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Court Rules Burning Porn = Making Porn

An anonymous reader writes "An appeals court has upheld the prosecution of a Michigan man who was charged with production of child pornography after downloading and burning pornographic pictures from the Internet. The pictures were created by a Russian website that the man was not affiliated with in any form. From the court decision (PDF): 'After reviewing the dictionary definition of the word make, the circuit court stated that the bottom line was that, following the mechanical and technical act of burning images onto the CD-Rs, something new was created or made that did not previously exist.' Is this simply a court's overreaction to a scumbag pedophile? And how does this affect the lawsuits by the BSA, RIAA, and MPAA?"

887 comments

  1. So by tsa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I understand this correclty I am an artist when I burn the music I illegally downloaded?

    --

    -- Cheers!

    1. Re:So by imoou · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Making != Creating, so you may be a music producer if you burn those music.

    2. Re:So by tehwebguy · · Score: 5, Funny

      ah, even better! that means the RIAA owes me a lot of money!

      --
      -- lol pwned
    3. Re:So by tsa · · Score: 5, Funny

      That certainly is better! Ah, I can see it now: Sgt. Pepper's lonely hearts club band, produced by Willem Tjerkstra. Let the big bucks roll in...

      --

      -- Cheers!

    4. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If I understand this correclty I am an artist when I burn the music I illegally downloaded?

      No, but you have made a music CD. Not an album in the sense of releasing an album, but the physical article. If you photocopied a kiddie porn photo, you have just produced an article that is child porn, too!

      The law is not a prohibition only against the initial photographer of such things... it's against ALL PUBLICATION AND DISTRIBUTION of pornographic material depicting (real) minors! Not just the original abusers, EVERYONE in the whole chain right to the end person who's getting off on it are in violation of the laws!

    5. Re:So by Red+Alastor · · Score: 1
      If I understand this correclty I am an artist when I burn the music I illegally downloaded?
      Yes. And I own your post at the moment it is copied in my cache. You owe me loads of money for using my copyrighted material !
      --
      Slashdot anagrams to "Sad Sloth"
    6. Re:So by jbolden · · Score: 1, Interesting

      No you are a publisher when you burn the music. Creating a greatest hits album is a new creation.

    7. Re:So by eclectro · · Score: 1

      If I understand this correclty I am an artist when I burn the music I illegally downloaded?

      And like an artist, you will be forced to sing and the RIAA will take all your money.

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    8. Re:So by Jozer99 · · Score: 1

      Yes, that is the basic idea.

    9. Re:So by rbarreira · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't understand a point. A cover band is not formed by musicians?

      --

      The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
    10. Re:So by SamSim · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, I think that just makes you a music manufacturer. You occupy the same position as any other CD pressing plant.

      In this context I believe it is the actual physical material which is considered pornography, not the images themselves. It's like distinction between a story in a newspaper, and the actual, physical ink on the page. In this respect he did indeed "create child pornography".

      The real issue I see here is: how tangible must the copy be to be considered the creation of a new copy? Surely if the data is on his hard drive then that counts, by this measure. So what if someone innocent blunders on to a child porn site by accident and backs out immediately, leaving a few images in his internet cache? What if he deletes his cache, but still leaves the data itself all but intact on his hard drive? Does the pattern of illuminated phosphors on his monitor count? Does the information in the modem wire count?

    11. Re:So by ShaneThePain · · Score: 1

      If that is true, RIAA lawsuits are null and void! I hope someone uses this to get back at the bastards! PIRATE PRIDE!

      --
      Fascism is the greatest political ideology ever conceived. Sorry.
    12. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so what, I made linux, bsd, windows and lots of other software.

    13. Re:So by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      I burn a lot of downloads from the net before I even look at them. So what am I?

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    14. Re:So by 6*7 · · Score: 1

      Offcourse only after setting the correct attributes in de ISO9660 headers.

    15. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      But you're totally missing the point, which is that possession is already illegal. It's not like the guy wasn't already going to lose his job, his family, and his future, simply for possessing the stuff. That's a pretty bad punishment, you know.

      It's the same principle as having different degrees of murder. If you execute everyone, regardless of whether they premeditated the deed and regardless of whether there were extenuating circumstances, then you send out the message that premeditated murder induced by greed is no worse than murder committed in desparation by someone who's suffered years of domestic abuse. Similarly, if you punish everyone who possesses child porn the same as those who are actually out there directly abusing children, then you send out the message that raping a child and selling photos of the deed is no worse than downloading a picture from the internet and burning it to a CD.

      Are you seriously telling me you don't think raping a child is worse than burning child porn to a CD? Because if you do think it's worse, then surely you're in favour of having a law that says it's a worse crime that needs a harsher punishment?

      Hey, how about we distinguish in law between "possessing" child porn and "producing" child porn? That way, we can charge the guy who's only burning it to a CD with "possessing" it, and save the harsher "producing" punishment for the people who are physically abusing children... oh, wait.

    16. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How would the prosecutor know what was on the CD-R unless s/he also (re)produced a new copy on their own computer with the assistance of the OS and applications through the mere act of examining said CD-R? Also, if the prosecutor admitted the evidence into court, then how isn't s/he also guilty of being in possession (albeit temporarily) of the same child pornography? These are some slippery f*cking slopes!

    17. Re:So by BobSutan · · Score: 1

      Point beautifully made. If I had more moderation points I would have given them to you +1 Insightful.

      --
      "On a scale from 1 to 10, people are stupid"
    18. Re:So by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      EVERYONE in the whole chain right to the end person who's getting off on it are in violation of the laws!

      Yeah, that's what Homeland Security told me when I was smoking a joint and funding terrorism.

    19. Re:So by gdamore · · Score: 1

      Nutshell: I think that possession of child porn *is* as bad as producing (in the movie or photography sense) it, and should be punished accordingly.

      This is based upon the following assumptions:

      1) possession implies that you are creating a market for the material -- if the market dries up, maybe some children will not need to fall prey to this kind of sickness

      2) the material can be "inciteful" of the deed -- meaning if you use child porn to get off, then it might follow that you would actually like to commit these acts -- and if that possession is allowed to distribute, there is the risk that you might "inspire" similar behavior in others

      I think anyone who knowingly and willfully possesses or traffics in child porn should be held accountable to the strongest punishment the law allows.

      Now, I suppose if someone found child porn on your computer, and you were unaware of it, then this would be a reasonable defense.

      By the way, I believe (in the US) we have similar laws regarding possession of stolen property. Regardless of whether or not you actually stole it, if it was stolen and you possess it with the knowledge that it was stolen, you can be punished accordingly.

      Of course, IANAL, criminal, or otherwise involved in the legal justice system.

    20. Re:So by RAY+GOLD · · Score: 0

      I'd say yes if the arrangement of such music is its own artistic expression. one of these days im gonna patent a color and screw evryone that uses it!

      --
      Anyone who knows the name, is guilty just the same!
    21. Re:So by Floody · · Score: 1
      Nutshell: I think that possession of child porn *is* as bad as producing (in the movie or photography sense) it, and should be punished accordingly.


      By that logic someone who has knowledge of an impending murder but does nothing to stop it, and is not the perpetrator, is guilty of murder? Sure, they're guilty of a crime (assuming due-process was applied and they were convicted in a criminal court) and they should be punished accordingly, but for a lesser crime than whomever committed the actual act. If the true perpatrator is in a different country and cannot be extradited, that is unfortunate, but has no bearing on the penalties imposed on the "accomplice."

      To put it another way: On one hand you have someone who actually exploited children in the production of some work, and on the other you have someone who is contributing to the exploitation of children. Both unjustifiable, but don't you think one is worse than the other?

    22. Re:So by SirChive · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Common sense tells us that somebody has to be harmed by your actions for you to have commited a crime. Possession of an image of an illegal act does not cause harm. It's just too vague to say things like possession "might inspire" other acts. We've all seen photos of people being shot. Does possession of an image of a murder make us guilty of murder?

      Sex crimes against children are evil. But we can't fight them by throwing out such a broad net that we destroy the concept of criminality and justice. If a person buys or sells then, yes, they are guilty of distribution because they are providing fiscal incentive for a crime. By owning a picture or looking at a picture,, in and of itself, is simply not criminal. It may be sick and twisted but it's not a crime.

      The laws are so broad now that you could randomly download a ton of pornograhic images and then delete them. But if somebody finds them in your recycle bin and a few include minors of any sort you could go to jail for a long time.

    23. Re:So by Ben+Varrey · · Score: 1

      In one sense, burning the CD is as bad as raping the kid--subscribers are the ones who pay for and support that kind of child abuse, making it profitable as well as pleasurable for the rapists themselves. If there weren't any child porn consumers, there would be very few child porn marketers.

    24. Re:So by TerranFury · · Score: 1

      "Tjerkstra?" Didn't he invent a pathfinding algorithm?

    25. Re:So by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 1

      No, I think that just makes you a music manufacturer. You occupy the same position as any other CD pressing plant.

      No, since the judge says that you "produced" the music, you are the legal copyright owner of the music.

    26. Re:So by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Informative

      you know nothing of the case. I do I am from Muskegon,MI and the sicko lived with my ex-stepchildren that I still dearly love and care for.

      This is the court's way of identifying legally what he was doing. The guy was downloading all kinds of kiddie porn, no not 16-17 year olds but 5-11 year olds. and making CD's to sell and distribute. This definition that the court came up with really does fit. he was "making" child porn to sell in essence by making a product. it's like using pieces of paper and gluing them together to make a book.

      Yes, the wording stinks, but this is expected in a backwater hick-town like Muskegon.

      Lots of details on the case are not out in the open because the man has used some of his friends to strong arm the press in keeping things quiet. But my 21 year old stepson who discovered the porn, alerted his mother and got it all rolling is certian that a pile of 100+ cd's all labelled the same and with frome what he could tell the same content on them is certianly not "a private collection".

      do you need 100+ copies of all the files you downloaded from greatbigbooboes.com?

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    27. Re:So by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      The point of the law is to prevent the spread of child pornography. Otherwise, you could only punish the person who originally took the pictures. The statute in question hinders the spread of child porn by criminalizing the production of contraband materials that may be used to for swapping or exchange. The defense claimed that he was merely storing data onto the CD-R, which was already covered by the crime of possession. The prosecution claimed that the CD-R was transferable. Furthermore, unlike the automatic cache of a browser, there was intent to produce a copy of the porn. The statute did not make an exception for personal use. It was not a conviction but whether he would have to stand trial for that charge. The Court said that he must.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
    28. Re:So by mikiN · · Score: 1

      Close. I think you're referring to Dijkstra's Algorithm.

      --
      The Hacker's Guide To The Kernel: Don't panic()!
    29. Re:So by Daengbo · · Score: 1

      I've joked for a long time that the death penalty should apply for any crime greater than grand theft auto, since that's the modern equivalent of horse stealing there in the US. Convict 'em and hang 'em / shoot 'em the next morning. I guess that you'd have to let {deity} sort them out if they deserved an appeal...

      Heck, I lived for over four years in a country where on-the-spot execution for drug traffickers was legal. Hint: It's in SE Asia and the PM is one of the richest men in the world.

    30. Re:So by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      You were smoking a joint? Off to the gas chambers with you!

      Before you go, though, could you please hook me up with your supplier? Apparently my priveleges for enjoying life have been revoked because I haven't even been able to find a street-monkey who will sell to me in over two years. And it's seriously pissing me off.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    31. Re:So by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      The law is not a prohibition only against the initial photographer of such things... it's against ALL PUBLICATION AND DISTRIBUTION of pornographic material depicting (real) minors!

      The interesting decision that seems to have been made is that burning one CD and hiding it in a shoebox in your wardrobe is considered "publication and distribution". I would have thought they would at least have to make an argument that there was an intent to distribute. The point being that penalties for distribution are much higher than possession. Seems this is going the same way as drug laws; they can't find any way to get at the actual producers, who are probably overseas, so they punish the endusers more to make it seem they're doing something.

    32. Re:So by tsa · · Score: 1

      Not me. I only make up stories about Sophie. No, not that kind of stories, you pervert ;-)

      --

      -- Cheers!

    33. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I DO randomly download thousands of images at a time, or at least I used to, I'd let kazaa or whatever rack up a couple thousand hits, download all of them and then sort through it later, sort of a shotgun approach. And i'd get things all the time that were, lets just say, not exactly what I was looking for. It's so easy to pick up the stuff accidentally, it's all over the newsgroups, All you can do is delete it but by then technically you are already a criminal. Even if you are careful you still pick up stuff that has the file-name changed.

    34. Re:So by fbjon · · Score: 1
      In one sense it does, yes, but that sense muddies the waters. Should possession of hard drugs be punished as hard as producing hard drugs? One could aruge that it would be more effective, but would it be right?

      Notice also, that the situation where consumers of child porn don't exist, doesn't exist. There will always be a market, regardless of how many people you throw in jail!

      IMHO, if you want to eliminate demand, you need to send as many (possessors) as possible to a psychologist. Not sure what to do with the producing side, though.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    35. Re:So by fbjon · · Score: 1

      It's certainly not private use, but I still don't see where the "producer" label comes from. "Distributor" seems much more accurate.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    36. Re:So by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      Your personal analogy falls short. Did you burn those discards of questionable material to CD?

    37. Re:So by owlstead · · Score: 1

      Of course, a lot of child pornography is created (to clearly specify created, I am meaning the form of production that actually includes the child) to fullfill a certain demand. Downloading and especially buying child porn creates this demand. In my opinion, this is the same as buying a stolen car radio - actually worse, since the crime is of a much higher degree. So the user of childporno should be punished, and the sentence should depend on the factors of the use. I can think of the actual involvement (ranging up to placing an order for a newly made video, I suppose), if the person distributes the stuff himself, the amount of porn, etc. But the actual crime *IS* different, and I can hardly see any justice for calling this the creation of porn.

      And then there are the practical issues. Just as with drugs, you cannot combat it by destroying the source. There will always be sources as long as there is demand. And, unfortunately, it is something that some people pay prodigious amounts of money for to get it. So from this standpoint, you will have to proscecute downloaders to the full extend. Also, practically speaking, the simple inclusion of a few child porn pictures on a hard drive should not be enough for proscecution. If they are clearly child porn and have been sorted on the drive than that is something different. Especially dubious is just looking at the cache of the web-browser, since popups can do big harm. But, as I understood from the article, that's far from the case here...

    38. Re:So by dinog · · Score: 1
      So if I download and burn some of the alt.politics.* newsgroups to CD to search and research public opinions and altitudes about certain issues, am I guilty of "making hate-speech" ? Am I guilty of making an incitement to murder ? Am I guilty of holocaust denial ?

      It seems this decision can set a precedent that has a very chilling effect on many kinds of speech. It may make backing up a newserver into a multiple felony act.

      Dean G.

    39. Re:So by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      I haven't even been able to find a street-monkey who will sell to me in over two years. And it's seriously pissing me off.

      Yeah, sometimes its hard to get into a good circle. Currently, I get packages from Snoop Dog :) I guess you don't know him?

    40. Re:So by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      I still don't see where the "producer" label comes from. "Distributor" seems much more accurate. No. A distributor buys a finished product and resells it. A producer makes products... CDs, in this case.

    41. Re:So by jdbartlett · · Score: 1

      What everyone seems to be ignoring here is that it's Fair Use that allows us (in the US) to make a copy of each of our own CDs, etc. Child pornography is illegal, there is no fair use of child pornography. There is no fair use for your illegally downloaded music, either, but the only thing burning music to a CD could make you is a pirate. (Argh, matey.)

      To answer the poster's original question, the child pornography case in no way affects current laws that allow Americans to make a copy of their own music CD.

    42. Re:So by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Sorry, the gp was right. A distributer makes copies of a work and sells them (ideally) for profit. A producer actually creates the content. You would think that on slashdot the distinction would be particularly clear. I suppose the question may come down to "did he create the content, or was he licensing the work". The former would be the producer, the latter a distributer.

      I anticipate it will get overtuned on appeal. Hopefully he'll rot in a small cell forever eiher way.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    43. Re:So by KilobyteKnight · · Score: 1
      The law is not a prohibition only against the initial photographer of such things... it's against ALL PUBLICATION AND DISTRIBUTION of pornographic material depicting (real) minors!
      So is the prosecutor guilty of public display when introducing the CD as evidence?
      --
      When will Windows be ready for the desktop?
    44. Re:So by FishinDave · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your apparent understanding of the distribution chain suggests that you obtain most of your digital goods illegally. Ingram Micro distributes Windows XP. It may do so by installing copies of XP on computers and selling them to dealers and end users, under license from Microsoft. I assure you, Ingram does not make copies of retail boxed versions of XP. It buys them by the truckload and resells them. Distributors of music CDs, DVDs, VHS tapes, etc., do not buy one copy and sell reproductions of it.

    45. Re:So by alexo · · Score: 1


      > By owning a picture or looking at a picture,, in and of itself, is simply not
      > criminal. It may be sick and twisted but it's not a crime.


      It is a crime because society (indirectly, via legislators) says it is a crime.
      If you don't like it, fight to change the definition.

      > The laws are so broad now that you could randomly download a ton of pornograhic
      > images and then delete them. But if somebody finds them in your recycle bin and a
      > few include minors of any sort you could go to jail for a long time.


      See above.

      Possession crimes are a peach.
      It doesn't matter how the matter got into your possession because you are not charged with obtaining it but with possessing it.

    46. Re:So by gdamore · · Score: 2, Insightful

      By acquiring the images, you probably *have* harmed someone, even if not directly. Even if you don't purchase the image directly, someone must have had some reason for making the image available to you. (Outside of law enforcement purposes.) Did you visit a subscription website that had these on them? Maybe the website was free but makes money on advertising.

      The point is, that if you have them (knowingly), then you are participating in the crime.

      There are times when participation and commission of the act should be legally distinct. I don't think child porn is one of those cases.

      I do think it should be a valid defense if you were unaware that you had child porn in your possession, to answer one of your other doubts.

    47. Re:So by ciatog · · Score: 1

      I can't believe you are making that argument in "favour" (and yes it is in favour) of those who download child pornography. The punishment handed down was not too harsh, and in fact those who watch the stuff are as bad as those who make it. By downloading child pornography (like any pornography) you are creating a demand for it that would not be there otherwise, therefore you are creating an industry for it and are in fact partly the reason these kids are having their lives ruined. I'm not saying childern being raped wouldn't happen if people didn't download it just before anyone says it, but it's a problem that needs to be solved one step at a time and Internet downloads and sites is a nice place to start. Plus a fully grown sexual man who has any kind of perversion is very capable of going out and acting upon those as well so don't feel too sorry for this man who probably has a few kids that have there friends over for sleep overs while their pig of a father sits in front of the computer sweating over kids their age. Plus you can't compare it to murder or any other crime. Not all crimes are the same or have the same circumstances, they all have to be weighed and looked upon differently depending on the consequences of the crime, the effect it has on victims etc. Murdering someone in cold blood is a crime that deserves the death penalty (debatable I know), murdering someone who abuses you (like the kids who are being raped so sick pervs can download the stuff) is self defense. Raping a kid, and paying someone to rape that kid is a little bit closer together, so if someone pays another person to kill someone just because they didn't do it themselves does not make them any better then the murderer themselves, and in a way they can be perceived as worse since they propagated the whole situation. Certain crimes are so vile that everyone involved should be punished equally, because if one part of the chain gets broken then that might help end the whole problem. I just think people really need to check their left wing, liberal attitudes at the door here when it comes to this stuff, then again you are probably in favour of abortion which shows you don't really care about babies/kids having their lives torn apart as long as those doing it are happy in their lives.

    48. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've joked for a long time that the death penalty should apply for any crime greater than grand theft auto, since that's the modern equivalent of horse stealing there in the US.

      Boy, you're a real fucking funny guy.

    49. Re:So by Zone-MR · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not always. People often share stuff for no profit or purpose - just look at all the music available on P2P networks.

    50. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then this guy is fighting against production of new child porn by means of pirating and selling his cds which are not based on his own material. After all he's hurting the industry, wouldn't you say?

      By leeching and selling, he's contributing nothing to those who create the original material. In short he's making money on fucking other people over. The 'other people', in this case, are the creators of child porn.

    51. Re:So by TerranFury · · Score: 1

      Yep. That was the joke!

    52. Re:So by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He "burns" them to his hard disk. Any attorney can successfully argue that storing binary data on a CD-RW is exactly equivalent to storing them on the hard disk.

      Really, optical and magnetic media are basically the same, and they serve for storage.

      Accidental viewing of child pornography (while you where trawling for 'adult' pornography) is probably quite real, and that is why the only viable answer is outlawing all pornographic material.

    53. Re:So by tinkerghost · · Score: 1

      The laws are so broad now that you could randomly download a ton of pornograhic images and then delete them. But if somebody finds them in your recycle bin and a few include minors of any sort you could go to jail for a long time.

      I believe that someone in fact created & distributed a message reguarding this to a bunch of newsgroups a few years ago. - Something along the lines of posting an image of a kitten or something in a recipee newsgroup along with the notification that if it had been child pornography they would now be eligable for 10-20 years in jail. It was someones attempt to attract attention to some stupid law congress was passing at the time.

    54. Re:So by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      Uh-huh. And what about music pirates' argument that they help create demand for a particular musical work by giving it broader exposure?

    55. Re:So by Ghost-in-the-shell · · Score: 1

      No no he's right
      Based on the legal precedent set by this case burning a CD of music is making music. Akin to burning porn is making porn.

      It is an odd and twisted logic but hey this guy is going to jail and for a long time. The problem, as hard as it is to see one in this considering the material in question, is how will this effect future cases from the RIAA, MPAA and so forth. Is taking a photograph (An image copy of the original object) of the Mona Lisa considered making a copy? and as such what are the legal ramifications for that.

      I think the original poster was exploring this idea not comparing crimes as the legal precedent is not isolated to future child porn cases.

      --
      -Ghost
    56. Re:So by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Actually, I get nearly all (no sense fibbing) of my content legally. Would you consider BMG (the music house which presses its own discs and sells them under its own packaging) to be a producer or a distributer. I dare say the RIAA would consider them a distributer, not a producer.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    57. Re:So by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      I consider Sony BMG to be a burglar and a vandal. :-) If its crime was kiddie porn instead of crappy, overpriced music, then it would be charged with producing and distributing copies of music. It's a licensed manufacturer and distributor of CDs that contain music. Wholesale distributors to whom BMG sells CDs are not licensed to manufacture more of them. But BMG does not "produce" music in the sense that you mean. Musicians do that. They perform the original work of creative expression. Musicians don't make or produce music; they do music. The really bad musicians can be said to commit music. Brian Hill, the perp in this case, did not commit kiddie porn. He made copies of kiddie porn that someone else committed. He is not being prosecuted as if he committed kiddie porn. Those who committed the porn - that is, enabled and/or participated in sexual acts involving children and the original depiction of those acts - would be charged with the same crime as Hill plus sexual abuse of a child, child endangerment, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, and probably other crimes that I don't know. I hope that satisfies slashdotters' sense of justice. But in any case, Hill, and everyone who has downloaded or burned kiddie porn, made more kiddie porn.

  2. Burning porn..? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is that like porn with STDs?

  3. Why worry about the {MP|RI}AA... by DaHat · · Score: 4, Informative

    any more than we already do... provided we don't burn our illicit wares to CD or DVD.

    No doubt those with iPods and other portable media devices with nonvolatile and erasable memory are safe from being liable under this ruling.

    1. Re:Why worry about the {MP|RI}AA... by BierGuzzl · · Score: 1

      That was intended as satire, right?

    2. Re:Why worry about the {MP|RI}AA... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Depends on how they construe "burning". If that simply means the act of placing data into permanent storage, then storing such files on your hard disk would be sufficient.

    3. Re:Why worry about the {MP|RI}AA... by mboverload · · Score: 1

      It's pretty retarded for a DVD(RW) to be considered any different than a hard drive.

      A hard drive is a MUCH better way to transfer incredible amounts of (kiddie)porn. Compress it all with MPEG-4, and you can probably fit a few weeks of it on a 500 giger.

    4. Re:Why worry about the {MP|RI}AA... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Compress it all with MPEG-4, and you can probably fit a few weeks of it on a 500 giger.

      So long as it's not more than 10 years.
    5. Re:Why worry about the {MP|RI}AA... by utlemming · · Score: 1

      I seriously doubt any laywer with half a brain cell is going to qoute the merits of a kiddie porn case. Kiddie porn is considered is considered a particularly vial and disgusting business. If RIAA and the MPAA are going to start quoting cases that involve kiddie porn, they are going to have a public relations nightmare. Alot of people, even those that have problems with copy music and movies illegally are going have real problems with equating copying music to having sex with children or being involved in the whole kiddie porn business. Forget the legal merrits of the argument, the mere fact that they were brought in a kiddie porn case would be enough to make a smart laywer use it. If I was laywering and defending a client, I would not let that issue die. I would force the RIAA/MPAA to argue the legal theory all over again, and any references to the kiddie porn case would envoke a tirade about how piracy is not the moral equivalent to raping a child.

      --
      The views expressed are mine own and do not express the views of my employer.
    6. Re:Why worry about the {MP|RI}AA... by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      I seriously doubt any laywer with half a brain cell is going to qoute the merits of a kiddie porn case.

      It's the RIAA we're talking about here. You know - the ones who have no qualms about taking a 12 year old girl or granny to court and then threaten to take them for everything they have.
      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    7. Re:Why worry about the {MP|RI}AA... by ray-auch · · Score: 1

      Er, piracy is the illegal seizure of a ship by armed force, and traditionally with rape / enslavement / execution etc. of those on board. Not only is/was piracy the moral equivalent of rape of children in many penal codes, it also frequently included the same in its commission.

      Your comment shows that **AA have already convinced you (amongst many) that breaching a copyright licence is equivalent to rape and pillage on the high seas.

      They have done this with very deliberate PR and with the clear intention of elevating the perceived gravity of the offence. It appears to have worked. If they think they can get file-sharing associated with child porn then they undoubtedly will, and probably terrorism etc. as well.

      think about it.

      Who most wants to identify P2P users ?
      What are the most common arguments we hear against anonymous P2P networks ?

      [
      A: RIAA / MPAA, and "used for child porn and terrorism"
      ]

  4. Wow by evil+agent · · Score: 5, Funny

    I didn't know I was making music all these years.

    --
    End transmission.
    1. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forget the music. I'm such a porn star.. I make one movie a day!

  5. Uhh, it's Child Porn by sheldon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please change the title.

    Child Porn is classified completely differently from Adult Porn, for good reason.

    1. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1, Informative

      Sadly, I don't recall all the recent Google vs. U.S. request for statistics stories making that distinction, even in the parts of the comments that I happened to read, although it was Child Porn the law was against, not Porn in general.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    2. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by paulthomas · · Score: 1

      This is surely true.

      However I think it is safe to say that this certain precedent can be generalized to any porn. What is at issue is the meaning of the word 'make' in a legal context.

      Although this won't legally set a binding precedent for cases dealing with different matters of fact, it may be called upon in future judgments as an example of a similar case for so-called "persuasive precedent."

      Cue the "make: *** No rule to make target `porn'. Stop." jokes.

    3. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Belseth · · Score: 1
      Child Porn is classified completely differently from Adult Porn, for good reason.

      Actually it's not, the president it sets applies to all porn. Personally I'm all for the death penalty for child porn makers and I'm all for throwing the book at him for even downloading it. The problem is this president will be used to charge people with other crimes. Say you download and burn adult porn to disk. By definition then you are a pornographer not some one that simply views porn. They are playing the letter of the law game to attack a guy viewing child porn but others will abuse the finding to go after non kiddie porn cases. Throw away the key with the guy fine but it's a bad ruling and will lead to rampant abuse. If the guy was burning them to sell or distribute to friends fine but that's distribution not "making" and is illegal under other existing laws.

    4. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      >Child Porn is classified completely differently from Adult Porn, for good reason.

      Yeah, because we all know that someone that's only a mere 17 years 11 months 29 days old is soooooo much younger and naive and in need of protection than someone that's lived to the ripe age of 18 years; however, that's the dividing line between child and adult in the eyes of the law.

    5. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The word is precedent. Please don't regale us with your legal theories until you have a basic grasp of the English language.

    6. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Indeed, with this precedent it's (basically) suddenly illegal to view porn anywhere where making it is illegal.

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    7. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by log0n · · Score: 1

      It's precident. Not president. Though 'presiden't could potentially make sense given the current administration.

    8. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What would you prefer, that anyone under 16 (for example) is a child, anyone over 18 is an adult, and you're at the judge's mercy if the picture is of a 16 to 18-year-old as to whether they're a child or an adult? Should we roll a d20+age to see if they're a child?

      There's no better option for a law than setting a sharp cutoff, and 18 seems to be working well.

    9. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by HexRei · · Score: 1

      in england, 16 has worked well for them for a loooong time. In fact, America is in the minority among even western nations in having such a high age of consent.

    10. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by CableModemSniper · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's precedent. Not precident. Though 'precident' could potentially make sense given the current administration.

      --
      Why not fork?
    11. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      At issue is not "child" vs. "adult" but "burning" vs. "making."

    12. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I agree. 18 is far too high. 16 or 15 is much more reasonable.

    13. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      The thing is, IIRC, acquiring and posessing child porn is alread against Federal law, possibly state law too. The only excuse I can think of is to drum up the charge to get a higher penalty. This guy was dumb to do this.

    14. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by jacem · · Score: 1

      The story itself is less than twice as long as the /. header. (and I did not read the Judges ruling.) But it does mention that the porn in question came from Russia.

      The question becomes was the porn legal in Russia (I don't know their age of consent) but it hardly seems unlikely that you could find yourself in the USA sufing a British porn site looking at 16 years old fscking and 20 years in jail.

      The internet does cross international bondries and laws.

      JACEM

      --
      DOC Disinformation Obfuscation and Confusion
      The carrot to FUD's stick
    15. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Jeremi · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I'm all for throwing the book at him for even downloading it [...] They are playing the
      letter of the law game


      Careful what you wish for there Belseth -- keep in mind that anything you see in your web browser you've already downloaded. For example, click this link. If that link points to a kiddie-porn site, congratulations, you are now a criminal! (and don't try to deny you downloaded kiddie porn either, the evidence is all their in your browser's cache folder)

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    16. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Fishstick · · Score: 1

      Is it _statue_ of limitations, or "statute"?

      I'm sure there is a legal president for this statue of limitations.

      --

      There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
      Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

    17. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *cough* unless they were born in February.

    18. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by HairyCanary · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I agree. I think it should be fairly straightfoward -- creating kiddie porn (as in, taking the pictures), selling kiddie porn, or purchasing kiddie porn -- these should all be illegal. It becomes very slippery when you try to extend it to downloading. And you do not really need to. It may be despicable, or perverted, but downloading in and of itself does not have any impact on society. If someone is buying it, that is different -- they are providing a financial incentive to the kiddie porn producer, which will keep the loop going. Thus it makes sense for that to be illegal. Downloading provides no financial benefit for the producer, therefore it is not part of the loop, which to me means it is not nearly so important. There is perhaps a gray area, where you could be providing financial incentive even if you do not pay directly for the images, by visiting a web site which has banner ads. I'd argue that that should be mostly left alone as well -- or at least, make the banner ad provider the "consumer", since the money trail leads to them. They ought to be more careful about where they allow their ads to be run. Follow the money, and stay off that slippery slope.

    19. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      That link's too tame. Now, if you really want to live on the edge, click on Schrodenger's Link. Warning, by clicking on that link you may or may not be downloading kiddy pr0n. Until you click, you won't know.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    20. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by shawn(at)fsu · · Score: 1

      A hard and fast line needs to br drawn somewhere.

      --
      500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
    21. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by JourneyExpertApe · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, everybody hates child porn. Let's all take a minute to hate pedophiles...

      OK, now that we got that out of the way, maybe the reason this article might be of interest to you, is that this could be used as a precedent in other cases. Like copyrighted music, movies, and software. Also, if someone is doing reasearch on, say, racist material on the internet, they might be charged with producing "hate" propaganda because they backed up their research materials.

      --
      If you can read this sig, you're too close.
    22. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      not really, Maybe he wanted to remove the images from his computer before his wife found them. Maybe he was being "responsible" and keeping the images away from his own kids. What if this "burning" was a normal backup? It just said he put them on a CD... not what for. What if you have porn [even legal] images on your home network server, what about porn on backup tapes?

    23. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by HeroreV · · Score: 1

      In some countries, 16 year olds are legal age. Not some crazy third-world Zimbuxalva, either, but modern developed countries.

    24. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by HeroreV · · Score: 1

      Obviously everybody is worried because they have hundreds of CD-Rs packed with child porn piled all over the place.

    25. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Trepalium · · Score: 1

      The Google request was about porn in general, because the DOJ wants to justify the COPA which was about preventing children from accessing pornography online. They wanted the statistics so they could use them to "prove" (as SCOTUS told them to do) that the law was needed in it's current form to prevent children from being exposed to that pornography. Rather interesting that the DOJ waited until the balance of power in SCOTUS changed, eh? It would be nice if the DOJ at least pretended it wasn't an arm of the Republican party during this administration.

      --
      I used up all my sick days, so I'm calling in dead.
    26. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by damiam · · Score: 1

      18 isn't the age of consent in the US; it's the age of legal majority. Minors can consent to sex (the exact age depends on the state) even though they aren't considered legally adults, and thus are ineligible for porn.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    27. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it was the exact opposite. Instead of people seeing kids in porn, it was kids seeing porn as a result of random web searches.

    28. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by ray-auch · · Score: 1

      Actually, the word used (President) fits perfectly well in context (making it a conspiracy, rather than legal, theory).

    29. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by ray-auch · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually English law on child porn was changed recently to 18.

      Certain famous Page3 models from years gone by started at 16 or 17, so if you have an archive of the Sun newspaper you probably now have kiddie porn (yes, allegedly it is retrospective). Lock up the librarians and throw away the key.

      England is also where people have famously (tv news presenter) been taken to court under kiddie porn laws for daring to take pictures of their kids in the bath.

      Furthermore, the age of consent is still 16. The English teenagers who at 16 can legally have sex, get married, have kids etc., now presumably can't even possess a picture of themselves in the bath let alone their kids.

      Oh, and say you're a middle aged male, then having (consensual) sex with a 16 year old girl is perfectly legal, but if she emails you a nude picture of herself you're an evil pedo child pornographer. Why is the picture of the 16yo child illegal - well, because it might lead to you wanting to have sex with the child, so it's illegal because it leads people on to "worse" things which are themselves... er... legal.

      Maybe I just don't get it, but seems to me like our collective moral compass is bent so far it's disappearing up its own arse.

    30. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You're completely right. However this is one area that people are unable to consider rationally, like drugs. Even looking at it in a calm, objective way is political suicide.

    31. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Xugumad · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even worse, with things the way they are currently, it would be near-trivial to ruin someone's life just by e-mailing them kiddie-porn. Just include the words "Here are the files you requested", and make sure you tip off the police before your victim has time to find and delete the e-mail.

      This has stopped becoming a search for justice, and rapidly becoming a witch-hunt...

    32. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by hairyfeet · · Score: 1
      Which is why I think we started down this slope when "cache" = ownership.

      When I got my first Internet capable computer(98) like many noobs I used what it came with-Internet Exploiter(TM) and I got constant pop ups from every kind of site known to man including-child porn.Luckily after having to pay $90 just to get it de-spywared I began spending all my time at security sites and learned how to browse safely,But I could have rotted in jail for simply not knowing how to protect a windows box-And that is wrong no matter how you feel about sick bastards that like to look at little kids.

      And NEVER forget that Big Brother(C) just LOVES to use the "its for the kids" to ramrod anything it wants down our throats.The only way that we are going to save this country that so many members of my family suffered for in WW2 and Korea is to stand up for the sickos-Because that is exactly WHY they choose them in the first place-Because no one wants to defend "pedos" or "terrorists".

      Mark my words-They will use the "pedo" and "terrorist" excuses more and more to subvert this country to their liking-Because they know it cuts down the risk that anyone will speak up.But I WILL speak up-The cache ruling was wrong-THIS ruling is wrong.Just because he is a sick bastard doesn't give them the right to twist the laws of my country.

      You just watch-If we don't stop our country from heading down this road anything a "rabble rouser" does will be an excuse to throw him/her away.Oh,He has a burned Ginger Lynn flick-He is a porn distributor now and that is against the law without a license-Bye Bye.Those in power will ALWAYS abuse that power if they can get away with it.The only way to stop them is to not fall for the "emotional response" cases they use to try to twist the law and instead point it out for what it really is-Abuse of power.

      A cache is not a copy(so sayeth the court to google)and a single burned disk does not a distributor make.Don't think about it as "helping a pedo"-That is what they want you to feel.Instead think of it for what it is-Twisting the law to get what they want.Sorry for the length-But the way they keep twisting my once free country to get "sickos" and "terrorists" really disgusts me.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    33. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you're wrong on this one. Creating, distributing, and possession should all be illegal.

      There are all kinds of non-financial incentives that may exist. The most obvious one is the sharing model, just like "warez" software. Community status, and access to other material, are both real incentives that result in the creation of new material with no money changing hands. And in this case "creation of new material" means rape.

    34. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by jadavis · · Score: 1

      Do you actually have any evidence of this happening, or are you just making it up?

      That's what juries are for. They look at the evidence and make a determination. Most juries wouldn't convict unless they saw some corroborating evidence. An isolated email from some anonymous account doesn't really mean anything. And to get a search warrant, the DA can't just go in with an anonymous email. If the accuser has a motive to frame the accused, the jury will see right through the setup.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    35. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Child Porn is classified completely differently from Adult Porn, for good reason.

      Uhh... no it isn't, dickhead. It's all porn. There is no fundamental difference.

    36. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Then this is juts a part of the "Be able to put anyone in prison" conspiracy. Becuase if you are a porn producer you need to have proof that all models are of legal age. And if you got no proof, then its obvioulsy kiddieporn and you burn on the stake of the american inquisition.

      You might be safe today, but tomorrow Agent Torquemada is sending SWAT teams to search your house.

    37. Re:Uhh, it's Child Porn by Kjella · · Score: 1

      I agree. I think it should be fairly straightfoward -- creating kiddie porn (as in, taking the pictures), selling kiddie porn, or purchasing kiddie porn -- these should all be illegal. It becomes very slippery when you try to extend it to downloading.

      The question is, where does downloading exist without uploading? Either you paid for it, you upload yourself or you're in a community posting links to it. In every case I expect there to be some incentive to contribute back. Even in a completely anonymous network like Freenet you can have circles only open to contributors - the free downloads are just a taster. I would assume that having anything that is new, rare or exclusive would be more valuable. Creating any system where kiddie porn is being traded around as bargaining chips *is* an incentive for people to create new and probably highly prized chips - new kiddie porn.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  6. Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. This verdict is absolutely crap. COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn. No children are harmed by such an act.

    2. Submitter -- Why is he a *scumbag* pedophile? People generally don't choose what and who they're attracted to. It is not illegal to be attracted to children. It is only illegal to act on it. Provided that he doesn't, he can still be a good man in my book.

    3. Laws against pedophiles (not against pedophiliac acts -- pedophiles) are counter-productive. For example, it is illegal to create computer-generated child pornography. Why!? Provided that it gives people who are into such things a release, and no children are harmed, I have no problem with it. Many of today's sex-related laws are based on some twisted idea of morality, and nothing more.

    1. Re:Three points by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 0

      Simply because in life where there is smoke there is usually fire.

      If you are happy to be associating yourself with peadophiles and have no problems with them then thats your decision, however as a parent myself you would not be welcome in my house.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    2. Re:Three points by Anthony+Liguori · · Score: 5, Insightful

      1. This verdict is absolutely crap. COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn. No children are harmed by such an act.

      This would be an argument that child pornography should not be illegal. From an economic perspective though, if people are consuming child porn, they are creating a demand which is going to increase the supply. This is why child porn is illegal to possess--it indirectly contributes to more children being exploited for it (the general wisdom being that the vast majority of child pornography is exploitative--if not all of it).

      2. Submitter -- Why is he a *scumbag* pedophile? People generally don't choose what and who they're attracted to. It is not illegal to be attracted to children. It is only illegal to act on it. Provided that he doesn't, he can still be a good man in my book.

      You choose to act upon impulses though. I often have an impulse to smash stupid people's heads in, but I control it. You may say "he's only consuming so it's not destructive..." but then see my response to #1.

      3. Laws against pedophiles (not against pedophiliac acts -- pedophiles) are counter-productive. For example, it is illegal to create computer-generated child pornography. Why!? Provided that it gives people who are into such things a release, and no children are harmed, I have no problem with it. Many of today's sex-related laws are based on some twisted idea of morality, and nothing more.

      The reasoning behind computer-generated child porn is #1. It creates a demand...

      It's certainly true that the current laws are curious. Even the most softcore porn featuring a 17 year old is illegal, yet incredibly hardcore material from the follow day that she turned 18 is legal... Strange.

      This judge got out of hand. If the guy has a descent lawyer, it'll be appealed. The guy may end up walking which would be sad.

    3. Re:Three points by belarm314 · · Score: 1

      ...you would not be welcome in my house.

      Yes, but how many slashdot readers would be? :-P

      --
      When moderating, assume I have not yet had my coffee.
    4. Re:Three points by Savantissimo · · Score: 5, Informative
      But he was allegedly producing porn using unconsenting girls. From the google cache of an MSNBC story:
      (Muskegon County, August 23, 2005, 7:36 p.m.) The child pornography trial of an Egelston Township treasurer has been adjourned, pending an appeal.

      Brian Hill was arrested late last year on charges of possession and manufacturing of child pornography.

      Police were tipped off when a friend found a videotape that Hill had made of foreign exchange students who were staying with him.

      Police say Hill set up a camera in the bathroom at his home.

      In a Muskegon County courtroom on Tuesday, Hill's attorney appealed the manufacturing of child pornography charge.


      If true, he definitely crossed the line.
      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    5. Re:Three points by GigsVT · · Score: 5, Informative

      For example, it is illegal to create computer-generated child pornography

      No, it's not.

      See Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition

      The court ruled that simulated child porn that involves no images of children and no children in its production is constitutionally protected free speech.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    6. Re:Three points by iella · · Score: 1

      For example, it is illegal to create computer-generated child pornography. Why!? Provided that it gives people who are into such things a release, and no children are harmed, I have no problem with it.

      Maybe because computer-generated child pornography could potentially encourage such a person to "act on it." It's back to the whole video game debate - is it okay for me to have a virtual reality in which I repeatedly commit violent acts of murder? Does that increase the possibility that I might one day go out there and make my virtual reality, reality? If there's even such a possibility, I believe it's better to err on the side of caution. But hey, I'm not the one making the laws.

    7. Re:Three points by abbamouse · · Score: 5, Interesting

      In response to #2: I agree with part of what you're saying, but there are three things to consider.

      A. Looking at porn makes people want more porn. The link between porn and sexual conduct is quite controversial, but the effect of viewing porn on the demand for porn is not. Viewing porn makes people want to view more porn. So far so good. This brings us to....

      B. The demand for child porn causes some child sexual abuse. Some abuse would occur anyway, but some of it is profit-motivated. Increased demand for child porn means a stronger incentive to make the stuff. Note that this is true even if no buying or selling is involved (ie trading). Open and free distribution might undercut the market to some extent -- but given that music companies continue to thrive despite widespread file-sharing, I doubt that market saturation will make child porn unprofitable.

      C. Viewing child porn violates the privacy of the kids. It's like reading someone's diary or peeking in on them in the shower. Unlike grown-ups, kids didn't consent to being displayed for sexual purposes. These kids are already traumatized; how do they feel moving into adulthood, knowing that people are viewing their abuse?

      I do tend to agree with your third objection, however. I suspect that if synthetic child porn were legal there would be quite a bit of substitution going on -- purveyors of real child porn would find it more profitable and less risky to just make the fake stuff and pretend it was real. There might still be an effect on demand that might outweigh this substitution, however.

      Of course, if child porn causes people to want to molest kids then you don't need any of the above arguments in order to oppose it. But even if it doesn't, it may still cause harm through its effect on the market.

      --
      Make cheese not war 8:)
    8. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I would associate with people who are attracted to children but do NOT act on it. As for letting me in your house, I am not a pedophile, and that fact that I am not willing to persecute people for some fetish beyond their control should not be a mark against me.

      Someone who is attracted to children has no more control over it than someone who is gay. Are they "scumbag homosexuals" to you?

    9. Re:Three points by Kenrod · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      It is not illegal to be attracted to children. It is only illegal to act on it. Provided that he doesn't, he can still be a good man in my book.


      Your book sucks.

      --
      Good heavens Miss Sakamoto - you're beautiful!
    10. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. This verdict is absolutely crap. COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn. No children are harmed by such an act.

      Yes, they are. First of all there were children harmed producing the original content, and then people continue to spread it, and make it more worthwhile or even necessary to create new content because income loss of piracy or because people want more or whatever.

