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Computer-Edited Photos Lead To Child-Porn Locale

Leilah writes "Toronto police have found a new application for computerized photo editing. The police released edited photos on Feb. 3 from a series of child pornography pics in an attempt to locate where the photos may have been taken. Two days later, they have identified the Port Orleans hotel in Disney World as being the location. This seems to be the first time photo editing has been used in law enforcement this way and strikes an interesting line between protecting the victims and being able to get public tips. It looks like it may be used quite heavily in the future given this success."

5 of 806 comments (clear)

  1. fp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    fp

  2. Did they use photoshop? Or the Gimp? by Predflux · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    If they DID use photoshop? Was it an illegal copy? =P

  3. It still isn't proof by MrSoundAndVision · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    This cannot be allowed to be considered evidence in any criminal case. We all know that software exists to place people in places they aren't.

    I recently got an invitation from Guru.com to join a project that would create software that could insert a preloaded video clip into a live video stream in real time. Such software could only be used for false incrimination.

    While child pornography is a terrible crime, governments must take care to ensure that such clips are not legal evidence, but used as "hints" in investigations.

  4. Re:Copyright infringement by bbc · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    "If they were so foolhardy, I'd love to see some civil court judge (or jury) find for the plaintiff and award one dollar damages."

    Statutory damages for copyright infringement are US$ 250,000 per incident. Or as Lessig puts it: share two songs with your friend and you will be paying more in damages than the surgeon who amputates the wrong leg.

    I doubt, however, that a court would rule this copyright infringement. It would probably be considered fair use.

  5. George Bush is having an intellectual love affair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: -1, Offtopic

    "INTELLECTUAL" is hardly the first word that springs to mind when you contemplate George Bush. Mr Bush glided through the best education that money can buy without acquiring much in the way of "book learning". At school, he formed a stick-ball team called the Nads (providing him and his pals with a chance to shout "Go Nads"); at Yale, he was famous for doing the alligator, a dance that involved falling on the floor and rolling around; at Harvard Business School, he wore cowboy boots and chewed tobacco, a strutting provocation to the lefty penseurs who dominated Harvard Yard.

    Yet for the past few months this paragon of good ol' boy common sense has been infatuated with a book about an abstract noun by a Jewish intellectual. ... Mr Sharansky's message comes down to... the world really is divided between good and evil. There are few things that irritate foreign-policy types more about Mr Bush than his Manichean view of the world. His infatuation with Mr Sharansky suggests that he is not likely to be any more "sophisticated" in his second term. ...

    When Mr Bush talks about freeing captives, the rest of the world looks at Guantánamo Bay. The trouble with Mr Bush's new doctrine is not that he has naively embraced freedom and democracy, but that he hasn't embraced them tightly enough.