppress it.

You’d expect the online world to jump on this, and you’d be right; the story has been Metafiltered and Slashdotted (with nearly 600 comments at the time of writing).

Now, if Telus was smart, they’d be hitting the “Comment” link on every blog story they could get their mice on to get their side of the story out there. And this incident gives us a chance to assess the state of online PR at one of the larger players in the Canadian online market.

So I’m offering an unbounty (which is to say, the only prize on offer is the meagre glory of a mention here) to the first person who can turn up an instance of Telus actually engaging the blogospheriverse on this issue. (Updated July 26: Derek Miller was phoned by Telus shortly after posting about the issue. They’re in phone tag hell, so we’ll see what develops.)

Some links:

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