      2. Submitter -- Why is he a *scumbag* pedophile? People generally don't choose what and who they're attracted to. It is not illegal to be attracted to children. It is only illegal to act on it. Provided that he doesn't, he can still be a good man in my book.

      I guess you are a pedophilephile? So murderers are good in your book too? They have psychological problems (usually psychopats) and they didnt choose to be so.

      3. Laws against pedophiles (not against pedophiliac acts -- pedophiles) are counter-productive. For example, it is illegal to create computer-generated child pornography. Why!? Provided that it gives people who are into such things a release, and no children are harmed, I have no problem with it. Many of today's sex-related laws are based on some twisted idea of morality, and nothing more.

      Im getting more and more sure you are a pedophile yourself. Free availability of content with real or not real children having sex with adults will attract more attention to this sickness and in result probably well have more pedophiles.

      Pedophiles know what they are doing is wrong this is why they are hiding it, and if they cared they would seek professional help. There is no reason and noone should be helping them feeding this "attraction" you so finely put it. And those pedophiles who did act on this, should either be executed or castrated.

    11. Re:Three points by brian0918 · · Score: 1

      "Someone who is attracted to children has no more control over it than someone who is gay."

      Strict homosexuality is simply the product of a society afraid of homosexuality. Does that mean it's wrong? Of course not. But they are as much in control of their lives as anyone else. Does that mean any of us are ever in control? I don't know.

    12. Re:Three points by MBCook · · Score: 0
      OK, I'll probably get modded to hell for this, but your post is FREAKING SCARY.

      FIRST, the verdict is NOT crap. I think it is a GOOD verdict. He produced something with child pornography on it. Child porn is illegal, thus he produced something illegal, thus he did something illegal. A=B=C. Not it's the same as creating child porn, but if you stick to that definition then people could make all the child porn they want out in international waters in or 3rd world countries where they don't care, then they could e-mail the files to the US where they could be distributed and sold. Under your interpretation, that would be perfectly legal.

      PS: Possession of any child porn is illegal. So this isn't a question of "is he innocent or is he guilty", this is a question of "is he guilty of X or is he guilty of X and Y".

      SECOND, why isn't he a *scumbag*? Are you comparing him to the nice pedophiles who give little kids candy and show them their puppies? You point out that it is illegal to act on the desire for children. It has been PROVEN that possessing child porn significantly increases the chances of someone committing a crime because the fantasy stops being enough and they want to do the real thing. Same for violent rape porn.

      Anyone who looks at child porn is a scumbag in my book. They are free to choose NOT to look at it. They don't have to.

      THIRD, laws against pedophiles are not counterproductive, they prevent things from getting worse than they are now. Of course it is illegal to make computer generated images of sex with children. See my second point. The fact that image was not taken with a camera doesn't make it any less harmful.

      If they do it with fake images and it relieves the pressure, good for them. Nice idea. Until it doesn't relieve the pressure and they can only get it up with children. But the images don't do it, so they start sitting in the park watching children. Or they offer to "babysit" someone. Or they just get the nerve up to abduct a child.

      You're right though. Our laws are based on a common morality. Like the common idea that I can't grab any women I see and force her to have sex. That's a terrible thing. "Common Morality" is clearly stepping on my rights. What a twisted idea that I can't force people to have sex with me.

      Again, I find a post like your TERRIFYING. Let me just ask you a simple question. Do you believe in evil? That's all I'll say.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    13. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      Forgive me, I was mistaken. Thank you for clearing this up.

    14. Re:Three points by porcupine8 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      The reasoning behind computer-generated child porn is #1. It creates a demand...

      Please explain to me how computer-generated child porn, in which no actual child is involved, creates demand. Are people not pedophiles until they've consumed some child porn? If nobody made child porn, would we have no pedophiles who want to look at it? Perhaps it fills a demand, but how could it create demand?

      You choose to act upon impulses though.

      Yes. And I would MUCH rather someone act upon their impulse by viewing pretend-child-porn that involves no actual children than by finding a real kid to fondle. Which would you prefer? Until we've found a way to "cure" pedophiles of what is basically a mental illness, I don't see any reason to make it illegal for them to soothe their impulses in ways that don't harm any real children.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    15. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      So murderers are good in your book too?

      No, murderers are not good in my book, just as someone who commits an act of child abuse is not. Being attracted to a child is NOT the same as abusing a child, just as wanting someone to drop dead is not the same as killing them. It is not illegal to wish anyone ill-will.

    16. Re:Three points by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Of course it is illegal to make computer generated images of sex with children

      It's not. Sorry to burst your fascist bubble.

      The supreme court ruled against your "thoughtcrime leads to real crime" line of logic. They said the only good reason to ban child porn is to protect children from the actual acts, not some potential increase in acts, and therefore any porn that doesn't involve real children is legal, even if it depicts adults that are pretending to be children, or drawn or rendered images that are presented as children.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    17. Re:Three points by boldtbanan · · Score: 1
      1. Children are harmed by the proliferation of child porn, and thus the copying/burning of it because it reinforces the economic benefits of creating it in the first place. The more there is available, the more demand there will be for it, and the higher the payoff will be for creating it (and not getting caught). Is there less porn on the internet (for sale or free) than there was before people were able to download it en masse? No, there's far more because the demand has gone up and supply followed. That said, creating and copying are two completely different things, and this person really should be guilty of distributing child porn, not creating it.

      2. He did act on his attraction by downloading the child porn. That means he supported the creation of it in the first place, and he's guilty of harming the kid(s) involved indirectly. That's called conspiracy. It's the same with other crimes -- if you know something is stolen when you buy it, you're guilty of possessing stolen goods. And if someone was murdered in the theft and you knew about it but still bought the item, you may be charged with conspiracy after the fact in the murder because you aided the person who committed the murder by providing financial gain.

      3. All laws are based on some sense of morality. Many go too far, some not far enough. The government intrudes far too much into our personal lives, and releases are necesary, however, pedophilia tends to be a progressive act. If you allow a pedophile to act out some level of his/her fantasy, the chance of escalation is much much greater than the chance that they will stop at that level.


      I'm sure someone will start equating me with Jack Thompson because of #3, but it's apples and oranges. I'm not saying watching kiddie porn turns people into pedophiles, but pedophiles who watch kiddie porn are more likely to escalate beyond just watching. Playing Need For Speed won't turn you into a street racer, but if you're a street racer who plays NFS, don't you think it will spark the desire for the rush of actually racing?
    18. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      Do you believe in evil?

      No, I do not. No one is "evil" for being attracted to children, just as no one is "evil" for being gay for for liking women with big butts for for being into (fake) japanese rape pornography. As a society we have to draw the line somewhere to protect ourselves and others, but I do not think that those on the other side are any more "evil" than we are.

    19. Re:Three points by FidelCatsro · · Score: 1

      People who are sexual attracted to children have a serious problem that needs addressed .
      Their crime however is not the burning it , or looking at it , or even being attracted to it , the crime in my eyes is not reporting the existence of the site to the authorities .
      You are allowing the abuse of children to continue by not doing anything to stop it .

      --
      The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    20. Re:Three points by bani · · Score: 1

      The reasoning behind computer-generated child porn is #1. It creates a demand...

      Do you agree with this reasoning?

    21. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess if it was up to you, you would probably legalize child pornography since they can't control it, and therefore not responsible for their actions, right? You have the first foot in already, you think animated child pornography should be legal...

      What about homosexuals raping other of their sex? No persecution of them either, since they can't really control it?

    22. Re:Three points by belarm314 · · Score: 1

      I agree with you on points 1 and 3...in light of a quote from TFA, which says the man actually taped some foreign exchange students staying with him, it would seem he did actually cross the line in regards to point 2, but i do agree that an attraction to underage persons should not be grounds to call someone a scumbag. Given the number of "teen sex" sites on the net, and their popularity, we'd have to disdain a very large portion of the population if we decided otherwise.

      As for consumption of child porn, I find your signature somewhat ironic, since this is one instance in which the free market should not, IMHO, be allowed to govern itself. We should provide penalties and fines for those who consume child porn, but any jail time, should, i believe, be served as mandatory couseling. The whole point of these laws should be deterance, not punishment. Fact of the matter is, by looking at porn that's already been made, one does not directly harm society. The creators, of course, have a much heavier offense to answer for, and should be jailed appropriately.

      As for the third point, this is one of those sticky situations where, even in a republic, the "tyranny of the majority" causes problems. Notification laws and the like would, I imagine, virtually destroy the life of anyone convicted of child molestation or exploitation, even after they've paid their debt to society. OTOH, I can certainly see why parents would want to know this information, and it is, of course, nigh impossible to determine who's actually made progress in ignoring their urges and who hasn't.

      All in all, there are no easy answers to this sort of thing, because it involves the blurry line between morality legislation and that which protects society. It's difficult enough to tackle this sort of thing logically without the populace screaming for morality, and statesmen taking up the same cries in the middle of debates. This is just one of those things a democratic republic will have to work through, I'd think, on it's way to becoming the least bad government in the world :-)

      --
      When moderating, assume I have not yet had my coffee.
    23. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I understand your point. Where do you draw the line though? Movies that show rape and murder and torture are okay, but a 14 year old girl dancing around naked is a horrific thing? Furthermore, if someone watches a movie about rape and murder, and then goes out and does it... Does that mean we should ban all movies that contain such material? This hypocrisy seems like a case of tyranny by majority to me. It is okay to show a 14 year old girl getting stabbed, but not her butt (heaven forbid!).

    24. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I agree 100% with you, just to clarify. Not reporting an instance of child abuse or encouraging it in any way should be (and is) illegal.

    25. Re:Three points by sankeld · · Score: 0

      You can control what you do. You cannot control what you feel.

    26. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      Just to clarify, my sig is a friendly jab at libertarians. It is not in support of them. ;-) I completely agree that this is an issue that should not be left up to the market.

    27. Re:Three points by xtieburn · · Score: 1

      "1. This verdict is absolutely crap. COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn. No children are harmed by such an act."

      I whole heartedly agree.

      "2. Submitter -- Why is he a *scumbag* pedophile? People generally don't choose what and who they're attracted to. It is not illegal to be attracted to children. It is only illegal to act on it. Provided that he doesn't, he can still be a good man in my book."

      Errr he did act on it by getting the pictures in the first place. If there wasnt the demand then there wouldnt be the production, if there wasnt the production there wouldnt be as many children being horrendously abused.

      "3. Laws against pedophiles (not against pedophiliac acts -- pedophiles) are counter-productive."

      I actually agree to a point.

      "For example, it is illegal to create computer-generated child pornography. Why!?"

      because it is a problem. A psychological sickness they should be getting help to stop it, not generating pictures to feed it.

      "Provided that it gives people who are into such things a release, and no children are harmed, I have no problem with it."

      Problem is there is increasing evidence to suggest that indulging in activities such as this reinforces ideas in the brain. (Its recently been used in psychology as cognitive therapy.)
      The more you view the more acceptable it becomes, I want to make it clear that this is not the same as video game violence and the like. Video game violence merely makes more video game violence acceptable. This art is portraying a real life attraction not a blatently obvious false reality.

      Real world examples can be seen in the porn industry today as adult porn has become increasinly accepted it has also begun to grow increasingly brutal. It's unfortunatley being largely ignored. Which is a problem with both that industry and paedophiles.

      Recent survey place 60% of men as having fantasies about children at one time or another. (I will try find a link to the actual survey.) This is a conservative estimate as many taking the servey, though anonymous, wouldnt be comfortable about ticking that box under any circumstances. This is a problem with society and needs some serious addressing instead of picking out the few people that cross the line and hammering them with every law and loop hole that can be found.

      By doing that you remain entirely closed off from the issue and this has shown in the past and today to have terrible consequences. (Close off sex ed you get more underage pregnancy, close off drug info you get more addicts.) Instead of being allowed to talk about it as a disturbing complex the people who have these thoughts simply bury them scared to hell both of themselves and the consequences of anyone ever finding out. (Ignoring the scum who actually act on them.)

      I dont maintain that people shouldnt be ashamed of thoughts towards children but at the same time youd have to be an idiot to not realise this isnt entirely unnatural or even that persons fault. It shouldnt be such a taboo, such a disgusting idea that people that need help wont ever feel they should go get it for fear of the consequences.

      I stress again, I am talking about _before_ crossing the line, not after. You cross the line and get these images or worse, make them, you deserve to be punished to the full extent of the law. (Though no further, as this case appears to be attempting.)

    28. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I think animated child pornography should be legal, yes. I think CHILD ABUSE should not be legal, and hence pornography with real children should not be as well.

    29. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      Even the Catholic church recognizes there is a difference between wanting to do something (which you can't control) and acting on it (which, hypothetically, you can). You're distorting my words. There is nothing illegal about wanting to rape someone -- Yes, I realize that is uncomfortable to hear, but it is true. However, doing it is obviously very illegal, as it should be. I am not against sensible laws to protect people. I am against thought-crimes and making things illegal because of the ideas they portray (animated child pornography), rather than because their production involves the abuse of a minor ("real" child pornography).

    30. Re:Three points by mboverload · · Score: 1

      He ALSO produced a hard drive with kiddie porn on it, and the RAM that was used when it was buffered to the CD burner drive, and the RAM on the burner itself.

      What's the difference between a hard drive, RAM, or CD? It's all a storage mechanism, and hard drive/CD are reasonable distribution mechanisms.

    31. Re:Three points by 777film · · Score: 1

      You make sense, in that someone who has an attraction to children can't help it. Often they were victims of sexual abuse themselves. But it's not just "a preference", as one might refer to homosexuality, simply because it does not involve consenting adults. It's a problem, and we as a society should not accept it. You can't say "Dan's a great salesman, a good poker buddy and gives to the church so he's an alright guy, despite the fact that he masturbates to 11 year olds."

      And the fact remains-- and you seem to miss this point-- that child porn is illegal to create and illegal to possess. And rightfully so, as any child involved in its creation is certainly there against their will (and whatever back story brought them to those circumstances can't possibly be pretty.) So perhaps it does give those attracted to children a release, but that in no way justifies the horrible circumstances under which it is created. If the man (and it's usually a man) so attracted can't be satisfied by "barely legal" consenting adults in schoolgirl clothes-- which is legal to create and possess-- he has a problem, and we are right to call that a problem.

    32. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pedophila is likely an genetic tendency, and if it is, needs to be erradicated

    33. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I was never suggesting child pornography should be legal or that possessing it should be legal. As for it being a problem, I'm not convinced. Provided he never engages in acts with a minor himself (and even then there is a huge different between a 21 year old and a 14 year old versus a 40 year old and a 9 year old), I don't have a problem with it. If he cannot control his desires to engage in such acts, IF HE EVEN HAS THEM, that's a problem. Just as many people enjoying looking at scatological pornography, they do not necessarily want to engage in it themselves. You're assuming Dan wants to rape kids and eventually might simply because he finds 11 year old girls attractive. I find 20 year old asian girls attractive, but I'm not going to rape them.

    34. Re:Three points by y86 · · Score: 0
      Submitter -- Why is he a *scumbag* pedophile? People generally don't choose what and who they're attracted to. It is not illegal to be attracted to children. It is only illegal to act on it. Provided that he doesn't, he can still be a good man in my book.

      It is only illegal to act on it you say? What do you call paying other individuals to exploit innocent children for his masterbation purposes? I WOULD CALL IT ACTING ON IT!!!

      he can still be a good man in my book. Your book is crap.

    35. Re:Three points by diakka · · Score: 1

      In my fairly Libertarian views, I agree with the ideals of your argument. However, Child molestation is some seriously sick and dangerous s#!7. I have heard doctors express the viewpoint that child molestation is getting out of control. When a child is sexually abused, that child will later have a 60% chance of going on to abuse other children in adulthood. And they don't abuse just one child. It's got all the markings of a disease with exponential growth built right in. I mean, if someone can indulge in their own sick fantasies and not have it affect the outside world... then great. But I suspect that's not how it works in the real world.

      On the practical side... There proabably are things we can do to effectively curb sexual abuse without restricting our freedoms. Perhaps our tax dollars would be better spent on tracking down the real perpetrators, educating the public about the nature of this abuse and helping protect children from being abused. We should institute some very invasive psychological screening for teachers or other positions that allow adults to come in close contact with children. I also think that child molesters should be given life in prison for the first offense.

      --
      -- Knowledge shared is power lost. -- Aleister Crowley
    36. Re:Three points by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but what are the feds gonna do if the website is hosted in Russia? Sure, they could try to put pressure on Russia, but I doubt that they're gonna be quick to act.

    37. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      So would I. I agree paying for child pornography should be illegal. If you reread what I wrote, you'll see I only said that being attracted to them should not be illegal.

    38. Re:Three points by rolfwind · · Score: 1
      C. Viewing child porn violates the privacy of the kids. It's like reading someone's diary or peeking in on them in the shower. Unlike grown-ups, kids didn't consent to being displayed for sexual purposes. These kids are already traumatized; how do they feel moving into adulthood, knowing that people are viewing their abuse?


      Agreed, but shouldn't distributing/making this crap be more punishable? Under that standard, the police/prosecutor/judge/jury themselves are guilty of a crime since they have to view it (to prosecute).

      I don't think the act of viewing should be prosecutable - actively seeking, then yes, - but viewing presuposses someone knows what they are viewing before they view it. It's like prosecuting people who click on a goatse link - I'm sure the /. crowd can understand.

      BTW, I didn't agree with the grandparent either - the man charged in this case took secret videos (in the bathroom) of exchange students he was hosting. I don't see why making a CD-R has to be relevant in this case, he made/produced the stuff plain and simple. Including making CD-Rs in the definition of making something only convolutes the law and original meaning.
    39. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed...A cartoon is not real...It's a series of drawings created/rendered by the artist. To make that illegal makes no sense.

      The content may be offensive, but it is fiction. If fictional content was illegal all those murder mystery movies would be too...They probably are in some countries.

    40. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      LIFE for the first offense? If a 21 year old girl has sex with a 15 year old boy, she should spend her LIFE in prison? As far as I'm concerned, that act should not even be illegal in the first place. Age of consent is too high in this country... 15 is a more reasonable age than 18. I'm getting sidetracked here, but what I think is fine you think deserves life in prison?

    41. Re:Three points by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      The actual answer to your sig is "one."

      Because a libertarian would have noted, "you've stepped over the line and you're in my face now", and then would have proceeded to kill him where he stood, ASAP.

      Remember that one of the most basic, bedrock positions of the libertarian stance is that you should be allowed to do pretty much anything as long as you don't interfere with others. Or to put it another way, Hitler's right to swing his fist ended at everyone else's face. Once Hitler stepped over that line, he would have been just target practice to any libertarian worthy of the name.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    42. Re:Three points by Anthony+Liguori · · Score: 1

      Do you agree with this reasoning?

      I honestly don't know enough about what constitutes computer-generated... Couldn't you have something that looked like a child and yet claim that it's really an adult and just happens to look young? The precedent scares me because this is such a gray area.

    43. Re:Three points by yoprst · · Score: 1
      1. This verdict is absolutely crap. COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn. No children are harmed by such an act.

      This would be an argument that child pornography should not be illegal. From an economic perspective though, if people are consuming child porn, they are creating a demand which is going to increase the supply. This is why child porn is illegal to possess--it indirectly contributes to more children being exploited for it (the general wisdom being that the vast majority of child pornography is exploitative--if not all of it).

      That doesn't render making and copying CP even remotely equal. Anyway, what makes you think that ppl create demand that way? Now, in the days of p2p, they can get it for free, and noone's gonna protect creators "rights".

    44. Re:Three points by boldtbanan · · Score: 1

      It isn't so much the fact that you aren't allowed to see the butt of a 14 year old girl, it's that the girl shouldn't be put in the position where she is showing her butt. Laws against child porn are not meant to prevent people from viewing it but to protect the children who are victimized for the sake of the people who view it. Going after the people who view it is a way of regulating the supply by attempting to reduce the demand.

      The definition of 'porn' is also key in that it requires some sexual aspect. It's usually fine to have naked pictures of your young kids as long as they aren't sexual in nature (baby in the bath-type pics). I do agree that the line that defines porn has been moved so that things that were harmless 10 years ago might now be seen as kiddie porn by hypersensitive groups (including those same baby in the bath pics).

      As for banning the movies, that's not at all what I'm saying. Kiddie porn is a special case in that a child is victimized in order for the material to even exist. Without the victimization, it's not kiddie porn. Movies about rape and murder are different in that the people aren't actually victimized, but rather are pretending to be. If someone is actually raped and/or murdered in order to create the movie, it's already illegal because a crime is required in order to create the material, the same as in kiddie porn. Games are more ambiguous, but it's like I said in my previous comment -- people who aren't already pedophiles (or having strong pedophillic tendencies) wouldn't play a game simulating pedophillia (or rape for that matter), whereas lots of people in our current culture are used to playing games (video and otherwise) about murder and have been for thousands of years.

    45. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh-oh!
      Someone likes the young stuff:

      http://johnnowak.com/temp/yuko_ogura_p1713.jpg

    46. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I understand that. My concern with libertarian philosophy is... where does the army come from needed to stop him? Where's the government to organize the effort? Where's the government to provide housing when all the troops return? Where's the government to take care of the veterans?

    47. Re:Three points by Knytefall · · Score: 1

      I'd prefer to save my strict-interpretation-of-the-law arguments for something less reprehensible.

      First, let's presume child porn is immoral. It's not based on an archaic sexual norm because our society holds that underage kids are not capable of making fully competent decisions. Sure, some are: but how do we make a law that coherently defines what a competent underage person is? It doesn't seem possible, so the under-18 standard seems 'good enough' to me. There is very little harm done by preventing under-18s from making porn--nothing that would cause me to get pissed about it. [I would, on the other hand, be willing to argue that they should be able to vote. But let's fix that one before we start trying to define a competent-to-make-sexual decisions under-18]. On the other hand, even allowing one child to be manipulated and molested by participating in creating child porn IS a significant harm--significant enough to override other concerns about sexual mores.

      Next let's look at why this is CREATING NEW PORN by looking at what porn is: visual materials designed to arouse an adult. Creating an additional copy of porn (printed or digital) allows another adult to be aroused. In this case, it's arousal at the expense of an underage child who was likely molested against her will. To say that it's not new is to say that there's no effect of that additional copy--an inherently absurd idea.

      I think civil liberties should be vigorously defended, and I think there's a line to be drawn about how much regulation should be imposed in order to prevent child porn. (For example, it's absurd to snoop on all Internet users to prevent it--the harm to society posed by a government who spies on everyone is perhaps the greatest possible evil). But to say that knowingly copying a CD containing child porn isn't an act that should be prosecuted under child porn statutes is absurd and only weakens civil libertarians' arguments when they're really important to be made (such as with the NSA spying).

    48. Re:Three points by temcat · · Score: 1

      You choose to act upon impulses though.

      Sorry, but this is the biggest philosophical question that people have been asking themselves for thousands years, and it still has no simple answer. You have to define "you" and define "choose" - and that is not some kind of scholastics, those are serious questions.

      I would say that basically there's no such entity as "you" - what exists is many impulses (or constant forces) of different magnitude and direction, some of which may even be random, and the resultant of these is what you call "your choice."

      This is offtopic though, because we can't really deduce any useful conclusions from this with regard to law in general and child pornography in particular. It was only a theoretical remark.

    49. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      So.... are you single (and of legal age)? Such clear thought is arousing. Provided that you're over 18 of course. If you're not, I'm not aroused.

    50. Re:Three points by Kjella · · Score: 1

      "1. This verdict is absolutely crap. COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn. No children are harmed by such an act."

      This would be an argument that child pornography should not be illegal. From an economic perspective though, if people are consuming child porn, they are creating a demand which is going to increase the supply.


      This is purely in the hypothetical: If someone downloads kiddie porn from newsgroups or Freenet, how is that creating demand? You're applying an economic perspective to something that most likely doesn't involve money (because it is infinitely more tracable). I agree that you generate supply if you do anything of the following:

      -Pay a producer, other people or websites for child porn
      -Ask a producer or other people to create or share child porn for you to download
      -Trade with producers or other people, thus creating value for the bargaining chips
      -Download counters will anonymously tell the producer or other people of your interest

      Granted, I'm sure that covers most that's going on but it is not implicit that copying leads to an increase in supply. For that you require some sort of feedback loop to exist. That also covers #2, so let's move on to the last one.

      "3. Laws against pedophiles (not against pedophiliac acts -- pedophiles) are counter-productive. For example, it is illegal to create computer-generated child pornography. Why!? Provided that it gives people who are into such things a release, and no children are harmed, I have no problem with it. (...)"

      The reasoning behind computer-generated child porn is #1. It creates a demand...


      The original poster intentionally left out a very important point, and you missed it. If downloading of CG child porn led to more demand, all we would end up with is a bunch of highly skilled CG artists. As much as people don't like to hear this, it is also a question of how many get into child sex after seeing child porn. I'm sure we can argue all day if those are pedos, latent pedos or "normal", meaning the capability is in us all. The real threat is not the demand it creates in the market, but the thoughts it creates in the minds of the viewer. It is also commonly used to make children believe this is normal, to mess with their minds. For that it doesn't matter if it creates a demand or not, real or not. That is the reason it will not be tolerated.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    51. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      Your argument is flawed. Copying child porn and giving it to a friend does NOT cause arousal at the expense of anyone. All events have already transpired. No one is getting paid or encouraged because of this copy. I DO think it is illegal to possess, and hence copy in the first place however.

    52. Re:Three points by hunterx11 · · Score: 1
      GRAHLAHGHISHZAHRSB ME GOOD YOU BAD GRAKSBSFUSFS

      I'm sorry if my argument is too intellectual for you; I had trouble dumbing it down to your level.

      Oh, also you're a pedophile, and a Communist, and a witch.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    53. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I appreciate your sane response. I was attempting to point out how subjective the whole thing is (and I think you agree). I do also a agree that producing child porn by victimizing children is not the same as producing a movie that contains a fake murder. If I wasn't clear, I apologize.

    54. Re:Three points by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1, Troll

      For the same reason people get sick of looking at porn and start wanting the real thing more than they did before they started looking at porn...

    55. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... No movies where people are killed (including movies about war) or where there is any kind of illegal activity (like speeding on an highway or anything else). I guess we should also include books in this.

      I, for one, welcome our new Amish overlord !

    56. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I think it's safe to say that at least half of SlashDot views porn regularly. The number of virgins in this place would be quite sufficient defense against any argument that viewing porn induces people to have sex.... :-)

      On the issue of inducing additional production of porn... the only way that downloading porn could create an incentive for increased production would be if the producer of the porn actually knows that the content is being downloaded. If it is downloaded from a web server, sure. From P2P or other indirect mechanisms, the circle of communication is not complete, so there is no enticement.

      As for whether it encourages people to molest children, the existence of child porn may actually reduce the level of violence against children by serving as a way for some potential child molesters to get their kicks without (directly) harming someone, in much the same way that people who take out their aggression in competitive sports are less likely to become gang members and commit violent crimes. There's a very real possibility that if the world governments were able to put a complete stop to child porn, child abuse levels might actually increase.

      Now "C" I do tend to agree with, for the most part, provided that it only applies to truly child porn (e.g. pre-pubescent). Once you're talking about teenagers who might very well be sexually active anyway, the argument becomes much more problematic. For example, one could make the argument that this applies to any pictures or movies in which someone is exploited.

      At some point, one could consider that almost everyone in porn is, to some extent, being exploited. Very few are truly in porn because they are voyeurs who want to have sex with someone while the world watches. Most are doing it for financial reasons, because of a lack of self esteem, social pressure, drunkenness, whatever. As a society, we have to carefully draw the line. Think that those college girls in porn videos are mature enough to make long-term decisions on exposure of their bodies in porn? Doubt it.

      I guess the bottom line is that this is a tricky issue, and when an activist judge makes a ruling like this, it really causes harm to society, as it creates dangerous precedent. Maybe the guy should have gotten jail time for photographing women showering without permission (assuming he didn't, that is). However, the whole child porn thing sounds more like a prosecutor with a hair up his/her ass looking for charges to make an example of this guy, and that is every bit as destructive as the acts in question, if not more so.

    57. Re:Three points by westlake · · Score: 1
      1. This verdict is absolutely crap. COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn. No children are harmed by such an act.

      One short and simple question: Would you trust this man with a picture of your kid?

      2. It is not illegal to be attracted to children. It is only illegal to act on it. Provided that he doesn't, he can still be a good man in my book.

      Downloading and copying photographs of a child's rape is not an act?

      Pedophilia isn't an attraction, it is an obsession. Careers, families and reputations destroyed. Downloads in the thousands and tens of thousands. Scout leader faces court over child pornography images

      3. Many of today's sex-related laws are based on some twisted idea of morality, and nothing more.

      Your opinion, not mine.

    58. Re:Three points by Knytefall · · Score: 1

      I'm going to define 'at the expense of' a little differently. Instead of looking at it as a fixed-cost, such that the original malicious act has an 'expense' which is divided up among all viewers, let's look at it as a necessary precondition. The arousal happens strictly because a malicious act has occurred. There was no other way for that arousal to occur save for committing a malicious act. Hence, though copying a CD is not a malicious act itself, you can't separate arousal from the malicious act.

      The CD is a device designed to arouse because it records an illegal, malicious act. If you remove the act, the CD is useless. There is no way to separate the two; it's not a question that there just happens to be kiddie porn on the CD--it is the defining characteristic of the CD that it contains kiddie porn; therefore, it is just as bad as any other copy of the CD (because all of those CDs depend on the original malicious act).

      Thus it, and all copies, are at the expense of the original malicious act because they all necessarily depend on that act to have occurred in order to be 'useful' in their purpose of arousing.

    59. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      You're twisting my words. I said "being attracted to", not "downloading and copying". Attraction versus obsession depends on who is using the word. The latter is obviously a problem. In today's sensitive society though, someone who makes a passing comment about an underage girl though can be considered a pedophile.

    60. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Writing anonymously for obvious reasons.

      "First, the verdict is not crap." Yes it is. You can't call burning CDs of X "making" X or you throw out hundreds of years of copyright law. This verdict IS crap. He didn't make child porn, he consumed it. IF CONSUMING CHILD PORN IS ILLEGAL, HE SHOULD BE FOUND GUILTY ON THAT CHARGE. But if all he did was copy something for personal use, then that's not creating it.

      "Not [that] it's the same as creating child porn, but if you stick to that definition then people could make all the child porn they want out in international waters in or 3rd world countries where they don't care, then they could e-mail the files to the US where they could be distributed and sold. Under your interpretation, that would be perfectly legal." Actually, no. The importation of child pornography is illegal. Trust me, I know of at least a couple Dep't of Homeland Security lawyers who work on this sort of thing. The USA has a lot of leeway when it comes to international governance affecting its citizens. The USA's jurisdiction extends WORLDWIDE. That's right, you can be imprisoned for that Cuban cigar you smoked in Spain.

      "Second, why isn't he a scumbag?" Uh. Because he's not? If you want to make a judgment about someone, YOU have the burden of proof. Why is he a scumbag? Because he gets turned on for some reason by the idea of very young sex? Without going into philosophical or psychological analysis of all that, I would have to say that it's pretty thin. If he didn't hurt anyone (and let's face it, if he's burning it to a CD then he downloaded it online, nobody got paid for it, and he didn't contribute to the market), then there's no reason to call him a scumbag. If you think he's a scumbag just because of what his attractions are, then it follows that you think people should be morally responsible for things they can't control -- but if that's the case, then the whole discussion of morality is moot because there are many things which we can't control and if they are immoral then we can't control our own morality, which makes discussing it stupid and pointless.

      "It has been PROVEN that possessing child porn significantly increases the chances of someone committing a crime because the fantasy stops being enough and they want to do the real thing. Same for violent rape porn." Prove it. Link? If such things had been proven, I think violent video games would have been banned long ago.

      "Third, laws against pedophiles are not counterproductive, they prevent things from getting worse than they are now." Oh yeah? I suppose we should outlaw adrenaline coming from anger, too. Since that would keep things from getting worse and erupting in violence. By the way, are wiretaps on U.S. citizens not counterproductive, because they "prevent things from getting worse"? You'll find that speculation isn't valid in a courtroom, and it certainly isn't valid when determining how millions of people should live their lives.

      "Of course it is illegal to make computer generated images of sex with children" Actually, it's not, and for good reason. See other posts on the board.

      "You're right though. Our laws are based on a common morality. Like the common idea that I can't grab any women I see and force her to have sex. That's a terrible thing." First of all, let me say how disgustingly stupid your pathetic mush-brain is. MORALITY is a set of cultural norms and they are purely, completely, and totally arbitrary. They are dictates of DOs and DON'Ts, and no WHYs and WHY NOTs. The law isn't supposed to be based on that, but is supposed to be based on protecting natural rights, such as those to life, liberty, and property. Forcing a person to have sex with you denies their right to liberty, so it is outlawed universally. Ditto for murder and theft and so on. Laws based entirely on arbitrary morality against acts which do not hurt anyone and which are carried out in private have often been stricken down. See Lawrence v. Texas (2003) for an example.

      I do believe in evil. Evil is men at war with eachother. Evil is torture. Evil is forcing your religion on another. Evil is NOT watching something that happened without your instigation.

    61. Re:Three points by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      This is why the US needs its own great firewall like China. Things that are most definately illegal should be blocked by ISPs and not allowed into the country. A third party (not Christian fundamentalists please) could run the blacklist and make it available for anyone who wants to to query and see the REASON for the block. If I find something I want to view is blocked, I could query the blacklist database and see exactly why it's being blocked. If the reason is bullshit I would be able to report it as incorrect. Also, mandatory terms for judges to serve as reviewers of blocking requests would be nice.

    62. Re:Three points by 777film · · Score: 1

      As for it being a problem, I'm not convinced. Provided he never engages in acts with a minor himself (and even then there is a huge different between a 21 year old and a 14 year old versus a 40 year old and a 9 year old), I don't have a problem with it.

      Well, I'll tell you why I have a problem with it. Any child depicted in pornography is there against their will, and the victim of a (quite possibly horrible) crime. Deriving sexual pleasure from watching a child being humiliated in such a way shows, at the very least, a total lack of compassion for the victim.

      I'm not saying that this always leads to this person committing the act himself, or that he should be locked up simply for viewing it-- but I do maintain that this is antisocial behavior and morally wrong, and it should be shameful.

    63. Re:Three points by diakka · · Score: 1

      First, I'm pretty sure that in most states, the situation you describe would merely be statuory rape, NOT child molestation. I don't think it should be illegal for a 21 year old to have sex with a 15 year old, regardless of gender. However, Life in prison would certainly much too harsh for such an offense. I believe in some states, it is even legal to have sex with a 16 year old as long as there is an age difference of 2 years or less. There can be exceptions written in to the law for certain situations. But certainly for the clear cut child molestation case, Life in prison is completely justified.

      --
      -- Knowledge shared is power lost. -- Aleister Crowley
    64. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i understand your argument and agree with it.

      however, it has no practical application.

      why? if the person attracted to children never acted on it, you'd never know his attraction! which is, imho, a good thing.

      you'd only knw about it if he acted on it.

      which this guy did - so we know about it.

    65. Re:Three points by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      Looking at porn makes people want more porn. The link between porn and sexual conduct is quite controversial, but the effect of viewing porn on the demand for porn is not. Viewing porn makes people want to view more porn.

      You can't just make totally unsubstantiated statements like this and expect anyone to take you seriously. Where's your proof?

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    66. Re:Three points by koreaman · · Score: 1

      I thought people were smarter than this on Slashdot.

      No, no, not you. I fully agree with your post. I mean everyone who's replied to you. I don't think I've ever seen so many strawman arguments and other [il]logical fallacies in my life, except maybe in some debates about abortion.

      Don't try convincing them of the obviously true points in your post (especially #2, which I have long been on a crusade to get people to understand, even though I am not myself a pedophile), as you have already done so to the best of anyone's abilites and they still refuse to understand. You can turn of the computer. They won't understand, they can't understand, just leave it alone.

    67. Re:Three points by Nomad37 · · Score: 1

      a "descent" lawyer huh? I've got an image of a guy in a suit rappelling down the pillars of a court building. Carrying a briefcase.

      --
      Pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will! - Antonio Gramsci.
    68. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I thought I'd take a good crack at it anyway. ;-)

    69. Re:Three points by koreaman · · Score: 1

      I can't blame you for trying :-)

      I guess it just can't work. Maybe someday, people will be more progressive than they are now and finally capable of understanding this. Oh well.

    70. Re:Three points by Tony+Hoyle · · Score: 1

      As for the third point, this is one of those sticky situations where, even in a republic, the "tyranny of the majority" causes problems. Notification laws and the like would, I imagine, virtually destroy the life of anyone convicted of child molestation or exploitation, even after they've paid their debt to society. OTOH, I can certainly see why parents would want to know this information, and it is, of course, nigh impossible to determine who's actually made progress in ignoring their urges and who hasn't.


      Imagine this. 20 year old man is attracted to 15 year old girl. They have a brief affair, the law finds out, and he gets put on a child protection list (the legal age is 16 here). He subsequently marries the girl a year or so later. Is he a peodophile? 15 years later he gets a job as a caretaker in a school. Is he a danger to the children?

      In the UK recently this happened. The man involved may never work again, has had his life destroyed, and has been labeled a dangerous paedophile by the tabloid idiots... I bet half the country just read the headlines and didn't realize what had hapened.

      It's a salutory lesson in *why* the public should not know about such things. IMO they're too damned stupid to tell the difference.

    71. Re:Three points by TheSkyIsPurple · · Score: 1

      > COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn

      There are two uses of "produce" going on here.

      1) The film sense... they actually put together content and create something original and new
      2) The CD Stamper sense... they produce copies of CD all day long... and end up creatin tons of new (but not original) things

    72. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you have no children. People attracted to pre-pubescent children are seriously sick and when they act on their impulses in any way, be it approaching a child for sex and/or producing, downloading, buying, viewing, etc. of child-porn, they become real scumbags and should be locked up.

      I have a question for you...
      Is it OK with you if one of these people that are OK in your "book" watch and/or distribute images of YOUR child being raped?

    73. Re:Three points by Sky+Cry · · Score: 1
      It's certainly true that the current laws are curious. Even the most softcore porn featuring a 17 year old is illegal, yet incredibly hardcore material from the follow day that she turned 18 is legal... Strange.
      Laws have to be as simple and precise as possible. How else would you draw a clear line between child and adult pornography?
    74. Re:Three points by Robber+Baron · · Score: 1

      Shit...if I'd nailed a 21 year old girl when I was 15, my friends would have thrown me the biggest, noisiest, drunkenist party you'd ever seen!

      --

      You're using her as bait, Master!

    75. Re:Three points by koreaman · · Score: 1

      Just out of curiosity, are you yourself a pedophile?

    76. Re:Three points by FidelCatsro · · Score: 1

      That misses the entire point , it's not the material which is the problem but how it is produced. What a firewall does is sweep the problem under the carpet, It does not stop the children being abused. what is needed is international co-operation to track down these people .
      (In this case IIRC these were not altered images )

      --
      The only things certain in war are Propaganda and Death. You can never be sure which is which though
    77. Re:Three points by Sky+Cry · · Score: 1
      Please explain to me how computer-generated child porn, in which no actual child is involved, creates demand. Are people not pedophiles until they've consumed some child porn? If nobody made child porn, would we have no pedophiles who want to look at it? Perhaps it fills a demand, but how could it create demand?

      Let me try to explain by showing a simple example:

      Child pornography consumer (i.e. pedofile) goes to a web page, where he can download child pornography. As he downloads, he is shown ads. Ads generate revenue for the child pornography supplier. Successfully generated revenue makes him supply greater qualities of child pronography.

      So without demand, there would be no supply per market rules. As long as child pornography can't be sold, new won't be created.

      Whether the consumer actually consumed what he acquired is transparent to the supplier - he got his money, he wants to do it again.

      Targeting both the consumer and supplier has greater effect, than targeting the supplier only. In the case of the child porno, benefits of targeting both outweight drawbacks.

    78. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about you... But looking at porn day long doesn't make me wanna hump gals more than before. If anything I'm bored with sex now, and don't bother with all the efforts to get a nice gal when I can just look at some jpeg (of possibly even nicer looking gals). Heck, that's enough to keep me satisfied really... Been divorced for ~3 years now, not even interested in the "real thing" anymore... I doubt the age of whoever you're looking at on the screen changes anything to that really.

    79. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at her bush. Has it got hair? - Eminem, Guilty Conscience

    80. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      No, certainly not. The biggest stretch I've made was being attracted to a fourteen year old girl when I was eighteen, several years ago. I do have some odd things I like ... but children isn't one of them.

    81. Re:Three points by Yartrebo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I second that. Heck, even a good fraction of underage sex (no less porn) is entirely or mostly benign. Humans are wired with a sex drive from around age 14 or so (puberty). I can see no reason for sex between two sexually mature people to be any different because one (or both) is/are under 18.

      Even when that's not the case, most of the real tradgedies are either traditional rapes, or the police themselves. The latter tends to be particularly true if the kids involved respect the adults involved.

      Regarding computer generated child porn, hasen't that been stricken down by the Supreme Court numerous times on first amendment grounds? Or has a new law been passed that the court upheld?

    82. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Submitter here. If you read the court decision, you would learn that the guy also planted video cameras to secretly videotape children (which would clearly be creating creating child porn). That qualifies him to be a scumbag in my book.

      However, that crime was a different charge that he wasn't contesting.

    83. Re:Three points by bani · · Score: 1

      If there is any validity to the reasoning then it's equally applicable to the "violent video games cause school shootings" argument.

      Think hard before you support this reasoning.

    84. Re:Three points by grumbel · · Score: 1

      ### The reasoning behind computer-generated child porn is #1. It creates a demand...

      a) How does it create demand?

      b) How do you actually get the exact age of a computer generated or hand animated person to determine if its child porn or just normal porn?

    85. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i understand your argument and agree with it.
      however, it has no practical application.
      why? if the person attracted to children never acted on it, you'd never know his attraction!


      Simply not true. Imagine this situation: you're at a bar with a friend. He's been drinking, so he's lost most inhibitions. And he tells you that he fancies a 9-year-old boy.

      See? It's quite plausible that you might discover someone was a paedophile, even though he had never committed any crime. Yet the likelihood is that you would either refuse to believe what you'd heard, or you would be very, very reluctant to continue to associate with that person. And if the word got around, that person would be ostracised, rejected, and quite possibly lose their family and job even though they had never committed any crime or abused any child in any way whatsoever.

      Oops.

    86. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Murderers are seriously sick and when they act on their impulses in any way, be it approaching people to murder them and/or producing, downloading, buying, viewing, etc. of murders, they become real scumbags and should be locked up.

      See the problem? You can't actually believe what you're saying unless you want to ban every portrayal of any crime, eliminating every film and book more realistic than the Care Bears. People need outlets for anything they're into but wish they weren't.

    87. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ditto. I don't look at porn because I'm getting laid every day, I look at porn while I'm taking the edge off.

    88. Re:Three points by koreaman · · Score: 1

      Eh, that's not pedophilia. Judging by the freshman girls (freshwomen?) at my school, there are certainly many that it'd be perfectly normal to be attracted to :-P

    89. Re:Three points by koreaman · · Score: 1

      I don't think the grandparent was contesting that the pedophile was a scumbag. He was merely saying that the the pedophile wasn't a scumbag because of the fact that he was a pedophile

    90. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      agreed. And I also think Child porn should be legal because of the political statement it can be used for.
      You see children in pornography obviously enjoying sexual activity, then that is used as proof in an argument that age of consent for sex laws are irrational.
      Because the pornography is critical to arguing a political opinion in this manner it should be covered under freedom of speech. Even if you disagree with that political statement, possession of child ponrography which shows children obviously suffering in abuse can be used to argue that this type of crime of molesting children should get harsher punishment. Either way the picture is just information and information should never be illegal especially when it has a valid political purpose.

    91. Re:Three points by Rob_Ogilvie · · Score: 1

      Um, this is Slashdot. There is no real thing before porn here. Not that I go there, but for those who do...

      --
      Rob
    92. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sadly though it has become so in the UK, Yay for legislated witch hunting

    93. Re:Three points by HairyCanary · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Nice try. You made that up.

      People look at porn because they want to. It does not work the other way around. I was a horny little monster well before I saw any significant amount of porn. Do you look at porn to make yourself horny, or because you already are? How do you select what porn turns you on?

      And when you get sick of porn, do you run out and find a woman to rape? Or do you mean that you seek out women solely for the purpose of getting laid? Or perhaps, just maybe ... you are like most normal people and you understand the difference between fantasy and reality, and you control your impulses no matter what their target.

