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Pennsylvania Law Requires ISPs to Block Child Porn

feed_me_cereal writes: "Salon has an article describing a new law in Pennsylvania which requires ISPs to prevent access to child pornography on the internet. Under this law, the government can give ISPs a list of websites to block. Failure to do so can result in fines from $5,000 to $30,000 + jailtime. While stopping child pornography sounds noble, it seems that these powers will do little to meet this goal and much to allow the government to decide what websites are suitable for public viewing." Reader lightspawn provided this link to the law itself as well as another story at freedomforum.org.

8 of 512 comments (clear)

  1. What a nightmare.. by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 4, Informative
    Glad I don't live in Pennsylvania, this type of web blocking is notorius for being inaccurate.

    We have an extreme version of this at our school - originally put in place to block porn, it was later extended to terrorism (fair enough), but then also anything under the "fun" category, the "online sales" category, and finally the "personal" category - laughably this last one includes ANY address with a ~ in the url.

    Needless to say, the potential for abuse here, as well as complex legal arguments, is HUGE

  2. The precedent by praedor · · Score: 2, Informative

    I am all for killing off kiddie porn and the purveyors of kiddie porn but I nevertheless find this a little bit disturbing as a precedent. Today it is kiddie porn, tomorrow adult content sites, then sites that provide birth control information, then...


    If it can be absolutely restricted to ONLY blocking kiddie porn and NOTHING else, then OK, but once the toe is in the door, it is hard to stop the leg, then the shoulder...

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    1. Re:The precedent by afidel · · Score: 2, Informative

      here is one
      See subsection 8 specifically subsection 8B.
      This is the CPPA or Child Pornography Protection Act. This specific clause was up for review by the supreme court in Jan 2001 but I cannot find the supreme's ruling anywhere online. But unless it was struck down and down resoundingly then it is either law or they will try again.

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  3. Re:Two things... by Stonehand · · Score: 5, Informative

    No, it's not. Read the law; it was prepared roughly two months ago, and it's just going into effect 'round now care of the 60-day delay.

    And the state AG is the one that makes the blocking decisions; the law explicitly states that the ISPs are under no obligation to go searching on their own, to monitor content (to decide what to block), or to otherwise search for affirmative evidence of wrong-doing.

    Now, the proxy issue... the law says "disabling access", which could be interpreted as either accessing directly (which makes a certain degree of sense, as the law mentions that banning requests should include URLs -- so ban the URL might be sufficient under that) or even banning indirect access (proxies, mirrors, and other foo).

    I'd be inclined to think that the former was meant (ban direct accessing of the specific URL), but... you'd probably have to check the debate records to find out.

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  4. Re:Two things... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 4, Informative

    Is the ISP supposed to just carte blanche kill off anything that even resembles child porn?

    Please retract knee from jerked position.

    NOTHING IN THIS SECTION MAY BE CONSTRUED AS IMPOSING A DUTY ON AN INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDER TO ACTIVELY MONITOR ITS SERVICE OR AFFIRMATIVELY SEEK EVIDENCE OF ILLEGAL ACTIVITY ON ITS SERVICE.

    It's really simple. If the government notifies you that you're distributing child pornography, and you don't take it down within 5 business days, you get fined. If you do it three times, you go to jail.

  5. ISPs should not have to do this. by R_V_Winkle · · Score: 2, Informative

    Ineternet Service Providers should be required to focus on effectively providing a link to the network and thats it. Routing and reliability is the job that I look to my ISP to perform. The governement threatening an ISP as a means to force their misunderstanding on the people is not something I welcome and I hope the message gets across soon.

    If someone is hosting something that is illegal then go after the someone and not their ISP or even worse the ISP of someone else that just happens to be linking to the same internet. If you can't get to that someone then deal with it. The internet is much bigger than Pennsylvania and the narrow views of whatever government entity that gets to tell my ISP what I can see.

    I for one will always be in favor of deciding what filtering needs to be done on my connection to the internet and think that the voters in Pennsylvania should let there representativers know that this heavy handed attempt is nothing short of an attempt to control something that can not be controlled in this manner.

  6. Yeah, PA is going down the toilet. by evilpaul13 · · Score: 3, Informative

    We've got a law that allows 'dangerous people' to be arrested and held indefinitely without being charged or brought to trial. If that doesn't sound like it has potential to be abuse, I don't know what does.

    This latest one will be another with enormous potential for abuse. It'll censor unfairly many sites that don't have child pornography on them. It would also be possible for someone saying something that isn't liked to be put on it 'accidentally.'

    But, I'm probably just paranoid, there's no reason not to trust the gov't. They are here to protect us.

    (I live in PA, btw)

  7. kiddie pr0n? by tGOw · · Score: 2, Informative

    hey, i hear you can get lots of hot kiddie porn on #cooch/EFNet"

    heh.

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