The American owner of a website that has been targeted by Australia's Human Rights Commission for racism says he will not remove the offensive content.

In January a Northern Territory man lodged a complaint with the Human Rights Commission about the spoof site Encyclopedia Dramatica.

His complaint about a page featuring racist descriptions of Aboriginals prompted Google to remove the website from Australian search results.

The commission has since tried to prosecute the website's American owners under Australia's Racial Discrimination Act.

In a letter to the site's owners, the commission said it had received 20 complaints from Indigenous Australians.

The site's owner, Joseph Evers, has blogged that Encyclopedia Dramatica will "never be censored in any way".

Mr Evers says the site's owners "laughed" when they discovered they were on the Australian Communications and Media Authority's list of websites to be banned under the Government's planned internet filter.

"We will keep publishing this content and our Australian users will be able to view it up until the point that your God-forsaken government blocks it with their soon-to-be-implemented secret list of banned material," he wrote.

Mr Evers says he has been advised by his lawyer never to visit Australia.

The webpage in question says the article was written by Indigenous Australians.

"This article was written entirely by Australian Aborigines who are satirising racists in Australia in the same way that Sacha Baron Cohen, a Jew, uses the character Borat to satirise anti-Semitism," it reads.

"So this article is completely 100 per cent not racist at all."