      Personally, I believe that an awful lot of people have fantasies about children (heck, in the distant past, there were societies that thought it quite normal to engage in sexual activity with children). And the vast, vast majority never act on it. Otherwise, why such a hot topic? I tend to think that the most vocal people on sexual morality are the most scared of their fantasies, and their ability to control them.

    94. Re:Three points by cibyr · · Score: 1
      It's certainly true that the current laws are curious. Even the most softcore porn featuring a 17 year old is illegal, yet incredibly hardcore material from the follow day that she turned 18 is legal... Strange.

      Well, you have to draw the line somewhere. That's where we draw the line.

      --
      It's not exactly rocket surgery.
    95. Re:Three points by HairyCanary · · Score: 1
      So many people are making stuff up as they go. Provide some kind of evidence for point A. I think that looking at porn makes you want more porn... for about 5 minutes. And then you don't want to see any porn at all for a while.

      As for point B... well, first, it's based on point A, which is bunk to begin with. On top of that... think chicken & egg. You assume that it is availability of child porn that creates demand. How so? People who are interested in looking at it will be interested even if it does not exist at all. Suppose I showed you animal porn. Would you start to become aroused by seeing more of it, and then go seek it out on your own?

      Point C I agree with.

      I totally don't buy the argument that (insert flavor) porn is bad because it makes you want more (insert flavor) porn. That is written into your mind somewhere, and it is hard coded. What I do believe is that it does not matter what is in your mind, and any arguments that are based directly or even loosely on that fact are very dangerous. What should be policed, and rightly so, is what you actually do. If you can control your impulses, and all you do is view synthetic child porn, what is the harm? If anything, maybe it gives you an outlet for those impulses so you don't have to try as hard to keep them from becoming action. I try not to judge people by what they think, only by what they do.

    96. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please remember to use an anonymizer prior to searching for above terms. Thank you. lol

    97. Re:Three points by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      Hitler was one man. In a libertarian society, only one person (and one or two bullets) would have been needed to stop him. Therefore, little or no organization is likely to be required, no troops, and little, if any, funding. "You're rounding up citizens based on ethnicity?" Bang. No more of that, then. Next problem?

      The thing is, you need an army to stop an army; but you don't need an army to stop a single person. When extreme problems flow from one person, you're quite likely to change the situation radically if you remove that person. In Hitler's case, stopping him early would have done more, I think, but stopping him at any point would have been beneficial.

      Something else flows from this approach: People who would emulate Hitler are likely to observe how he ended up, especially if he was nipped in the bud, so to speak. That leads to either suppression of the behavior, which is fine, or attempts to unite groups of people, which might serve to gather them in one place so they are more easily killed. :)

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    98. Re:Three points by stwrtpj · · Score: 1
      I suspect that if synthetic child porn were legal there would be quite a bit of substitution going on -- purveyors of real child porn would find it more profitable and less risky to just make the fake stuff and pretend it was real.

      Computer generated child porn IS legal. The reason that the distributors have not switched to this is cost. It is still cheaper to get a real kid in front of a camera than it is to set up a render farm to produce realistic-looking graphics.

      --
      Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
    99. Re:Three points by Mad_Rain · · Score: 1

      You can't just make totally unsubstantiated statements like this and expect anyone to take you seriously. Where's your proof?

      The proof is a "scholar.google.com" search away. You could start with an article by Quayle and Taylor, which has a small sample size, but cites a number of other relevant articles. The big idea of the article is (quoted from the abstract) "the important role that the Internet plays in increasing sexual arousal to child pornography and highlights individual differences in whether this serves as a substitute or as a blueprint for contact offenses. It also draws our attention to the important role that community plays in the Internet and how collecting facilitates the objectification of children and increases the likelihood that in the quest for new images children continue to be sexually abused."

      --
      "What do you think?" "I think 'What, do you think?!'"
    100. Re:Three points by tezbobobo · · Score: 1

      I think of it something like this (and I qualify that I do not like paedophiles). I would presume, being on the web, you live in America. In America the age of consent is around 16 years in most states. That means at 16 people are deemed to be sexually responsible. That means most states should consider that an appropriate age for people appearing in sexually explicit material.

      Now in Egypt, Turkey, or Tanzania, where the consential age is 18, you are a bunch of paedophiles, and should not be welcome in there countries. And on the same note in the Philipines and Mexico, the age of consent is 12, which I'm sure you find morally reprehensible.

      My point is that all of these people have an age of consent which reflects the ethical attitude of the nation.

      There should be discussion about the morality of sexually submissive relationships (when older is taking advantage of younger) and what is a responsible age. But blind moral preachings are inhibiting to proper discourse and progress.

      As for when there is smoke there is fire... I presume (using Slashdot) you are a technically oriented person and have access to people's computers for servicing or system administration. I would have a very bizarre view of the world if I thought the porn I found on people's computer reflected their real lives. I'm sure "Mr Jones" has never, nor convinced his wife, had sex with a horse. I can't imagine "Mr Smith" has ever had an orgy, or will ever even have the opportunity. And I'm sure "Mr Brown", even though he like to have a look at pictures of cheerleaders, will never have to opportunity to have sex with a cheerleader.

      People have inhibitors. They generally know socially acceptble and unacceptable behaviour. They are also able to seperate their imagined life from their real life. I've often thought of pushing my boss down the stairs, but it will never happen.

      Unlike you, I think the majority time there is smoke, there is not fire.

    101. Re:Three points by tezbobobo · · Score: 1

      Whereas I would prefer to test the hypothosis and then free any people jailed wrongly if it is false, and not jail them in the first place in case we are wrong.

      Remember that whole "innocent until proven guilty." It shouldn't be turned on for somethings and off for others. We live in a liberal society. Liberal of course means "free".

    102. Re:Three points by Winlin · · Score: 1

      Will Durant, one of the best historians of the 20th century, met his future wife Ariel when he taught at her school. If I remember correctly he was around 25 and she was 14 or so. They married and lived a very long and happy life together.He would be considered a pedophile in the media today, but i would certainly hesitate to label him as such.

    103. Re:Three points by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 1

      "The reasoning behind computer-generated child porn is #1. It creates a demand..."

      Actually I think a better defense of it would be that it makes law enforcements job easier. How are the supposed to tell the difference between a good render (or more likely photoshop copy&paste) and the real thing? Leaving it legal just makes it easier to defend.

      Not that I'm saying I'm for the law, I think its silly, if they're going to legislate it should be based on marketing/perception of the porn itself-- Eg, if someone is pre-pubecent (whether rendered or doctored or whatever), then its illegal. If someone doesn't(and it violates no other law), then its legal, even if shes actually underage(Ever watch a traci lords porn that wasn't traci I love you? Congrats, you're a pedo by most peoples standards!)

      --
      Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx
    104. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's certainly true that the current laws are curious. Even the most softcore porn featuring a 17 year old is illegal, yet incredibly hardcore material from the follow day that she turned 18 is legal... Strange.

      Er... how?

      Look, the purpose of the age restriction is to prevent 'children' from being exploited, no? Well, how do you define children? You could have an intricate series of definitions classifying the gradual aging of children that would only lead to abuse (how would you define it? By breast size? Pubic hair count?) or you could just arbitrarily pick an age at which most people are physically adults, and stick with it.

      The 18th year is a pretty good one for that. Is it perfect? No. But at least it has a definition you can't screw with.

    105. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even the most softcore porn featuring a 17 year old is illegal,
      JB Ramsey,

      Meanwhile, there's a woman in a bikini strattling a man in an ad on a website targeting young girls.
      http://www.girland.com/

      Meanwhile Planned Parenthood wants girls on the pill. Of any age.
      http://parents.berkeley.edu/advice/teens/thepill.h tml
      http://www.eadshome.com/plannedparenthood.htm
      http://www.ppwi.org/?processor=content&sectionpath =30/31/33&complexcontentid=766

      Meanwhile sexual content is a marketing tool used to get the attention of teens.
      http://www.focusas.com/SexualBehavior.html
      http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/probe/docs/sexrevol.ht ml

      Meanwhile a Kraft commercial starred a junior high scool-age boy offering his cheese sandwich to a young girl. When she accepts,
      Barry White's "let's get it on" plays.
      http://www.thefixx.net/printthread.php?s=d98713dfe a3bd42a3bdb0aa1b8097b7b&threadid=537&perpage=13

      Meanwhile Dave Matthew's band "crash into me" is (was, 10 years ago) played on radio stations anytime day or night. Meanwhile "sex and candy" was on the radio day and night.

      Meanwhile Walmart sells thongs geared to young teens
      http://www.menstuff.org/archives/walmart.html#2002

      Meanwhile many marketing campaigns across the nation are either:

      Promoting some (shirt,dress,jeans) as a way for girls to look sexier and thus more attractive to boys.

      Using shows that do promote teen sexuality (and are thus more attractive to teens) as a vehicle to promote their items (sponsors of the afore - mentioned Doogie Houser episode)

      Meanwhile MTV, in addition to showing "love in an elevator" and Madonna's "like a prayer" video (again, dating myself) begins a show TITLED "MTV undressed" where teens frolic in bedrooms wearing underwear. Unmarried, bi, gay, or straight seems to make no difference.

      We're out to protect the young people. give me a fucking break.

    106. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      "You're rounding up citizens based on ethnicity?" Bang. No more of that, then. Next problem?

      How is this different than mob rule? "I hear Jim is queer, let's go round him up and kill him!" Do you really think leaving justice up to random bands of men is a good idea? Many people did support Hitler and his ideas ... Who's to say libertarian justice in Germany would've have been carried out against Jews as well as Nazis?

    107. Re:Three points by OmgTEHMATRICKS · · Score: 1

      I guess that explains why Grand Theft Auto inspires thousands upon thousands to go out and jack cars and beat old women with baseball b- wait, that's silly! Oh, child porn? Yeah, yeah! 'Devil made me do it!' Right on!

    108. Re:Three points by temcat · · Score: 1

      As he downloads, he is shown ads

      And what if there's no ads? If he's an "altruistic" person?

    109. Re:Three points by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      At the same time, if you search for the sexual habits of society, you'll find that the average age of first sexual contact has gone down to age 15--and girls are increasingly getting younger than guys on that scale.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    110. Re:Three points by Sky+Cry · · Score: 1

      That's an example, not the only possible way it can go.

      Now ask yourself, which is more likely. That child porn producers are doing it for money or not?

    111. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is actually illegal in such countries as Canada and Norway.

    112. Re:Three points by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Increased demand for child porn means a stronger incentive to make the stuff. Note that this is true even if no buying or selling is involved (ie trading). Open and free distribution might undercut the market to some extent -- but given that music companies continue to thrive despite widespread file-sharing, I doubt that market saturation will make child porn unprofitable.

      Er, no. The reason music companies continue to thrive is people keep buying music, and the availability of free P2P downloads doesn't seem to interfere with that. If it were, say, illegal to buy music, the music companies would shrivel up and die overnight. No one would go buy CDs on a shady street corner when they could use Kazaa for free in their own homes.

      Similarly, making child porn can only be financially profitable if people are paying for it. It's very simple: if no one pays, there's no money. In a barter situation, there might be a form of profit--"you send me a clip I haven't seen, and I'll send you a clip you haven't seen"--but not in a sharing situation.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    113. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "If true, he definitely crossed the line."

      He did. But did he actually *abuse* those kids ? Or is the only abuse he's guilty of the knowledge-after-the-fact of those kids that images of them are now going all-over the world ?

      The word "abuse" has a widely different meanings, ranging from "a single abuse of trust" to "perpetual physical and/or mental abuse". I'm afraid that a couple of over-zealous law-makers have thrown them all on a single heap.

      I mean, how is the abuse of actual physical overpowering a minor and going against his/her wishes *in any way* (let alone sexual) comparable to the sneek-a-peek that is described in the above post ?

      Yes, lets throw it all on a heap, and judge someone by the most horrible description that we can tag on it.

      But if we are allowed to (or must !) do that, is there than not a chance that everyone (including every last person in the court that condemned that guy) has done something in their (near) past that could be extended by the same means to make them look like hardened criminals, all belonging behind heavy-duty bars ?

      If a Judge wants to have the right to use a dictionary as an excuse (because that is currently all I regard it) to "throw the book" at this person, than he should allso use that same book to look-up the *non-singular* meaning of other words (like the beforementioned "abuse").

      As others have allready mentioned, knowing that even *looking* at a child "the wrong way" could get you into trouble makes me hesitant to even be spotted anywhere near youngsters without at least one other adult in direct vincinity.

    114. Re:Three points by temcat · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of people who share stuff just because they feel, erm, "generous". Then there are exchangers - I don't think many of them produce their own material.

    115. Re:Three points by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      So without demand, there would be no supply per market rules.

      Yes yes, demand creates supply. You've done a very good job of illustrating this. But you still haven't said how having no supply (no child porn available) would have any affect on demand (no pedophiles wanting child porn). Does lack of child porn magically cure pedophiles?

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    116. Re:Three points by Sky+Cry · · Score: 1
      Does lack of child porn magically cure pedophiles?

      No, this isn't about "curing pedofiles". This is about protecting children, that otherwise would fall victim to those, who create child pornography. The less children harmed, the better.

      Theoretically, as long as no child is harmed in any way, there isn't a problem with pedofiles. For example, imagine some "big brother" watching over all children. If it can be guaranteed, that children are not involved, pedofiles can do whatever they want. (Like watching drawn child pornography.)

      Of course, that's just theory. I highly doubt that such an absolute way of making sure children don't get harmed exists at all. But also notice that in this particular case "big brother" actually gives more freedom.

      The idea is, if you could target the problem directly, you could exterminate it without sacrificing anything else. In practice, though, you have to compromise. Getting rid of child pornography is viewed as so important, that the "sacrifice bar" is much higher, than with most other things.

    117. Re:Three points by typical · · Score: 1

      Before that ruling, however, it was often assumed to be illegal.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    118. Re:Three points by koreaman · · Score: 1

      That depends how mature (Notice I don't say how old) and capable of decision-making the child is.

    119. Re:Three points by fyngyrz · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I'm a US citizen; I'm going to respond as if this were a conversation between two US citizens, as you've not said one way or the other and the odds, if nothing else, favor that.

      How is this different than mob rule? "I hear Jim is queer, let's go round him up and kill him!"

      It is hugely different. Jim is at zero risk, because he has not interfered with life, liberty, or property. Hitler, on the other hand, has, and is at risk. If you, for instance, in a fit of homphobic idiocy, were to decide to harm Jim, I'd be perfectly happy to shoot you in the head at the very first opportunity. This is the very considerable force that underlies a libertarian society; it's not that no one will be held accountable (like a mob), it's that everyone is accountable, all the time, to everyone else. As a member of such a society, you'd know that interfering with Jim's day to day life would result in you not having a life. So you'd behave, or you'd die — which solves society's problem with you. At the very least, you'd not get to misbehave any longer, and you'd not cost society any more than a bullet or two to stop. You can't avoid the consequences, either — if you were to shoot me instead, the next citizen would step up and shoot you.

      Do you really think leaving justice up to random bands of men is a good idea?

      I think leaving justice up to the individual is a good idea, as long as that individual is just as accountable to their neighbors as everyone else is. I can tell you one thing: leaving justice to a bunch of power-seeking, barely-to-non accountable men and women has not proven to be a good idea here in the USA. Our system is flat-out busted.

      To back that up, I point to the incredible mess that is US law — criminal and civil, and the separate, independently power-based tax system — there is no question in my mind that the system as it stands does not make good law, and consequently everything downline from that is working less and less well each and every day.

      Yes, a libertarian system would pose many challenges, not the least of which would be transitional if the society wasn't a new one (I suspect it would have to be, though.) Right now, people are sheep. They'd have to be responsible citizens instead of passive victims of a power-base. It's a huge difference, and no, honestly, I can't see it happening because the populace is conditioned to not know how to take care of itself at this point in time. In the unlikely event that we get into space, new frontiers may provide the opportunity for such a society. I like to hope so, anyway. That doesn't make libertarian ideals any less attractive to me today.

      Many people did support Hitler and his ideas ... Who's to say libertarian justice in Germany would've have been carried out against Jews as well as Nazis?

      Libertarian ideals don't recognize idiot concepts like superiority of race, to start with; further, as rule from above isn't in the game plan, lunatics shouting for pogroms would be very lonely people. Lunatics trying to implement pogroms would be dead. Hitler got into power and was able to do what he did because he rode in on the very power structure you are thinking is a good thing, while that same structure forbade any citizen from doing anything about it. It didn't happen overnight; it was a political mechanism that put Hitler into power, not a libertarian system or even a mob. It was a political system where responsibility and power were vested in members of the system, but not the citizens. In other words, a system very like ours today.

      Hitler is long gone, however. Lets talk about a current, but similar problem, namely, Bush and his royal court.

      Bush, by setting policies, and the system downstream from him by following said policies, is torturing people, taking people's property, kidnapping people's wives, eavesdropping on people,

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    120. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child
      > porn. No children are harmed by such an act

      That's crazy.

      So the guy who makes child porn out of a 7 year old girl and burns one CD out of it hurts her, but the guy who makes 100,000 copies of the CD and puts it on his website for hundreds of millions to see doesnt?

    121. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is explicitly illegal in the UK. I do wonder if it applies to crap artists though.

    122. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I think you're drastically overestimating people in general. Don't get me wrong -- I'm not saying what we have now is good. What I am saying though is that I'm not convinced what you pose as a solution (with no evidence as to if it would actually work -- no theory or anything) is any better.

      You assume everyone would be an ideal libertarian. The truth is, no more than 90% of the population will ever agree almost anything you put before them. Considering that there are hundreds of issues that really matter, and you have people disagreeing with each other about almost everything. I theorize that sometimes, to get things done and to keep order, you have to pick something and force everyone to go with it. No, it isn't some glorious idealistic notion, but I think that's what is necessary.

      People aren't even well educated and caring enough to vote. I'm not convinced that given the opportunity to run things for themselves, they'd step up and do it. I think you're making the assumption that everyone want to be in control. In reality, most people just want to follow.

    123. Re:Three points by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      My argument is that pedphiles are going to have their urges whether or not real or drawn child porn exists.

      Not all of them will be strong enough to completely ignore these urges, unless we come up with some way to medically help them, which we haven't yet. I'm not saying this is ok, it's just how it is.

      If you exterminate ALL child porn, real or drawn, what's left for these people to act out their urges on? That's right, actual kids. I'm not saying that this would *excuse* them, but whether or not we're excusing them that's more real kids getting hurt. If we at allow them drawn/CG child porn, at least a few of the pedophiles will get their rocks off on that who might have resorted to more direct means if they had nothing else to turn to.

      You're right, there's no way to keep every child from being harmed. But I think that minimizing it takes targeting the real child porn that harms real children, while allowing the pretend child porn that might actually protect some children.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    124. Re:Three points by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      Well, if you read again, you'll see I'm not really saying what you appear to think I am. I mentioned problems in general, said I didn't think we (US citizens) could get there from here, and suggested that somewhere in space might be a reasonable place to start such a society.

      If you got 90% of the people to go along, I'd be amazed. However, like the system we're currently under, the remaining 10% would work to fit in, mostly. The beauty of a libertarian society is there is less work required to do so. Fewer taxes, fewer laws, fewer social levels, fewer criminals, fewer everything, basically.

      Regarding voting... there is little point in voting when the choice is between person A who won't do what you want and is nowhere near what you stand for personally, and person B who is essentially the same. Voting only means something if you have reasonable choices. It's kind of like a poll. If I ask what would you like to do with your mother and give you option A "shoot your mother" and option B "strangle your mother" you're not likely to want to answer the question. You need some other options that actually represent what you might want to do with your mother. Similarly, before it becomes reasonable for me to vote for president, you'd have to offer me someone I was (somehow) convinced wasn't going to be just another constitution crushing, superstitious, warmongering, illicit special interest pandering, expansionist, social retard. Or was going to fund space travel at about 50% of the national budget, that might do it.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    125. Re:Three points by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I agree with you on the voting issue. However, most people don't vote because they're apathetic, NOT because they hate both choices. I completely respect someone who choses not to vote because of the reasons you mentioned. I myself only vote 3rd party (including last election).

    126. Re:Three points by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      heck, in the distant past, there were societies that thought it quite normal to engage in sexual activity with children
      1500 years ago isn't really the "distant past" in my opinion.

    127. Re:Three points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This verdict is absolutely crap. COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn. No children are harmed by such an act.

      The verdict is not crap -- Michigan law (quoted in the fine decision) prohibits copying child porn. Your ire should be directed toward the legislators who wrote the law, not the appellate court who correctly applied it.

    128. Re:Three points by diakka · · Score: 1

      Oh... so because Will Durant did it, now it's ok to fuck a 14 year old? He may not have been a pedophile in the classic sense, but there is something serioulsly messed up about a 25 year old getting together with a 14 year old. Just the idea of it makes me sick.

      What is it about our society that we disassociate the perpetrator from the crime? Oh... He was a really great guy, except for those people he killed. He did molest his daughter... but aside from that, he was a loving husband, generous and volunteered for charity. I'm a pretty forgiving guy, but there are some things that shouldn't be forigiven. Fucking children is one of those things, at least in my book.

      --
      -- Knowledge shared is power lost. -- Aleister Crowley
    129. Re:Three points by mink · · Score: 1

      Good thing he was not a pediatrician.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  7. Why stop at CDRs? by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 1
    ...following the mechanical and technical act of burning images onto the CD-Rs

    There is something mechanical and technical happening when you copy something to a hard drive as well. Or floppy-style media.

    --
    http://www.rootstrikers.org/
    1. Re:Why stop at CDRs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True, but it's far easier to distribute a CD-R to someone else.

      Still, your logic is good. I think this is one of those cases where the law is out of sync with reality.

    2. Re:Why stop at CDRs? by smchris · · Score: 1

      True, but is another demonstration that hard drive storage beats CD-R in _so_ many ways.

  8. Make? by Gunark · · Score: 4, Funny

    But your Honour... I didn't copy these Britney Spears albums, I made them!

    1. Re:Make? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That'll only make them _more_ likely to want you in jail

    2. Re:Make? by noidentity · · Score: 1

      "But your Honour... I didn't copy these Britney Spears albums, I made them!"

      Isn't the point to get the sentence reduced???

  9. From the title, I thought he was protesting porn by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 2, Insightful

    By burning it. Circuit Court: burning CDs of porn == making porn

  10. Do I own the copyright then? by smallfeet · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If I "make" the music I burn to CD do I then own the rights to it? If not, then what does it mean to make something?

    1. Re:Do I own the copyright then? by MBCook · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It seems to me this is probably based off of the same idea with books.

      If I copy a book verbatim, it is not my book. It is the original author's.

      But what if I take various short stores that I like from all over and put it in a book (we'll assume I got permission). I have now made a new book that didn't exist before.

      While I didn't produce any of the content, I did produce a new book. This is my understanding of the decision.

      Of course, in classic /. style, I have not read the decision to see if that is the argument the court used. But that would be my interpretation.

      --
      Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
    2. Re:Do I own the copyright then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you copy a book, the new book belongs to you. The author can sue for copyright infringement but not theft, because you didn't take the pages or ink from him.

    3. Re:Do I own the copyright then? by Temposs · · Score: 1

      Mod parent +Insightful :-)

      --
      Knowledge is just opinion that you trust enough to act upon. -Orson Scott Card
    4. Re:Do I own the copyright then? by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      If not, then what does it mean to make something?

      To me it means this ruling is idiotic. If it already existed before you burned it, how could you possibly be making it?

    5. Re:Do I own the copyright then? by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      If it is your own anthology, you might own the copyrights to the anthology. But IANAL....

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  11. Already true in the UK. by nicolaiplum · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is already true in the UK. Someone who downloads child pornography over the internet is considered to be "making pornography" under the same laws that the photographer taking the pictures would be charged under.
    This can lead to sentences for downloading or copying and distributing child pornography that approach those for making it in the first place, which is treating the two acts as equivalent, when they are not.
    More relevant to the slashdot crowd, if one copies child pornography for any reason whatsoever one can be considered to be "making pornography". If one administers computers used by others and discovers child pornography in one way or another, and copies it aside as evidence, one is at risk of being accused of "making pornography". Therefore the general advice is that if one finds a computer with child porn, one should step away from the computer and call the police, not attempt to do any of the usual sort of evidence preservation, further investigation, etc, that one might if it was another sort of computer intrusion.

    --
    "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled"
    1. Re:Already true in the UK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Part of my job is to scan work networks for pr0n and other nasties. I had to get a signed "memorandum of understanding" from the local Chief Constable that if I discovered child pornography on the network, I wouldn't be prosecuted for "creating" copies if I notified them ASAP.

      In the UK, this is an absolute offence; there is no efence in law, and you can go down for up to five years. Per offence.

    2. Re:Already true in the UK. by Budenny · · Score: 1

      This is not a fair summary of the UK law. It does not treat making and owning as the same thing. It does however make the possession of some kinds of material involving children a strict liability offense. That is, simple possession is an offence, and the onus is on the defendant to prove innocence.

      This is quite different from the general law on other materials. Material with a tendency to deprave or corrupt is unlawful under the Obscene Publications Act. Material with a tendency to incite to racial hatred is unlawful under the Race Relations Act. The laws of Blasphemy forbid some kinds of slurs on the Christian religion. However, in these cases, what is unlawful is publication or public utterance, not simple private possession.

      So to possess a copy of Lady Chatterley was not a criminal offense, and I don't think anyone was ever prosecuted for it. But Penguin Books was prosecuted under the Obscene Publications Act, as the publisher.

      The UK is trying to treat different offences and different sorts of material differently and appropriately. They may or may not have got it right, but they are trying, contrary to the impression given above.

    3. Re:Already true in the UK. by myowntrueself · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Of course, the UK has a long-standing tradition of this sort of legal shenanigan.

      At one time, they didn't make much of a distinction between stealing an entire bakery and stealing a single loaf of bread; in either case they turned you into an Australian...

      And now with the anti-terrorism laws, its illegal to possess any information that *might* be useful to a terrorist. I guess they'd turn you into a Cuban for that (ie Guantanamo).

      Child porn (of 16 year old girls) vs child porn (of 8 year old girls)?
      What will they turn you into then? A hillbilly?

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    4. Re:Already true in the UK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now with the anti-terrorism laws, its illegal to possess any information that *might* be useful to a terrorist. I guess they'd turn you into a Cuban for that (ie Guantanamo).

      No, and no.

      One, it isn't illegal to posses information that might be useful to a terrorist. If it was, we'dd al be in violation, almost any technical data is useful to a terrorist in some way.

      Two, only illegal combatants are in Gitmo. No Americans. And the Constitution and the Geneva Convention don't protect illegal combatants.

    5. Re:Already true in the UK. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And the Constitution and the Geneva Convention don't protect illegal combatants.
      Cool! So I can use illegal combatants as slaves? Do I need some kind of judge to declare them illegal combatants, or can I just pick some up at the local afghanistan?

      Oh wait, this silly document seems to disagree:

      Article 5.
      No one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

      Article 6.
      Everyone has the right to recognition everywhere as a person before the law.

      Article 9.
      No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest, detention or exile.

      Article 10.
      Everyone is entitled in full equality to a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal, in the determination of his rights and obligations and of any criminal charge against him.

      And so on...
    6. Re:Already true in the UK. by Gildersleeve · · Score: 1

      While the law does say that possessing and making child porn are different offences, there is legal precedent that downloading a file onto your computer can be classed as 'making'.

      You think that this is only a problem for pedos? Legal precedent can easily be used in quite creative ways, if the court feels like it. Some precedent for criminal conspiricy in the UK comes from a court case 30 years ago in which a firm was prosecuted for advertising police radar detectors - they had to bend the laws at the time in order to get a prosecution, now the same dodgy precedent can be applied to all sorts of cases.

      Suppose some future Lady Chatterley case came about - someone who owned a hard copy of the book couldn't be prosecuted, but someone who downloaded an electronic version could. If an extreme political group pushed a leaflet inciting racial hatred through your door you couldn't be prosecuted, if they sent the same leaflet as a pdf in an e-mail you could. The legal precedent is there, and can and WILL be used if needed.

    7. Re:Already true in the UK. by sjmurdoch · · Score: 2, Informative

      There is an article from FIPR which discusses this case, and some problems it introduces.

      --
      Steven Murdoch.
      web: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/sjm217/
    8. Re:Already true in the UK. by nicolaiplum · · Score: 1
      --
      "For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled"
    9. Re:Already true in the UK. by Budenny · · Score: 1

      The teacher appears from the link to have been arrested on suspicion of possessing material unlawful under the Child Protection Act. He may or may not also be charged with making. I hadn't heard of the case before and am not sure what it proves, one way or the other.

      The orginal poster, to whom I replied, seemed to be saying that UK law treated the act of burning to CD the same as the act of making, for instance, taking photographs. The implication was that it was inappropriate.

      My reply was that this isn't quite right. UK law doesn't treat burning a CD as making, but it makes a quite different distinction, between material which it is unlawful to publish, and material which it is unlawful to own. For the second kind of material, it also makes possession a strict liability offense. It does also distinguish between making and owning in the case of the second sort of material. Both are unlawful, and they are not, contrary to what was said, treated as the same thing.

      It was later argued in the thread that practice would erode the distinction. That, for instance, to write a pdf of Lady Chatterly to one's hard drive, in the days when that book was unlawful to publish, would have counted as making. That is not true. Since it is publication, and not making, that is unlawful, for materials prohibited under either the Obscene Publications or the Race Relations Acts, receiving LC, and writing it to disk, would not be unlawful, and would not be an offence. Similarly, the act of writing LC would not be an offence. It would be an offence to publish it, and that is why Penguin books could be prosecuted (unsuccessfully).

      Is the UK law appropriate and can these distinctions be defended? I think so. Most people living in the UK probably would agree that there is a difference of kind between the materials prohibited under the Child Protection Acts, and the others, and that it is appropriate for posssession of them to be unlawful in the one case but not the other. I agree. I'm somewhat less easy about strict liability, in this and other areas of law, but do see why it is needed.

      If the teacher were to have been arrested for mere possession of material which is unlawful to publish under the Obscene Publications Act, but which does not fall under the Child Protection laws, then the other posters in the thread would have been proved right, and my view of the law wrong. The extension from publication to possession would have taken place. In addition, if he were to be prosecuted for having made, when the only qualifying act was to burn to CD, then I would have been proved wrong again. There is not enough detail on the link to settle this one way or the other, but it would be, from what I know of the law, very surprising and a very considerable change, and I don't find anything in the link to support either claim.

      The reason I posted was to say what I continue to think, that, contrary to the implication of some posters, the UK law is deserving of our considerable respect, as a responsible effort to make the right distinctions and treat different things differently, in a very difficult and unpleasant area.

  12. Well by itior · · Score: 0

    Even though the decision is totally asinine, the downloaders are the ones who create a market for this kind of stuff. In my opinion the sentences should be much harsher than four years for possession.

    Sick mofos.

  13. Not overreacting by twocoasttb · · Score: 1

    I don't think there are too many punishments I would qualify as "overreacting" when it comes to pedophiles. It shouldn't matter if you create, distribute, burn or otherwise. The posting's statement "...the man was not affiliated with [the child-porn website] in any form" is insulting. I don't give a rat's ass whether he was affiliated or not.

    1. Re:Not overreacting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, Captain Punishment. I think if anyone has any porn containing anyone under 18, hell, even if they have inappropriate thoughts about a 17-year-old, they should be castrated and burned at the stake.

      Any way that we can twist words to meter out more punishment to these guys is ok in my book. For instance, let's not only say he "made" child porn by downloading it and burning it, let's say he actually raped a child! No, no, let's say by burning the CD he raped dozens of innocent children, and then killed them!

      Damn, doesn't it feel great to be righteous?

    2. Re:Not overreacting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Following your logic, you will soon find a newspaper report to the effect of:
      "A young System Administrator was arrested today under charges of creating child pornography. It appears that he produced a "backup" of all files stored on a file server run by his company, thereby copying child pornography that had been previously placed there by a user of the system."

  14. Can you say "Cruel and Unusual?" by students · · Score: 1

    It would be far too harsh to put this man in prison for 20 years when it appears that he has not personally hurt anyone. I presume that the judge will exercise his right to ignore sentancing guidlines and give this man a fine or maybe a few days of prison.

    Imagine if everyone who burned a disk of pornography was in prison for 20 years.

    1. Re:Can you say "Cruel and Unusual?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine if everyone who burned a disk of pornography was in prison for 20 years

      You mean child pornography?
      Last time I checked, not many people cared if regular pornography was pirated.

  15. Not that I want to defend this guy by rolfwind · · Score: 1

    But what's the difference between burning it on CD-R and "burning" (writing) it onto your harddisk? Both create a copy that wasn't there before.

    I'm forseeing problems with people who might have objectionable stuff in their browser cache by browsing X-rated sites but at the same time not looking for underage content.

    1. Re:Not that I want to defend this guy by satcomdaddy1 · · Score: 1
      I'm forseeing problems with people who might have objectionable stuff in their browser cache by browsing X-rated sites but at the same time not looking for underage content.
      I think a case could be made if you were a "regular" (adult) porn fan who may have a picture in your browser cache of Tracy Lords the day before she turned 18, but to aggregate and save multiple images or films of kiddie porn is completely different.
      And others are correct, the subject of TFA did not harm any kids directly (his money may have gone to those who do however--supply and demand, you know), and therefore SHOULD be punished differently: The originator should be drawn and quartered in the public square, the guy who created the copy should only have to spend about 20 years in a maximum security prison.
    2. Re:Not that I want to defend this guy by rolfwind · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but I'm talking about intent here.

      I'm not even talking about adult porn fans - but anybody who browses the web has so much crap in the browser cache they aren't aware of - not everybody is a techie.

      I had to fix my adolescent nephew's computer on multiple times, even with some safe browsing filter their parents installed, they had "adult content" on their browser cache. While I don't have doubt they explored the more adult sites, I'm sure they aren't aware a copy of whatever photos are on their computer.

      But there is a copy on their computer, does that make them porn producers?

      Downloading often times tries to depict an deliberate act, but often browsing and the contents of a browser cache won't be viewed by the owners as deliberate downloading.

      Should burning a cd-r itself be the crime or high evidence of a crime? Even murder considers degrees of intent apart from the technical facts - from manslaughter to 1st degree murder.

  16. Does a file in Firefox's cache constitute "make"? by reporter · · Score: 1
    Pedophiles are scumbags, and so are child abusers.

    However, the court overreached in this case, and I hope that the decision is annulled on appeal. If the decision is upheld, then technically a file that is cached by Firefox in its cache directory falls under the definition of "make".

    Note that many Slashdotters view pornography online. We cannot be 100% sure that all pictures are those of women exceeding the age of 21. Most pornographic sites do not offer PDF files containing the signed consent of the women in the pictures. There is no way to be certain of their ages. If any Slashdotter accidentally viewed a picture of an underaged youth, then that Slashdotter would be headed straight to prison -- under the scope of this court decision.

    Caching a file of an image is essentially "making" or "creating" something that did not previously exist -- on your computer.

  17. Dictionary? by venicebeach · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After reviewing the dictionary definition of the word make

    Is it just me or does consulting a dictionary sound like a really poor way of deciding an issue of law?

    1. Re:Dictionary? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      When laws are written down, the wording is carefully chosen to say something exact. Some words don't mean quite what you think they do. Looking them up in a dictionary (as the original writer would have) doesn't sound too dumb to me.

    2. Re:Dictionary? by abbamouse · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually, it is quite common to see judges use a "plain meaning" standard in which they look up the words of a law in a dictionary (not necessarily a law dictionary, either) and see what it says. Indeed, this textual approach seems to be the leading competitor to originalism among conservative judges. Believe it or not, Merriam-Webster does show up in the occasional opinion.

      --
      Make cheese not war 8:)
    3. Re:Dictionary? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely, especially when you consider that over the past couple of hundred years lawyers have managed to create thousands of entirely new words specifically for use in the legal environment. Furthermore, they have (ahem) "reporposed" many others, to the extent where "legalese" is, for most people, a completely different dialect of the English language. Literally, it's like reading Shakespeare ... sure the words are recognizable but make no sense in context because the meanings have changed. In any event, it sounds like this guy ran up against a judge that was intent on "making" an example.

    4. Re:Dictionary? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      In order to rule they would need a definition for the word. If the Legislature didn't specifically define "make" in the statute then it would be sensible to use a dictionary.

    5. Re:Dictionary? by joNDoty · · Score: 2, Funny

      Is it just me or does consulting a dictionary sound like a really poor way of deciding an issue of law?

      I agree. I just burned a photo CD of an old Phish concert. Now I could be arrested on multiple counts of making, possessing, and distributing marijuana!?

    6. Re:Dictionary? by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

      But they're not always written to be clear.

      Ask anyone from a state that has speed limits, but a law that only requires drivers drive at speeds that are "reasonable and prudent"!

    7. Re:Dictionary? by commodoresloat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Especially true when he could have consulted Black's Law Dictionary, or any court case in copyright law or obscenity law dealing with the production of new works by copying old ones; IANAL but I am sure there are some precedents to look at. Certainly he could have offered a useful interpretation of the legislature's intent when they used that word, which quite obviously did not include practices that would include photocopying someone else's work and sticking the copies in a desk drawer.

    8. Re:Dictionary? by brendanryan · · Score: 1

      It would be interesting to hear what a lexicographer (dictionary writer) would say about this. It's my understanding that the average lexicographer would be really frightened by it. The job of a dictionary is not to PRESCRIBE, but DESCRIBE. A dictionary merely describes how words are probably going to be understood by most people; it reports (and tracks) the ever-changing significance of the words it catalogs. It is a reference tool, not an authority, regardless of how they sell themselves on the dust jacket. But hey, don't take my word for it, just look up "dictionary" in the dictionary! ;-)

    9. Re:Dictionary? by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      if im not mistaken a good number of men that started dictionairies just happened to be "members of The Bar" or members of a bar/club that had lawyers or similar i think webster was a lawyer how about Mirriam?

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    10. Re:Dictionary? by scaryjohn · · Score: 1

      Wow. You could really screw with Scalia's plain-meaning head by just editing the dictionary so that the words put in the statute books fifty or two hundred years ago come to have the opposite meaning. Talk about unelected, unaccountable people making laws!

      I've had classes on statutory interpretation (I'm a law student), and nobody's brought this point up. Probably because it's impractical. And would lead Scalia to horde old dictionaries... But still.

      --
      One might ask the same about birds. What ARE birds? We just don't know.
    11. Re:Dictionary? by micheas · · Score: 1
      When laws are written down, the wording is carefully chosen to say something exact.


      Nice theory, but in the United States many/most laws are written to give either, the best chance of passage, or the best chance of ones opponents looking bad. For example The Patriot Act was not titled that way for any legal reason. It was titled so that privacy advocates could be called unpatriotic. This is just a visible example, it is the norm in most of American Politics. I am sure it would take a short amount of research to find many laws that worked exactly the opposite way of what they were intended to.


      Some words don't mean quite what you think they do. Looking them up in a dictionary (as the original writer would have) doesn't sound too dumb to me.


      I would look them up on findlaw instead of in the dictonary.
    12. Re:Dictionary? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      "Is it just me or does consulting a dictionary sound like a really poor way of deciding an issue of law?"

      Until laws are written in some sort of self-referential language isntead of English, this is going to have to happen. It's either that or haul in the legislators and ask them what they meant when they passed a law, but doing that you shift from "rule of law" to "rule of legislators."

      It's unfortunate enough that Congress gets to change the meaning of the words of the Constitution on a daily basis, I'd rather not see that creep down into the everyday statutes as well.

    13. Re:Dictionary? by deblau · · Score: 1

      Don't be a patent judge. That's a lot of what they do, interpret ('construe') patent claims by looking at what their words mean. For example, read Part II(B) of Phillips v. AWH, 415 F.3d 1303 (Fed. Cir. 2005).

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    14. Re:Dictionary? by Myopic · · Score: 1

      my lawyer friend said one of the first things he learned in law school was that words don't mean what they mean. he really struggled with that.

      nevertheless, sometimes when a word doesn't have a well-known-to-lawyers definition, a judge will fall back to the dictionary. i recently read about a state which wanted to start taxing bottled-water companies under a hundred-year-old "beverage tax" law, which previously had not been applied to water. the judge ruled that "water is not a beverage", which i thought was totally absurd, until i looked it up in a dictionary, and in fact my dictionary explicitly excluded water from the definition:

      beverage |?bev(?)rij| noun a drink, esp. one other than water.

      crazy.

    15. Re:Dictionary? by turbosk · · Score: 1

      This is up for any number of interpretations. I can find a definition that includes water as a "beverage". In the end, we are at the mercy of the system and possibly corrupt judges.
      from http://dict.die.net/beverage/
      beverage n : any liquid suitable for drinking: "may I take your beverage order?" [syn: drink, drinkable, potable]
      Source: Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
      Beverage \Bev"er*age\, n. [OF. bevrage, F. breuvage, fr. beivre to drink, fr. L. bibere. Cf. Bib, v. t., Poison,Potable.] 1. Liquid for drinking; drink; -- usually applied to drink artificially prepared and of an agreeable flavor; as, an intoxicating beverage. "He knew no beverage but the flowing stream." --Thomson.
            2. Specifically, a name applied to various kinds of drink.

    16. Re:Dictionary? by damiam · · Score: 1
      A dictionary merely describes how words are probably going to be understood by most people

      And the judge's job is to decide how words were probably understood by the lawmakers. Since the dictionary describes common usage, it's usually a decent guide to what the lawmakers meant. Not perfect, of course, but better than the judge just pulling things out of his ass.

      --
      It's hard to be religious when certain people are never incinerated by bolts of lightning.
    17. Re:Dictionary? by antonymous · · Score: 1


      Is it just me or does consulting a dictionary sound like a really poor way of deciding an issue of law?

       
      Yeah, they should just eliminate the controversy of using a dictionary and go with Wikipedia.

    18. Re:Dictionary? by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      It's just you. A basic principle of jurisprudence is that words are to be given their common, everyday meanings so that ordinary people can read the law and understand what it says.

  18. Now, Wait... by CWRUisTakingMyMoney · · Score: 1

    Isn't burning a CD/DVD just storing data to a permanent medium? If burning to an optical disk constitutes creating pornography, why not burning to a magnetic disc (a hard drive)? Hell, even temp files are stored there. Could you extend this to someone who clicks a wrong link or whatever, kiddie porn pics pop up on the screen which then get written to a cache on the hard drive, and now the poor sap is guilty of accidentally creating child pornography? Give me a break.

    --
    Those who anthropomorphize science and/or nature already believe in an intelligent designer.
    1. Re:Now, Wait... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't burning a CD/DVD just storing data to a permanent medium? If burning to an optical disk constitutes creating pornography, why not burning to a magnetic disc (a hard drive)? Hell, even temp files are stored there. Could you extend this to someone who clicks a wrong link or whatever, kiddie porn pics pop up on the screen which then get written to a cache on the hard drive, and now the poor sap is guilty of accidentally creating child pornography? Give me a break.

      What you are looking at is the camel's nose.

  19. Completely misinterpreted article title by Mark+Programmer · · Score: 1

    The whole article was kind of a let-down for me. Immediately after reading the title, I thought I'd be treated to a bizarre story about a Christian fundamentalist group getting in ironic trouble for an anti-porn demonstration.

    --

    Take care,
    Mark

    There is a solution...

  20. That's bad. by zoloto · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While I don't condone this pedophile's actions in the spread, making or distribution of such material I believe the courts were wrong in how they defined "making porn". It's a digital copy. It's not as if who ever burns a CD/DVD "creates" the piece of work; eg. If I were to copy a disc, I certainly didn't write the code, write the UI etc. and this is what it looks like they jury and court tried to make him guilty of.

    I'm all for riding the demand and material of such child pornography in every possibly way (obviously not conflicting with law or human rights (ie: torture)) but from what it looks like, the jury went too far by taking the definition of "making" out of context / too close to the line to be of any good. There's an understanding for wanting this person to be put away for his disgusting actions, but maybe I'm wrong in my understanding of this judgement.

    1. Re:That's bad. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you're pretty much right. The charge was stupid, the ruling was stupid, and the worst part is that because of the prosecutor's hardon for fucking over pedophiles instead of doing things right, the guy will probably get the case overturned and walk in the end. He should have just stuck with the actual crime that the guy performed, and let the whole vigilante aspect of being friendless, jobless, familyless and having to live the rest of his life with a big sign saying "hey rednecks, come shoot me!" in his yard take care of the rest.

    2. Re:That's bad. by nacturation · · Score: 1

      "I'm all for riding the demand and material of such child pornography in every possibly way..."

      Uh, I think you mean "ridding" -- your spelling conveys an entirely different meaning!

      --
      Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.
    3. Re:That's bad. by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      What jury??? The case has not even been tried yet! All these appeals are about is whether or not the prosecution can charge the guy with making kiddie porn!

  21. downloading child pornography by wzeallor · · Score: 1

    just to be clear: downloading child pornography is not pedophilia.

    1. Re:downloading child pornography by blackholepcs · · Score: 1

      The word comes from the Greek paidophilia ()--pais (, "child") and philia (, "love, friendship").

      The term paedophilia erotica was coined in 1896 by the Vienna psychiatrist Richard von Krafft-Ebing in his writing Psychopathia Sexualis. He gives the following characteristics:

      the sexual interest is toward children, either prepubescent or at the beginning of puberty
      the sexual interest is the primary one, that is, exclusively or mainly toward children
      the sexual interest remains over time


      Taken from Wikipedia
      Parent is wrong. Downloading kiddy porn IS pedophelia, as the point of downloading it is sexual interest. You can't tell me that you download Jenna Haze facial vids for the artistic value.

      --
      Halitosis - (n.) Halle Berry's Camel Toe.
    2. Re:downloading child pornography by RubberDuckie · · Score: 1

      From Dictionary.com:

          pedophilia: n. The act or fantasy on the part of an adult of engaging in sexual activity with a child or children.

      Sounds like pedophilila to me.

    3. Re:downloading child pornography by wzeallor · · Score: 1

      Diagnostic criteria for 302.2 Pedophilia A Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent, intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual urges, or behaviors involving sexual activity with a prepubescent child or children (generally age 13 years or younger). B The person has acted on these sexual urges, or the sexual urges or fantasies cause marked distress or interpersonal difficulty. C The person is at least 16 years and at least 5 years older than the child or children in A. Note: Do not include an individual in late adolescence involved in an ongoing sexual relationship with a 12- or 13-year-old. Thank goodness we don't use Webster's to diagnose. Unfortunately, the same can't be said about legal judgements and /. posts.

    4. Re:downloading child pornography by BoneFlower · · Score: 2, Interesting

      http://www.misleadinglinktochildporn.com/

      Now, if that link was in fact a real link, and you clicked on it thinking it was, say, legal pornography, and only realize the truth after your browser has displayed the pictures- is that pedophilia? In this scenario you have definitely downloaded child porn.

      Or you go on a usenet porn group and just download everything. Probably a fair chance that a few of the pics are underage. Again, you've downloaded child porn.

      Maybe you donwload a few vids of the next Traci Lords... bingo, child porn.

      You may be researching the issue in general, and land yourself in a legal pickle of child porn- this has apparently happened to a few people.

      You might be browsing MySpace, and check out some hot girls... hot 16 and 17 year olds. Some of those pictures are very borderline and I could easily see a judge declaring them pornographic, especially in Republimerica. Given the rampant age inflation to avoid being kicked off the site, you may not even know, if the real age is mentioned at all it might be in bright yellow on bright white, or obscured by background images.

      While willfully downloading child porn would be pedophilia in almost all cases, there are *many* scenarios where someone downloading it would not be pedophilia.

    5. Re:downloading child pornography by stwrtpj · · Score: 1
      Maybe you donwload a few vids of the next Traci Lords... bingo, child porn.

      I thought I read somewhere that Traci Lords lied about her age when she first started doing porn movies, so there are some flicks with her in them when she was only 16. If this is not an urban legend, one wonders if those original videos are now classified as child porn.

      --
      Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
    6. Re:downloading child pornography by Winlin · · Score: 1

      She was closer to 14 or 15 I think, and all but her very last adult film were made while she was underage. Her last one was filmed just after she had turned legal, so it's the only legal one ( in the U.S. anyway) that you can find.
            According to wikipedia, the government was going to prosecute lots of industry figures over the Lords case, but it turned out that her fake ID was a U.S. passport in the name of Traci Lords. So it was the government that had accepted the false document, not the nasty evil porn folks.

  22. I fail to see the logic.... by ShyGuy91284 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Technically, it's just a strage medium. A CD or DVD is no different then a hardrive in the basic function (other then technical limitations on size, rewritability, and speed). So shouldn't just downloading it to a hardrive be considered making a copy of it by this logic, since the data is "made" on the hardrive? If the downloaded it onto a Tape drive, USB drive, or portable hardrive, would it still count as making a copy? What if he ripped the hardrive he downloaded it to out of his computer? Would that then turn into making a copy? I don't accept. What he did was terrible, but from a overall perspective, this sounds like the kind of loophole that could be taken advantage of in situations where what the person did wasn't really that bad. I find it hard to believe this was done. It seems like such a common-sense loophole that it would have been patched up long ago.

    --
    In undeveloped countries, the consumer controls the market. In capitalist America, the market controls you.
    1. Re:I fail to see the logic.... by TropicalCoder · · Score: 0

      I think this is a case where the judge has used his perogative to draw a line. Look - it's like - where do you draw the line between trafficing and simply using drugs? A judge can decide whether the quantity a suspect is caught with is consistent with personal use, or more indicative of trafficing, irrespective of the actual reality - something we usually never actually know in any given case.

      I submit that the act of buring a CD or DVD is different than just copying to the hard drive - or just being in the browser's cache - because once burned, that CD or DVD can be physically transported and sold to another consumer. This may be the judge's opinion, anyway. Certainly, the article does not inform us of the judge's personal rationalization for his ruling - which was most likely well within his perogative to decide.

    2. Re:I fail to see the logic.... by onemorechip · · Score: 1

      So if a user keeps his browser cache on a DVD-RAM, that also qualifies as manufacturing? It's rulings like this that muddy the waters. Surely the law is not such a fuzzy thing?

      --
      But, I wanted socialized health insurance!
    3. Re:I fail to see the logic.... by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      So shouldn't just downloading it to a hardrive be considered making a copy of it Of course. Before you downloaded, there was no copy of the file on your hard drive; after downloading, there is a copy of the file on your hard drive. What if he ripped the hardrive he downloaded it to out of his computer? Would that then turn into making a copy? No. You simply moved the same file from inside of your computer to outside of it. Do you make a copy of a magazine when you move it from a shelf to a table?

  23. Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Firethorn · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is a somewhat scary decision, as much as I like the nailing Pedophile's balls to walls. For example, that case in Vermont that made the news about the judge giving the guy 60 days, I'd have given him 40 years.

    As for point three, I believe that that the law, at least about totally generated art, was struck down. It doesn't matter about the 'computer', it's the whole no minors being involved.

    Then again, there's the whole 'looking at it on a screen might intice you into doing it for real' thing.

    Of course, being at work, I'm not exactly going to search wide and far for it.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  24. Replying to Your 'three points'. by sglider · · Score: 4, Insightful
    No children are harmed by such an act.
    If you ignore the fact that mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn, adding 'fuel' to their proverbial 'fire'.
    COPYING child porn is not the same as CREATING NEW child porn.
    I agree with this statement; I'm not sure which hole they pulled this verdict from, but it can't stand on that premise.
    It is only illegal to act on it.
    Does encouraging an act count? By people downloading Child porn, does it give those that hurt the children more means to make child porn? I'm not trying to make a point with this question, I'm actually asking that question.
    Many of today's sex-related laws are based on some twisted idea of morality, and nothing more.
    I disagree with the 'nothing more' part; Also the 'twisted' part. It's far to say that the majority of people find the act of murder repugnant, so there's a law against it (not to mention the detrimental effect it has on a society). Also with Child pornography. The act itself screams, "this is wrong", and the majority of people agree with that, so there's a law against it. Keep in mind I only speak of social law, as opposed to economic law, where those with the most money make the rules.
    --
    War isn't about who's right. It's about who's left.
    1. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Does encouraging an act count?

      Ask the RIAA what they're encouraged to do when people download their music.

      Aside from that, I have to wonder how much child porn is just sitting out there on p2p networks and such where whoever made it has no clue if anyone's downloading it and will probably continue to abuse children either way.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    2. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      I did not RTFA -- If he was MASS PRODUCING, that is very different than making personal copies. Similarly, I do agree that giving money to those producing such pornography should be illegal. I was under the impression he was being jailed for copying pornography for personal use, and they used this to lock him up for longer than he would've been otherwise. If he was NOT mass producing, the burning should be of no consequence.

      Forgive me for posting without reading, but when I see a phrase like "scumbag pedophile", I get rather pissed off.

    3. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      By people downloading Child porn, does it give those that hurt the children more means to make child porn? I'm not trying to make a point with this question, I'm actually asking that question.
      I can't see how it would, considering that the pornographer doesn't profit from it. Buying child porn would, certainly, but not downloading it off P2P.
      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    4. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by bani · · Score: 1

      If you ignore the fact that mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn, adding 'fuel' to their proverbial 'fire'.

      Which is exactly the same reasoning used by jack thompson in his argument against violent video games.

      Are you *SURE* you want to go down this road? Think hard.

    5. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by IAAP · · Score: 1
      If you ignore the fact that mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn, adding 'fuel' to their proverbial 'fire'.

      Where did you get that from?

      There's plenty of "deviant behavior" porn out there ("shit eating", "golden showers", "screwing very old people", and much more), but it has never fueled interest in me. I've seen some of it and was completely grossed out over it. There could be child porn legally available, and I would never be interested in it - no matter how much is out there.

      Those folks who are into the child porn need help.

    6. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by mrmeval · · Score: 1

      You make a resond argument to evil. It won't effect them but is good for those readin.

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    7. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Joe+Decker · · Score: 1
      If you ignore the fact that mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn

      Does it? (I know that sounds rude, but I'm serious, do you have any basis for that belief?)

    8. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by ichthus · · Score: 1

      when I see a phrase like "scumbag pedophile", I get rather pissed off.

      And, when I see someone rallying to the defense of pedophiles, I get rather pissed off.

      I was under the impression he was being jailed for copying pornography for personal use, and they used this to lock him up for longer than he would've been otherwise.

      Any excuse, legal loophole or technicality used to extend the incarceration of pedophiles is well-used. And, this is regardless of whether they produce, or just [simply?] watch.

      --
      sig: sauer
    9. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by renoX · · Score: 1

      >Does encouraging an act count?

      That's a slippery slope: do making violent movies/games encourage murder? Does distributing documentary of murders encourage murders?

      Somehow, this looks like double standard to me..
      I really don't think that you should be indicted for burning CDs, it's all pixels in the end..
      Well, except of course if the guy has given money to access the website, *that* is a serious crime, wanking off in front of pixels whatever those pixels represent is not.

    10. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      Life for someone convicted of any act people decide can be called 'pedophelia'. I think you might be surprised at the world you'd create.

    11. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      You're not acting rationally. I am personally attracted to asian girls. Am I a scumbag because of that? No. Someone might be attracted to 15 year old girls. Are they a scumbag? No. Does my attraction to such girls mean I will rape them one day? Certainly not. Neither does his.

    12. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by ichthus · · Score: 1

      Oh, the slippery slope argument. Classic. You're approach can be used to decriminalize ANY type of behavior. I loathe to think of the world _you'd_ create.

      --
      sig: sauer
    13. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by kelleher · · Score: 1
      I did not RTFA -- If he was MASS PRODUCING, that is very different than making personal copies. Similarly, I do agree that giving money to those producing such pornography should be illegal. I was under the impression he was being jailed for copying pornography for personal use, and they used this to lock him up for longer than he would've been otherwise. If he was NOT mass producing, the burning should be of no consequence.
      I don't care whether he was mass producing, making copies for himself, or just watching them on his computer while jerking off. I want his balls on a plate.

      Now, before you dismiss me as some right-wing nut case, I should tell you that I'm considered very (perhaps too) liberal by my friends - pro-choice, oppose the death penalty (believe our judicial system is too prone to mistakes), support many social programs, believe same sex marriage should be legal, etc. However, I'm a human animal with a daughter and the thought of pedophiles triggers an instinct to kill in me. It's that simple. No rational argument will change it - kill the fucker.

      Forgive me for posting without reading, but when I see a phrase like "scumbag pedophile", I get rather pissed off.
      Me too - I'm friends with plenty of scumbags and none of them deserve to be compared with pedophiles.
    14. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      If you ignore the fact that mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn, adding 'fuel' to their proverbial 'fire'.

      False analogy, non sequitur: It is unproven that consumption of child pornography causes one to desire it more.

      Indeed, "using" pornography produces an immediate decrease in that desire. Over the long term it could increase, decrease, or stay constant, but whichever occurs, and if that is caused by the action taken or if it would have done such anyway, is uncertain.

      Child pornography laws are aimed at preventing the exploitation of children. The viewing of children as an object of sexual attraction, while greatly distasteful to us and 99% of the rest of the world, is not illegal.

    15. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by cetialphav · · Score: 1

      Why not go down that road? There is a big difference here. Child porn is illegal in and of itself; violent video games are not. So, mass producing violent video games fuels the interest for more violent video games. That doesn't sound so bad unless you believe that violent video games are immoral in and of themselves.

      What Jack Thompson argues is that violent video games fuels the interest for more violence, but that is completely different from the child porn argument. There is no need to prove that the possession of child porn leads to people harming children because mere possession is illegal.

    16. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by ichthus · · Score: 1

      You're arguing ridiculously. Nobody is going to convict you of being attacted to Asian girls. But, if you're getting off on porno video of 8-year-olds, I hope you're found and prosecuted. At what age to we draw the line (for all you slippery-slope crybabies)? Who is to say? But, it's liberals like you that will continally push to drop the "age of consent."

      --
      sig: sauer
    17. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by bnenning · · Score: 1

      Which is exactly the same reasoning used by jack thompson in his argument against violent video games.

      Not really. Thompson's argument is that violent video games will make the consumer more likely to commit violent acts. The kiddie porn argument is that downloading it will encourage the *producer* to continue or increase production, abusing more children in the process.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    18. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Mr2001 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      By people downloading Child porn, does it give those that hurt the children more means to make child porn? I'm not trying to make a point with this question, I'm actually asking that question.

      If you're seriously looking for an answer, then here it is:

      No.

      I'm willing to bet that the vast majority of all child porn on the internet is made available for free. It is, after all, highly illegal, and pursued a lot more vigorously than warez and other illegal data sharing. If the people who distribute it wanted to collect money for it, that would mean setting up a payment scheme, which would make it a lot easier to track them down and arrest them.

      Therefore, the people who are only interested in distributing child porn for money will do it offline, where they can know exactly who they're dealing with to minimize their risk of being arrested. The people who are interested in sharing child porn with other pedophiles online will do it as anonymously as possible, which makes it difficult or impossible to charge for it.

      I'll also answer a question you didn't ask, but which is implied as part of that one: Not all child pornography hurts children. Remember, the legal age limit for appearing in porn is 18 (AFAIK), even though in most states and countries, teenagers can legally consent to sex at age 16 or earlier. A video recording of teenagers having consensual sex would be considered child porn, even though the participants aren't children and haven't been forced into anything. The court decision explains that at least some of the illegal pictures in question were of teenagers (but who knows how willing they were to be photographed).

      ["Many of today's sex-related laws are based on some twisted idea of morality, and nothing more."]

      I disagree with the 'nothing more' part; Also the 'twisted' part. It's far to say that the majority of people find the act of murder repugnant, so there's a law against it


      If that were the only reason to outlaw murder, it wouldn't be a valid one. Luckily, there are perfectly good reasons to outlaw murder that don't boil down to "we think it's icky", such as respect for the victim's right to life or his right not to be attacked.

      If you polled a group of random Americans, depending on which part of the country you pulled them from, you might find that a majority of them found homosexuality or Islam repugnant, but again, that wouldn't be a valid reason to outlaw homosexuality or Islam. In a civilized society, you have to be tolerant of your fellow man, even if what they're doing makes you uneasy - unless they're actually harming someone.

      Forcing children to perform sex acts is harmful. But recording teenagers having consensual sex (with their permission) is not harmful, and neither is downloading a file or burning it to a CD-R.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    19. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Correction: you're attracted to young Asian girls:
      http://johnnowak.com/temp/yuko_ogura_p1713.jpg

    20. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn, adding 'fuel' to their proverbial 'fire'


      Can you point to some evidence that backs up that assertion?

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    21. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by cetialphav · · Score: 1

      He was not indicted for burning a CD. He clearly possessed child porn so he would already be charged on that count. Now the law says that "making" child porn has a higher penalty (make perfect sense). The court had to determine if this counts as "making". The law does not define what constitutes "making". The law also does not have any provision for intent to distribute, so it really does not matter if he makes one copy or 500 copies.

      It seems to me that he made a collection of child porn on each CD-R. If I select different pieces of music together and burn a CD, I think that would qualify as making a collection (or compilation). (Note that it does not matter whether I may have violated copyright in doing so; it is still something new.)

      In fact, the legislature could have provided an exception to "making" by exempting copying for their own personal use. This has been done in other instances, but it was not done here. It seems like the court ruled pretty reasonably to me. I can see where the defendant may have been surprised, but too bad. He should have checked with a lawyer before making the copies.

      Assuming the guy gets convicted, the sentence will almost certainly not be 20 years. A judge will look at the facts and give an appropriate sentence. The law provides for up to 20 years, but it is not mandatory.

    22. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

      You aren't?

    23. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by mushroom+blue · · Score: 1

      well, then. how about a specific example.
      you see, up until a few years ago, homosexuality was considered "crimes against humanity". if you were caught having gay sex, not only were you incarcerated, but you were now a registered sex offender. What is a crime against humanity, you ask? well, according to Texas law (and all but 10 other states), it is the act of performing anal sex, oral sex, or sex with an animal.

      now you know why all religious talking heads always equate homosexuality with bestiality. anyway, now that homosexuality is tolerated (due to a supreme court ruling), all the laws needed to be changed.

      the point? our laws are based on morals. morals change. laws will change with them. in the 14th century, Colombus brought many young girls (13 and young was the preference) back to spain and portugal from his conquests, to be sold to the wealthy. not only was it socially accepted, but it was a lucrative side-business. now, I don't condone such an activity - slavery or pedophilia - but I do realize that it is a social no-no, and the law was crafted around this type of thinking. the law might not change in our lifetimes, but individual rights should not be trampled because of it.

      no matter what laws are passed, or what social taboos are in place, people will still download child pornography. it is near-impossible to prosecute the photographers, as even finding them is difficult. instead, the government prosecutes the end of the chain. the sad thing is how truly ineffective this is even compared to the failing war on drugs, as at least they catch a fair number of dealers and middlemen. you may hear about a child pornography ring busted, but they're very few and far between. and judging from the glut of files being offered on file sharing networks (bittorrent being an interesting exception), it isn't even making a dent.

      this is not to say that I advocate people having sex with minors. that is a violation of an individual's rights. and even if there is consent, the law has appropriate punishments for most cases. that said, this law prevents an indulgence in fantasy. the supreme court rightly ruled that virtual child pornography (drawings, comics, hentai, 3D renderings) is protected under the first amendment. so we can fantasize about it when it's still pretend, but bring any element of realism into it, and it suddenly becomes illegal. very interesting conundrum there.

    24. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by TheSkyIsPurple · · Score: 1

      There are many people who do things simply for the recognition and adoration... some will create more so there is more to trade and collect...

      There is more to motivating action then money. (or why would any FOSS exist?)

    25. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Mad_Rain · · Score: 1

      Can you point to some evidence that backs up that assertion?

      Absolutely. Searching scholar.google.com can get you some interesting research. Here's a start. While it is a small sample size for this study, other researchers have also found with various sample sizes that it's not uncommon for people viewing, masturbating to, and producing child pornography to have it "normalized" by their fellow pedophiles. Once they consider it "normal," they're more likely to commit further sex crimes against children.

      --
      "What do you think?" "I think 'What, do you think?!'"
    26. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by TheSkyIsPurple · · Score: 1

      I thought this was one of the reasons that FOSS was becoming more popular?
      If a person has never seen it before sees some and likes it, there is a good chance they will look for more.

      Doesn't seem that hard of a link to me...

      I found out about FOSS along time ago... now whenever I have a need for some software, I look for FOSS that can handle it. when bored, I'll even just look around at random FOSS and see what's out there. And, having the equipment, and having inspirations that were not being covered by existing FOSS at times, I've created my own for my private usage/collection. After doing that for a bit, and seeing more FOSS out there... I decided to start distributions some of my own creations.

      Substitute child porn for FOSS, and the logic doesn't change.

    27. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by koreaman · · Score: 1

      You critize him for that, while missing the huge Saaya Irie collection?
      If you're going to do ad hominem arguments at least do them well.

    28. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Mad_Rain · · Score: 1

      It is unproven that consumption of child pornography causes one to desire it more.

      I just replied to another post requesting similar information, over here. Consumption of child pornography seems to normalize the behavior, and is reinforced by the pedophile community on the Internet. When viewing and masturbating to that material becomes "normal," the threshold for committing child sex abuse is lowered, and the likelihood of someone acting on that increases.

      --
      "What do you think?" "I think 'What, do you think?!'"
    29. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      Forgive me for posting without reading, but when I see a phrase like "scumbag pedophile", I get rather pissed off -------------- yes its an insult to the "honest and upright" scumbags

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    30. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Yartrebo · · Score: 1

      The RIAA wouldn't agree with you. Devaluing child porn by making bootleg copies is going to diminish any financial incentives to make more, since producers' have a harder time selling their for-profit copies.

      Just look at drugs. If marajuana was $15/ton wholesale and $75/ton retail, then it wouldn't attract all the criminal elements into distribution and dealing.

      Profit is a great incentive to commit illegal acts.

    31. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yes really. you havent read any of thompson's diatribes have you.

    32. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "How to do girls"... wow! You watch videos on how to "do" girls?

      http://johnnowak.com/temp/sighting/Picture%208.png

    33. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you ignore the fact that mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn, adding 'fuel' to their proverbial 'fire'.
      Another theory is that suppressing porn is one of the major fuels to its fire. The easiest argument for this case is to think about living in a nudist colony. If everyone you saw all day was naked, you'd quickly adapt, and seeing naked people would no longer be exciting. [Insert joke about old, saggy people here.] Plus, the social stigma that porn and masturbation are "naughty" things that should be hidden away adds to its consumption the thrill of doing something you're not supposed to. So, in a twisted way, the values that seem to attack the porn industry on the surface may, under the surface, be the very ones that bolster it! This isn't necessarily to say that all child porn should be legalized, but consider this: Lots of little girls like playing dress-up. They love getting attention. Suppose a photographer takes pictures of a little girl while she does this. At some points, she's nude. At all points, she's enjoying herself. The photographer never touches her. He sells the photos and the little girl (and her family) get a cut of the money. Where's the harm?
      Does encouraging an act count? By people downloading Child porn, does it give those that hurt the children more means to make child porn? I'm not trying to make a point with this question, I'm actually asking that question.
      I'd say they already have the means. If you mean "the incentive to keep doing it," then yes, obviously. The problem is in the definition of "harm." Is taking pictures of clothed children, some of whom may occasionally have their legs spread at a greater than 10 degree angle, really harmful to them? That's the trouble: we're facing a kind of "reverse slippery slope" where people so afraid of truly harmful child porn are willing to lump in stuff that's arguably not even porn--like pictures of clothed children, or computer graphics that were never real children to begin with--because, OMG, it's just a "few" steps from looking at clothed children to kidnaping and raping them, and, OMG, if we can save just one kid from a sicko, all the stupid laws in the world were worth it!
      I disagree with the 'nothing more' part; Also the 'twisted' part. It's far to say that the majority of people find the act of murder repugnant, so there's a law against it (not to mention the detrimental effect it has on a society). Also with Child pornography. The act itself screams, "this is wrong", and the majority of people agree with that, so there's a law against it. Keep in mind I only speak of social law, as opposed to economic law, where those with the most money make the rules.
      A better reason murder is universally outlawed is: a society that allows its own citizens to murder each other at whim cannot sustain itself--eventually, there'll be no one left. The case against child porn is much foggier. In fact, many countries just a few decades ago were quite lax in their child porn laws and enforcement. ISTR reading that some forms were even legal in Japan until fairly recently. It's mainly due to pressure from the West that they've changed their stance.
    34. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love circular logic. And so do you.

    35. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by MilenCent · · Score: 2, Informative

      Consumption of child pornography seems to normalize the behavior, and is reinforced by the pedophile community on the Internet.

      Being in a reinforcing community isn't illegal, and isn't the original issue raised.

      Normalizing doesn't "fuel" consumption of porn, it would simply break down a cultural taboo in the consumer's mind. That doesn't provide impetitus, it just loosens a restriction.

      And, that can work both ways. You can be disgusted with porn enough so that it drives you away from it, just as anyone who has ever been caught unawares by goatse will never think of the human colon in a friendly manner ever again.

    36. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      I'm not advocating decriminalization. I'm advocating the punishment fitting the crime.

    37. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by SmellMyTeenSpirit · · Score: 1

      "If you ignore the fact that mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn, adding 'fuel' to their proverbial 'fire'."

      My problem is the vague and (it seems to me) primarily rhetorical nature of their "adding fuel to their proverbial fire." The existence of child pornography is not the problem, it's the creation of child pornography: if no more child pornography were ever created, how could anyone argue that looking at the existing pictures was wrong? And, since your fire is proverbial, I guess that means that there is no burdern of proof, that you do not have to demonstrate the relationship between the act of viewing child pornography and the exploitive acts of creating it.

      So what if we changed tactics. What if instead of simply trying to violently change the nature of a group of human beings who happen to have what we consider to be deviant sexualities, what if we instead tried to nurture that sexuality and help the person create relationships that satisfy their needs without literally exploiting any children?

      What if there was a large, government overseen child pornography library that people could get access to provided that they agree to also go in for counseling? What if it was a physical library? What if it was a child porn rehab center? Also, and I'm just going to throw this out here and then dive for cover, when has anyone ever proved that there is something inherently and morally wrong with children and adults engaging in sexual activity? Who's to say that it isn't possible to have a healthy, nurturing sexual relationship between people just because one of the people is less developed? No one says that children can't have friendships, or intellectual relationships. No one claims that ten year olds lack the capacity to enter into student/teacher relationships? And, if they are at a disatvantage because of their inexperience, I could simply reply that they're only inexperienced because everyone is making it hard for them to get experience.

      I would much, much rather people acknowledge that they have sexual feelings toward children, and then come together in a productive, and most importantly, SOCIAL series of interactions that do not -have- to involve anyone exploiting anyone else. Obviously, these interactions must be supervised. Then again, in my book almost everyone needs to have some sort of supervison and moral accountability (that's one of the inevitable results of existing in a social context).

      I'm not saying that my specific "library of kiddie porn-ia" idea is any good, but my point is this: when we only allow ourselves to think negatively, we commit ourselves to acting based on negative thoughts and premises. How then could we hope to be productive? Maybe sometimes we'll happen to pick a usefully negative approach, but more often we will simply detract, destroy and negate. Instead of attacking people who want to have sex with children, why don't we help them? Instead of getting into a taboo-triggered knee-jerk moral hissy fit, why don't we try to understand one another and treat each other with compassion and respect.

      Oh, right. I remember now. Because this is America.

      I am endlessly apalled by the blatant and definitively American habbit of treating understanding and empathy as empty gestures that the liberal or the weak of faith and morals stupidly insist on wasting everyone's time with.

      And there's an even bigger issue here:

      What are the implications of a society being obsessed with justice but sconful of mercy?

      It makes me shudder.

      --
      "Cornflakes are not the innocent critters they seem"- Sterling Morrison
    38. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Random+Musing · · Score: 5, Interesting

      However, I'm a human animal with a daughter and the thought of pedophiles triggers an instinct to kill in me. It's that simple. No rational argument will change it - kill the fucker.

      Your protectiveness is understandable and admirable. And while I won't attempt to sway your opinion with a cogent argument (because, as you admit, it will do no good), I will at least attempt to make a point.

      I am a convicted sex offender. In my late teens, I did some things with a 12-year-old that were unspeakably stupid. This behavior worked went unchecked for several years, and developed into attitudes, that in turn developed into further behaviors with another young girl. I convinced myself that so long as I had their consent, it couldn't be hurtful. I held this belief very strongly.

      My stupidity caught up with me soon enough, and I was arrested. The arrest was a turning point of my life. It sent me a message that I wouldn't have otherwise gotten from logical arguments. In that way, I can certainly relate to you when you say that no rational argument will change your opinion (which is to "kill the fuckers"). There was no trial. I plead no contest. Although I could likely have avoided jail for various legal reasons, it would have meant pleading not guilty and effectively calling the children and their families liars. It would have meant putting them on the stand. Jail was far more preferable to me, even though I was terrified of it.

      When I was released from prison I sought conselling. My fundamental attitude had already been changed by then: it didn't take much time after my arrest (but long before my conviction) to understand and believe that any sexual encounter with children is devastatingly hurtful -- and not just to the girls themselves, but also to their families, and to my own family as well. Counselling helped me to understand the psychology behind pedophilia, and how to manage it.

      And it is perfectly manageable. What decision do I have? Hurt kids, or don't hurt kids. It's not even a question that requires considering. You hear about convicted sex offenders whose defense seems to be "I couldn't help myself." Ludicrous! They made a choice. I made a choice. I paid for it, I dealt with it, and now it's in my past. Still, I constantly worry about how the girls and their families turned out. As I should, in some respects.

      Now, you would have me killed. (There was a time when I'd have obliged you, but those times are past.) Perhaps you would like to see a law passed that imposes mandatory death penalty on all sex offenders where children are involved. Even if this would solve a problem, is it feasible? Can society actually do this? Would this even happen?

      No.

      So what instead happens is that a large portion of the population carries the sort of rage and hate that you have, without understanding the nature of the crime and the psychology of the offender. What's very well known, however, is that high degrees of stress and concern increases the likely hood of recidivism. That is to say, the more people call us scum, wish us dead, insist we are hopeless, the greater the chance of relapse. This is true of any offender, incidentally.

      I think there probably are those who are pretty much hopeless. But there are a large degree of those who are definitely not. It is a perfectly manageable problem. All I want is to live a normal life, within reasonable constraints. That is to say, I certainly don't expect I should be allowed to work at a daycare center, or teach in schools. If you knew about my past and you weren't concerned about me being around your children, I would be concerned about you. What I would like is for people to judge me for who I am now, not what ugliness exists in my past.

      I owe a debt to the people I have hurt to live my life with honor and integrity, and when people at large insist that I am a worthless pariah and should be executed, there is a danger that I start to believe it. An

    39. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by typical · · Score: 1

      If you ignore the fact that mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn, adding 'fuel' to their proverbial 'fire'.

      That's quite a claim. Can you support it?

      Does this apply to only child porn, or also to adult porn?

      If it applies to both, does it apply to other things too, and if not, why?

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    40. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1
      Any excuse, legal loophole or technicality used to extend the incarceration of pedophiles is well-used.

      I'm glad you're not in charge. If you want tougher laws, well, then make tougher laws. But don't pull legal sleight-of-hand to "do what's right."

    41. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by HairyCanary · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Let's see. The person you replied to is arguing ridiculously. And yet you're the one that brought up the magic "liberal" catch phrase. Perhaps you should go find any evidence at all that liberals do want the age of consent dropped. Guess what, you won't find it. Please quit making shit up.

      Back on topic. If you get off watching porno of 8-year olds.... more power to you -- PROVIDED you didn't pay for that video, directly or not. You err by making the criminal act the viewing of the porn. If we were all punished for our fantasies, then the whole world would be in jail ... starting with the most vocal of the moral right, no doubt. The criminal act in fact is the exploitation of children, or anything that contributes to it. Downloading, watching, etc ... if it doesn't provide any gain to the producer of the video, that is a matter between you and your God. If you paid for it, then you have become part of the cycle, and I agree that you should be punished.

      And everyone needs to simmer down and quit letting their emotions make their decisions for them -- the problem with this issue is what legal precedent it sets. Whether or not you think all pedophiles should burn in hell is not relevant, you should stop to consider whether this ruling might affect the way other laws are applied, and you may be the target.

    42. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by tech_guru5182 · · Score: 1

      The problem is how this extention is likely to be used to support rulings based on similar laws about other types of materials, not that he wasn't in the wrong for having the images on his computer, but that he intentionally placed them on another media. If you were to extend this, I can see it as a way the RIAA could prosecute people for ripping CDs, and placing a copy of the resulting file on their MP3 players.

      --
      BAN BPL! Keep the radio spectrum free fro
    43. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by sglider · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was replying in an economic sense. Does consuming something create a 'need' for it economically? the Laws of economics agree. If a man buys child porn, then there is a market for such things (the 'fuel'), and the producers will continue to produce. That is the 'fire'.

      --
      War isn't about who's right. It's about who's left.
    44. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Retief-CDT · · Score: 0

      Dude in all honesty you need counseling. Your post indicates an ambivalence to why we as adults protect children. Do you honestly believe child porn is freely commited on the childs part? Ultimatly these acts are caused by Socialpaths who have problems with understanding that other people exsist outside themselves.
      There are many places that will provide help. Find one before you act on an impulse that can't be undone.

      --
      Matt's addition to Occam's Razor:"The most simple answer is preferred by those that are simple."
    45. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by 4D6963 · · Score: 1
      "If you ignore the fact that mass producing of Child porn only fuels the interest for more child porn, adding 'fuel' to their proverbial 'fire'."

      I don't know. You're basically saying that more child porn makes "them" want more child porn. Maybe, idk. But if there was less porn, would I want more porn than I do now or less? I think I'd want more. And as long as I'll have all of the testosterone I have, I'll always want porn, no matter whether I got TB's of it or KB's. I guess it goes the same way for those into child porn.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    46. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Mad_Rain · · Score: 1

      Normalizing doesn't "fuel" consumption of porn, it would simply break down a cultural taboo in the consumer's mind. That doesn't provide impetitus, it just loosens a restriction.

      Is that cultural taboo/restriction on child pornography really something that you want loosened at all then?

      The original issue was that viewing and masturbating to (child) pornography leads to further viewing of pornography, and/or (child) sexual abuse. I do not know whether "only looking" provides an initial impetus, but it certainly perpetuates desires and results in an increase in both "looking" and "contact" behaviors.

      Google Cache of an article "But I Was Only Looking..." by McCarthy and Gaunt. The orginal .pdf can be found here.

      --
      "What do you think?" "I think 'What, do you think?!'"
    47. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by chasisaac · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Thank you for your openess and blutness. I think your post should be a reality check for all.

      --
      -- A computer without Windoze is like a choclate cake without mustard
    48. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by barefootgenius · · Score: 1

      You have my sympathy. Nothing can excuse what you did to the girls. You will have to live with the guilt for the whole of your life, but I hope you come to manage it. Not many people I have met have recovered from sexual abuse. I do know two people who have come to terms with it and live happily although it took years. This would be my wish for the girls, and from the sound of it yours as well. Best wishes for your future.

      --
      /. bug #926803 - Why I can post.
    49. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by SirChive · · Score: 1

      "What are the implications of a society being obsessed with justice but sconful of mercy?"

      Look around America. Look around the world at the actions of America. There's the answer to your question.

      There's a Buddhist saying "It's better to be kind than to be right". I've never found a single American who understands or agrees.

      When I mention this concept, usually in the context of trying to get somebody to let go of a petty grievence, the answer is invariably "that's dumb - how can something be more important than who's right?"

    50. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Is that cultural taboo/restriction on child pornography really something that you want loosened at all then?

      (This is the kind of question by which debators are measured. Let's see if I'm up to it....)

      Yes, if retaining it means the kinds of idiot, draconian, internet-strangling censorship that is being promoted in its name!

      Of course I'm not for child pornography, but neither am I particularly against it. What I am against is its creation, and thus I am also against people profiting from its creation because of the economic support it would provide to it.

      But now, even simulated, computer-generated child pornography is illegal, and that's a terrible precedent. And the people who use child porn as a hot-button issue do not use the kinds of reasoned arguments we're trying to make. They use it as an emotional issue, they seek to place, in the minds of the public, a mythical gigantic child pornography ring of which they can inspire fear.

      That's the kind of culture of control, for example, that has the preachers of thousands of churches nationwide teaching their flocks about the vast conspiracy surrounding the supposed "Church of Satan." I heard about that dozens of times back at the Depressingly Christian Private High School I attended. As with many of the threats that were posed back then, once I started looking into them myself they turned out to be overblown at best, and non-existent at worst.

      Of course child pornography is bad. But just "consuming" a work that contains it won't make you a frothing-at-the-mouth pedophile, and needlessly censoring works that "contain" it when no child has been harmed causes real artistic harm -- the novel Lolita, one of the greatest modern works of English literature, recently celebrated an anniversary. Its protagonist, Humbert Humbert, was a pedophile, and not a sympathetic character, but that didn't stop people from censoring it then, and it doesn't stop people from censoring it now.

      (How'd I do?)

    51. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was replying in an economic sense. Does consuming something create a 'need' for it economically? the Laws of economics agree. If a man buys child porn, then there is a market for such things (the 'fuel'), and the producers will continue to produce. That is the 'fire'.

      But:
      1. The laws of economics break down somewhat in this area, because internet pornography doesn't involve scarcity. Copy it, and nothing is lost. One person could get a copy for almost the same cost as a hundred. One could argue that porn is one of the few types of intellectual object that is "used up" over time (eww), but that's a separate point. If you want to make it go ahead, but I hope you wash your hands afterwards.
      2. We're getting away from the issue of whether consuming this material actually encourages people to act upon it, which is what makes the "fire" damaging. And obtaining the fuel isn't damaging either, if it's computer generated.

      (Yeah, it feels weird to be defending child porn, although what I'm really defending is freedom of speech. Even so, there are probably some very interested FBI agents putting stuff into my file right about now....)

    52. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I want his balls on a plate.
      You are a sicko.
    53. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Those folks who are into the child porn need help.
      Nd are probably too terrified to get it with all the alogical sickos who want them tortured.
    54. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by TheLink · · Score: 1

      Just curious, assuming it was consensual, wouldn't the victims be rather traumatized when they are told that what they and you were doing was so very very wrong, and you were going to be punished severely for it?

      I've seen kids fall down, and it seems they don't know whether they are severely hurt or not - they look to their parents, and if their parents kick a huge fuss, then it becomes a big issue. In contrast if the parents notice but don't look fussed, they just pick themselves up and carry on merrily.

      Now, I'm not saying that one should say "it was ok" to stuff like this. But there was someone who was molested, and her parents made it clear to her that it wasn't her fault, and that the guy had something wrong with him. So in the end she grew up pretty well adjusted, no trauma. A bad memory perhaps, but not one that overshadows her life.

      I feel if the system hypes things up and treats it like some unspeakable horror, it risks making things a lot worse for the victims.

      That may be even more so, if it was consensual. They'd probably be burdened with guilt, shame, and they might feel great resentment at having such a terrible thing being done to them (perhaps also at being tricked etc). All this at an age where they are considered not old enough.

      --
    55. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You would perhaps benefit from reading "Beauty for Ashes" by Joyce Meyer.

    56. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm willing to bet that the vast majority of all child porn on the internet is made available for free. It is, after all, highly illegal, and pursued a lot more vigorously than warez and other illegal data sharing. If the people who distribute it wanted to collect money for it, that would mean setting up a payment scheme, which would make it a lot easier to track them down and arrest them.

      There are actually many many pay sites out there, they operate under the "nudity != pornography" thing on the outside, then some stick to that, others just then proceed to provide or give instructions on how to obtain clearly pornographic material.
      However, the much more popular method is "free" downloading. It's not quite free however, as it's usually done via a FTP server or IRC serve with an upload/download ratio where you can download so many bytes/files for each byte/file you upload, or some other method of qualifying you for DLs, so you have to break the law before the other person technically breaks the law. This method appeared to be surpassed by pure free downloading with the explosion in p2p, however I imagine people quickly realized how easy people were getting busted for that, combined with network filters on keywords and files making it alot more difficult to find.
      And before you go off thinking me some sick pedophile for knowing this, I should at least note that I only know this because when I was a minor I preferred to look at people my own age rather than at adults.

      And I also wanted to point out an effect no one in this discussion seems to consider: the downloading of these images for free (or even trade when not by an actual producer) actually protects children by satisfying the pedophiles desire such that he doesn't seek out actual children to molest.

    57. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Feanturi · · Score: 1

      If the people who distribute it wanted to collect money for it, that would mean setting up a payment scheme, which would make it a lot easier to track them down and arrest them.

      Yeah, that's how Pete Townsend was caught (says he was researching to understand his own abuse as a child), because evidently he had entered his credit card number to pay for access to a russian child porn site, one of many that exist to make money off of this stuff. There was a whole big sting involving many of these pay sites a couple years ago.

    58. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by anzev · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Even though I might not have anything wise to add to this discussion I'd just like to thank you for speaking out and being honest. And most of all, for not posting as an AC. It really shows you've come to terms with what you've done -- no matter how bad or good it was, and I refuse to judge! But I admire you for this.

      Perhaps you would like to see a law passed that imposes mandatory death penalty on all sex offenders where children are involved

      Speaking of such laws is stupid. Even considering them is stupid, I have to agree. Some people do deal with stuff with anger and rage which I belive is simply wrong. If everyone would stop, count to 10 (or 10^10^100), and take a deep breath and a rational argument, this world would be a better place - e.g. no war on Iraq, no terror. After all, the same thing fuels it, hate and anger towards difference.

      If someone is different, most people say: "Hey, let's burn him!". However bad and digsusting to my personal taste pedophilia may be, I think that it does not excuse the broadnes of the laws passed by this verdict. Ok, so children are involved, but, it's really a matter of personal taste -- some people like mature women/men. Yes, I know, they have the ability to discern between good and bad, wrong or right, etc. and children don't. Personally I think possesion and viewing (or burning for that matter) should not be illegal, but making pedophile material should be.

      If rational arguments were chosen and thought put into this matter it would easly be observable that by stoping the production, one can stop the possesion, but not the other way around. Because If he or she is already making it, there's a good chance they won't stop just because nobody wants to look at them anymore. What matters is that they are having fun.

      Anyway, back to my point on difference. We judge the muslim world because they have certain habits and laws. Some people (read Bush) want to attack them because he doesn't understand that not everybody is a "west texan girl". And so on...

      Well, my point in this post would be, that everybody should think really hard before doing anything that migth end up hurting somebody (or blowing up a whole nation). This includes the judges! They are not above the law, even though they might impose it.

    59. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Random+Musing · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Just curious, assuming it was consensual, wouldn't the victims be rather traumatized when they are told that what they and you were doing was so very very wrong, and you were going to be punished severely for it?
      First of all, victims should never be told that what they did was wrong. That's ridiculous. I'm sure that, sadly, it has happened. But any child of a loving parent who gets help will never have to hear this. The blame is always put on the offender, which is where it belongs.

      Now, when the victim doesn't understand or believe that what has been happening is wrong (which was the situation in my case), then yes, that realization happens quite overwhelmingly when they learn about the arrest and punishment of the offender, it can be quite devastating.

      And this is quite exactly what happened with the most recent young girl I got mixed up with. We were very close. We loved each other, however misdirected or inappropriate or misguided that love was. When she learned that I was arrested and sent to jail, she screamed and wept bitterly. (I wasn't there, but I learned about this after in the parents' statements.) This fact continues to weigh heavily on me.

      From a certain perspective, one could argue that real damage was done by the system and society's perception of what we did being immoral, rather than what I did to her (which was always at her request). In fact, this observation led to many interesting and academic discussions with my psychologist about societal morals and its history. But these remain academic. This perspective can also be dangerous because it may begin a pattern of self-justification. For all the reasons that adult/child sexuality is deemed wrong by society today, and however they came to be, and however they may change in the future, they're completely irrelevant in the face of the unavoidable conclusion: it is hurtful and so it is wrong. Consent makes no difference here, and in fact, as you speculated, I also believe consent could make the act even more damaging.

    60. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Random+Musing · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Not many people I have met have recovered from sexual abuse. I do know two people who have come to terms with it and live happily although it took years. This would be my wish for the girls, and from the sound of it yours as well.
      One of the worst parts for me is that I may never know how they managed to cope. The only comforting fact is that the most recent girl received help early and quickly. Some day I may have a chance to talk again with the parents or with the girls themselves, if it will help them receive some closure. I do wish desperately that they turn out ok.

      Thanks for your reply of good wishes.

    61. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by ildon · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should go find any evidence at all that liberals do want the age of consent dropped. Guess what, you won't find it. Please quit making shit up.

      This belief comes from the 70's when the liberal movement picked up all the gay/lesbian/etc. organizations into the fold. At the time age of consent laws were in fact used against homosexuals in some states/cities, by making different ages of consent for homosexual activity than for heterosexual activity. Gay people wanted the age of consent lowered to be the same as the heterosexual age of consent.

      Unfortunately, pedophilic organizations such as NAMBLA attempted to attach themselves to this same movement and lower it even further (or get rid of it completely) and unfortunately at first many of the gay organizations allowed them to speak with them simply because they wanted more support. They soon figured out what was really going on and distanced themselves appropriately.

      So that's why some people still believe "liberals" want to lower the age of consent. It also doesn't help that many people calling themselves "liberal" defend "being attracted to children" and "computer generated child porn". But to claim this is a mainstream liberal belief is folly.

      Yes, I once read the entire wikipedia page on NAMBLA.

    62. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by jwdb · · Score: 1

      I would like to thank you for sharing this, and in my opinion anybody who can be this honest with themselves is a better human being than many.

      Good luck with the future and never lose that honesty - it will at least earn you respect.

      Jw

    63. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1
      Good luck with the future and never lose that honesty - it will at least earn you respect.
      Are you fucking joking? Honesty, after age 18, gets nothing but hell!

      Have you ever tried confessing to the officer, who is stopping you for a speeding violation, that yes, you have a small bag of marijuana in the glove box when he asks you if there's anything in the car which he should know about? possession.

      Have you ever tried asking the officer, who is stopping you just because they're walking the beat, that yes, you have been drinking at the pub? public intox.

      Either you're a completely ignorant rich priveleged pretty-person or you're a complete fucking moron. Law enforcement is a money-making endeavor. Honesty has jack shit to do with it.

      Note: I've tried "honesty" in both of the aforementioned situations. I'm now a fucking social outcast, even with a $100k education.
      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    64. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by screaser · · Score: 1

      > By people downloading Child porn, does it give those that hurt the > children more means to make child porn? I'm not trying to make a point > with this question, I'm actually asking that question.

      If you're seriously looking for an answer, then here it is:
      No.


      I do wonder, though, if downloading xyz (pretend it's not child porn for a second) would still provide incentive to the actual producers of xyz (just not a financial one)...

      I mean, honestly, if you produce a super spiffy free open source tool and a million people download it and love it, you feel pretty darn good and might choose to do so again if you can. The fact that we even have an open source community proves that (direct) financial gain isn't the only thing that motivates people to produce something and make it available on the internet.

      Back to child porn; if those that are actually producing it feel that there are millions of people just begging for their product, they will be more likely to try to produce more, no? Thus it seems that the "as long as you don't pay them for it" argument is flawed?

    65. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would point out that Rind et al (1998) found that there was no significant damage caused in consensual adult-child sexual relationships. But, of course, most of those cases were probably unreported.

      On the other hand, here is an interesting discussion of another study:

      https://www.annabelleigh.net/messages/187669.htm

      Essentially, it is about this study:

      Ney, Philip, Tak Fung, and Adele Wickett (1994), "The Worst Combinations of Child Abuse and Neglect," Child Abuse and Neglect, 18, 705-714.

      Although never specifically spelled out in the results, it is a curious fact that when considering every combination of physical abuse, physical neglect, verbal abuse, emotional neglect, and sexual abuse, in EVERY CASE when sexual abuse is added to one or more of the other types of abuse, the harmful effects are LESS than if sexual abuse is NOT present. Now this is not meant to suggest that if one is verbally abusive to a child one should then rape the child to mitigate the effect. Far more likely, "sexual abuse" was used to describe a lot of consensual adult-child sex, so much so that even when combined with genuine sexual abuse, the overall pattern was one of "sexual abuse" mitigating the effects of physical abuse, physical neglect, verbal abuse, and emotional neglect.

      You have acted quite nobly, Random, and clearly had the girls' best interests at heart, but unfortunately your persecutors did not, and have ended up harming at least one of those girls, possibly quite severely.

    66. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      I mean, honestly, if you produce a super spiffy free open source tool and a million people download it and love it, you feel pretty darn good and might choose to do so again if you can. [...] Back to child porn; if those that are actually producing it feel that there are millions of people just begging for their product, they will be more likely to try to produce more, no? Thus it seems that the "as long as you don't pay them for it" argument is flawed?

      Thing is, open source software has a vibrant community. When you go to a site where you can download free software, there's typically a message board or email link where you can communicate with the authors, send them a donation, submit patches, etc.

      I doubt there is such a thing with child porn - at least not in public. As I said earlier, the people who make it available online have a strong incentive to remain as anonymous as possible, which has the side effect of making it hard for them to get any feedback. If their primary method of distribution is P2P, Usenet, or Freenet, they'll have trouble even finding out how many people have downloaded what they uploaded.

      If free software discussion forums were routinely investigated and infiltrated by the FBI (or the local equivalent), who used all the information they could get to track down the authors of free software and arrest them, don't you think it'd suddenly get a lot harder for random folks to communicate with the authors, as they all went into hiding overnight? And wouldn't it simultaneously become a lot harder for those authors to know who was using their software, how much they enjoyed it, and whether they wanted to see more?

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    67. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      The fact that some people find something repugnant is not sufficient reason to make it illegal. If something is found to be actually harmful, well, then there may be cause. May, I say. Arguably, more children are harmed by alcoholic parents and secondhand smoke inhalation than by pornography, but people don't get put in jail simply for smoking or drinking in the privacy of their own home. Nor would I be jailed for selling a pack of cigarettes or a bottle of wine to a friend. By your logic, the fact that a majority of people find, say, homosexuality repugnant should be grounds for making it illegal. Others think that a woman wearing a revealing outfit is repulsive and immoral. Matter fact, virtually every aspect of human behavior will have its detractors, which is why public opinion is not relevant when deciding to pass a law against it. As the great Lazarus Long once said, "The popular will is often an idiot." Child pornography is against the law because it can be easily demonstrated that children are harmed by it, not because it disgusts most of us.

      Suppose (as will eventually happen) we can synthesize perfectly realistic imagery of children performing illicit sex acts. All done by computer, no actual children involved anywhere in the production of said porno. Would you still be in favor of putting someone away for twenty years because he was caught with some of said pictures on his hard disk? Because he burned copies to sell or give away? The mere fact that you and I find such images appalling doesn't mean that others should be punished for disagreeing with us.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    68. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? marijuana and then driving drunk? And you had the priviledge of spending $100K in education?
      By your judgement I can tell your education was a scam.

    69. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your offense did not involve physical violence (you convinced the girls to have sex with you) then, punishment along with treatment is appropriate. But when violence is used or the children are pre-pubescent, the damage to and the suffering of the victim is horrible. In these cases, death or life in prison should be one of the possible punishments, especially when it is not their 1st offense.

    70. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Random+Musing · · Score: 1
      My offense did not involve violence. The thought of using violence against a child quite literally makes me physically ill. And, believe me, I do (now) appreciate the irony.

      Also, I did not have sex (intercourse) with either girls. Clothes never came off. They never touched me. There was no coersion. Legally speaking, the offenses were on the less severe end of the scale. In reality (in terms of psychological impact), none of that matters in any useful way.

      Whether or not the child is prepubescent or whether or not there was violence is not a reliable indicator as to the psychological impact to the victim. In the absence of anything better (e.g. a crystal ball), the law uses these things to determine the seriousness of the offense and hence the severity of the punishment. But, for example, a non-violent sexual encounter between an adult and a 12-year-old can quite easily be as damaging as one with a girl half that age. There are other significant factors too, such as the stability of the home and involvement of the parents, whether or not counselling was gotten for the child, and so on.

      I think to suggest that someone deserves to die if they have a sexual encounter with a prepubescent child but if the child is pubescent then, while very bad, it's not quite as bad, rather misses the point.

    71. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by jwdb · · Score: 1

      Ok, well I personally had relationships between people in mind, not being nabbed by the cops as I'm not usually in that situation (dunno about you...). How about trying to stay on this side of the law, eh buddy?

      Jw

    72. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you don't mind telling- what did you do that was deemed jailworthy, given that it was consensual and there wasn't intercourse, nudity?

      In high school when I was in my early teens a pretty female teacher patted me on my butt a fair bit more than once, and it wasn't because it was getting in the way...

      I sure didn't mind ;). I'd be quite shocked and even outraged if she had to go to jail, or got fired for that.

      Heh, even if she kissed me, I wouldn't have minded either, but maybe that's "boys being boys"...

      That said, in my opinion, sex in general should be between lifelong partners. It makes for a more scalable and peaceful society. Many people form strong physical and emotional bonds when they have sex.

      It's a bit like welding people together prematurely and only then realizing they don't fit. Could end up with this guy I know. Though they've broken up (was definitely not a good match), he's so obviously still far from recovered.

      So such situations should be discouraged. Avoids the higher risk for heartbreaking situations.

    73. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Random+Musing · · Score: 1
      If you don't mind telling- what did you do that was deemed jailworthy, given that it was consensual and there wasn't intercourse, nudity?
      My physical sexual contact was limited to petting over clothes, with a couple instances under clothes (with their permission, always -- while in many ways meaningless, I would not have done anything otherwise). The biggest aggravating factor, which ultimately is what made the judge give me jail time, was that there was more than one victim.
      I sure didn't mind ;). I'd be quite shocked and even outraged if she had to go to jail, or got fired for that.
      I don't think she should have to go to jail either. Jail truly does change a person, and rarely for the better. Jail is a breeding ground for criminogenic thinking. In terms of sex offenses, it has time and again been shown that jail is very rarely a deterrent. I might accept that it's a suitable sentence for denunciation and for punishment for some degrees of offenses, but it's rarely a deterrent. In reality -- that is, in today's social climate -- I think it's possible your teacher definitely would have been looking at jail time. I likely would not have seen jail time if my case had been to court a 5-10 years earlier. Things are definitely changing.

      However, it is my opinion that your teacher should at a minimum have lost her job and been prevented from teaching again. Sure, you liked it, what teenaged boy wouldn't want that kind of contact from a good looking teacher! I can think of more than one teacher from my high school days that I'd not have put up much (i.e. any) resistance if they wanted to have their way with me. But a teacher is in a position of authority, and that kind of behavior is not appropriate for a student-teacher relationship. Also, that kind of behavior ("innocent" patting on the bottom) usually progresses over time to more invasive acts. It's called grooming.

    74. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      Just curious, assuming it was consensual, wouldn't the victims be rather traumatized when they are told that what they and you were doing was so very very wrong, and you were going to be punished severely for it?

      I've always wondered about this. You see documentaries of abuse victims, and one of the common things you hear is "I didn't even know it was wrong." So, wouldn't it be better in these cases to just shield the child from the whole mess and not make a big deal about it *to them* (just prosecute the guy and keep the kid as sheltered from the trial/sentencing as possible)? I think the children are often more distressed by the fallout and aftermath than the actual abuse. And they obsess over it mostly because their parents and psychologists are constantly obsessing over it.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    75. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "In reality -- that is, in today's social climate -- I think it's possible your teacher definitely would have been looking at jail time."

      To _automatically_ criminalize such behaviour seems rather wrong to me. It seems less of protecting the victim and more of some other negative emotion.

      As you've mentioned - your victim was harmed more by the thought of you going to jail. So all that talk of protecting the victim from harm seems rather hypocritical.

      I think I'd rather live/grow up in a society where I risk getting a few nonconsensual pats [1], than in a society where my teachers would automatically get jailed for even _consensual_ pats. The latter would seem to be a lot more dangerous and frightening.

      [1] Albeit pats which stop once someone says/indicates nonverbally "stop that"/"don't".

      Motive and context are always important.

      While we should teach children to not let people take liberties with them, to say "No", etc, there must be better ways of "protecting the children" than jailing people like you and traumatizing your victims.

      Even if it was consensual AND motives weren't that bad, allowing such behaviour might encourage people with bad motives.

      I suppose they could jail you and not traumatize your victims by not telling them or lying to them.

    76. Re:Replying to Your 'three points'. by mink · · Score: 1

      I believe that some people do not realize they are doing the behavior you describe or don't understand how it is affecting those around them.

      It's easy to think "Hey this person is wrong, I know the right answer and if I correct them I will be helping them not be wrong anymore". Sometimes people do this and mean well but either the recipient doesn't see it that way, or the person doing the correcting does it so poorly or with so little empathy for the other person that they do more harm then good. I've seen it get to the point where it harms every interaction between those two people, because the one who thinks they are helping does not notice that the one they "helped" is always defensive of everything they state and will now doggedly stick with any idea or wrong information. The helper is sometimes actually wondering "Why would this person want to be wrong, they should be happy I corrected them on [insert subject]."

      I had a bit of trouble trying to describe what I see in a way that I think makes sense.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  25. Re:So.....If Making Music Was Illegal by YellowTop · · Score: 1

    If making music was illegal, then the penalty should also apply to
    those who download "illegal music".

  26. This is a no brainer. by mustafap · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    > Is this simply a court's overreaction to a scumbag pedophile?

    Who cares. Let the scumbag become someones bitch in jail for the rest of his life.

    --
    Open Source Drum Kit, LPLC deve board - mjhdesigns.com
    1. Re:This is a no brainer. by shodanx · · Score: 1

      why stop there , why not let every parents who feels like it beat him up just for fun ? after all if this guy had anything to do with child pornography he becomes DE FACTO sub-human, he is stripped of all of his right and should be killed right ?

      in fact all judges should be parents because people who don't have kids don't understand the unrational fear parents have to live with and there is only relief when someone associated with the fear gets sacrified

      also if someone somewheres downloads a file that turns out to contain child pornography (who cares if he paid for it or if even knew what it was before he downloaded it, I mean if he downloaded teenblowjob.mpg on some p2p network and it turns out it's a video of a 17 year old girl giving the head to some guy then clearly the guy downloading it is "creating more interest in child pornography market" and as such he is no longer human and has no right, all that is left is to stone him without letting him have a trial of course !! it just plain common sense right ? I mean just read the comments on this story or any other story about child porn and it's pretty clear that anyone who has a kid is perfectly clear that this is how thing should be

      it's time for an old fashion pedophile-witch-hunt !!! bring on the torches !!!

  27. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

    Then again, there's the whole 'looking at it on a screen might intice you into doing it for real' thing.

    By that logic, I'd expect to never see another movie with violence again.

  28. Ouch! by 4x5 · · Score: 1

    I'd expect a ruling like that if he put labels on them and was trying to distribute them, but when does making a backup of files (sick child porn in his case)mean your "making" something original. Sure he is making unique content (with my b/w goggles on) but something as simple as me "making" copies of data cd's and drivers and other archives I "collect" every month doesn't mean I'm "creating" anything other than a copy of a set of files I downloaded, just like moving them to a different hdd; plain and simple.

    BTW Does this cover Tapes? cause I got lots of DDS sitting around with gigs of "original content" on them...

    Grrr... my fireplace just ate my cds and tapes... ;)

  29. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by GigsVT · · Score: 3, Interesting

    'looking at it on a screen might intice you into doing it for real' thing.

    The supreme court struck down that line of reasoning when it struck down the ban on "simulated child porn".

    Besides, if you follow that reasoning to its logical conclusion, you better start pulling about half the movies at the rental store off the shelves, since most depict illegal acts of some sort.

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  30. Child porn laws are very strict by The+Famous+Druid · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There was a case a few years ago here in Australia, where a guy accidentally followed a link to a child porn site, was disgusted at what he saw, and reported it to the police. The police took his report as a 'confession' to the crime of downloading child porn.

    Never heard the result of the court case, but I'd like to think the court had a bit more sense than the police.

    --
    Quidquid Latine dictum sit, altum videtur (anything said in Latin sounds important)
    1. Re:Child porn laws are very strict by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Could someone please find a link for this?

    2. Re:Child porn laws are very strict by The+Famous+Druid · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Could someone please find a link for this?

      Be careful what you Google for, Big Brother is watching. :(

      --
      Quidquid Latine dictum sit, altum videtur (anything said in Latin sounds important)
    3. Re:Child porn laws are very strict by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      www.scroogle.com

  31. Does that mean by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I download music, and burn it into CD-R that now I'm a producer of my music CD, and that I can sell the CD? :)

  32. Real reason for this ruling by panxerox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The real reason for this ruling is to find a way to give child porn downloaders more jail time, reason or precident have no meaning. If prosecuters can finagle or subvert any method of logic to make J6P think that they are "protecting the children" TM then by god thats what they are going to do.

    --
    "It's so convenient to have a system where everyone is a criminal" - A. Hitler
    1. Re:Real reason for this ruling by scaryjohn · · Score: 1
      If prosecuters can finagle or subvert any method of logic to make J6P think that they are "protecting the children"

      Who or what is "J6P"?

      --
      One might ask the same about birds. What ARE birds? We just don't know.
    2. Re:Real reason for this ruling by Random832 · · Score: 1

      Joe Sixpack

      --
      We've secretly replaced Slashdot with new Folgers Crystals - let's see if it notices.
  33. What was the intent of the law? by no_pets · · Score: 3, Insightful

    IANAL but if the law was intented to apply to person(s) mass producting child porn for distribution then I would believe that only one copy (or even just a couple) of CD-ROMS would not apply to this law. If convicted there is a pretty stiff penalty so I would think only possession would apply.

    "Making" porn would most likely imply forcing a child into sexual acts in order to photograph, or "make", the pornography. Unless, of course, the law is in reference to mass production of this illegal content.

    Either way, IMHO the guy should get the maximum penalty for possessing child porn, but not penalized for making it. Someone in Russia made it.

    --
    "A government is a body of people, usually notably ungoverned." - Shepard Book Quoting Malcolm Reynolds
    1. Re:What was the intent of the law? by nugas · · Score: 1
      IANAL either, but I don't think you have to be one to see why the court ruled the way it did.

      In the opinion, the judges cite Michigan law, which states that (a) "child sexually abusive material" includes [a long list of things, as well as] reproductions or copies of photos, videos, etc., and (b) it is a crime to make "child sexually abusive material."

      So... since the defendant was making reproductions of the material, he was, under Michigan law, "making child sexually abusive material."

      In another form, the reasoning goes like this:

      • Brian Lee Hill makes reproductions of child sexually abusive material.
      • Under Michigan law, reproductions of child sexually abusive material are child sexually abusive material.
      • Therefore, Brian Lee Hill makes child sexually abusive material.

      The legislature is apparently stuck in the world of physical artifacts--they assume you have to make something you can hold in order for you to 'make' something. They ignore the question of incidental copying. But wasn't Hill making reproductions of the material when he downloaded it through memory onto his hard drive? Didn't he make more copies when he caused the data to be copied to his computer's video card memory? And what about his ISP? Didn't they, too, make reproductions of the material in their routers? If I were a Michigan ISP, I'd talk to my state representative to get this sorted out. Quickly. Unless they're protected by some common carrier law, they might be guilty also.

  34. Where's my money, RIAA? by blackholepcs · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If this court decision is the final say and starts a chain reaction in court decisions everywhere, then I'm going to sue RIAA and MPA for every cent they have. Because, technically according to the decision of this court, all 3000 mp3's I've burned and 250 movies (give or take) are new creations that I created that didn't exist before, and I had a hand in "making" them. So I want my damned money : recording fees, sales percentages, box office royalties, rental and DVD royalties. With interest.
    Seriously, I don't condone child porn in any way, shape, or form. But this ruling is a rediculous scare tactic, created by old, wrinkled retards who still think it's 1946 and that LCD and iPod are some kind of illegal drugs us punk kids are taking.
    That has been and always will be the problem with court systems. They are generally full of old, outdated, disconnected duesche bags who go by a world view that is 50 years outdated. Thus we have stupid judgements, asanine laws, and the continued existence of paradoxical things like RIAA. Our generation (20's and 30's) will be these people in another 30 years or so, which means that in 2035, we will finally legalize file sharing and what not, but our children will be writing the same kind of rants on /. about us making it illegal to share your holodeck programs.

    --
    Halitosis - (n.) Halle Berry's Camel Toe.
    1. Re:Where's my money, RIAA? by chudnall · · Score: 1
      If this court decision is the final say and starts a chain reaction in court decisions everywhere, then I'm going to sue RIAA and MPA for every cent they have. Because, technically according to the decision of this court, all 3000 mp3's I've burned and 250 movies (give or take) are new creations that I created that didn't exist before, and I had a hand in "making" them. So I want my damned money : recording fees, sales percentages, box office royalties, rental and DVD royalties. With interest.


      I don't want to stir up the whole "RIAA is evil|justified" debate, but this argument is fairly trivial to refute. Copyright law doesn't assert that you're not "making" something when you copy a work, it just states that you are not allowed to copy someone else's work without permission. So, assuming that there is no special provision of copyright law that exempts child porn from copyright protection (I have no idea whether this is true or not), it is possible that the pervert in question broke both copyright and criminal law at the same time.

      Seriously, I don't condone child porn in any way, shape, or form. But this ruling is a rediculous scare tactic, created by old, wrinkled retards who still think it's 1946 and that LCD and iPod are some kind of illegal drugs us punk kids are taking.


      Yeah, this ruling probably is not in line with the original intent of the lawmakers, but in this case I have a hard time getting too worked up about it...
      --
      Disclaimer: Evolution comes with NO WARRANTY, except for the IMPLIED WARRANTY of FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
    2. Re:Where's my money, RIAA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But copyrights are fore creators of new works, yes? So if you've created/produced some new work (OK, by copying), then this ruling says that you have copyrights to that work.

      Or the ruling is bunk.

  35. Please read the ruling instead of the /. spin by sopuli · · Score: 5, Informative
    The prosecutor requested the district court to bind defendant over on all counts.
    Regarding the counts related to the CD-Rs, the prosecutor argued that MCL 750.145c(2)
    encompassed activity where an individual arranges for, produces, makes, or finances child
    sexually abusive material, and when defendant took the blank CD-Rs and burned images on
    them, he clearly created child sexually abusive material. The prosecutor noted that the statute
    defines "child sexually abusive material" as including any reproduction, copy, or print of a
    photograph depicting a child engaged in a sexual act. The prosecutor argued that, therefore, by
    copying, reproducing, or burning the images onto a CD-R, defendant "made" or "produced"
    child sexually abusive material.


    Of course by reproducing the material, he knowingly became part of the chain, and therefore also part of the abuse.

    1. Re:Please read the ruling instead of the /. spin by Threni · · Score: 1

      > Of course by reproducing the material, he knowingly became part of the chain,
      > and therefore also part of the abuse.

      He's not an abuser if he just burned a disk. If what he's done is `making porn` then the sentence for `making porn` should be dropped to a $5 fine or something. Otherwise you risk holding the law up to ridicule.

    2. Re:Please read the ruling instead of the /. spin by rawwa.venoise · · Score: 1

      The prosecutor noted that the statute
      defines "child sexually abusive material" as including any reproduction, copy, or print of a
      photograph depicting a child engaged in a sexual act.


      let me get this in other way. Did he said COPY? Then the simple fact of downloading is ALREADY a crime. And if not, then if you copy the content to other directory location is also a "produced" version since we actually move data in the hard drive. Unless you copy creating a simbolic link i don't see how this (cd-r burning) is so different from copying files from one place in the disk to another.

      So why they differentiate this from regular download?

    3. Re:Please read the ruling instead of the /. spin by Harker · · Score: 0, Troll
      He's not an abuser if he just burned a disk. If what he's done is `making porn` then the sentence for `making porn` should be dropped to a $5 fine or something. Otherwise you risk holding the law up to ridicule.


      This sounds like nothing more than justification.

      If it were not for these motherfuckers who download, buy or otherwise obtain kiddie porn, there would not be a market for it, and people would not produce it, or at the very least, the amount of it would decline, because there is not a market for it.

      Those who download and watch kiddie porn need to be held just as guilty as those who produce it, because they are part of the chain that causes it to be produced.

      All of them need to be taken out and shot in the head. They have no place in our society.

      H.
      --
      When VCR's are outlawed, only outlaws will have VCR's.
    4. Re:Please read the ruling instead of the /. spin by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1
      Of course by reproducing the material, he knowingly became part of the chain, and therefore also part of the abuse.

      Gives them a nice little precedent. No more simple possession for marijuana users - now just find a few joints on somebody, and you can charge them with "manufacturing marijuana". That will get you 5-30.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    5. Re:Please read the ruling instead of the /. spin by SilverspurG · · Score: 1
      If it were not for these motherfuckers who download, buy or otherwise obtain kiddie porn, there would not be a market for it
      What kind of fantasy planet do you live on? Males have been poking themselves into anything that moves since before apes became human.

      Animals don't know much about age. If the female raises the tail then the male delivers. And, in many cases, the male won't even wait for a raised tail.

      I saw a discovery channel edition of the mating habits of bears. The only recourse that the female bear had, if she no longer wanted to be bred, was to sit down. The only reason why she won is because the male bear lacked the dexterity to hold her in a proper position. You should've seen how hard it tried, though.
      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    6. Re:Please read the ruling instead of the /. spin by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      It's already that way in most US states. Being in possession of more than one quantity in separate packaging is automatically "intent to distribute".

      You know how I learned to roll joints? I had 2 oz. and sat down and rolled both ounces into joints. Had I been caught (with over 100 joints) I would be sitting in prison for a long time.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    7. Re:Please read the ruling instead of the /. spin by Threni · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > If it were not for these motherfuckers who download, buy or otherwise obtain
      > kiddie porn, there would not be a market for it, and people would not produce
      > it, or at the very least, the amount of it would decline, because there is not a
      > market for it.

      There'd be plenty of `kiddie porn` even if it were all distributed for free. Most of it is swapped for free anyway.

      > All of them need to be taken out and shot in the head. They have no place in our
      > society.

      Perhaps you'd like to suggest to your legislators that the victims of child abuse should be executed? After all, it's those people who go on to become abusers of children. Why not break the chain?

    8. Re:Please read the ruling instead of the /. spin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Surely you are looking at this from the wrong angle.

      This man is not part of production. In fact, you can look at him like a HK bootlegger. He takes what other people produce without paying for it. What he has taken he then sells. Thereby depriving the original producer of their income.

      He's indirectly fighting against the production of new child porn.

  36. Making, burning, downloading, and eavesdropping by phorm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    At some point though, it sounds like he was supporting the production of child pornography, and that is what they should have nailed him for. Instead, they've come up with this burning=making precedent, which could be misused in so many other cases it's scary. From the linked article though, I catch very little about burning and a lot about downloading... the PDF goes into more about the burning.

    Now, there are a few points:

    a) He got the pictures from a Russian website. From my experience with porn websites in general, you probably aren't going to get much content from a single site, so chances are they he was using some sort of paysite. In a way, he was in fact funding the creation of such content.

    b) In the PDF, possibly unrelated, the guy had spycams which he used to take pictures/videos of a foreign exchange student staying at his house. It doesn't detail the age of the student though... but it might be beyond the age of majority.

    c) We're not talking about a few CD's... there were approximately 50 of them. This in itself indicates a dangerously obsessive behavior, but again if they were all different I don't agree with the arguement that burning=creation. Certainly it seems a stretch to put somebody who archives such things on the same rack as the person forcing children into sexual acts. However, it doesn't indicate whether there were multiple copies of the same clips, or 50 discs worth of unique content. This in itself could be important, as if may be that the defendent was in fact producing media for purpose of distribution. Again, not necessary a charge of creation in itself, but pushing the line a bit.

    What scares me:

    it found that one who burns a computer image onto a CD-R is making a reproduction or copy. The court ruled that "the crime is committed when the person clicks the mouse to reproduce the image onto the CD-R." The circuit court also rejected defendant's argument that MCL 750.145c(2) was

    OK, fine so we've got a copy. A reproduction.

    But above that we have

    After reviewing the dictionary definition of the word "make," the circuit court stated that the bottom line was that, following the mechanical and technical act of burning images onto the CD-Rs, something new was created or made that did not previously exist.

    Which dictionary did they use... the judge's book of court-convenience? Also, what didn't exist? The disc existed, the files existed, they simply were not located on the disc at that time.

    Personally, I have no problem with them nailing the guy properly under the existing laws. He possessed, funded the creation of, and possibly had intent to distribute an illegal material. There are also the other charges in relation to his cameras. However, this sets a terrible precent and I think it is incredibly stupid overall to use the given arguement. Now the Supreme has the choice of junking a very stupid legal decision/precedent and letting out a pedophile (again, 50 discs shows a rather dangerous obsession), or approving it and letting it stick for later cases involving copying of files to CD.

    The issue at here isn't whether acting as a pedophile should be illegal, but whether the courts are far stretching laws in order to catch such individuals, to the detriment of society as a whole.

  37. No, he didn't by phorm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Unless you mean by downloading...

    He joined the chain at the time he downloaded the articles. Until or unless the material was pass on to another individual - thus creating another link in the chain - he had already become a member and the downloading was a moot point.

    We're not arguing that what the guy did wasn't an illegal act, we're just argueing which parts of it are actually illegal vs the creation of new definitions of illegality.

    1. Re:No, he didn't by sopuli · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Burning the child porn must be illegal because it is part of the distribution chain that supports the production of child porn. What if he burnt it with the intent of selling it on? What if he burnt 500 copies? Or should there be an exception in the law that makes it ok to burn a private copy of your child porn collection? That way you could still arrest the real distributors, without vicitimizing the poor lone pedophile who only supports the abuse of children by purchasing the child pornography.

    2. Re:No, he didn't by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      The point is not whether the lone pedophile is a more or less despicable person than anyone else in the chain; the point is that such a ruling has implications far beyond child porn. There is a difference between use and distribution; there is a difference between possession and production. To blur these things will lead to sweeping changes in the way copyright infringement is viewed, among other instances, as the comment by the OP is meant to illustrate. And it is hypocritical for the court to rule this way if it would rule differently were a different technology used (e.g. photocopier). If he had a stack of 500 CDs with mailing labels on them that would be a different story, of course; same as if he had a stack of 500 photocopied magazines.

    3. Re:No, he didn't by sopuli · · Score: 1

      So 500 CDs is part of the production chain, 1 CD is not. So somewhere between 500 CDs and 1 CD it stops being production. Would that be at 2 CDs? 5 CDs? 20? If you produce the CDs one at a time, would that be part of production? We're not talking about copyright laws, these are specific child pornography laws.

    4. Re:No, he didn't by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      He burned the material to media that is commonly used for distribution. Note that there is no "fair use" for child porn. He can't claim to be making legal backups or anything of the like. He should be burnt with every law they have in their legal arsenal.

    5. Re:No, he didn't by JenovaSynthesis · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yes, there *is* a differnce even though you chose not to see it. Remove the kiddie porn because in the context of this discussion it is moot.

      Drugs laws already make this distinction. Because if he burned the CD for his own use, the drug law equivilent is "Possession". If he burned the 500 or whatever number, he could be charged with "Possession with intent to distribute".

      If we followed your logic, then the person who has one or two marijuana plants for their own use can be charged with Possession with intent to distribute when clearly one or otwo plants does not allow for that.

      Simply burning the CD is not producing the content. It is transferring between media.

      --
      Anonymous Cowards generally receive no replies because you're a coward and I'm a bitch :)
    6. Re:No, he didn't by tolan-b · · Score: 1

      It's not part of a distribution chain if he didn't distribute anything.

      What he did was illegal anyway and he should be prosecuted for that (downloading and possessing child pornography), but to say he was *making* child porn is incorrect because it was a copy, and to say he is a distributer of child pornography is incorrect because he didn't distribute it, as far as we know at least, and that's all the court can go on.

    7. Re:No, he didn't by einhverfr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      IANAL

      But I would argue that there must be an intent to transfer the copy to another person before it becomes distribution.

      So making 1 CD for personal use is posession.

      Making 1 CD and giving it to a friend is distribution.

      Is there any evidence that this was his intent?

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    8. Re:No, he didn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know what plants you're talking about, but 1 or 2 is plenty for a small time dealer. If grown properly, you can get a good couple ounces off a plant easy.

    9. Re:No, he didn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I worked at an ISP, and someone had kiddie porn in their public_html/ directory, but I had noticed that they recently logged in and deleted half of it, should I make a backup of their folder as evidence of the existence of the data, since they could log back in tomorrow and delete the other half?

      How about the case where some federal investigators collected and sorted kiddie porn, then modified the images to remove the people in them, posted the pictures online, and let the public help identify the hotel where the pictures had been taken based on appearance?

      "No fair use" indeed.

    10. Re:No, he didn't by Original+Replica · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If he sends these copies to his friends is he actually hurting the child porn industry in the same way that shareing mp3's hurts the music industry? Could his conviction be used as a defense against RIAA suits? Illegal copying of material generates more demand for said material?

      --
      We are all just people.
    11. Re:No, he didn't by Ben+Varrey · · Score: 2, Informative

      Except there's no real way to ensure that he wasn't planning to distribute his burned CDs. If burning sexually explicit images of children onto a previously blank CD isn't "making child porn," then what is? If I photocopied print images of kiddie porn, would that count?

    12. Re:No, he didn't by Savantissimo · · Score: 1

      Aw, come on, they weren't that harsh - they could have charged him with DCMA violations. {shudder}

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    13. Re:No, he didn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By the standard you would say downloading music from Kazaa would be copyright infringment, not just uploading it.\

      Want that precedent applied to intellectual property offenses?

      5 years for downloading music?

    14. Re:No, he didn't by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Unless you're an experienced grower, or phenomenally lucky, one or two plants will get you approximately jack shit.

      When you hear of people being busted for grow operations they're typically caught with 50+ plants. The reason is that a vast majority of plants, unless you've bought premium seed, grow up to look like a tomato plant without tomatoes--all stem and leaves.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    15. Re:No, he didn't by jdbartlett · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But it's only Fair Use that allows us (in the US) to make a copy of each of our own CDs, etc. Since child pornography is illegal, there is no fair use of child pornography. Every time a piece of child pornography is reproduced, that very act is a crime. The court rightly ruled that the act of reproduction includes transferring between media.

      I doubt reproduction of the images would include unintentionally or unknowingly navigating to a website that includes an inappropriate image of a minor; the key difference is that doing so would be an accident - what this man did was intentionally (yes, for his own use, but still intentionally) reproduce a piece of child pornography.

      I agree that it would be hard to accuse him of intent to distribute the images on the grounds that he made a single copy, but it does prove that he intentionally downloaded the images and planned to keep them. It rules out the possibility that he could have 'accidentally' downloaded the images. Plus, the very act of copying the illegal images is, even for personal use, illegal.

      Copying illegally obtained music is also illegal, but the original piece of music was probably protected rather than condemned by the law.

      There have been instances where police officers have been sent (by members of the public) pornographic images depicting minors as evidence of their existence in a certain case. This is technically distribution, and is treated very seriously.

      This law is designed to protect the innocent. A minor cannot give consent to appear in pornography and is therefore a victim. Every time someone reproduces a pornographic image of a minor, its presence is more permanent and it becomes that extra bit harder to destroy every copy of the image, which is the ultimate goal. Regardless of whether he had photocopied, printed or simply copied the file containing the image, he reproduced it and thus added to the task of destroying it.

      This does not affect your legally (under fair use) copied music.

    16. Re:No, he didn't by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      I have seldom read such disingenuous bullshit. The Michigan law prohibits the making of "Child sexually abusive material," which is defined as "any depiction... including ... a computer or computer-generated image... which is of a child or appears to include a child engaging in a listed sexual act..." Note that the focus of the law is on the making of depictions of child sexual abuse. The so-called "creative act" of sexually abusing a child is a separate crime. The original recording of an image of child sexual abuse is a crime. So is the making of every subsequent copy of that original image. The law does not qualify this crime with "intent to distribute" or "for financial gain." Comparison to marijuana laws that make such distinctionns is inappropriate. Downloading such an image is a crime, because it creates a new copy of the image that did not exist before. Burning such an image to CD-R from a copy on another medium is a crime, because it creates a new copy of the image that did not exist before. "Transferring between media" does not happen, as every slashdotter knows. One does not move a particular image from a hard drive to a CD-R. What really happens is that a new copy is made and then the copy from which it was made is deleted. Under Michigan's law, the act of making that new copy is a crime, regardless of one's intended use for that copy or whether any money changes hands. The court correctly ruled that the defendant made a depiction of child porn when he burned it to CD-R. It could also rule that he made anothe depiction when he downloaded a copy of such an image.

    17. Re:No, he didn't by loraksus · · Score: 1

      Drugs laws already make this distinction. Because if he burned the CD for his own use, the drug law equivilent is "Possession". If he burned the 500 or whatever number, he could be charged with "Possession with intent to distribute".


      Please, possession with intent to distribute would be 2 or 3 copies if you are going to compare it with the drugs laws in the USA.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    18. Re:No, he didn't by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      If burning sexually explicit images of children onto a previously blank CD isn't "making child porn," then what is?
      I'd say "making child porn" is taking the photographs yourself.

      Otherwise, we get something like this, if I replace the nouns and what is in the quotes:
      If burning MP3s of Aerosmith onto a previously blank CD isn't "making music," then what is?.

    19. Re:No, he didn't by mink · · Score: 1

      "The reason is that a vast majority of plants, unless you've bought premium seed, grow up to look like a tomato plant without tomatoes--all stem and leaves."

      When I was a teenager that was all you needed. Kids these days....

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  38. Think about the patent model... by PornMaster · · Score: 1

    Making something doesn't give you the rights to associated intellectual property. Think about patents. You could make something that's covered under one or more valid patents, but that doesn't negate the patent-holder's rights to the design/process, nor give you rights to the design/process.

  39. Re:From the title, I thought he was protesting por by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > burning CDs of porn == making porn

    So I'm not a virgin?

  40. You'd best look up Martin Niemoller by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Here you go: Martin_Niemoller

    It's the principle of the thing. Yes, child porn is one of the most evil things there are, but if the judge can make bad decisions in a good case, what is to prevent him from making equally bad decisions in less good cases? I suppose the rationale for punishing customers of child porn is to reduce the market; if no one bought any, there'd be a lot less made. I doubt that is true, simply because I suspect most makers do it for themselves. But that's not your argument, is it?

    How about we extend that philosophy to reporting on child porn? After all, if no one knows about it, there'd be a lot less made.

    OK, and now, extend that to reading about it. After all, if no one reads about it, reporters won't have any incentive to write about it, and by the chain we've established, a lot fewer people would learn about it, and it's at least arguable that it could reduce the market for child porn.

    Congratulations! If you said "good idea" to that, then you should volunteer yourself for a stay at the local jail. But if you said "ridiculous", then you have just refuted your comment. Either way, your comment loses.

  41. What's the difference... by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, out of curiosity, what's the difference between:

    • burning a CD;
    • copying to a flash drive;
    • copying to a hard drive;
    • copying to RAM;
    • copying to a monitor / TV;
    • printing;
    • copying from one 'Net router to another?

    I'm all against exploiting children, but let's not destroy the law in the process, hmmm? Stretching (breaking, really) the law like this to go after a bad guy does more to harm the law--and thus society, and thus children--than the act this man was convicted of. If we want to make a law against duplicating child porn, that's one thing...this, however, is exactly what neocons should be upset about when they rant about ``legislating from the bench.''

    Cheers,

    b&

    --
    All but God can prove this sentence true.
    1. Re:What's the difference... by PopeOptimusPrime · · Score: 1

      The problem is that modern judges are still very old-fashioned and know little or nothing about technology.
      The judges I know still insist on using their Smith-Corona typewriters circa 1985. If a lawyer tells them that there is a fundamental difference between a CD-R and a CD-RW and a hard drive in terms of "making a copy" he will probably believe them.

    2. Re:What's the difference... by TheSkyIsPurple · · Score: 1

      I remember seeing software licenses that had clauses that specifically allowed you to make transient copies of the software into RAM for the purposes of running the software... The law gets really technical in funny ways. I'm too lazy, but I'm guessing the definition of "production" in that section of law would clarify how it got classified that way.

    3. Re:What's the difference... by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      You didn't bother reading the opinion, which quotes the law under which this guy was charged verbatim. The law - which this court did NOT make - criminalizes making kiddie porn; making copies of kiddie porn; and making copies of copies of kiddie porn.

    4. Re:What's the difference... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If we want to make a law against duplicating child porn, that's one thing...

      But the Michigan law does disallow duplicating child porn, and that's why the court made the ruling it did.

  42. "Subconscious copying" by tepples · · Score: 1

    If making music was illegal, then...

    Unfortunately, this may already be the case if you aren't big enough to cross-license with major music publishers.

  43. But what is porn? by tepples · · Score: 1

    Personally I'm all for the death penalty for child porn makers

    But would you consider a photo of an infant in a bathtub, taken by the parent, to necessarily constitute child porn?

    1. Re:But what is porn? by damsa · · Score: 1

      Nudity by itself is not porn according the US supreme court. Give that infant in a bathtub a sex toy, then it might be porn.

    2. Re:But what is porn? by Yartrebo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      People have gone to jail for obviously innocent pictures. Perhaps some judges have a little common sense, but when it comes to demonized things like child porn, drugs, and terrorism, there will be plenty of innocents caught up. Even if found innocent in a court of law (which is quite likely in the case of kitchen sink photos), the stigma with being even an acquitted sex offender makes holding or finding a job nearly impossible and one can forget about ever running for public office.

    3. Re:But what is porn? by Bilbo · · Score: 1

      True, there is "nudity" that is clearly not "porn", but unfortunately, there are still plenty of people riding a fine line between "art" nudes of children (or "pre-teen model" sites), which are clearly intended as porn. There are some rules, but I don't know if the impact on the young children themselves (or the adults who eat this sort of stuff up) is any different.

      --
      Your Servant, B. Baggins
    4. Re:But what is porn? by Helios1182 · · Score: 1

      I think most people would view a website of pre-teen nudes i na very different light than that of someone's picture of their 2 year old in a bath tub.

    5. Re:But what is porn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same question, different angle. Some pics are innocent to some people, not innocent to others. A front page pic of someone being arrested is titilating for some, but ordinary for others. Jennifer Garner in promotional shots for Alias elict the same reaction in me that a boy in underwear does for a kiddie porn fan but does that make ABC guilty of distributing pornography via a medium available to so many? How many boys have got off at one point or another on Sears catalogues? If this guy has a copy of Haley Joel Osment in the 6th Sense, who's to say it wasn't for the same thrill as half the pics on his hard drive? Does that mean everything in his house with a child associated with it is evidence of his sleazy mind?

    6. Re:But what is porn? by Savantissimo · · Score: 3, Funny

      There is nothing in a Sears catalog that somebody doesn't want to sleep with.

      --
      "Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?" - Patrick Henry
    7. Re:But what is porn? by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1

      This could mean the end of "but think of the children!" comments. You never know how they might be thinking of the children! That very post might be illegal!

      --

      kurzweil_freak

      5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

      Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

    8. Re:But what is porn? by MBGMorden · · Score: 1

      I can't remember the exact law at the moment (ie, I remember reading it but can't recall if it applied on a Federal or South Carolina State level), but parents are specifically exempted from child porn prosecution for pictures of their own kids, provided that there is no sexual activity taking place in the photographs.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
  44. Like the "intend to distribute" by IAAP · · Score: 1
    charge when someone is busted for one joint. Geeze! The trouble is, when you start exagerating the charges, it dilutes the original offense. Charge someone with "terrorist threats" when they threaten to kick someone ass, you make it so that when folks hear the "terrorist threat", they'll just think of some guy who's pissed off at someone - which is what I do now. Someone charged as a drug dealer, I just think he had a joint or two. Someone charged for having child porn, I think he was looking at a 17 1/2 year-old or something.

    What I'm getting at too, is that, when I hear about these "crimes" I just think they're really nothing and it's just some prosecutor trying to make a name for himself.

    Sorry, unless I see the evidence for myself, I don't believe the hype coming from law enforcement.

  45. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by kelleher · · Score: 1
    For example, that case in Vermont that made the news about the judge giving the guy 60 days, I'd have given him 40 years.
    60 days or 40 years - doesn't matter as long as you make sure his cellmate has a child on the outside. Accidents happen...
  46. Making... not Producing by spiritraveller · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "Defendant was charged with . . . multiple counts of arranging for, producing, making, or financing child sexually abusive material, MCL 750.145c(2)."

    So the law says producing OR making. Therefore, they are not the same thing. Producing is what we think of when we talk about taking pictures or hiring actors and cameramen. So "making" has to mean something else.

    The question is what does it mean, and is the statute specific enough to hold someone responsible for committing acts that fall within that meaning?

  47. Welcome to the world of Zonk... by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 1

    You dont think any thought goes into these 'submissions' do you? Take a perusal through some of his other stories, and their horrible fact-checking. It should be obvious.

    Then, do what most other slashdotters have done. Use your homepage preferences to remove this editor and the related 'stories' from your homepage. And then, like me, when you sign on at a computer that does not have your preference cookies you will see WHY you blocked him.

    At first its funny, then its just sad.

    1. Re:Welcome to the world of Zonk... by RubberDogBone · · Score: 1

      Maybe the title will get fixed by the time the story gets duped.

      Or possibly by the second time it gets duped.

      There's always hope!

      --
      Sig for hire.
  48. Who Cares by j3rryh · · Score: 0

    Let the kiddie porn makers & downloaders go to jail. I hope they rot there. Now if this applied to adult pr0n, I would be concerned. (decency laws and what-not)

    --
    "Coffee is the lifeblood of champions" -Mike Ditka
  49. Nope... You don't understand... by MosesJones · · Score: 1


    You would be a producer or DISTRIBUTOR of the music, there is a big difference between that and being the artist.

    Which appears to be what the judge has decided.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
  50. Burning by knipknap · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It took me more than 3 minutes to understand why "burning" would be the same as "making" stuff.

    [...] after downloading and burning pornographic pictures from the Internet [...]

    Right, so he downloaded it, printed it and later obviously showed regret when he burned the pictures. Why would that be worse than keeping them...? Oooh, *that* burning.

  51. The question here by commodoresloat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    is whether the court would have the same ruling had he photocopied the naked pictures and kept them in a pile under his bed. Or, indeed, tore out his faves from the magazines and "produced" a new work by stapling together a pile of old clippings. I seriously doubt the court would rule this way in such cases. Had he distributed the CD that would be another issue, but I fail to see how burning the cd is itself producing child porn. The fact is, the law treats producing child porn differently than possessing since production involves the direct exploitation of minors (whereas possession may exploit them but in a very different but less direct way). Another point is that burning the cd is no different from downloading the pics in the first place and keeping them in a folder, or even just looking at them in your browser, copying them to a cache. This is just a way of raising the penalties against someone who is without doubt a criminal but probably not a "producer" of kiddy porn. The problem is that it has implications far beyond the instant case, something a judge should have figured out before making such a ruling.

    1. Re:The question here by sopuli · · Score: 1

      This ruling has no implications beyond child porn. As you can see it refers to laws specific to child pornography. Why you think he would not have gotten in the same trouble for photocopying I don't know, are there any precedents? I agree that posession is less direct, there is a difference between raping a child, and paying someone for raping a child.

    2. Re:The question here by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      and there is a difference between distribution and possession, which is really the issue here, methinks. You're just bringing up rape to sensationalize the discussion. The fact is, this does have implications beyond child porn because there are other situations where burning a cd or photocopying a picture have legal implications. This would also have implications for copies stored on a hard drive, which there have been many such cases, and to my knowledge none of those cases resulted in this sort of ruling.

    3. Re:The question here by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      Hard drives are not commonly used for distribution of anything. Compact discs are a form of media commonly used to distribute data, music, video and the like. They're basically slamming him for producing something he could hand off to someone else either for free or at a small price. He probably wouldn't do that with his hard drive. They used laws specific to child porn to do this, btw. This piece of news has no business in YRO...

    4. Re:The question here by westlake · · Score: 1
      there is a difference between raping a child, and paying someone for raping a child.

      You hire a killer, you burn with the killer.

    5. Re:The question here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The answer is maybe. The deeper question is if this will apply to other people who are caught for the identical thing. The answer is probably no. Which leads me to believe that had he been caught with a stack of photcopies he made, the answer might be yes. If for whatever reasons (prosector, repeat criminal, grudge, bordeom, ugly face, etc) this guy has it comming to him, the law can be intrepreted and exceucted in creative ways. WIth a role model like Bush you can't even be suprised.

    6. Re:The question here by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      This ruling has no implications beyond child porn. As you can see it refers to laws specific to child pornography.

      No direct implications, I'll agree. But laywers and judges like to reason from analogy, starting with one precedent and ending up with a decision in a seeminly unrelated case. A judge could later say that burning a pirated copy of a movie onto a DVD is equivalent to what happened here and should be treated the same. This would be a Bad Thing, and that's what people are worrying about here.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    7. Re:The question here by vsprintf · · Score: 1

      Hard drives are not commonly used for distribution of anything.

      Please tell that to the RIAA, MPAA, and FBI. You're also mistaken on another front - external USB hard drives are being used to distribute large amounts of data. We buy and deliver about 50 drives per month.

    8. Re:The question here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A judge could later say that burning a pirated copy of a movie onto a DVD is equivalent to what happened here and should be treated the same.

      No, he couldn't. These are two VASTLY different laws. Precedents are only on point if the laws and circumstances are identical, or at least very similar.

    9. Re:The question here by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1
      so what about "faces of death"... or hell, the nightly "smart bomb" footage on CNN. How about the "rodney king" hate crime filmed by onlookers? If you posess the images of the hate crime are you in th same group as the white pointy hat klan? If you posess a Koran are you a terrorist? There's a clear line between being a "watcher" and a do'er. The guy probably got the porn for free off Bittorrent anyway, so he didn't "support" the actual creator. The bigger question is this: Where does it stop? If CNN shows pictures of raped and tourtured Iraqi prisoners are all the people that view the nightly news guilty?? How about TiVo users.. Under the same rules can the Human Rights Court come after anybody they want now?

      Ultimately, it's just information. It's a very dispicable information, but information about an event is NOT the same as causing the event yourself. Never forget, these cops, judges and procecutors want to be "thought police", they are tired of arresting "criminals" after the fact and would love to arrest "potential" criminals instead... to make their jobs easier. After all, if you're 16 and make dirty doodles of your girlfriend, in their book you're "deviant" and should be dealt with. We all know people that have dirty thoughts commit crimes, so if we have "proof" of the dirty thought we should presue it.

    10. Re:The question here by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      I doubt that a judge actually would make such a ruling, or that it wouldn't be overturned on appeal. It was intended to show how far such a precedent could be warped if an activist judge really wanted to. Considering that federal courts have claimed jurisdiction over truck-stops because their customers are engaged in interstate commerce, it's not as far out as you and I would like it to be.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    11. Re:The question here by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      How different is it really? You downloaded the movie or music to view it, just like the kiddie porn guy did... you are downloading it for the entertainment that the media provides. If you burn a copy of it the same legal gymnastics could apply that you're "producing" a movie to pirate... remember, like another person said, there's no "fair use" law... "fair use" is a legal concept, but not a written part of law.. it's just the idea in court cases that certian actions are so basic they can't be illegal... The copyright law means that copying is copying... hence we have to have "licenses" to run software because it's "coppied" onto the hard disk and "coppied" into computer memory to run. That argument is alredy make and lost.

    12. Re:The question here by be-fan · · Score: 1

      This case has implications for any other case that might use it as a precedent. The precedent here is not "burning a CD of child porn equates to distribution of child porn", but rather, "burning a CD equates to distribution". When some lawyer digs up this case to go after a file sharer who burned an archival CD, he's not going to make the distinction between music and child porn, because logically there isn't one. If burning one type of thing to CD constitutes distribution, burning another type of thing also constitutes to distribution. Precedents aren't limited to the specific case in question --- they can have implications across the whole of law.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    13. Re:The question here by Sancho · · Score: 1

      Fair use is written into law:

      http://fairuse.stanford.edu/primary_materials/code s/92chap1.html#107

      The problem is it's not explicit. Fair Use is called a "limitation on exclusive use" meaning it's a limitation of copyright. And what considerations are used for determining Fair Use are outlined in copyright law. But it's all still at the judge's discretion, which means that you won't know if your use is "Fair Use" until you're sued and win the case.

    14. Re:The question here by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Suddenly I'm beginning to understand why I'm treated like a felon wherever I go.

      When I was 18, a freshman in college, my girlfriend (who attended a neighboring college), was 17.

      In Indiana that wasn't legal and carried stiff penalties.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    15. Re:The question here by LexMan · · Score: 1

      What do you say to a lawyer with an IQ of 50? "Good morning, your honour."

  52. Re:From the title, I thought he was protesting por by SamSim · · Score: 1

    I guess it depends if you're a pyrophiliac or not.

  53. Re:Good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Smart man! Don't forget to bring your torch later, we're going out to search for witches... err, I mean homos... err, I mean pedos!! Yeah, that's it!

  54. Gary Glitter by joshsnow · · Score: 1

    In 1999, the one time pop star, Gary Glitter, was convicted in the UK of "Making Indecent photographs of children". I believe he didn't even burn the images to disk - just the fact that he'd downloaded them was enough for him,by UK law, to have "made" them.

    bbc story

    So, while I can see the logic behind someone burning material to cd/dvd being held to have "made" it, I suspect that in both cases, in the UK and the USA, the laws being used date from the time when to be in possession of such material, a person would have to actually literally make it - i.e. take photographs, develop them etc.

    The laws probably need updating, but the spirit behind the letter remains unchanged. The trouble is, that there are implications for illegal music/movie downloads too.

    I think the laws need to be revisited - especially so that paedophiles have no grounds for appeal.

    1. Re:Gary Glitter by mark_hill97 · · Score: 1
      I think the laws need to be revisited - especially so that paedophiles have no grounds for appeal.

      So that guy down in prison who's former employee planted child porn on his computer and called the cops should have no chance of appeal? What benefit would that do to anyone? any law made will be used in ways other than intended, thats why we HAVE appeal.
    2. Re:Gary Glitter by joshsnow · · Score: 1

      OK, so I expressed myself badly - I'm not advocating removing the right to appeal at all. What I was saying, in the context of this particular news story, is that someone who has been proven to have downloaded dodgy material, but is appealing on the technicality that he didn't "make" it (even though he has admitted to obtaining it) shouldn't be able to appeal on those grounds.

      My point is that laws needs to change to reflect the fact that possession isn't the same as "making" and therefore, if someone admits or is found - beyond doubt - to have purposefully obtained such material, that person wouldn't be able to appeal on the grounds, quite correctly IMO, that he hasn't "made" the material.

  55. "Precedent" by spiritraveller · · Score: 1

    And how does this affect the lawsuits by the BSA, RIAA, and MPAA?"

    This is a state court, interpreting state law. It means absolutely nothing to a Federal court interpreting (Federal) copyright law.

    Slashdotters throw around the term "precedent" all the time as if every time someone does something it sets a precedent. A court only has to follow a precedent set by another court if it is on point and if the precedent setting court is a higher court in the same jurisdiction... state courts do not set precedent on Federal law.

    The Bumblefuck Municipal Court does not set precedent when it finds you guilty of jaywalking on your own land. It might be a precedent in the sense that it happened prior to the next decision, but it is not binding on any other case.

  56. Read the Article! by ClearlyPennsylvania · · Score: 1
    From the second link:
    The prosecutor differentiated between someone who simply views an image on the computer, which automatically stores the image in a temporary Internet file, and someone who then burns or copies that image to another medium thereby making or producing more child sexually abusive material.
    The court is, in fact, distinguishing between automatic creation vs manually creating copies.
    1. Re:Read the Article! by Stephen+Samuel · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The prossecutor need not have distinguished between downloading and burning. There is nothing in the statue which distinguishes between the two kinds of copying. If 'making a copy' on your CD makes you culpable, then making a copy by downloading the same image would make you just as culpable. A prosecutor 3 years from now could just as easily 'forget' to make the distinguishment, and throw the book at somebody who accidently downloaded a kiddi porn flick with the rest of his/her adult purn.

      This seems like a most strange way to interpret the law. In my world, 'making a video' generally implies pulling out a video camera and filming something. I think that it would be very fair to presume that the legislature intended to make just such a disginguishment when it set out posession and production as two separate crimes.

      Now if the guy videoed kids using his bathroom and shower, that would easily classify as 'making' a video of kids (although whether it would classify as porn Vs. simple violation of privacy might be it's own legal fight).

      This seems, to me, like a example of 'good case, bad law'. This guy deserves to be sent up for a long time, but I think that the courts are stretching the law just so that they can give the bastard an extra few years in the slammer.

      --
      Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
  57. The law is clear by mark-t · · Score: 2, Informative
    Possession, mere POSSESSION, of child porn is illegal... it doesn't matter how you got it, or where you got it from... if you are caught with it, unless you can show fairly convincingly that you had no reasonable way to know it was in your posession in the first place (eg, it was actually amongst a significant amount of other things, not all of which you could be directly accountable for, such as content downloaded by a software trojan that you didn't know about before), then you can and will be charged and sentenced to whatever degree is permissable by law.

    However... burning a CD with the content, because it is a conscious and deliberate act, pretty much negates any possibility that a person could try to appeal to that line of reasoning as a defense if one was caught with such content.

    Although I agree with some other posters that say it was stupid to associate burning a CD with child porn on it with creating or producing it.

    1. Re:The law is clear by Beave · · Score: 1

      So, just so i have this correct. I'm browsing _legal_ porn (adult), and theres a link I click on. The link pulls up child porn. I go to jail for this? That's wonderful.

    2. Re:The law is clear by mark-t · · Score: 1
      No... because you could very easily argue that there was lack of intent on your part (and I'd be suprised if you didn't win, unless you had a really dense lawyer).

      However, an argument like that would not have a hope of succeeding if you burned CD's with the illegal content.

    3. Re:The law is clear by stwrtpj · · Score: 1
      Possession, mere POSSESSION, of child porn is illegal.

      I'll probably lose karma for this, but I really don't give a shit.

      I personally have problems with this law. I have a problem with any law that makes the mere possession of a bunch of digital bits or a piece of paper that happens to have a certain kind of picture on it illegal. It's a dangerous precedent to set.

      I don't buy the arguments about how this is meant to keep down demand so the supply dries up. It's a bullshit argument because the people downloading this stuff have urges, and those urges don't go away just because you take away their supply. Just like a drug addict will not stop being a drug addict just because you cut off supply. Instead, he'll just go looking for a new supply.

      I certainly do agree with the laws against PRODUCING child porn (though I have certain arguments against the age of consent laws, but that's another topic). I do not want to see children exploited sexually. I just think that making it illegal to possess a bunch of data bits or a piece of paper is ridiculous.

      --
      Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
  58. Economic Falacy by dyoung9090 · · Score: 1

    "they are creating a demand which is going to increase the supply"

    No, they are not creating a demand which is going to increase the supply. They're creating a supply that fits the demand.

    Demand doesn't increase supply in and of itself. That's like saying that the wealth of online *adult* pornography creates the market for it, when it's just satisfying the market that's out there. The fact that it's a voracious market has nothing to do with it. Not providing an adequate supply of it only puts a premium price on it. If there wasn't so much free porn (of all kinds) online then pay-porn would be a premium because people would have to pay extra to get that which satisfies their demand.

    I don't disagree with laws against kiddie porn (which, when you filter , I just disagree with people who think that supply creates demand when supply FILLS demand (economics 101... hell, more basic than that... it's high school.)

    1. Re:Economic Falacy by Anthony+Liguori · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with laws against kiddie porn (which, when you filter , I just disagree with people who think that supply creates demand when supply FILLS demand (economics 101... hell, more basic than that... it's high school.)

      Okay, my wording sucks. The point is, the existance of a demand will lead to an increase in supply. One doesn't create "demand" (you could argue that marketing does...).

    2. Re:Economic Falacy by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      In the presence of a pre-existing supply (product), if demand for the ORIGINAL supply (product) is high, then there is a premium paid for it and there exists no incentive to create new supply (product). If the demand is not for the ORIGINAL supply (product) but for something new then there is incentive to create something that will satisfy this demand. In the case of kiddy porn, that means when people get bored with what's available, some pioneering sleeze is going to create new material to offer up.

    3. Re:Economic Falacy by mushroom+blue · · Score: 1

      I think you missed his entire point. he was stating that there is no proof that the existence of demand will lead to an increase in supply.

    4. Re:Economic Falacy by mushroom+blue · · Score: 1

      interesting. but how does this apply when the supplier has no monetary incentive for more goods? see, it is VERY rare that someone is profiting on child pornography. almost all people downloading child pornography do not pay for it. this was made very clear in the essay that Pete Townshend of The Who wrote about child pornography; the distribution and acquisition of the good (being the pornography) is done without monetary exchange.

      now, without financial incentive, how does the supply rise? in fact, how does one gauge the demand without a measurable market?

    5. Re:Economic Falacy by Yartrebo · · Score: 1

      What counts here is the number of works created/filmed, not the number of copies made.

      Don't measure apples with oranges. Unpaid copies provide no financial incentive to the filmer and the existance of alternative means of supply only depresses their pricing power.

      I wonder if this is why the feds don't prosecute P2P'ed ordinary porn with any vigor.

    6. Re:Economic Falacy by dyoung9090 · · Score: 1

      Great point! Most of the people with stashes of kiddie porn didn't get it from a store or from a mail-order catalogue, they're getting it from (and I might be wrong here) free sources like Usenet, websites and trading groups. You'd have to be pretty stupid to see a website offering child porn for sale and say "well, I'd better give them my credit card number and address" because either (A) it's a trap to get your information or (B) it will someday get taken down by the authorities who will then have your information.

      One can argue I suppose that because it's hard(er) to acquire that people are more likely to kidnap, molest and violate young children to produce their own but that's a far from likely scenario.

      I tried to explain the differences in criminal minds to a co-worker once. You have a murder in a small town and the two likely suspects are (A) a convicted pedophile and (B) a shoplifter. Which is more likely to have done it? People tend to pick the pedophile because that crime is seen as so much more dangerous than shoplifting and they just ignore the fact that all three are totally different mindsets. One's reason for murder is rarely the same as their reason for sexual assault or their reason for mild stealing. Shoplifters are not more likely to turn to armed robery than lets say drug dealers just because those two are both forms of theft.

      Of course, the context of that situation was different (should someone who skipped a shift from work two days earlier be held responsible for a later theft of $50 just because both are "crimes") but the point is, people commit different crimes for different reasons. The person that owns kiddie porn for sexual gratification isn't going to be any more or less likely to sexually assault a child.

      Now, I'm not saying the two groups are mutually exclusive (there are going to be some shoplifters who turn to armed robbery) but in this case the people that are going to molest children (or back to the topic, create kiddie porn) typically aren't doing so because they've got a 40 gig hd of pr0n and they want to "give back" to the community, they're doing it because they like molesting children and the people who do have a 40 gig hd of pr0n aren't going to go after their neighbors just because they want to add to their collection. The content creators may have a huge collection of material, but that's an over-lapping interest and not a causal one.

      I have met some guys so titilated by having a few naughty pics on their palm-pilots, or proud of their collection of Playboys and they're no more or less likely to rape a woman than the guy with no stash and an over-active hormonal balance.

    7. Re:Economic Falacy by dyoung9090 · · Score: 1

      I'd have to disagree with you here... when there is a premium paid for something there is even more incentive to create new supply. People tend to flood a premium market with ever-lower costing product until that market has been flooded and the premium has gone down to the point where it's no longer cost effective to produce it. If widgets are selling for $1,000 and you can make that widget for $20 bucks, you'll start selling them for $500 and get some cash out of it. Then Bill realizes he can create $20 widgets and sell them for $100 and eventually the Widgets are down to $25 and it's no longer valuable for people to enter the market because the profit margin is so low.

      The problem here is that the product is usually free (through various forms of P2P, Usenet, websites) because lets be honest, most people realize there's such a paper trail in trying to sell porn (credit cards, server records... once the gov't finds the server BOOM, they have the credit info for all these people that purchased it. Once the gov't finds the porn-owner BOOM, they've got his bookmarks/sources) that it's too risky for money.

      Without this money giving KP a price-tag, there's no real incentive to make more other than an underlying desire to create (and distribute) KP. KP creators aren't making the stuff to earn a profit but because they want to.

      The sad thing with the industry is that as much as we'd like to see it end, targetting end-users is only effective when it nets connections to distributors and from there the creators. Criminalizing the back-up of KP isn't stopping children from being photographed, it's just giving the end-user another few years in (theoretical) jail (or more likely probation.) It's as effective as making the use of spoons in drug use illegal. You add a few years of jail to the end user but in the end when they get out they're just going to know not to use a spoon/burn a cd.

      It's not like the KP end users are sitting at home saying "ah hell, *looking* at KP was as illegal as I can go. Now that making a CD of it is illegal I'm just going to have to quit."

  59. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    By that logic, I'd expect to never see another movie with violence again.
    Why? He didn't say that he was aroused by violence. And that's the difference; when someone is aroused by something they want more of it. The danger with child porn images is that just looking may, at some point, not give enough satisfaction. The next step would be to actually participate in the acts.

    The other issue with having images of children in sexual situations is that the pictures can be shown to children to get them to believe that it is "normal".

    I don't like the fact that possession of a picture is a crime but there is some evidence to show that in this case it should be. That said, the person in question should have only been convicted of possession not of "production". I think this has a good chance of being reversed. (IANAL)

    On a related topic; what will happen in the next few years with the widespread use of camera phones by those under 18? Can an adult go to jail for possessing a picture or movie of himself getting his first BJ at age 16?

    This is a difficult issue all around. I would suggest you just say no pictures of nekkid children or move to a country that allows this kind of thing.

  60. Why not just change the law? by ShyGuy91284 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's obvious they just want to put people in jail for 20 years for posession. Why not just make it 20 years for posession? They are clearly trying to take advantage of the law to give someone a harsher sentence then they are able to. Put it in this perspective. You accidently hit someone with a car. A little injury (like a broken leg or something like that), but they are still alive. How about the people in the court manipulate the situation like this. You drive knowing someone may get injured or even killed. Since you knew that, it's attempted murder. This kind of jumping and skipping over crucial parts of what makes the difference between "attempted murder" and "hitting someone with a car" seems pretty similar to this article.

    --
    In undeveloped countries, the consumer controls the market. In capitalist America, the market controls you.
  61. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

    Plenty of people ARE aroused by violence. The fact is, movies about people aroused by violence who torture girls are LEGAL (see Hostel and many others). Your argument here is flawed.

  62. Re:Good... by ichthus · · Score: 0, Troll

    Ah yes. Spoken like a true AC. So, let's just look the other way, or rationalize, or normalize pedophilia. Yeah, that's it!

    --
    sig: sauer
  63. the scary thing is by extra+the+woos · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What if some scumbag sends me a link and I visit it and it's some sick shit like child porn. I immediately close it BUT THERE'S A COPY MADE IN MY BROWSER CACHE.

    Have I just produced child pron? Dear god I hope not, but it seems like that could be argued based on this ruling...

    scary

    Why wasn't this guy just put in jail for possession of it. Posession of it is illegal and by burning it to a cd well.. he pretty much proved his guild, there.

    --
    replacing it with NEW Folger's Crystals! (lets see if they notice the difference)
    1. Re:the scary thing is by Kumiorava · · Score: 1

      Should be fine as long as you don't make/produce backup of your harddrive.

      In one other comment a person claiming to be closer to the case said that the man actually produced CDs for sale.

  64. Misleading Title by tjhayes · · Score: 1

    When I first read "Burning Porn". I wondered why it would be illegal for someone to burn(i.e. light on fire) porn?

  65. Why are we Americans so reactionary about porn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    We might actually have a few things to learn from Japan. I am firmly against child abuse and rape just like most people but I am not against fantasy. It is human nature. Most people do not act on them. Porn can be a means to allow some people to "pretend" to act on their fantasies without actually doing it. Restricting porn really is equivalent to alcohol prohibition and drug illegality. People will continue to do it when it's illegal and they will do it in a much more dangerous and unhealthy manner.

    Here is a report on multiple studies that looks at Japan, Germany, and a few other countries that have relaxed restrictions on porn. It mostly involves the decrease in rape during the period of relaxation of anti-porn laws but there are parts relevent to child porn. I advise people to read the following article. It's really an eye opener.

    Porn in Japan

    This quote from the article is pertinent to this discussion:

    "These decreases in sex crimes involving children are particularly noteworthy since in Japan, as in Denmark, for the time under review, there were no laws against the personal non-commercial possession or use of depictions of children involved in sexual activities; so-called "childporn" (Kutchinsky, 1985a; pp. 5)."

  66. Not an RIAA/MPAA issue by servognome · · Score: 1

    From the court decision, by burning compilations he was in fact producing new works. This is something that already has been upheld in the courts. Basically the only thing this applies to in the sense of the music/movie industries is that the individuals produce and own the copyright to their own compilations (eg DJ's creating their own playlist).

    --
    D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
  67. Re:Three points (Refuted) by zoloto · · Score: 2, Informative

    Karma can go to hell for now, so I'll bite.

    1) Correct. Copying child porn is not the same as creating new child porn. But the child is still victimized. True, even if physically done only once to the child their victimization is celebrated, condoned, accepted in the minds of individuals repeatedly. Fantasizing over a child in a sexual (explicit or other) way does its damage the first time, and every time after that is reinforcing such acts into the mind, each as damage reinforcing as the next.

    2) Your questioning why people call him a scumbag, and I will avoid discussing that for now. But you're wrong about what people choose what they are attracted to, and whom and here is why. Choice. Based on the preponderance of education one receives by a vast majority of people in any given region, child molestation and exploitation is known to be wrong. This man had a choice, even at an earlier age, to not do something that was wrong but instead chose to do it. A small attraction, if allowed to be entertained in the mind, will grow into something much larger than anticipated or even expected. But that's the crux of the matter. He did have a choice and did not choose correctly with either the laws of the land or what was accepted universally by a vast majority of people in this world that you DO NOT sexually exploit a child for any reason.

    If you doubt that thoughts lead to actions or in any way dispute this please read books by, "Lazarus, Lazarus & Fay, 1993", Shengold (1995), Sutherland (1995) and vos Savant (1996) and acquaint yourself with how choices that are left uncorrected or unguided can be damaging to an individual or many others around them. "The Manifold of Sense" - by Dr. Sam Vaknin is also a good read that deals with Narcissism. Believe me when I say that it is quite related to this issue.

    3) For example, it is illegal to create computer-generated child pornography. Why!? ... no children are harmed. Yes you are right. However, the basic premise of child pornography, no matter in regards to it's fictitious or actual nature in being, is so repugnant, combined with common knowledge of the basic premise that thoughts do lead to actions is why any "art" depicting sexual exploitation is deemed illegal.

    I'm shocked, though it's not completely surprising, the amount of people who come out and give speeches where they claim "sex-related laws are based on some twisted idea of morality, and nothing more." That so called "twisted" idea of morality is based on the moral reasoning from a deontological point of view. That such acts deviate from the stability of society and must be quashed, even when some of them are veiled from the public and aren't allowed audience or to promulgate to prevent the perpetuation of acceptance of such acts.

    While I could go on about the ramifications of the ill-informed and undereducated status of the people in this country regarding the stability of society from a moral point of view, it wouldn't do this thread any justice, failing to hold the attention to the points you raised.

  68. Is it just me? by TallMatthew · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Or has sex with underage boys/girls become the most vilified act in American culture?

    I'm not condoning anything, but it's really getting out of hand. There are people dying by the thousands in this country and abroad, people in serious trouble with dope, women who aren't getting child support and who are getting beaten up, and yet with all these things going on, what America considers the most heinous crime is sex with children. I find it very bizarre that the same country that sobbed griveously over the death of Jon Benet Ramsey, who was dressed up like a hooker and paraded around in beauty contests before she turned 10, is chomping at the bit to put away pedophiles.

    I don't know about anyone else, but if I see a little kid coming my way, I go the other direction. I would never address a child without his/her parent present, which is kind sad because when I was young, there were lots of adults who would talk to me. It would be kind of nice to be a buddy to some kid on the block, to find out what he/she is about, maybe even toss a ball around or something, but forget that. I don't need those problems.

    As for the poor bastards who get themselves in a predicament with a kid, they might as well leave the country because their life is effectively over in this country.

    Yuck.

    1. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      >> Is it just me? or has sex with underage boys/girls become the most
      >> vilified act in American culture?

      Actually no, sex with minors OUTSIDE of marriage is.

      Many US states cheerfully allow minors under the age of 15 to marry in defiance
      of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, General Assembly resolution 2018,
      which states:

      "Member States shall take legislative action to specify a minimum age for marriage, which in any case
      shall not be less than fifteen years of age; no marriage shall be legally entered into by any person
      under this age, except where a competent authority has granted a dispensation as to age, for serious
      reasons, in the interest of the intending spouses."

      This makes the US (a UN member) a rogue nation and a human rights violator
      when it comes to the rights of children and their sexual safety.

      Want to have sex legally with a 13 year-old nymphet? marry her in New Hampshire
      and bang her with impunity with the courts' blessing.

    2. Re:Is it just me? by briansmith · · Score: 2, Insightful
      There are people dying by the thousands in this country and abroad, people in serious trouble with dope, women who aren't getting child support and who are getting beaten up, and yet with all these things going on


      If you are sexually abused as a child, the chances that you end up ALSO experiencing any or all of the above problems increase considerable due to the incredible psychological trauma that comes with sexual abuse.


      There are many, many people well above 18 years old that cannot handle the psychological implications of totally consensual sexual relationships. When a child is subjected to sexual encounters before he/she can even comprehend the consequences or morality of those situations, the adverse psychological impact is magnified when they realize it later on in life.


      I find it very bizarre that the same country that sobbed griveously over the death of Jon Benet Ramsey, who was dressed up like a hooker and paraded around in beauty contests before she turned 10, is chomping at the bit to put away pedophiles.


      First of all, the whole country did NOT sob over the death of Jon Benet Ramsey. In fact, all mentions of that case among regular people that I heard involved something along the lines of "why is she getting so much attention when there are so many other children who ignored?"


      Anyway, I think most educated people would say that the Ramsey family's exploitation of their daughter was wrong, too. Some of those people would say that the way that they dressed her was wrong too. But, just because her family dressed her in an "unappropriate" way doesn't mean that we should care any less about her death than we would any other child.

    3. Re:Is it just me? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      There are people dying by the thousands in this country and abroad

      According to the hungersite, 24,000 people die every day of hunger and related causes.

      Just sayin'.

    4. Re:Is it just me? by Xeth · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Indeed. Just look at the comments for the story. Everyone who even vaguely sides with this guy is loudly proclaiming how much pedophiles are scumbags and that every breath these deranged and inhuman creatures take is an affront to all that is good and moral, as if they're afraid of even a casual association with such people.

      The extreme criminalization of such a simple act (viewing/possessing images) scares me. I live in a dorm. It's a public place, and sometimes I leave my door open. What if I step out for a moment, and someone loads some child porn on my machine and runs away? Or what if my machine gets compromised and starts downloading such things in the background? Then I'm totally screwed. I think people need to step back from the visceral response of terror and hatred that comes from sexually abusing children, and consider things rationally for a moment.

      --
      If your theory is different from practice, then your theory is wrong.
    5. Re:Is it just me? by Eol1 · · Score: 1

      "Want to have sex legally with a 13 year-old nymphet? marry her in New Hampshire
      and bang her with impunity with the courts' blessing."

      Just make sure you don't cross state lines. Its illegal to have sex with anybody under the age of 18 (federal law) period. If you cross state or country lines, you fall under federal juristiction and will be jailed for have sex with a minor (your wife). This law was recently passed to curb legal sex tourism (where Americans would go to lets say Burma where sex with 8 years old legal and be immune to prosecution when they came home). Its a BS law but one that can

      Also there was a recent case in Kansas where a guy married the 14 year old he knocked up (she was from Missouri, had both parental and HER OWN consent) and then was tossed in jail for raping a minor. The evidence: She was pregnant before they were married. He is now in jail doing 20.

      --
      De Oppresso Liber
    6. Re:Is it just me? by Eol1 · · Score: 1

      Because we are in America. Just like we have laws against child labour but somehow Hollywood and sports are immune from this. Its legal for child actors to work adult hours and somehow forcing your child to play / practice 10 hours a day for a paid professional sport (as you have to start them young if you plan to be a multimillion dollar sports star at 16) is legal.

      Its ok to abuse children in America, just don't have sex with them. Have to love the American way.

      --
      De Oppresso Liber
    7. Re:Is it just me? by typical · · Score: 1

      If you are sexually abused as a child, the chances that you end up ALSO experiencing any or all of the above problems increase considerable due to the incredible psychological trauma that comes with sexual abuse.

      Can you (a) support this and (b) demonstrate that this is a causual link and not simply a correlation?

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    8. Re:Is it just me? by _vSyncBomb · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Uh, no, it's not just you... it's apparently you and a whole lot of other weird pervert freaks. (E.g., those that moderated your post "Score:5, Interesting", for example... maybe they're some of those "poor bastards" who get themseves into "predicaments" with kids, so they understand where you're coming from.)

      I personally talk to kids all the time, even toss them back them their footballs when they bounce my way. Never had any "problems" with doing that. The thing that works for me, which you might want to try, is keeping my dick in my pants--and my hands out of theirs--while doing so.

      And regardless, sex with underage children helps terrorists kill Americans.

    9. Re:Is it just me? by peterfa · · Score: 1
      1. MANY experts agree totally. I've been educated in college about psychology and human sexuality. This does a lot of damage.
      2. When most children who are abused end up with lots of problems such as substance abuse and suicide, much greater than average, even a "casual correlation" is significant. Now what if you were sexually abused?
    10. Re:Is it just me? by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      People have such a visceral response to CP because children are vulnerable.

      I was young and vulnerable once, so were you.

      People who are used that way end up completely fucked in the head. The vast majority of them will end up spending the rest of their lives dealing with the psychological fallout of their abuse.

      Sexually abused children have a higher rate of suicide, depression, eating disorders, sexual disfunction, pretty much any negative mental problems you can think of. Some of them retreat into themselves and stop trusting people, others end up engaging in dangerous behaviors to get attention.

      If you haven't taken a specific class in behavioral psychology or if you don't know anyone who's been sexually abused/assaulted at a young age... you might not appreciate just how it can destroy someone.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    11. Re:Is it just me? by stwrtpj · · Score: 1
      I'm not condoning anything, but it's really getting out of hand. There are people dying by the thousands in this country and abroad, people in serious trouble with dope, women who aren't getting child support and who are getting beaten up, and yet with all these things going on, what America considers the most heinous crime is sex with children. I find it very bizarre that the same country that sobbed griveously over the death of Jon Benet Ramsey, who was dressed up like a hooker and paraded around in beauty contests before she turned 10, is chomping at the bit to put away pedophiles.

      The main problem is that no one wants to take the time to examine each instance on a case-by-case basis. Instead, we cling to absolutes and hold everything up to a black-and-white litmus test. Things that should be no-brainers are not, and vice-versa. Examples (at least to me) of no-brainers:

      1. 30 year old man has sex with 5 year old girl. Pretty cut-and-dry there. I would not trust the 5 year old to have given informed consent.
      2. 30 year old man has sex with 17 years old girl. Odds are the girl knew exactly what she was doing and gave informed consent.

      But guess what? The age of consent is 18 in your state. Sorry, player #2, go to jail, do not pass GO.

      Stupid, isn't it? Yes, I agree, things get more difficult as the age goes down from 17 as to whether the person was giving informed consent. But we continue to apply a single standard and as a result, we get people branded freaking sex offenders when their only real "crime" was a lack of good judgement.

      --
      Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
    12. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Or has sex with underage boys/girls become the most vilified act in American culture?

      Paedophilia is not about seducing seventeen year old girls. It is about having sex with children that are crying and begging you to stop. Is is not sexually arousing for normal people. The victims are miserable and scarred for life. A person very dear to me killed herself as a result of being abused almost twenty years before. If you ask me it rightly is a vilified act if not the worst.

    13. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it is just you, and you ought to check that guilty conscience. Why would there be a problem with talking to a child or throwing a ball around...unless you are afraid it will lead to something else.

      And to answer your question, the sexual abuse and exploitation of a child should be considered a heinous crime. The thought of an innocent life being destroyed because some sicko can't control themself is a horrible tragedy and should not be tolerated by anyone. You are so worried about the "life" of a person who get themselves into a "predicament with a kid," but you apparently couldn't couldn't care less about the child who's life was ruined. That is just sad.

      In my opinion, anyone who gets off this crap is no better than the person who makes it, so they all should hang.

    14. Re:Is it just me? by esmoothie · · Score: 1

      America seems to make a big deal out of sex in general. Was anyone else troubled when people threw a fit over GTA because of the sex in it and not because it condones killing cops and pedestrians?

    15. Re:Is it just me? by briansmith · · Score: 1

      In case you are not just trolling:

      http://www.google.com/search?q=study+consequences+ of+sexual+abuse

      Depending on the study: sexual abuse victims are more likely to be suicidal, more likely to become criminals (in particular, prostitutes), and much more likely to engage in long-term abusive relationships.

      As for whether it is just a correlation, I think you should just apply some common sense.

      Also, try talking to a few victims of sexual abuse and forming an opinion on your own.

    16. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, this is not true, at all. It is purely a cultural phenomenon which manifests itself in the "victim" as "abuse" only after years of those in their surroundings instructing them how to feel as though they were "violated". That is, assuming the "victim" gave their consent. In light of this, it is the legal and mass media systems which are hurting the child, not the one physically involved in the act.

      Their could be an environmental correlation but that is too heavily confounded to be the basis of causation.

      Americans tend to forget that, just because they feel something, it doesn't make it absolute. It is just how that culture defines things. There are places where this concept doesn't exist and, interestingly enough, neither does the problem. Take a course in parapsychology or some specialized sociology courses. Both of these touch on this issue and it is really quite interesting.

      The unfortunate part is that this has been made into such a hot button that the ability to discuss the real issue has been lost. It is practically using witch hunt tactics to name anyone who isn't outraged past the point of reasoning as one who is part of the problem.

      If only the legal systems in some countries could mature a little. Sure, doing something without someone's consent is not right but age is used to cloud the issue.

    17. Re:Is it just me? by westlake · · Score: 1
      The extreme criminalization of such a simple act (viewing/possessing images) scares me. I live in a dorm. It's a public place, and sometimes I leave my door open. What if I step out for a moment, and someone loads some child porn on my machine and runs away? Or what if my machine gets compromised and starts downloading such things in the background? Then I'm totally screwed

      You can multiply the "what ifs" endlessly.
      But the reality of an arrest for child pornography looks more like this:

      The offender will be an adult male, an authority figure with daily access to children age twelve and under, perhaps most likely a teacher or other professional.
      His conduct will be reckless, arrogant and self-destructive past all belief. Downloading and forwarding thousands or tens of thosands of images to his home computer from work. With little or no effort made to cover his tracks.
      It will cost him his job, his career, his reputation, his marriage.

    18. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it is just you. because all across the world an adult male raping a young child is disgusting and horrific act that enrages everyone but the sickest of individuals.

      So this means you are one of those sick individuals?

    19. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Societies are different. For much of the world's history 13 was close to the ideal marrying age in many cultures. When you grow up knowing that, are treated like an adult from about age 10 and are prepared to run a household by the time you are 12, things seem a bit different to you. Human beings are extremely flexible creatures. Even today some 13-year-olds are much better prepared for marriage than some 30-year-olds. I don't even think there should be a hard line; I think that below a certain age (say 18) you should just have to get an independent evaluation of your maturity and awareness.

    20. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because of the stupidity over GTA, I'll probably never vote for Hillary Clinton now... I liked her when she said it took a village to raise a child. She later retracted that view to appease the conservatives (who said it takes a mother and a father to raise a child). I think she did all that grand standing over GTA for the same politically effective but idealogically confused reasons. Any politician that actually discusses the problems and dynamics of child abuse in the US in detail, rather than just "cracking down", will however, get my vote.

    21. Re:Is it just me? by marvinglenn · · Score: 1
      I live in a dorm. It's a public place, and sometimes I leave my door open. What if I step out for a moment, and someone loads some child porn on my machine and runs away? Or what if my machine gets compromised and starts downloading such things in the background?

      Hopefully you wouldn't go and burn those files to a CDR once you discovered they were there. Doing such would establish that you know/knew the content was there, and wished to preserve it.
      --
      The whores get mad when the sluts give it away for free.
    22. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > With little or no effort made to cover his tracks.

      You sound you are rather "experienced" yourself in this area. Hmm.

    23. Re:Is it just me? by peterfa · · Score: 1
      Just so you know, I've been educated by experienced psychologists. If what I say is wrong, then to hell with all of their reputations and experience.

      It is true that in cultures where this behavior is considered normal that victims suffer a less. It's also true that in other cultures they mutilate genitals. There is no ignoring the fact that the child was taken advantaged of because the adult was superior in reasoning. There's also the simple nervous system responses. The child doesn't know about what sex is and about sexual desire. Sexual behavior with a child violates the child.

      Anyways, a class in "parapsychology" isn't definitive either. Just because you've seen a counter argument doesn't mean that children aren't actually hurt. Other counter arguments: "We are sexually liberating the children." and "I just couldn't help myself."

      There's also the evolutionist perspective. Which you'd be familiar knowing so much about psychology. There is no advantage to having any kind of sex with children. They cannot reproduce. If a girl manages to get pregnant, she will have sever problems.

      Further, the vagina of a young girl is very delicate. Sex with a young girl damages her vagina very easily. This is clear evidence that sex with children is wrong and damaging. If it was ment to be, then it wouldn't hurt. It is not a cultural phenomenom.

      Check out this site for more information

    24. Re:Is it just me? by peterfa · · Score: 1

      If this guy is a troll, I fell for it agian. >:(

    25. Re:Is it just me? by TallMatthew · · Score: 1
      Yes it is just you, and you ought to check that guilty conscience. Why would there be a problem with talking to a child or throwing a ball around...unless you are afraid it will lead to something else.

      This is exactly the kind of pedestrian logic that is driving the country insane.

      One mustn't approach children, because other people might think something's wrong.

      One must approach children, otherwise other people will think you are a wrong person.

      Onward Christian soldiers ... thank you so much for your retarded moral system.

    26. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes, its part of a conspiracy.

      1. Program (mind control) the feel of extreme hatred towards paedophiles molesting 8 year olds. (easy, its a disgusting crime)
      2. Gradually extend the subject of hatred (paedophiles) by redefining the crime.
      3. ??? Soon, quite a high percentage of the population can be defined as paedophiles.
      4. Profit! Anyone who challengs you politically/commercially can now be thretened or framed. In spain it was heretics, but the american inquisition will use a diffrent kind of witch.

      If burning is producing, you need proof all models are of legal age, or you can be charged with producing child pornography. This in effect outlaws all porn. Metal headware cant save you from the media mind control, you need to improve your knowledge in how cults work to defend your mind.

    27. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Paedophilia is not about seducing seventeen year old girls. It is about having sex with children that are crying and begging you to stop. Is is not sexually arousing for normal people."

      No, paedophilia is about being attracted to children.

      Having sex with children is called statutory rape. Having sex with children who are crying and begging you to stop is called aggravated sexual battery against a minor.

      Paedophilia, as you fail to understand, is not a crime.

    28. Re:Is it just me? by sirwired · · Score: 1

      So basically what you are saying is that the punishment of a serious crime should be based on the ability of somebody to frame you for it?

      What is happening here is you are confusing the difference between conviction and sentencing. In the criminal justice system, determination of guilt and seriousness of sentence are two separate functions. A conviction is based on the amount of evidence available. Your sentence is based on the crime, NOT how likely it is your conviction is correct. (At least in theory.) Those convicted by circumstantial evidence don't (or shouldn't, anyway) receive a greater or lesser sentence than those convicted by 50 eyewitnesses and 40 forensic scientists. This would reward clever criminals that are good at covering their tracks.

      While a wrong conviction may be more likely for such a serious and villified crime, (I honestly don't know), that does not mean that the punishment should be reduced. Instead, the standards for evidence should be raised higher if wrong convictions are a problem.

      The determiniation of standards for evidence is a whole other topic that is beyond the scope of this post.

      SirWired

    29. Re:Is it just me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'd appreciate if someone could comment on the legality of the following scenario:

      user sets up a large encrypted file & loopback setup.

      user sets up filesharing software to save all downloaded data to /dev/null. user then uses filesharing software to download heinous, morally repugnant graphic images/videos/copyrighted material... contraband, you get the picture.

      user's net activity trips multiple flags with ISP/law enforcement.

      law enforcement seizes hard drive. When no data are found they assume contraband must be in encrypted file.

      law enforcement cannot decrypt. when they finally coerce/threaten/beat password from user, they find a homemade video entitled "you're a fascist" with images of Mao, Nazi Germany, concentration camps, Taliban executions...

      data were transmitted but never stored. nothing new was created. user never had posession of illegal material. were any laws broken?

      this may be modded off topic, but I believe it is relevant to the discusion.

    30. Re:Is it just me? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      What he's saying is that the villification means that the public doesn't care about sentencing anymore.

      Just ask someone on the street what should be done with a person who is accused of child pornography. Their first reaction will not be "give them a fair trial like everyone else".

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    31. Re:Is it just me? by khallow · · Score: 1

      You're assuming that a temporary copy of the contraband doesn't appear on the hard disk. Still with a little care, there need not be anything to seize.

  69. A little more information makes this clear by TartlessMango · · Score: 1

    From the ruling (much more informative than the stub or the article), the man had burned over 50 CDs of child porn, not just one. This makes the charge a little more reasonable than the stub or article makes it sound, since he could be intending to sell or distribute the material.

    Also from the ruling, the man was caught red-handed videotaping an exchange student (young male) in the shower. Evidence found at his house indicated he had been habitually inviting exchange students to stay at his house so that he could do this.

  70. burning? by Jacek+Poplawski · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one who understood that he was PRINTING it on paper then BURN this paper?

  71. Not a Virgin - w00! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    This is so excellent, this means legally I have 'made' oh so many chicks, but wait a minit that means I made Bill Gates and Goatse too and all those cute little kittens. I think I am gonna shootmyself forking internet

  72. disappointed by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    I checked aclu.org, and even read some of the articles linked there, but was unable to find Some Bleeding-Heart's Cry of Foul Play against a Pedophile. Could you please provide a direct link to this work of literature, or perhaps a .torrent file? I'd like to burn it to DVD.

    1. Re:disappointed by ichthus · · Score: 1

      Are you really so stupid as to think I was refering to a specific brief or article on aclu.org? Or, can you see the commonality of position between the poster's stance and that of the ACLU? Big stretch there. Here's a hint: BOTH ARE LIBERAL. Get it?

      --
      sig: sauer
    2. Re:disappointed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, the good ol' "all liberals support pedos" argument.

      Try this on for size: the guy appeals, and the apellate court agrees that this is the stupidest thing they've ever heard and overturn the case on procedural error. The guy walks, and all because the prosecutor had a fucking hardon for pedos and couldn't figure out how to use the law the right way. I'm surpised the prosecutor hasn't managed to blow his face off with a fork yet, with a level of stupidity like this.

    3. Re:disappointed by Jongpil+Yun · · Score: 1

      Right wing Slashdot poster, meet sarcasm. While I'm surprised you haven't met already, I hope you have a nice time together.

      Idiot.

  73. It WAS appealed by TartlessMango · · Score: 1
    If the guy has a descent lawyer, it'll be appealed.

    The document linked to in the stub is the appeals document (ie. he did appeal). The appeal was denied.

  74. copy vs. create by icepick72 · · Score: 1
    something new was created or made that did not previously exist.

    In the case of the RIAA, maybe this is good news for people because the RIAA is concerned about "copying" music, not "creating" music. So in the latter case if it didn't previously exist then we're not copying anything. Hahaha. Screwed up logic but the courts are screwed up often-time so maybe this could make 'em think for a while.

  75. This site illegal? by darkain · · Score: 2, Funny

    It is now illegal for me to browse the slashdot web site, because in order to view it, my browser must "make" a temporary file on my local hard disc of the copyrighted slashdot logo. I hereby turn myself in for copyright violation.

  76. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Good point, but I don't think anyone was actually tortured in Hostel. In fact I believe that "snuff films" may be illegal.

    You could argue that if simulated rape, torture, and killing in a movie are ok then simulated sex with a child is ok. Somehow it just doesn't feel ok. To me anyway.

    BTW RE: your sig -- you sure do sound like a libertarian;-)

  77. hey imbecile by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The United States does not have an age of consent of 18. In fact, the United States does not have an age of consent. Each state sets the age of consent, which can go as low as 14. I very much doubt that 14 puts the US a relatively high age of consent among the western nations. What we're talking about here is the definition of child pornography, which has the model below 18 in almost every jurisdiction, even your shitty old England. This has nothing to do with age of consent.

  78. Re:Good... by bnenning · · Score: 2

    ...throw the book at the sick bastard.

    I agree, but let's do it with existing law, rather than twisting words to create bizarre interpretations that can easily be abused in other cases.

    --
    How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  79. bottom line.. by rupert0 · · Score: 1

    the guy had child porn, i woud'nt give him any posibilities to get free.

    --
    RUPERT! I TOLD YOU TO WATCH THE BAGS! You were looking at the boys again, WEREN'T YOU.
  80. Language, please. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pedophile -> Somebody who loves feet. Bloody Americans corrupting a perfectly good language.

    1. Re:Language, please. by Theatetus · · Score: 2, Informative

      In American English, foot-lovers are podophiles. The Greek vowel stems are actually a bit ambiguous between (don't trust unicode so just interpret the ascii) p[e|o]s (foot) and p[ai|e]s (child).

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
  81. If only he had moved instead of copied by Eol1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just finished reading the ruling and I personally think the judge is intentionally misreading a law that hasn't been updated to incorporate the realities of the digital age.

    He seems hellbent on 'The decision by the Legislature to specifically include reproductions or copies in defining child sexually abusive material, which term is then incorporated into subsection 145c(2), leaves no room for contrary judicial construction.'

    So if our pedo has just MOVED the file to CDR instead of copying them would this not apply? Basically it appears to me that the pedo is getting nailed for making backups. I highly doubt the orginal intent of the law was to prevent people from backing up their data. The problem with reading reproduction as he read it is anything that isn't the orginal is a reproduction. Our pedo reproduced the the images from Russia, reproduced them when he stored them, reproduced them in his cache when he moves them around his drive or views them, etc etc.

    This kind of narrow reading really pisses me off and I think people are missing the broader impact of this ruling on other more popular slashdot illicit actions (like warez or copyright infringement). People really need to look past the child porn part of the ruling as the judge wasn't ruling on child pornography, he was ruling on the legal meaning of the word reproduce in the digital age. Hopefully the SC throws this out and sides with our pedo.

    --
    De Oppresso Liber
    1. Re:If only he had moved instead of copied by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      1. There is more than one judge on the MI appellate court, and the decision represents their consensus. 2. One never moves a file from hard drive to CD. A new copy is made on the CD, then the original is deleted from the hard drive. 3. The ruling was on the definition of "make," not "reproduction." That definition exactly fits what the defendant did.

  82. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    That's the only reason I could see giving the guy the minimum... When the father's waiting for him on the outside. (Well, any relative or concerned individual would do).

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  83. YOU ARE INSANE ALTOGETHER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Excuse me everybody, but are you insane altogether ? The guy had CHILD PORN on hid machine.
    NO MATTER HOW they manage to fine&jail him, IT WAS THE RIGHT THING TO DO.
    There is NO EXCUSE for such likings, NO EXCUSE for this sexual orientation.

    And no, I'm not a Christian fundamentalist, thanks for asking.

    1. Re:YOU ARE INSANE ALTOGETHER by aduzik · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While I agree with you that this scumbag needs to rot in jail for a good, long time...

      NO EXCUSE for this sexual orientation

      Pedophilia is not a sexual orientation. Gay and straight are sexual orientations. They have nothing to do with this filth.

      Now, back to the original point, I think that when someone has done something as horrifying as download child pornography, a court's natural reaction, if they're human, is to throw every conceivable book at the bastard. I think that the reason they claim that burning a CD containing kiddie porn is the same thing as "making" porn is that he was making media for the express purpose of carrying this kind of filth. If he put it on his hard drive, he easily could have deleted the files, so he didn't "make" a hard drive. But when he burned a CD, he made a CD, and the only way to disassociate the data from the media is to physically destroy both. In that respect, I can see how the court would find that he was making porn.

      Now, let's all pray to our respective gods that this guy never sees the outside of a prison cell ever again.

      --
      If it's not one thing it's your mother.
    2. Re:YOU ARE INSANE ALTOGETHER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      May you be reborn as a pedophile so that mercy may take root in your soul.

  84. Fallacy by i8puppies · · Score: 0

    You assume that child pornography is a market. You then base the rest of your argument off of this assumption.

    Child pornography is not like regular pornography. It does not follow supply & demand.
    Child pornography will be made regardless of whether or not child pornography already exists. It is the byproduct of bad human nature.

    Your argument makes as much sense as "Real video files of people being killed will cause more murders."

    Child pornography is not like the tabacco industry or starbucks. Child pornographers won't "lose motivation" to exploit children just because they have no audience.

    1. Re:Fallacy by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      You don't think there is a network effect? I.e. the more producers there are, trading films, images, etc. the more they will create?

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    2. Re:Fallacy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But he's not a producer, he's just a backer-upper. Lets say you download a copy of MS Office. A crime has been committed yes. If you burn it to a disk, should that be a seperate crime? That's the question here. He's not burning it, handing it out and saying "hey guys, anyone got some stuff to trade?" He's just saying "I have committed a crime and I don't want to have to recommit the crime if my computer dies."

      Yeah, if you start showing your friends how you have expensive illegally downloaded software you may create a demand as more and more people know you've "got the goods" and offer to trade you other illgotten goods for it, but by and large if you're keeping it to yourself, you're only filling your own demand, not creating it in someone who otherwise didn't want it.

    3. Re:Fallacy by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      The OP that I was originally replying to was arguing that there was no "child porn market" and hence posession should not be illegal. My point here is that posession *should* be illegal, but that this guy should *only* be guilty of posession, not of manufacture or without further evidence of distribution.

      Just making myself clear.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  85. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    'looking at it on a screen might intice you into doing it for real' thing.

    I do disagree with this line of reasoning, at least for competant adults. I was just keeping the post short. There's plenty of people out there trying to ban violent video games because of the exact same logic. In actuality, the statistics work out the opposite in many cases. People use the games as a form of catharism, working the violence out of their system. By that logic simulated porn could actually help the pedo control his or her impulses, avoiding commiting the greater crime.

    At least in most movies, commision of illegal acts are eighter punished or explained away as the 'greater need'. Vigilante justice and such.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  86. What's so special about "burning?" by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

    What is the significant difference between burning a CD and downloading this stuff to your hard drive? By this definition, wasn't he "making" something when he downloaded the files?

    --
    // This is not a sig.
    1. Re:What's so special about "burning?" by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      What's special about burning is that the court was asked to rule on burning. Had it been asked to rule on downloading, it would have reached the same conclusion. Downloading makes a new, addition copy of a file.

    2. Re:What's so special about "burning?" by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      Thanks prof poindexter. Now care to give us a lecture on case law and precedent?

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    3. Re:What's so special about "burning?" by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      You'll find case law and precedent aplenty in the Michigan court's opinion: http://tinyurl.com/cxzsy

    4. Re:What's so special about "burning?" by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      I think you missed my point. I suppose I'm being far too oblique for print. But whatever.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    5. Re:What's so special about "burning?" by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      Take a writing class.

  87. fair use? by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    He was not, to my knowledge, charged with copyright violations.

    1. Re:fair use? by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      That sure would be nice though, eh? It would make tracking down pedophiles a heck of a lot easier if they started suing eachother over copyright infringement.

  88. Throw him in jail by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    But dont make up new stuff... Geesh. Dont courts even think about what they are doing these days, and the long term effects of judgements?

    Sure the guy is sick, and should be jailed. but he commited the crime by REproducing it. Thats enough for a conviction.. why invent things that really arent true?

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  89. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by John+Nowak · · Score: 1

    Bad example then -- See Ichi the Killer.

  90. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Jeremi · · Score: 1
    60 days or 40 years - doesn't matter as long as you make sure his cellmate has a child on the outside. Accidents happen...


    They do, but what you describe above is more appropriately called murder, and you would be an accessory to it.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  91. One word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FUCK.

  92. You assume too much by i8puppies · · Score: 0

    A) looking at porn does not guarentee you will go out and look at more.
    B) child pornography does not follow supply and demand. child pornography is a byproduct of bad human nature, not because of the needs of some imaginary underground community. child pornographers will not lose motivation to make child porn just because they have no audience.
    C) define the exact age when every single person on the planet was known to be self-aware and able to make judgements for themselves. you might find it harder than you think. age of consent in idaho is 14.

    child porn does need to be stopped, but understand that child porn does not make people into child molesters, it's the other way around.
    these are blurry lines we walk on. if i watch a video of someone being killed and am gratified by it, am i no different than the murderer? who is fit to judge?

  93. This makes sence by a_greer2005 · · Score: 1

    He made copys, it is the same if he had prints and the equipment to duplicate. What is the problem here?

  94. How a bout a sexual definition? by Gorimek · · Score: 1

    I would prefer a sexual definition of porn. That is, porn involving pre-pubescent people would be child porn, while porn involving sexually mature persons is not. If you can reproduce, you are not a child in a biological sense.

    That would tie in with what pedophelia actually is. It's not the desire to have sex with people under 18. Lusting for a 17 year old does not in any way make you a pedophile, and it's bizarre and sad that some people actually believe that.

    That's not to say that porn involving under 18's could not be illegal, or that there couldn't be a separate age of consent, but it should be done as it's own thing, not by pretending that either of these things are pedophilia.

    1. Re:How a bout a sexual definition? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Well, ignoring the fact that puberty doesn't happen overnight, the point is that we're not looking for a sexually mature model. We really don't care about the particular sexual deviancies of the viewer; we're worried that a young girl may be sold into the porn industry either without consent or with "consent" - but she's too young to understand all its ramifications. 18 is the age of majority, when you're capable of making legal decisions on your own.

    2. Re:How a bout a sexual definition? by chgros · · Score: 1

      would prefer a sexual definition of porn. That is, porn involving pre-pubescent people would be child porn, while porn involving sexually mature persons is not. If you can reproduce, you are not a child in a biological sense.
      Of course yo DO realize that puberty (for girls) happens on average before 13...

  95. Man guilty after creating hard disk bit copy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The bit sequence on his hard drive did not exist until he downloaded the stuff. It's persistant storage. CD not even necessary.

    Cheers

  96. Misunderstood by TakaIta · · Score: 1
    To me it seemed a very strange thing to download porn, just to be able to burn it afterwards. That is, until I understood it was about burning on a CD.

    I imagined that someone tried to destroy porn this way. An incredibly stupid person, because the original porn would still remain available for download.

  97. The problem is (IANAL) by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    that the law should not be able to be executed in creative ways that appear arbitrary. Arbitrary governance is not really a good thing for a democracy.

    If the law is not to apply to others caught with the same thing, then we do not live under the rule of law.

    Look, I am not saying the guy shouldn't be punished, but rather that the law should be even-handed.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  98. Are you saying (IANAL) by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    that when he downloads kiddie porn and saves the images to his hard drive, that he has made an article of pornography (his hard drive)?

    If so, then wouldn't any case of digital kiddie porn involve manufacture?

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Are you saying (IANAL) by xwizbt · · Score: 1

      In which case any image sent to my email could appear on my hard drive and be considered. There are far reaching implications for this case regarding the data on my hard disk. Not all of it is there at my request.

      Regardless, if I organise the data on my hard disk and burn it to a CD, am I not claiming some sort of ownership. I might quickly knock off a music CD for my mate, or rip a couple of VIDEO_TS folders off for someone else. I'm taking the data and changing it.

      In a case like this, taking child porn, reorganising it and committing it to CD is surely asking for trouble. 'It's only for my personal use' is hardly an argument. What possible personal use could there be that's acceptable? Can anyone stand up and say that organising child porn on your hard disk in any way is legal?



      But then we extend it to other formats. MP3s. Well, it's either legal for you to burn a CD or not, isn't it. If it's not, then don't; it's hardly like 'Well, if you're downloading child porn you can do this, so why can't I do this with the latest blah-blah album?'. How can child porn be compared to burning a music track. Either the item you're burning is legal or it isn't. Child porn isn't. Your music might be. Go figure.

    2. Re:Are you saying (IANAL) by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      Can anyone stand up and say that organising child porn on your hard disk in any way is legal?

      We all agree the answer to that question is "no." But the question is "how illegal is it?"

      Is it mere posession? Is it production or distribution? This is what this debate is boiling down to.

      The fact that someone burns a CD doesn't necessarily mean that either manufacture or distribution is occurring. It is still illegal, but it shouldn't be considered manufacture in this case, I think.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  99. hey anonymous asscrust by HexRei · · Score: 1

    Semantics. Almost every state has an age of consent of 16 for the vast majority of the population. The discrepancies you mention almost unanimously have a condition of marriage, age difference of the participants, or gender of the participants. For all intents and purposes, for the vast majority of those over 18 in the US, the age of consent is 18.

    That said, I did misunderstand the previous poster. And I'm not from england, ass.

  100. I would go further by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    And to say that further distribution or interest in child pornography creates all kinds of incentives (including financial) for its continued production. Therefore, like using unlicensed copies of Windows, it perpetuates a harmful cycle.

    Again, this is a stupid ruling.

    Also regarding many of the sex-related laws being primarily about a religious sense of morality, I would agree to a point (though many of the laws worthy of such criticism are either no longer enforced, have been repealed, or have been struck down). However, you can't get from "many laws are such-and-such" to "this law is such-and-such" without making a clear case. Child pornography is different from laws, say, enforcing certain distances in strip clubs primarily because the production of child pornography causes direct harm to children, and its distribution supports the system by which this occurs.

    It is true that for adult pornography some similar issues can be raised, particularly in the area of human trafficking. However, whether outlawing all porn would help solve that problem is debatable at best (I am unaware of any evidence that links these problems to the main producers of material). Here again, better enforcement of the underlying problem is more important than the laws regulating it. The same is not true for child porn, I'm afraid.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  101. hmm.. by ShaunC1000 · · Score: 1

    I thought all digital information is defined as intellectual property. Unless the guy actually took pictures of the kids he didn't create anything origional, he just re-produced previous IP. According to this definition, to avoid being charged by the RIAA all you would have to do is burn your downloaded MP3s to a CD and claimed you created the music using this ruling as a precedent. How could you be stealing music if you made it? The judge wanted to nail this guy, and I bet you someone is going to use it as a loop-hole.

  102. Hey! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am a pedophile, you insensitive clods!

  103. Did he burn for backup or distribution? by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If he burned for backup (meaning only one or two copies and he kept the CDs), then he's obviously not a producer or distributor. If he burned to give to others, then it would make sense to say he's "distributinng", if not "producing." Just looking at the definition of the word "make" is simply stupid when it comes to digital data.

    Irrelevant, anyway. Child porn is a non-issue. Child abuse is another matter. Come up with a program to stop child abuse, you don't have a child porn issue any more.

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
    1. Re:Did he burn for backup or distribution? by slim · · Score: 1

      Child porn is a non-issue. Child abuse is another matter. Come up with a program to stop child abuse, you don't have a child porn issue any more.

      While I agree with the sentiment, I think that's unrealistic. If there's a demand for child porn, children will be abused to feed that demand. In other words, children are being abused, who would not be getting abused if people weren't paying money for footage of it happening.

      Now, if you could detect the child abuse, prevent it, and let that market go unfed, that would be brilliant -- but people have a pesky habit of not getting caught.

    2. Re:Did he burn for backup or distribution? by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

      Problem applies to child porn equally. So it's no solution to pursue child porn. Child porn is like drugs - as long as there's a market, you'll have the crime. Get rid of the underlying reason for the market, it dries up. The real problem, of course, is that you can't ever get rid of the underlying reason - at least, not as long as society relegates the solutions to the state and the law.

      Much of what is prosecuted as "child porn" isn't even child porn in the sense everybody assumes, i.e., actual child "abuse". Much of it is simply pictures of naked kids, none of which has been established as encouraging actual child abuse by the CUSTOMERS, as opposed to the producers. And in this case, it sounds like a customer was convicted as being a producer - which is nothing to the purpose.

      Usenet newsgroups have tons of pictures of young "models", many of which are probably underage depending on what state or country you're in - argueably ogling Emma Watson of the Potter movies is "child porn" since she will be legal in England at sixteen this or next year (and she IS being ogled by a lot of people including me).

      Arresting people who are the consumers is the same bad concept as arresting drug users - it can't work because there are unlimited number of them and it replenishes. It's strictly a mechanism to criminalize people for their desires, which is a standard government trick to control the population. The excuse is always that the behavior has "negative social effects" which cost the "society" or certain individuals money or health or security or whatever and therefore it must be controlled. This argument is almost always incorrect and could be applied to almost any behavior. In other words, it ends up being an excuse for "anything not mandatory is prohibited."

      Concentrating on finding the people who actually abuse children to produce porn would be a more effective use of resources at the very least. But that's not the state's purpose.

      --
      Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  104. Not A Copyright Issue by reallocate · · Score: 1

    One, it is difficult to imagine a punishment that is not appropriate for a 'scumbag pedophile".

    Two, whether or not the act of burning existing child porn onto CD's and DVD's creates illegal "new" porn or amounts to the distribution of illegal porn, seems a pointless issue.

    Three, this isn't a copyright issue, unless the Russian originators of this stuff want to sue this guy for violating their copyright.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  105. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by kelleher · · Score: 1

    You can call it murder, I'd call it effectively removing a future threat. And if it were my daughter, it wouldn't matter what you called it - I'd still kill the guy.

  106. Displaying on monitor involves no copying by AmPz · · Score: 1

    "copying to a monitor / TV"
    Actually there is no copying going on when you display something on your monitor or TV, because there is no memory in the monitor. It is beeing displayed "live" from the graphics memory of your graphics card (or DVD-player).

    1. Re:Displaying on monitor involves no copying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not necessarily true. The JPG copy on disk makes no picture at all until presented on screen or other display. Printing to screen or printing to paper, what is the difference? Permanence? Well it wasn't a good enough reason to discount the temporary copy to cache or memory or transient storage on disk. So why here?

    2. Re:Displaying on monitor involves no copying by AmPz · · Score: 1

      Just because you cannot see something, doesn't mean it's not there (quote from "Small Soldiers").
      You can't see the picture on the harddrive, but the information is there. Just like it is stored in the RAM of your computer when you are actually using the jpg.
      It is however NOT in any way "stored" in the monitor. A monitor contains no memory at all.

      Let's say you print this jpg to a transparent sheet of plastic, and use a lightsource to project it against a wall. I'am sure you agree that by doing this you are not copying the picture from the transparent sheet of plastic to the wall. If you on the other hand for example take a photo of the sheet, then you have made a copy. (a copy of the information has been stored in your digital camera).

    3. Re:Displaying on monitor involves no copying by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      Actually, you might want to rethink the idea that a monitor "has no memory". While you are technically correct that monitors don't have frame buffers or such (ie, gobs of memory to hold an image), LCD monitors, by their very nature, act similar to DRAM with refresh (in that you have a bunch of transistors essentially acting as a very brief storage area for bits which are visible instead of hidden), and I wouldn't doubt that there is some limited amount of memory incorporated into some LCDs to allow the upping of the refresh rate or similar. In a similar vein, regular CRT-based monitors, while not likely having separate memory, could/can be used as memory itself (back in the 1940's/50's, specially designed CRTs, albeit with long-delay phophor coatings, were used as a form of memory storage on some early computers)...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  107. Quick Question Considering President by CrazyDuke · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ...err...I mean precedent, not president. Does this mean, if say, some random guy burns a copy of a video from Al Jazeera showing an act of terrorism, that they are guilty of making terrorism?

    Holy crap! Does this mean that people that still have pictures, videos, and articles of 9/11 are terrorists now?

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
  108. The difference is intent. by KenSeymour · · Score: 1

    I think the difference is intent.

    You can browse a child porn link unintentionally. That involves writing it to
    your monitor, hard drive (via the browser cache) and your RAM.
    It might have been spam or a popup.

    Having burned it to a cd or printed it out makes it hard to claim it was an accident.

    --
    "We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." -- Albert Einstein
    1. Re:The difference is intent. by Fastolfe · · Score: 1

      In the US, this differs from state to state. I suspect "intent" factors more into the discretion of the prosecution than the actual law. While I can't recall a case where someone was convicted solely due to a small number of clearly inadvertant retrievals, I have heard of cases where the bulk (if not the entirety) of the case against them was images stored in a browser cache. The sheer quantity of images suggested he was actually hunting for them, but the word of the law didn't care one way or the other. He was convicted because the images were stored on his hard drive. Even though they were in the browser cache, it was still possession. In this situation, even a single clearly inadvertant retrieval would mean the person broke a law. It's just up to the discretion of the police/prosecutors to decide whether it should be pursued.

      Now, I have no idea what state this was in. I should reiterate that every state has its own (possibly completely different and even contradictory) laws about this type of thing. I personally don't care for laws that require human discretion to keep it from being applied unfairly.

  109. the problem is... by C10H14N2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The way criminal prosecution works is that the widest possible number of charges are filed in order to get the severest compounding of sentences. No matter how repugnant you may find a person or their acts, this practice of trumping up multiple charges for single offenses is dangerous.

    I recently encountered a case where a 24yo claimed that she had been raped by a then friend of hers after they both were out getting completely drunk. He was convicted on separate charges for, basically, every place he stuck it. The definitions of each were such that the jury was compelled to convict on the same act multiple times. So, rather than getting twenty years in prison, he got forty--about what you'd get for first degree murder in most of Europe.

    1. Re:the problem is... by CastrTroy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I heard the same kind of thing when some guys robbed a jewelry store a couple years back. Not only did they get charged with robbing the place, but with wearing a disguise (ski mask) while robbing a place. That charge can only exist in order to lay more charges on someone who you have already charged with commiting a crime. Wearing a ski mask is not a crime, but it is when you rob someone. So you have to be convicted of robbing someone to be convicted of wearing that ski mask. That's 2 charges for 1 act. It would be like having laws against murduring someone while wearing pants. If you wore pants when you murdered them, you'd get an extra 5 years.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    2. Re:the problem is... by bloodstar · · Score: 1

      The way criminal prosecution works is that the widest possible number of charges are filed in order to get the severest compounding of sentences. No matter how repugnant you may find a person or their acts, this practice of trumping up multiple charges for single offenses is dangerous.

      I recently encountered a case where a 24yo claimed that she had been raped by a then friend of hers after they both were out getting completely drunk. He was convicted on separate charges for, basically, every place he stuck it. The definitions of each were such that the jury was compelled to convict on the same act multiple times. So, rather than getting twenty years in prison, he got forty--about what you'd get for first degree murder in most of Europe.

      Honestly, is anyone suprised by these efforts to extend and expand criminal behavior? The idea that if I were to make a CD all of material that from stuff I own, and have a right to, and find that by this horrifying logic that I've suddenly, 'made' a new cd, which means I'm suddenly distributing material that I made for my own personal use and because I don't want my cds to get scratched?

      I suspect this one will be overturned higher up. if not, the RIAA and the MPAA are going to have an absolute field day. After all the RIAA already uses the same logic for their legal efforts to maximize their gain.

      I suppose we can count ourselves lucky that we aren't seeing people charged with a seperate count of battery each time they punch someone. or for a seperate account of robbery for each individual bill they stole.

      --
      "The bass, the rock, the mic, the treble. I like my coffee black, just like my metal" - Mindless Self Indulgence
    3. Re:the problem is... by Kirth+Gersen · · Score: 1

      [CastrTroy] -- It would be like having laws against murduring someone while wearing pants. If you wore pants when you murdered them, you'd get an extra 5 years.

      Of course, then you'd be sending a message that crooks shouldn't wear pants. Well, that's already been tried:

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,36 04,1502159,00.html/

    4. Re:the problem is... by Motherfucking+Shit · · Score: 3, Interesting
      That's 2 charges for 1 act. It would be like having laws against murduring someone while wearing pants. If you wore pants when you murdered them, you'd get an extra 5 years.
      I'm glad I'm not the only one who thinks this is ridiculous. The impetus behind this practice is obvious; they charge you with 10 things, knowing that they can't necessarily prove any of them beyond a reasonable doubt, but hoping that one of the charges will stick. The problem is that many times, all of them stick, and some poor schmuck goes away for decades over a simple crime.

      The last time I was called for jury duty, the case involved the following scenario:

      A guy gets pulled over for speeding; I don't remember the numbers but he wasn't speeding by that much. It starts out as a routine traffic stop. For whatever reason, the cop decides to search his car. The cop finds an unregistered handgun in the console, and arrests the guy.

      In a nutshell, dude had a gun that isn't registered. The list of charges went something like this:

      Unlawful possession of a firearm
      Unlawful possession of a firearm by a convicted felon
      Possession of an unregistered firearm
      Possession of an unregistered firearm by a convicted felon
      Possession of an unregistered firearm in a motor vehicle
      Carrying a concealed firearm without a permit
      Carrying a concealed firearm by a convicted felon
      Carrying a concealed firearm in a motor vehicle without a permit ...etc

      (Oddly enough, the traffic violation was never pursued)

      There were like 10 charges for essentially the same crime - having an unregistered gun in his car. The fact that he had a prior felony conviction pretty much doubled the charges, as each offense was seconded as the same offense "by a convicted felon." What bothers me, very deep down, is that they didn't just charge him with having an unregistered gun in his car. They charged him with having an unregistered gun, with having it in his car, with carrying it, with carrying it in his car, ad nauseum.

      Why is there a law against "carrying" the firearm in your car if there's already a law against "possessing" the firearm in your car? Why was he charged with "carrying" when the gun was in his console, and not on his person? And why does carrying or possessing the gun in your car warrant charges on top of carrying or possessing it, period?

      It's just insane. There ought to be a "greatest common denominator" law that says if you get charged with multiple things, the jury can only find you guilty of the single most severe charge they believe you are guilty of.
      --
      "BSD: Free as in speech. Linux: Free as in beer. Windows 10: Free as in herpes." --Man On Pink Corner in #52607549.
    5. Re:the problem is... by SilverspurG · · Score: 2, Informative

      Did you pursue jury nullification, or did the judge strictly inform you that he would dismiss you if you did?

      Jury nullification is a serious right/authority of the jury. The fact that many judges will underhandedly remove potential nullifying jurors is nothing short of, in itself, felonious.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    6. Re:the problem is... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I've heard that in some areas, promoting and/or exercising your right of jury nullification (which I believe is an important check/balance in the judicial system) will get you thrown in jail on the spot, for contempt of court. :(

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    7. Re:the problem is... by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      You're correct on both counts. Judges do not like jurors who are willing to exercise their legal rights as a juror.

      If you ever want to get out of jury duty just mention "jury nullification". While it's a perfectly legal and, as you mentioned, important part of our system there really isn't a judge in the world who will allow it to happen.

      Very similar to the America before 1776. King George didn't like the way the colonists' courts were conducting themselves so he simply hand-picked all of the judges by placing them, legally, on his personal payroll. Prior to that they had been on the payroll of the colonies.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    8. Re:the problem is... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Here in CA, judges seem to be largely handpicked by law enforcement -- if a major judicial candidate isn't endorsed by the various police departments, they've little chance of getting elected. And no one wants to be seen as the judge who is "soft on crime"... even on victimless crime ... let alone on crimes "against children". Dismissing a case of statutory rape involving a 17yo and her 18yo boyfriend could put a halt to your career in a hurry, because sure as shit someone would spin it as meaning you're "in favour of letting children be raped".

      From my rant page (http://home.earthlink.net/~rividh/asylum/wartime. htm):
      ==========
      6.18.01 Corpus Christi Texas is now placing "DANGER" signs on the homes and vehicles of some "sex offenders" (without much regard for whether the offense was a genuinely predatory abuse or a chance encounter with a consenting but underage girl). Does anyone else hear an echo of those signs warning "JEW" in Nazi Germany??
      ==========

      Another way to get out of jury duty is to cultivate lawyers as friends. They don't want anyone who might be "influenced" (or advised) by someone who actually knows the law! -- As a lawyer/judge I know puts it, "A jury consists of 12 people too stupid to get out of jury duty; so what makes you think they're competent to judge your case?"

      I don't think I've heard of any modern cases of jury nullification being exercised by the jurors, tho I have heard of a few cases where the judge threw out the verdict (tho mostly in civil cases with a clearly-excessive financial judgment).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    9. Re:the problem is... by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      When I was 18, a freshman in college, I had a girlfriend who was 17, a freshman at a neighboring college. We were in Indiana.

      We were sitting in a park, in my car, and just smoking cigarettes and laughing over some Arlo Guthrie tape playing on my car stereo. Police stopped by, searched my car, and held us both for about 30 minutes. One of the officers counseled me that I could be put in prison because I was in a car with a 17-year old who had her shoes off. In Indiana, if the woman has her shoes off, that's legally only one step away from full-blown sex.

      Fucked up... but I still have that incident following me.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    10. Re:the problem is... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      You're probably lucky they didn't arrest you for providing cigarettes to a minor. (They would have, here in the California nuthouse.)

      OMG, ankle porn; what's next, an exposed thigh?? -- Sounds like Indiana suffers from a 17th century definition of "indecent exposure".

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    11. Re:the problem is... by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Hehe. Here on a web-forum, at 4:18 AM... all I wish for is a marijuana cigarette and the chance to sleep.

      But I'll get neither... So I'll continue to converse with you. Feel free to look up my IM info.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    12. Re:the problem is... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Keep a brick by the bed. Sleep will never be far off. ;) I had to wander off to bed myself. The livestock want to be fed at the butt-crack of dawn.

      I did peek into your site... you've got unclosed tables (no /table tag) on http://home.comcast.net/~ssg_vlfs/index.html and all of its subpages that I looked at, making the entire page invisible to 100% compliant browsers.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    13. Re:the problem is... by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      I've never liked HTML anyway. Anything which doesn't keep linefeeds and spaces where I put them without special tags and renders 6 different ways in 6 different engines isn't a language--it's a moody beast. "I am HTML. I have no rules except for the ones that I choose to observe today. Those very well may change tomorrow."

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    14. Re:the problem is... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      [laughing] That's why I thumb my nose at HTML standards, and write code that works more or less the same in *all* browsers, whether it's technically correct or not!

      It could be worse. We could be making web pages in C !!!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  110. If we could make the punishement fit the crime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the state of michigan would make him sit there and watch the whole stack.

  111. Should be by Shawn+is+an+Asshole · · Score: 1

    It should be 14.

    According to AgeOfConsent.com it's 14 in Missouri and Iowa but that only applies to guys, though. It's 17 and 16, respectively for women.

    Here's the chart:

    http://www.ageofconsent.com/ageofconsent.htm

    --
    "It ain't a war against drugs.it's a war against personal freedom" --Bill Hicks
  112. Distribution, possession, etc by phorm · · Score: 1

    A charge of distribution starts when distribute. Possession with intent to distribute applies to drugs, but I'm not sure about other illegal mediums. Certainly if there isn't such a law it might be an idea to amend one (say >2 copies of the same illegal item indicating an intent to distribute).

    It's not about fair use or illegal backups, it's the overall claim that burning is creation. If he'd been charge with "intent to distribute" I doubt anyone here would be arguing so heatedly.

  113. Clueless courts by JourneyExpertApe · · Score: 1

    This seems to me like another case of courts not understanding computer technology. It reminds me of the idea that there is a fundamental difference between "viewing" and "downloading" something. Whenever you view something on the internet, you're actually downloading it and storing a persistant copy on your hard drive (unless you have caching turned off). By burning it onto a CD, he has simply transfered it to another medium. If he had left them on his hard drive, would he have been charged with production? Now, if he had made multiple copies, then it would be reasonable to assume that he intended to distribute them. My main concern is why courts must always make arbitrary distinctions between different storage media.

    --
    If you can read this sig, you're too close.
  114. Downloading and Buring? by oztiks · · Score: 1

    Well from what i know about the TCP/IP protocal is that downloading it is pretty much the same as buring it on a CD in the sense that its merely replicating data from one media device on to another media device. So if your talking rationally isnt downloading Child Pornography also producing it?

    I can understand being charged with "distributing" child pronography because thats what hes done, but producing it not the case...

  115. Activist Court by yintercept · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The point is not whether the lone pedophile is a more or less despicable person than anyone else in the chain

    I agree that this was an extremely bad ruling. Basically, because we don't like the defendent the court is willing to twist important legal definitions to get a harsher sentence. This is a prime example of the legal activism that Repuplicans are supposed to be against.

    The difference between distribution and possession sits at the heart of the IP debates on Slashdot. Where is the line between our personal use of data and distribution? In a system of rule of law, we need a cleaner definition that not only suits porn cases but other activities.

    We may hate the defendent in this case with all of our might. However the activist prosecutor with activist judges bending the distinction between distribution and possession does a great deal of harm to the integrity of the legal system.

    BTW, if we feel that 4 years is too short of a time for the possession of child pornography, then we should change the law. This thing of bending meaning out of definitions ultimately has the effect of destroying the rule of law.

    Unfortunately, I fear that the Republican defense of legal activism will end up only including liberal activism and will ignore conservative activism.

    1. Re:Activist Court by winwar · · Score: 1

      "This is a prime example of the legal activism that Repuplicans are supposed to be against."

      The practical definition of judicial activism is a court ruling that goes against what you believe it should have done. :)

    2. Re:Activist Court by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      As a point of contention for the sake of argument...

      Say you take a prison population, deprived of human sexual/emotional contact, and begin feeding them porn. Provide them with access to pornography.

      How long, how many years, before even the most retarded individual grows tired/bored/desensitized of looking at 18+ porn and begins looking at 18- porn? My guess is less than 5 years.

      Not that this was the case in point. The case in point involved a well-connected individual with plenty of access to "normal" sexual outlets. A truly despicable person to turn to kiddie porn.

      It's the same argument for food. If you haven't eaten in 20 days even the beatle on the side of the road begins to look like a gourmet meal.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    3. Re:Activist Court by fbjon · · Score: 1

      Good point, but it doesn't apply to those who have some kind of fetish, and only get off by watching this kind of stuff.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    4. Re:Activist Court by jwdb · · Score: 1

      Would you still call it a bad ruling if he clearly did intend to distribute and profit from it?

      That's what a post a little higher is claiming is the situation...

      Jw

    5. Re:Activist Court by yintercept · · Score: 1
      Would you still call it a bad ruling if he clearly did intend to distribute and profit from it?

      That would be a very interesting way to structure and administer the law. Let's say you structured things so that if you found a person had something (and knowingly had something**) then you could charge someone with posssession.

      Let's say you had proof that the person had or was going to distribute it, then you can get them for distribution. Lets say you had proof that the person was going to sell it. Then you can escalate the charge.

      What would be bad, though, is if we made rulings on vague inklings. If you just have a feeling that someone was going to distribute it is not the same thing has being able to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that they were going to distribute it. If you are asking about going with gut feelings opposed to going with proof ... then you have one of those nasty conflicts with the Constitution.

      The answer to your question would depend on the meaning of your word clearly. If that means you can prove beyond a benefit of a doubt, then, "yes". If not then I think the Constitution says "no."

      **I think the knowlingly is kind of important. Imagine if someone put an image of kiddie porn sized at width=1 and height=1 and stuck it in a forum. Well, our browsers would download it. Everyone who visited the forum would now be in possession of the kiddie porn, even though they only saw a dot.

    6. Re:Activist Court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really.

      Most people stick with puberty+ porn, especially fullydeveloped+ porn.

      I stopped wanting to touch middle-schoolers when i stopped being a middle-schooler.

    7. Re:Activist Court by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Considering that the age of puberty, for girls, is typically around 9 years old... you're pretty far off base.

      You're clearly baiting the argument using (false) presumptions.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  116. Why is child porn "evil"? by typical · · Score: 1

    Yes, child porn is one of the most evil things there are

    Okay, "evil" is pretty much a subjective term. I can call anything I want to attack "evil", and there's not much anyone can do to convince otherwise. A lot of people do exactly this. However, I'm going to have to say that child porn just doesn't rate that highly on my list of things that damage happiness.

    Murder is pretty darn awful. Someone gets killed, they are gone. All the time they've spent learning things is suddenly wiped out.

    Arson is pretty bad -- maybe a lot of people die, definitely a lot of work to repair the thing, and so forth.

    But child porn? Don't shift the question to one of sexual abuse -- I'm talking strictly about child porn right now. Say a seventeen-year old girl is posing in lingerie. Where is the damage? Taking pictures of someone, young or not, in the buff, just does not rank anywhere near murder, arson, and similar crimes by any kind of a sane standard. What actual damage is caused? Oh, sure, you can say that by a Victorian standard, someone's honor is stained and so forth...but seriously, it just isn't something that is going to stop anyone from potentially living a happy and full life.

    And *if* horrific damage is caused by child porn, then how exactly does this differ from, say, the pictures taken of tribal kids in the nude sitting around a cooking fire somewhere in National Geographic? Can you explain why *this* is just fine and your hypothetical pornographer is horrible? I certainly can't.

    Now, all that pornography in general need entail is that the purpose be to produce sexual arousal. That in and of itself isn't going to hurt anyone. Okay, we can reasonably say that "perhaps children will be sexually abused in the *making* of pornography". We have laws against sexual abuse. Why does there need to additionally be laws against child pornography? It would seem that it is pretty straightforward to prosecute sexual abuse of children as easily as prosecution of pornography -- you have pictorial evidence of someone committing a crime. What then makes the simple classification of "pornography" need be illegal?

    Finally, child pornography is one of the very few things for which possession is, in and of itself, a crime (controlled drugs and unlicensed firearms are the only other two things that I can think of). I would guess that the idea is that someone found the possibility that child pornography might lead to sexual abuse potentially too high of a risk, and then followed that up with the idea that making possession of the data illegal would help cut the legs out from under the market, thus making the market illegal. I see that as a pretty long stretch (and if that is the rationale, non-commercially produced child pornography should be legal).

    What's more, if you want to argue based on some kind of absolute ethical standard, that sexually idealizing someone below eighteen is simply *evil*, you have to also explain why somehow, this invisible and global balance of good and evil mysteriously shifted in the last couple hundred years. Juliet was *thirteen* years old. How is it that in a single heartbeat of the long, long history of mankind, that Good and Evil have so abruptly taken a rapid adjustment?

    Frankly, I can see (adult) prostitution having a lot more problems associated with it (disease vectors, despite the precautions), and even that is legal in some places in the United States.

    But everyone likes to have their demons, the things that everyone can comfortably sit back and agree are bad. We happen to like hating Nazis (They were monsters! Monsters! Not just an xenophobic and nationlistic time of history in a country! That couldn't ever happen to anyone else, because *those people were monsters*!"), drugs (watch Reefer Madness for an example of the propaganda that led to marijuana being criminalized -- it's downright alarming), and child porn ("Won't somebody think *about the children*!")

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
  117. a derivitive work? by DragonTHC · · Score: 1

    does that mean that by burning an unreleased hollywood movie to DVD, I have created a new derivitive work not covered by the copyright?

    --
    They're using their grammar skills there.
    1. Re:a derivitive work? by Naruki · · Score: 0

      Ooh, I like the way you think.

    2. Re:a derivitive work? by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      You are mistaken if you think you can make a derivative work without the permission of the original work's copyright owner. http://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ14.html#who

  118. Why? by missing000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why do you care about the message the punishment sends? Is the punishment a deterrent for the commission of the crime?

    In this country we have a judicial system that is based on the prevention of crime, not retribution.

    The question we should ask here is what punishment is the most effective in preventing future acts, not what is 'fair' in relation to other crimes.

    1. Re:Why? by be-fan · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Theoretically, the justice system in this country is based on justice, not on prevention. That's why we have a principle that says punishments should fit the crime, and don't just subscribe the death penalty for everything.

      Consider adultry or fornication. In most places, its a minor offense, punishable by a fine. We could be like Afghanistan, and punish it by stoning. That is the most effective way of deterring people from committing the crime, and indeed has desireable social ramifications (repressive Muslim countries have a *far* lower AIDS incidence rate than their economic class would suggest, and indeed places like Afghanistan and Iran have lower rates than developed nations like the United States). We don't do this, however, because such a punishment would not be just.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    2. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? Because not caring about the difference means those who might commit such crimes won't care about the difference. And, as such, knowing the punishment is exactly the same, may very well opt to do what most people would consider worse, what the living, breathing victim most certainly would consider worse. But, hey, who am I to judge. I mean, it's not like I, as a voter, have any say over the laws in the age of no-paper-trail electronic voting machines. Let's just execute every fucking one of them because they aren't human.

    3. Re:Why? by bfischer · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Is the incidence of AIDS lower or are they just not testing for it so much? It started as a result of drug use, but now it seems to be spreading through sex.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/10434 86.stm

      http://www.iranmania.com/News/ArticleView/Default. asp?ArchiveNews=Yes&NewsCode=27489&NewsKind=Cultur e

    4. Re:Why? by Eol1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      We care because we care about the victim. If I am going to get 20 years for looking at childporn or 20 years for actually raping the neighbor girl, I might as well rape the neighbor girl.

      You see this problem a lot in crimes such as rape where the punishment is out of proportion to the actual crime. If the penality for rape is 20 years and the penality for murder is 20 years, I might as well rape and murder you rather than leave a witness alive to talk. I have a better chance of getting away with it and do the same time if caught (as most sentences are served concurently). If I break into your house and murder you (lets say you caught me in the act) I might as well murder the rest of your family while I am at it as I am doing life regardless. This is why we care about fair sentences and not criminalizing petty behavior.

      --
      De Oppresso Liber
    5. Re:Why? by missing000 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Really, the flaw in that logic is the idea that the Death Penalty has any measurable deterrent effect. It doesn't. If it did, that would indeed be a cause for great debate about the use of the practice, but in the real world most western states have either disposed with the practice or put severe limitations on it.

      The reason we use it here is that we feel good to know that bad people are removed from us and punished to an extreme degree. We also take pleasure in gladiation, war, snuff flicks and all kinds of other socially unacceptable practices.

      Let's take a look at your AIDS claim too. The fact is that most of your claim is unproven. These states have aggressive laws preventing all kinds of sexual practices, and therefore also discourage coming forward with diseases evidencing these 'crimes'
      Also worth noting is the fact that the nations themselves control the very numbers that you refer to.

    6. Re:Why? by missing000 · · Score: 1

      That's what I was talking about. Effective punishment.

      However, you should prove your statement. People do not think about punishment when commiting most crimes. They may think about the fact that it is a crime, and the chances of being detected, but they do not consider the degree of punishment, especially for crimes that involve some term of incarceration.

      The victoms matter. In fact, that's why we have these laws in the first place. The victoms that matter most though are future victoms. Prevention is the key here.

    7. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this country we have a judicial system that is based on the prevention of crime, not retribution.

      If that were the case, Tookie Williams would be alive today.

    8. Re:Why? by Myopic · · Score: 1

      yes, what you said doesn't counter what the parent said. we want to *deter* posession of child porno, and we want to *deter* the creation of child porno *more*.

      think of it this way. say you are a pedo so you download some child porn and keep it around. if the punishment for posession is the same as for manufacture, then there is no *deterrent* from going out, finding a child, and producing some porn. there is no deterrent because the punishment will be the same. to be perfectly clear, i'll put it back in your words: the *punishment* for making child porno would not be a *deterrent*, because the posessor is already liable for that same punishment.

      furthermore, all other crimes are broken down this way. take another prohibited object, like marijuana: if growing plants had the same penalty as posession the plants, then every pothead in the country would have a farm in his closet. we *deter* potheads from growing weed by adding extra penalties to that crime.

      also, you are certainly wrong about one thing, in this country (well, I live in the USA) our criminal justice system acts both for prevention and retribution.

    9. Re:Why? by Zakabog · · Score: 1

      Really, the flaw in that logic is the idea that the Death Penalty has any measurable deterrent effect. It doesn't. If it did, that would indeed be a cause for great debate about the use of the practice, but in the real world most western states have either disposed with the practice or put severe limitations on it.

      It does when taken to the extreme. If you issue the death penalty for ANY criminal act, there'd deffinitely be a lot less crime. There'd be less criminals because they'd all be dead, and before someone did some small crimes like shop lifting, they'd have to think "Do I want to die today?" The reason we don't do that is because, well it's just wrong. You don't want to kill everyone, you want to punish them so they stop, and the punishment should fit the crime.

      The death penalty for a crime like murder might not have a measurable effect because the person commiting the act already knows their either going to be in jail for the rest of their life or die, I'd rather choose death (why would anyone want to stay in prison for the rest of their life?) But when it's a penalty for a lot more crimes it will deffinitely have a measurable effect.

    10. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> The question we should ask here is what punishment is the most effective in preventing future acts, not what is 'fair' in relation to other crimes.

      If fairness is of no consideration, then obviously the best way to prevent future acts would be to apply the death penalty... This would work for any crime. But then again if you do not confess your sins before dying and you go to hell then I suppose that could be considered cruel and (at the very least) unusual punishment. If you do ask for fergives (and it is given) then going to heaven for commiting a crime would not seem very appropriate and may actually encourage desperate people to commit crimes, so maybe the death penalty should be taken off the table (if you are a christian anyhow). Life in prison would also prevent future acts I suppose.

    11. Re:Why? by Serzen · · Score: 5, Informative
      Your points are interesting, but not entirely true in all cases.

      Committing a murder during the course of a felony (the rape, in this case)--in some states--automatically bumps the murder up to 1st degree, which means, depending on where you're being tried, that you'll be looking at life without parole or the death penalty.

      Similarly, if you break into someone's house and are caught, wind up killing the person who catches you and decide NOT to kill the rest of the family, and have a good lawyer, you can argue that the murder was accidental, demonstrate that you were only there for a little petty theft, you might be able to shake the 1st degree murder and work your way down to 3rd degree murder or even down to manslaughter. 20 years is certainly better than life without parole.

      Not intended to be legal advice, use with caution, don't run with scissors, etc.

    12. Re:Why? by Temsi · · Score: 1

      In this country we have a judicial system that is based on the prevention of crime, not retribution.
      Really? What country would that be? Certainly can't be talking about the United States of America.
      Why do I say that? Because here, we still put people to death, even when we already have the option of keeping them in prison until they die of natural causes. Not to go into an argument about the death penalty, but statistics prove that it is NOT a deterrant, and therefore it serves no purpose as a "prevention of crime". Thus, the only logical conclusion can be that the state is enacting revenge on behalf of the victim. In any dictionary you look at, revenge and retribution are pretty much described in the same way: "inflicting punishment in return for injury".

      You're trying to have it both ways. On one hand, you say punishment shouldn't be sending a message, but on the other, you want punishment to be a deterrant to prevent future crime. The problem with that, is that "the message" and "deterrant" are one and the same. So, if you want to have a punishment effective in preventing future acts, you make the punishment more serious the more serious the crime. The only way that works, is by using the differences to send a "message" to people that "this crime is more serious than that one".

      Punishment in the US is basically considered to be 3 things.
      1. deterrant
      2. retribution
      3. rehabilitation

      Unfortunately, punishment doesn't usually work as a deterrant, and there are practically no systems in place to rehabilitate criminals (if anything, they're punished for life, even after they've done their time, because they have to live with the stigma of being "convicts" and in many states, if they committed a felony they can't vote or own guns even though these things are constitutionally guaranteed rights).

      So, with 1 and 3 being rather ineffective or even non-existant, that leaves only retribution, and that's exactly what we have in this country (the USA).

      Now, if by "preventing" you mean stopping the person who has already committed a crime from ever doing it again, you only have two choices as the legal system operates today: life in prison or execution. Sadly, somewhere along the line, the rehabilitation part of the system got kicked to the curb, so those are the options we're left with. And unfortunately, focusing on those who have already committed the crime, does absolutely nothing to prevent others from doing it.

      --
      -- This sig for rent.
    13. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The question we should ask here is what punishment is the most effective in preventing future acts, not what is 'fair' in relation to other crimes.


      Wait up though, isn't there something wrong with that final statement? Shouldn't the law do both? I imagine giving the death penalty for speeding would stop people from speeding, but is that "fair"? The fear of penalties does deter people from commiting crimes, however, the criminals are still people. They deserve fair treatment.
    14. Re:Why? by alexq · · Score: 1
      The question we should ask here is what punishment is the most effective in preventing future acts, not what is 'fair' in relation to other crimes.

      This doesn't really make any sense. This implies we should have the death penalty for every crime, no matter how small - because that would be the best preventative. Hey, even better - how about we kill your whole family too? No one would litter or double-park again!

    15. Re:Why? by winwar · · Score: 1

      "In this country we have a judicial system that is based on the prevention of crime, not retribution."

      At best we SAY we have a judicial system based on prevention not retribution. In reality we have a judicial system based mostly on retribution (punishing after the fact). Just look at the time and money we spend on prosecuting crime vs prevention. Prevention is hard, time consuming work. Convicting them and putting them in jail is much easier.

      "The question we should ask here is what punishment is the most effective in preventing future acts, not what is 'fair' in relation to other crimes."

      Good luck in determining that. You may also get contradictory results in attempting that method (if robbery and murder have the same penalties, you might as well kill the person you rob....)

    16. Re:Why? by ManufacturedMirth · · Score: 1

      Somewhat off-topic, but you really shouldn't say "it will definitely have a measurable effect" without anything to back it up. These sorts of things have a habit of being disproven in practice. Maybe it would have an effect, maybe not.

    17. Re:Why? by gaspyy · · Score: 0, Troll

      Petty behaviour?

      So, what are you saying is that penalty for rape should only be 5 years so that you may not want to kill the victim too? What kind of twisted mentality is that?

      Back to the topic, I feel no sympathy for that guy. By burning files on a cd-rom, he demonstrated that he knew what he was doing - no "I accessed the files" by mistake". The files could've been for backup but maybe he wanted to resell them. So yes, he was creating more child pornography.

      You have to realize that he was part of the system. Because of people like him, children are abducted, abused, sometimes murdered.

      Why should I care for him?

    18. Re:Why? by be-fan · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Even the 10,000 figure reported in the BBC article would put the AIDs incidence rate at the level of a developed country like the UK, instead of at the level of developing countries in its economic class. Like it or not, harsh attitudes and laws about sex do a good job of preventing diseases like AIDs from spreading, especially in poor countries where access to contraceptives and early diagnosis is limited. However, just because the laws (and punishments!) are useful doesn't mean the laws are just, which was the point I was getting at.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    19. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why we have a principle that says punishments should fit the crime, and don't just subscribe the death penalty for everything.

      We already have enough trouble with people killing their victims of lesser crimes, such as theft or rape, to avoid being identified. If there were a death penalty for those crimes as well, then the decision to kill the victim anyway would be a much more common one, and this would actually encourage murder rather than prevent crime.

    20. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why should I care for him?
      You should care about the system, not a case in particular. By ensuring that the system is fair to everyone, you're ensuring that it will be fair to you, if the need comes.

      So, what are you saying is that penalty for rape should only be 5 years so that you may not want to kill the victim too? What kind of twisted mentality is that?
      No, he's saying that the penalty for murder should be higher than the penalty for rape, so that the overall cost for raping AND murdering is higher than that of raping.

      Let's say that a man want to rape someone, but risks 10 years for that. If the urge becomes too strong, the risk may become acceptable for that man. However, if the chance of getting caught is high, he may still hesitate.

      The chance of getting caught is higher if you don't kill the victim. So, ethics aside, killing the victim lowers the risk, and may seem an acceptable choice for some people, who are already capable of raping someone.

      Now, if you risk 30 years for killing the victim, then it might not lower the overall cost function. It'll be harder to catch you, but if caught, you'll pay far more.

    21. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The death penalty certainly discourages repeat offenders.

    22. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, the likely scenario is this:

      Perv likes girl
      Perv rapes girl
      Perv realises he's in trouble now (didn't think of it before, as you say)
      Perv now covers up his tracks by killing girl and hiding the body

      Now (if he's burned the body or it isn't found for a while), he cannot be accused of rape, only murder. And he cannot get ratted in by the girl, 'cos she's dead.

      I think that is what the GP was on about.

    23. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are put on death row, you also get to spend the rest of your life in prison. Just thought you might want to know.

    24. Re:Why? by dhasenan · · Score: 1

      It would certainly eliminate repeat offenders; nobody would be convicted twice.

      However, this would have the greatest effect when the police corps is well funded and pervasive enough to locate all criminals. If crime is a certain method of suicide, only suicidal people will be criminals.

    25. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're a little mixed up about the felony murder rule. Burglary is one of the enumerated felonies that bump a killing up to murder 1 if it occurs during the commission of.

      I don't remember all of them exactly, but they include burglary, arson, rape.

    26. Re:Why? by Cerberus7 · · Score: 1
      why would anyone want to stay in prison for the rest of their life?

      Because I could have lots of time alone with my books... *crunch*... That's not fair. That's not fair at all. There was time now. There was, was all the time I needed...

      --
      I don't know about you, but my servers run on the power of cotton candy and happy thoughts. -Anonymous Coward
    27. Re:Why? by keraneuology · · Score: 1
      People do not think about punishment when commiting most crimes.

      Some do - those kids you laughed at back in high school who, when asked "we're gonna break into the school and trash the teachers' lounge - wanna come?" replied "no way... if we get caught I'm gonna be grounded/expelled."

      --
      If the g'vt kept the data on you that google does you'd better believe you'd be calling it "doing evil"
    28. Re:Why? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      "In this country we have a judicial system that is based on the prevention of crime, not retribution."

      While I agree this is what it has become, this is at odds with a court precedent which stated that the police are NOT required to PREVENT a crime, bu rather are only required to pursue a crime AFTER it has happened.

      [BTW I *don't* disagree with that ruling, because to agree with it is to institute a system of Thought Police.]

      So... are we punishing people for what they did wrong, or are we punishing them to make them into an Example? You can't have it both ways, because to "make an Example" that *has any social impact*, the punishment must be dramatically out of proportion to the harm caused by the crime.

      And how does "making an example" differ from "See this guy's broken kneecaps? We'd hate for your kneecaps to end up like that..."??

      How is this fair and just?

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    29. Re:Why? by alexo · · Score: 2, Insightful


      > Theoretically, the justice system in this country is based on justice

      Forgive my interruption but you do not have a justice system.
      You have a legal system.

      When innocence or guilt (and the nature and severity of the punishment) is often determined by the quality of the legal representation that one can afford, "justice" does not enter the equation.

    30. Re:Why? by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      An eye for an eye ey?

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    31. Re:Why? by Vaystrem · · Score: 1

      "(repressive Muslim countries have a *far* lower AIDS incidence rate than their economic class would suggest, and indeed places like Afghanistan and Iran have lower rates than developed nations like the United States)."

      First I would like to say that blaming HIV/AIDS transmission on infidelity is incredibly short sighted and flat out wrong. Is it a component? Certainly, but the degree to which it is a factor is radically different in different countries. Looking at Pakistan, who you give as an example... From UNAIDS.

      "Of the reported cases with known transmission routes, the most predominant during the quarter ending June 2004 was injecting drug use (73.72%), followed by heterosexual relations(22.18%), men who have sex with men (4.0 %) and mother-to-child transmission (0.1%). " http://www.unaids.org/en/Regions_Countries/Countri es/pakistan.asp

      Furthermore there is some debate about the quality of the data coming out of regions where these issues are very highly stigmatized. I would suggest to you that the challenges of dealing with a disease that has a religious and social stigmatization, as HIV/AIDS does through most of the world, makes estimates difficult as people are going to be very unwilling to report that they have it. Looking at the UN Epidemiological Fact Sheets on HIV/AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Infections on Pakistan http://data.unaids.org/Publications/Fact-Sheets01/ pakistan_EN.pdf We see that in total only 210 cases of HIV/AIDS have been reported (Page 6) but estimates of prevalance are between 24,000-150,000.(Page 1)

      Regarding Afganistan. UNAIDS http://www.unaids.org/en/Regions_Countries/Countri es/afghanistan.asp doesn't even have an estimate in place for the infection rate so I don't think you can accurately make any sort of argument about HIV/AIDS prevalence in that country based upon punishments surrounding infidelity.

      Regarding your comment that Iran has a lower HIV/AIDS incidence than the United States. First, is that a reasonable and fair comparison? Treatment programs are much more likely to exist within the United States. As well it is likely that HIV/AIDS is more likely to be diagnosed, and sooner, within the USA than in less developed countries due to less social stigma, better technology, etc.
      USA: Between 470,000 and 1,600,000. (0.3% - 1.1%)
      http://www.unaids.org/en/Regions_Countries/Countri es/united_states_of_america.asp
      IRAN: Between 10,000 and 61,000. (0.0-0.2%)
      http://www.who.int/GlobalAtlas/predefinedReports/E FS2004/EFS_PDFs/EFS2004_IR.pdf

      From the World Health Organization report on Iran:
      "Based on the reported data, the HIV epidemic in the Islamic Republic of Iran appears to be accelerating at an alarming trend. According to reports by the National AIDS programme , the number, 1159 of newly diagnosed HIV infections and AIDS cases in 2001 shows a three-fold increase in comparison to both years 2000 and 1999.

      This considerable increase may indicate another outbreak The previous dramatic increase had occurred in 1997, when the number of HIV/AIDS cases had reached 815 new infections.

      Injecting drug use drives the epidemic in the I.R.of Iran. In 2001, 64% of all AIDS cases were injecting drug users. The data on HIV seroprevalence among IDUs shows the highest rates of infection compared to all other tested groups. IDU have tested positive in 1996 and a prevalence was found of 5.7% of cases in 1996 , 1.7% in 1997. 8.5% in 2002 and 29% in 2002 among clients of counseling centers. The data is variable as it r

    32. Re:Why? by KilobyteKnight · · Score: 2, Insightful
      In this country we have a judicial system that is based on the prevention of crime, not retribution.
      You didn't specify what country you are in, but if you are in the US you are mistaken. Laws can not prevent crime even if that was their intent. A police officer can not arrest someone for thinking about committing a crime. They have to wait until some illegal activity has already occured.

      There may be some argument to be made that the threat of punishment is a deterrant. The vast majority of criminals either think they're going to get away with it or do not think about the consequences of their actions. Threat of punishment is not much of a deterrant to someone who thinks they will never face it. There may be the rare criminal that weighs the consequences and decides the benefit of the crime outweighs the punishment.

      What the legal system is left with is punishment after the fact and isolating or monitoring that person in such a way as to prevent reoccurance.
      --
      When will Windows be ready for the desktop?
    33. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pretty sure he was using theoretical examples to make a point about punishment vs. crime.

    34. Re:Why? by typical · · Score: 1

      While this is true (and interesting), it doesn't address the grandparent's point, which is that rape compared to rape + murder is not necessarily distinguishably lighter in punishment. You were arguing about the penalty of muder compared to rape + murder.

      Frankly, I disagree with the grandparent, at least in the specific instance he used -- rape isn't going to get you a life sentence, but murder could.

      On the other hand, child sex offenders never really are allowed to be treated as rehabilitated by society in the US; this is different from any other crime. Pretty much anywhere they go, their names and addresses must be publically available from the local sheriff's office, and many states simply make them available online. Maybe it would be worthwhile to take the risk of a murder conviction to avoid wearing the scarlet 'A' for the rest of your life [shrug]. For example, here is the registry showing the information for Pittsburgh.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    35. Re:Why? by bladernr · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Really, the flaw in that logic is the idea that the Death Penalty has any measurable deterrent effect.

      But what if the US actually used the dealth penalty? Right now, most people sentenced to death have a far larger possibility of dieing of old age. I firmly believe that if death were guaranteed within 30 days of that sentence, it would have a deterrent effect. The problem is that the penalty isn't really a reality, and criminals know that.

      As an aside, I am against the death penalty, but for completely different reasons. I happen to think, in an ideal world, it is a just punishment for certain crimes. But:

      1. I don't see many rich people on death row. If the justice system is fair, how do you explain that?

      2. I am not convinced we can execute people quickly (a requirement for it to be a deterrent) and be sure we never execute an innocent person. I believe innocent people have been executed in the past. I am one of those old-fashioned types that believes it is better to let 10 guity people go free than punish an innocent man. Will the current implementation of the dealty hold up to that standard?

      --
      Sarcasm and hyperbole are the final refuges for weak minds
    36. Re:Why? by sevinkey · · Score: 1

      Man, I need to move to whatever country you're from. In my little corner of the US, you get mandatory 10 years for each picture if you have child porn, but the average time spent in jail for rape is 3 years.

      Even murder, you're looking at getting out in 15 years. What's message from our leaders? Better to rape and kill than see pornography.

      It's not about protecting the children. I've watched CPS work. They try to keep the family together and put a bandaid on things so no one hears a complaint about the abuse anymore. yay.

      Recent studies show that some people like children better than adults, and they can't be fixed. So I have a feeling congress felt the only thing to do was to lock them up forever.

      Just shoot 'em for god's sake if you're gonna do that. This is all silly.

    37. Re:Why? by ciatog · · Score: 1

      OK seriously, that argument was awful.

      First lets equate this to drink driving. If someone drinks and drives, causes a car accident and then kills the person in that car, then they get convicted with 20 years in prison, lose their job, and lose their license. If another person drinks and drives, but doesn't cause an accident or any deaths but just gets pulled over by a cop, and they get the same punishment, will people just decide they might as well start causing car accidents because potentially they will get the same punishment for the crime? The answer is NO! You know why? Because of the moral consequences and anyone who would do something like that is a psychopath and deserves a sentence anyway. With drink driving however someone who gets pulled over only potentially could have caused an accident and the killing of someone whereas with the pigs that watch child porn they are partly the cause of the making of child porn since it's made for them to download and purchase so they are indirectly involved with the problem. And don't let the word indirectly make you think it's any less serious for them, the only reason I use it is because they don't actually do the raping but they sit by, watch it and enjoy the fact a kid is being tortured and hurt for their pleasure.

      So no one is across the street thinking "Hey, I might as well rape the girl in the neighbours house since it's the same punishment as watching it" since if they have this thought in the first place this makes them a sexual predator that would have done it anyway. It's not like they are sitting there all their lives salivating over the watching of child porn, and then just because they hear about a decision that has been handed down in court that equates downloading child porn to actually doing the rape, that their whole mindset will change and they will turn into child rapists. They were potential rapists all along, it's in their mindset, simple as that.

      I just can't believe you think watching child porn isn't that bad (And yes by even arguing in favour of the people who do this must disgusting of acts is thinking it's not that bad) don't mind give an awful argument like that. That's just an insult to abused kids and to yourself.

    38. Re:Why? by thegnu · · Score: 1

      Why do you care about the message the punishment sends? Is the punishment a deterrent for the commission of the crime?
      Because a message could be, "Dude, you should have just raped the little girl."

      In this country we have a judicial system that is based on the prevention of crime, not retribution.
      BWAAAAAhAAAAHAAAAAAA!!!

      The question we should ask here is what punishment is the most effective in preventing future acts, not what is 'fair' in relation to other crimes.
      For every hit of acid you get caught with in GA, you get 20 years with no reduction of sentence. If you and your husband torture your kids, crush their fingernails, etc. you get 15 years, and reduction for good behaviour. If you sell an XBOX with pirated games the purchaser may or may not have bought ANYWAY (crime = possible dent in sales for manufacturer) you get hard time. If a company dumps poison into a river, destroying an important ecosystem and greatly increasing everyone's risk of cancer, the company gets fined a manageable portion of their income.

      Why would you take someone's life away from them (put them in jail) for POSSIBLY costing someone money (distributing pirated material), then fine someone money for taking life (killing an ecosystem, introducing poison into a human habitation)?

      I don't get it. That's why it's important that the punishment fit the crime. As it stands, it's better to torture children than to steal from a large corporation.

      --
      Please stop stalking me, bro.
    39. Re:Why? by Rinkhals · · Score: 1

      >When innocence or guilt (and the nature and severity of the punishment) is >often determined by the quality of the legal representation that one can >afford, "justice" does not enter the equation.

      Well said.

      --
      "I'm a snake if we disagree"-Jethro Tull, Bungle in the Jungle
    40. Re:Why? by bigpat · · Score: 1

      Thank you for your Insightful comment.

      Once the punishments get too harsh and the laws too many to avoid, then it is as if there are no laws. Chaos can only be avoided with a just and reasonable system of laws with a series of escalating punishments with regard to the severity of the crime. The punishments for rape should be less than murder. The punishment for physical assault with a weapon should be more than for fraud. The punishment for possession of child pornography should be less than distribution, and should be much less than the punishment for the one that coerces the child in the first place.

    41. Re:Why? by bentcd · · Score: 1

      A universal death penalty would be much less effective than you think, and it would likely cause a rise in serious crimes. When all crimes are punishable by death, you will no longer see motorists just accepting a fine on the spot, or shop lifters accepting their sentence without appealing. Today, these things happen because the punishment they are facing is relatively small compared to the cost of going through with protests and appeals. When the sentence they are looking at is always death, then they will have the ultimate reason to put heaven and earth in motion to get off. The court system would be swamped with court cases (for fines and other that is usually handled with less protocol) and appeals (for all the desperate people who would otherwise just have sucked it up) and you'd be looking at a backlog of several decades. The end result is that even if you _did_ run a red light today and even if there _is_ ample evidence that you did so, your court date would be in 2042 and so it would still be a while before your execution.

      In the mean time, the chaos caused by this mass of cases would make it much easier for serious criminals to fly below the radar. Since everyone does _something_ illegal every now and then (even if just whistling for yourself on the sidewalk after 10 in the evening), it would be clear to everyone that they are up for execution should anyone find out. Since they're practically doomed anyway, they might as well make it worth their while and rob a bank or something.

      More likely, though, you'd get a rebellion. You can certainly get killed for being a rebel, but hey, they'll kill you for jaywalking too so what's the big deal?

      --
      sigs are hazardous to your health
    42. Re:Why? by SilverspurG · · Score: 1
      <i>hey try to keep the family together and put a bandaid on things so no one hears a complaint about the abuse anymore. yay
      You're not kidding. My father allowed me to be completely disfigured (3rd degree burns over the upper 50% of my body, full chest, both arms, full neck, and half my face) at 2 years old and then still gave custody of me back to him because he could demonstrate a "stable household" when he remarried.

      Fuck the government.
      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    43. Re:Why? by loraksus · · Score: 1

      ditto.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    44. Re:Why? by Kiryat+Malachi · · Score: 1

      No. We have a justice system.

      Sadly, it doesn't always work as well as we'd like. That doesn't change the intent - the intent is to provide justice, not to provide legality.

      Or would you argue that China is a democratic country just because the populace can vote?

      --

      ---
      Mod me down, you fucking twits. Go ahead. I dare you.
      (I read with sigs off.)
    45. Re:Why? by kimvette · · Score: 1

      The answer is to rape the child in Vermont.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    46. Re:Why? by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      You see this problem a lot in crimes such as rape where the punishment is out of proportion to the actual crime. If the penality for rape is 20 years and the penality for murder is 20 years, I might as well rape and murder you rather than leave a witness alive to talk.

      That's a logical thought but it's completely false in most American states.

      If just blow you away in New York, for almost any reason, it's second degree murder. 25 to life. If I blow you away after raping or robbing you then it's first degree murder. Life in prison without parole or lethal injection.

      In fact, the only way that you get murder one in New York, besides the aforementioned example (murder committed in the process of committing another felony) is if you kill a peace officer, a judge or a witness against you.

      Besides the fact that it makes it murder one instead of murder two, in your example (I might as well kill her because murder is no worse then rape), you could still wind up with a consecutive sentence of 40 years.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    47. Re:Why? by rtb61 · · Score: 1
      The justice system is about apprehension, detention and rehabilitation. Prevention of crime relates to the measures society takes as a whole to reduce the impetous for commiting a crime. Duration or type of punishment has no meaning, the majority of people believe they will get away with it and the punishment only motivates them to take greater precautions. The only real deterant is the belief that you will be caught.

      Prevention of crime is just political speak, you really want to prevent all crime, then lock every one up and make your society a prison (and don't subject the guards to any laws at all, otherwise they will break them). It only really comes out when it becomes apparent that the current system is failing (from the amount of suffering going on) and blanket empty promise.

      The death penalty is an inherent hyprocrasy because it punishes the worst crime murder with murder and sends the wrong message to society about the abhorence of killing someone to fullfill your own goals. Let alone the failures in the system that see innocent peole murdered. Question, when an innocent person is murdered by the legal system are those that were involved in it (judge, jury, prosecutors, witnesses for the prosection) now guilty of murder and should morally be subject to the punishment that they inflicted.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    48. Re:Why? by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1
      Why do you care about the message the punishment sends? Is the punishment a deterrent for the commission of the crime?
      Because if a pedophile knows that raping a child will get her the same punishment as downloading child porn, she might just choose to go do the thing that gives her the greater high -- actually raping a child.

      In this country we have a judicial system that is based on the prevention of crime, not retribution.
      If you are talking about the US, you could be wrong. As legal theory goes, there are generally few reasons for punishment:
      1)retribution/revenge -- we are morally bound to punish wrongdoing/lawbreaking OR the person "deserves it" and we should "get even"
      2)local deterrence ("reform") -- the punished person will not commit the crime again
      3)global deterrence ("protection of the state") -- no one will commit the crime because of fear of punishment
      4)incapacitation -- the person cannot commit the crime due to incarceration

      You may also consider a different set of similar reasons:
      6. The Purposes of Punishment: 3 to 5 purposes are traditionally cited:
              a) reform or rehabilitation
              b) incapacitation
              c) general deterrence and/or the securing of social peace
              d) retribution

      Or these:
      First, they review four traditional arguments justifying capital punishment[:] retribution, deterrence, reform and protection of the State.

      The US system is largely based on #1 only -- retribution is the just reason for prosecution and punishment. As I am not a lawyer (yet), I do not consider myself an authority on the subject, but I have had law professors lead me through this concept before, and they have all come to the same conclusion -- the US system of justice is based largely upon retribution.

      One such example that Western justice systems serve the purpose of retribution is the Nuremberg courts. It is pretty obvious that there is no method of deterring dictators from committing crimes against humanity. Thus, Nuremberg did not occur for #3. There was also no need to make sure the men on trial were prevented from committing the same crimes again -- it was virtually impossible for them to rise to that level of power and instigate another Holocaust. Thus, #2 as well was not a reason (similarly #4 was not a reason). That leaves retribution.

      Some information about which I speak:
      1 - It is to be remembered that one of the primary reasons for the law's existence, indeed the state's existence, is that people are to be relieved of their need to strike out against those who have wronged them. Not to argue the rights or wrongs of it; it is entirely natural for an individual, when injured or harmed by another or others, to seek revenge and retribution.

      OK, I'm sure that I've sufficiently lost any reader, as I've lost myself in all this HTML mark-up I've done in this comment, mixed with the myriad of sources I've drawn from here. You can forget this comment ever existed, or you can use it as a springboard into more information on theory of punishment ("penology"). It really is quite fascinating.
    49. Re:Why? by Eivind · · Score: 1
      But what if the US actually used the dealth penalty? Right now, most people sentenced to death have a far larger possibility of dieing of old age. I firmly believe that if death were guaranteed within 30 days of that sentence, it would have a deterrent effect. The problem is that the penalty isn't really a reality, and criminals know that.

      No. That's not the problem. It's not like there are large numbers of murders in the US that essentially think, before the murder the equivalent of: "Ok, so we've got a death-penalty, and I'll get caugth and get it, but I'll only be executed 12 years later, so that's Ok, I guess I'll go ahead and murder."

      Most people who murder are not doing any sort of rational cost-benefit analysis whatsoever, if they where, they wouldn't *be* murderers.

      Those that think about it at all, instead think that they're not going to get caugth, or they're not going to get convicted, or they'll be in (wherever) before anyone ever notices there's a dead body, or the body is not ever going to be found or, or, or.

      Fact is, USA has the death-penalty. Fact is, basically all other countries you care to compare yourself to does *not* have the death-penalty. There are only 25 countries in the world where death-penalties where actively used last year. Fact is, death penalties send the message: There are certain situations where its *rigth* to kill a person, even when milder restraints are possible. (noone argues against killing in self-defence when no other option is open.) Fact also is: the US has more murders than just about any country you care to compare yourself to. (assuming you don't want to compare yourself to Nigeria)

      Something you're doing must not be working.

    50. Re:Why? by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 1

      Hey, I liked your comment!

    51. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WIth the lifelong restrictions and harrassment they inflict on people labeled as sex offenders you might as well kill the person you sexually assault, the penalty isn't that much different anymore.

    52. Re:Why? by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      I firmly believe that if death were guaranteed within 30 days of that sentence, it would have a deterrent effect.

      This is possible, but I doubt it would have much affect. The truth is, people committing murder believe they will not be caught or are too desperate to care. As a result I believe the death penalty is not much of a deterrent even if it happens shortly after the conviction. I don't think most people advocating the death penalty understand the psychology behind the act and those that do are more interested in revenge than deterring others.

  119. BSA...? by Choad+Namath · · Score: 1

    Since when are the boy scouts suing people? Are they suing people for being gay or something?

  120. who said law should make sense? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Okay, look here bucko, there is a hell of a fuck of difference between posession of drugs for personal use vs. having kiddy porn. You are the one who is choosing not to see this. And it does not paint you in a good light.

    Also, with drugs, the user is going to smoke them or snort them or whatever, they will be consumed and not a risk to society, other than whever damage they do while they are high. But a CD-ROM, that's an artifact that's could get found by a kid, traded with other creeps, etc. Its not just harming the kids in the picture, but it could infect others with this sick preversion that ruins the lifes of little kids for the sexual gratification sicko perverts.

    1. Re:who said law should make sense? by JenovaSynthesis · · Score: 1

      I guess your literacy skills failed you when I said that the kiddie porn issue was moot. It could be kiddie porn, MP3s, TV Episodes, or Windows on that CD. No matter what the contents were, he did not generate them from scratch therefore he did not produce the content. In order for this guy to have produced the content, he would have had to facilitate its creation. He merely transferred the medium upon which it was stored.

      --
      Anonymous Cowards generally receive no replies because you're a coward and I'm a bitch :)
    2. Re:who said law should make sense? by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      And your perceptual skills seem blunted. The entire case is about child porn. You cannot render that moot, regardless of your desire to.

    3. Re:who said law should make sense? by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      The prosecutor noted that the statute
      defines "child sexually abusive material" as including any reproduction, copy, or print of a
      photograph depicting a child engaged in a sexual act.


      Basically you are calling people illiterate for reading the article, something you clearly have not done, and are arguing about dictionary definitions, rather than about the legal definitions of the specific law in question. If you remove that specific law from the argument...then the entire argument is moot because out of that context, the words do indeed have different definitions. But too bad, the specific law clearly states that creating child porn includes making copies or reproductions of it. You can argue that copying files to a CD is not, in fact, creating a copy of those files. In fact, go right ahead. But because "child sexually abusive materials" are define to include copies, prints, and reproductions of said materials, if he created a copy of them, he did, in the context of this law, create "child sexually abusive materials". You are correct that if I copied an episode of friends to a VCD so I can watch it on my DVD player, you wouldn't say that I produced an episode of Friends. But you would say that I created a copy of it. He's not charged with taking a picture or filming a movie, he's charged with creating a copy. Feel free to argue that burning something to a CD is not copying it, but it would take a pretty compelling argument. A copy is defined as an imitation or duplication of another work. Copying is defined as the act of making a copy. So that's why the judge brought up dictionary definitions. Are you actually saying that putting a CD in a burner, and burning files to that CD, is not creating a copy of those files?


      Just to repeat myself, child porn is defined to include a copy, not just original works. Since he made a copy of it, he made child pornography according to the laws definition of making child pornography. The fact that it was child pornographs is not moot. It is in fact critical. If it was any other content, the law wouldn't apply, so it wouldn't matter what its definitions are. But it was and it does and they do.

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    4. Re:who said law should make sense? by JenovaSynthesis · · Score: 1

      Yes you can. It's the principal that reproduction inherently cannot be the original production. Copying kiddie porn to a CD from a hard drive is worlds away from photographing/videotaping under-aged kids having sex with adults.

      As it has been pointed out elsewhere, copying Metalica MP3's to CD does not make me Metalica for that process. Copying Star Trek Episodes to DVD does not make me Patrick Stewart/Avery Brooks/etc.

      --
      Anonymous Cowards generally receive no replies because you're a coward and I'm a bitch :)
  121. Re:MOD PARENT DOWN by mark_hill97 · · Score: 1

    doesnt sound like a troll to me, no infact it sounds more like you dont agree with his position. I think his position is wrong but still, its not a troll to have a different opinion.

  122. Commentary on those three points by typical · · Score: 1

    A. Looking at porn makes people want more porn. The link between porn and sexual conduct is quite controversial, but the effect of viewing porn on the demand for porn is not. Viewing porn makes people want to view more porn. So far so good. This brings us to....

    I wish one of the people posting this would actually support this with a reference, but okay, it at least sounds plausible, so we'll assume it for the sake of argument.

    B. The demand for child porn causes some child sexual abuse. Some abuse would occur anyway, but some of it is profit-motivated. Increased demand for child porn means a stronger incentive to make the stuff. Note that this is true even if no buying or selling is involved (ie trading). Open and free distribution might undercut the market to some extent -- but given that music companies continue to thrive despite widespread file-sharing, I doubt that market saturation will make child porn unprofitable.

    I'm dubious.

    Let's hypothetically suppose you decriminalize child porn, but keep sexual abuse of children illegal (thus, one could photograph a seventeen-year-old posing, but not having sex).

    Assuming that the existing laws against child pornography are effective (which would be necessary to support them, presumably) in the suppression of production of child pornography, I would imagine that the laws against sexual abuse would be equally discouraging against the production of child pornography containing sexual abuse.

    This would seem to nullify (B).

    C. Viewing child porn violates the privacy of the kids. It's like reading someone's diary or peeking in on them in the shower.

    It's a thought, but then why does it only apply to pornography? Why doesn't it apply to anything else that someone might not want leaked (like the abovementioned diary contents)?

    Unlike grown-ups, kids didn't consent to being displayed for sexual purposes.

    That's an interesting concept, but I'm not certain that I agree (at least WRT an eighteen-year-old age limit -- I think that you'll find that most teens have an understanding of sexuality).

    These kids are already traumatized; how do they feel moving into adulthood, knowing that people are viewing their abuse?

    Well, that probably all kind of depends on whether they're taught that being seen nude is a catastrophic event, I'd say. [shrug]

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    1. Re:Commentary on those three points by slim · · Score: 1


      >> Unlike grown-ups, kids didn't consent to being displayed for
      >> sexual purposes.



      > That's an interesting concept, but I'm not certain that I agree
      > (at least WRT an eighteen-year-old age limit -- I think that you'll
      > find that most teens have an understanding of sexuality).


      Let's work out the morals in the general case before moving on to boundary conditions. Think in terms of 8 year olds, not 17 year olds. Suddenly it seems a bit more distasteful, no?

    2. Re:Commentary on those three points by typical · · Score: 1

      Let's work out the morals in the general case before moving on to boundary conditions.

      Why? The rules apply to the 17-year-old case as well, and if we identify a problem with them there, one can imagine that they should indeed be modified.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
  123. Oh no... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Crikie.

    I've gone cross-eyed...

    (Austin Powers reference)

  124. You've got the wrong child porn by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Pictures of 17 year olds in lingerie is not what gives child porn the bad name. That's a strawman you've set up to ignore the evil child porn, which is intercourse with 3 year olds. Puritans like to lump it all together so they can raise a bigger stink, but what offends almost everybody about child porn is not the tame stuff that you could find on any beach or at any high school football game, but the stuff where babies are raped. I have no idea how much real child porn is out there, but I'm certain it does exist in some quantity, and is truly evil.

    1. Re:You've got the wrong child porn by typical · · Score: 1

      Pictures of 17 year olds in lingerie is not what gives child porn the bad name. That's a strawman you've set up to ignore the evil child porn, which is intercourse with 3 year olds.

      Okay, 17 year olds in lingerie is definitely on one end of the spectrum. On the other hand, I'd like to point out that intercourse with 3 year olds is decidedly on the other.

      The law recognizes pornography containing 17-year-olds as child pornography, thus I think that it is reasonable to debate this based on that example.

      I also pointed out in my post that sexual abuse and pornography need not be tied together legally. Your counterargument rests upon this assumption.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
  125. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Jeremi · · Score: 1
    You can call it murder, I'd call it effectively removing a future threat. And if it were my daughter, it wouldn't matter what you called it - I'd still kill the guy.


    And if everyone followed your logic, that guy's parents would have to kill you first, in order to "effectively remove a future threat" to their son. Which would mean that your parents would have to kill that guy's parents first, in order to effectively remove a future threat to you. And so on until nobody was left alive.


    Avoiding scenarios like that is why law was invented, and it's what keeps the majority of people alive from day to day. If you choose not to follow the law, that makes you a criminal, no matter how justified you think your actions might be, and you wouldn't get to spend much time with your daughter while serving your jail sentence.

    --


    I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
  126. Although by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I do not agree with how the judge decided. Dictionaries have a bad history of being inaccurate, and to use one to decide a court ruling is poor judgement. It also proves that the many years we spend in English class were not well spent, because a high paid judge does not understand the English language well enough to understand the severity of this bad decision.

    [See "'Studies in Words,' by C.S. Lewis 1960, Cambridge University Press", for a good introduction.]

  127. To What Effect? by Dausha · · Score: 1

    "And how does this affect the lawsuits by the BSA, RIAA, and MPAA?"

    Um, probably none. IIRC, the types of lawsuits levied by the above named entites are based in copyright law. IANALY, but virtually every copyright action is governed by Federal law and federal courts, not the Court of Appeals for Michigan. Heck, I don't even think the Court of Appeals is the highest court in Michigan, and so may be subject to an overturn. The issue here is based in Michigan state criminal law, not copyright law.

    --
    What those who want activist courts fear is rule by the people.
  128. Wow I didn't see thsi coming by saskboy · · Score: 1

    " Court Rules Burning Porn = Making Porn "

    Who'd have thought that the average Slashdotter was a porn star?

    --
    Saskboy's blog is good. 9 out of 10 dentists agree.
  129. Child Pornography by peterfa · · Score: 1
    All children involved in pornography are abused. It is the taking of sexually explicit photos of children that is abusive. Adults, who would be mentally fit enough to produce pictures, are mentally superior to the children. The adults are taking advantage of the children.

    After the photos have been produced, they must disapear. The reason for this is that it encourages more child abuse. Pedophiles might get the idea that it is Ok. It however is not. A similar phenomena occurs on the Internet which worries social scientists. Pedophiles can create forums and talk about pedophilia in total anomity. They can encourage eachother and pass tips on how to engage in behavior and get away with it. They can also support eachother and give to the idea that this is ok. It's not because it damages children so easily, and by so much.

    It is proper the remind a pedophile that this behavior is wrong, does damage the children, and is actually unhealthy and needs to be treated, but one should not shame the pedophile. Shame causes the pedophile (as with fetishes too) to hide their behavior, and comfort themselves...with the behavior.

    1. Re:Child Pornography by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which language was this translated from? It's oddly condescending and poetic at the same time. Lovely really.

    2. Re:Child Pornography by peterfa · · Score: 1

      For your information, this is from formal and scientific education.

  130. Put all Muslims in jail for 20 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We should lock all muslims (moslems, mohammedins, etc) for at least 20 years and do not let them out unless they renounce the muslim faith. You see, the muslim holy book, the koran, says it is perfectly ok to marry nine years old girls. Mohammed himself did when he married Aiesha, his last wife. It was said that she was nine years old and playing with dolls when Mohammed married her. That makes all muslims the followers of a pedophile, and that pedophile was their prophet! That makes all muslim holy books not only child pornography, but a call to spread child porn. Look in muslim countries and you will see that this is exactly what they do. And they can do it four times because they can legally commit bigamy four times and that is in the Koran too.
    Every muslim must be into this and it is a real conspiracy because in muslim countries a muslim who tries to leave this 'church' can be killed by anyone virtually on sight! This is a way to lock up all muslims in the United States. The army should seek to lock up all the Iraqiis in Iraq as well, then go on to lock up the 300 million muslims in Indonesia. Now where is the United Christian States of Crusading America going to get the money to build jails for all those millions is simple. They are going to get it from you. You don't think for one minute all those hard working and imaginative prostitutors,,,,heh...heh..prosecutors are going to pay for this out of their OWN money, do you? Take that Al Quaida, lock up all muslims and let them rot at taxpayer expense while the prosecutors and judges get rich.
          Hey, ya better lock up the Christians too. They believe in the 'whole bible', and in every act depicted in it. A character protrayed as good in the bible must be good in every way and every act is accepted as good. Therefore Lot was a pedophile and incestor with his daughters. That is actually IN the christian bible. And therefore all christians who believe their bible are also pedophiles in their hearts and should also be locked up along with the muslim pedophile worshipers and the Lot and god worshippers. In fact, by the time we are through it will be like Stalins purges. EVERYBODY will be in jail and NOBODY will be left to feed and care for them! Ultimately the reaction to this will be the prosecutors get prosecuted for wasting the taxpayers money?.

    1. Re:Put all Muslims in jail for 20 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > That is actually IN the christian bible.

      Never heard of that. Could you paste-and-copy the passage here or provide a reference? Thanks.

    2. Re:Put all Muslims in jail for 20 years by TallMatthew · · Score: 1
      Genesis 19:34-36

      The next day the older daughter said to the younger, "Last night I lay with my father. Let's get him to drink wine again tonight, and you go in and lie with him so we can preserve our family line through our father." So they got their father to drink wine that night also, and the younger daughter went and lay with him. Again he was not aware of it when she lay down or when she got up. So both of Lot's daughters became pregnant by their father.

      Such naughty, naughty girls. And Lot ... oh, what a bad, bad man. But at least he didn't burn a video of the proceedings to a CD.

  131. Does Burning Books == Making Books? by TheDormouse · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So does Burning Books == Making Books too??

  132. So now everyone has to keep records on porn stars? by CaptainTylor · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So, whoa, whoa. If burning == "making", then does that now mean that anyone who downloads porn is now subject to the record-keeping requirements of 18 USC 2257, which basically states that anyone who makes porn after November, 1990, has to keep records of the ages and real names of all the people depicted in it? It's been held in the past that "distributors" and "resellers" are subject to this requirement, not just the people who held the cameras - now it seems to me like they're saying everyone is.

  133. That's why by poptones · · Score: 1

    You just said "why" when you asked the question. If the punishment is exactly the same for raping the kid next door and getting off on a real, live person or jacking off alone to pictures of some anonymous kid half a world away, where is the incentive for a person of such proclivities to abstain from just fucking the kid next door?

    If the punishment for going 100MPH over the limit is exactly the same as the punishment for going 10MPH over the limit, why the fuck not just drive 140MPH until you get stopped?

    Yeesh. Figures this is michigan. I had the misfortune of being born in that shithole. haven't been back in twenty years and don't miss it a bit.

  134. With regards to point #3 by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

    While you use lots of big words and references, it isn't illegal to create computer generated CP. At least not in the U.S. So no, it is not "so repugnant", at least from a legal standpoint.

    The case is ASHCROFT V. FREE SPEECH COALITION and you can read the majority opinion here: http://supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/00-795.ZO. html

    The majority concludes that it is not illegal, as no children were involved.

    You might want to look at the other opinions, as this case generated a majority opinion, a concurring opinion, a dissent and a concurring dissent. Obviously the case stirred up some strong feelings.
    http://supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/00-795.ZS. html

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  135. MOD PARENT UP by StarkRG · · Score: 1

    Extremely insightful, as is the one below this one.

    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP by StarkRG · · Score: 1

      Yes, well, I can see how that's a convincing argument as well...

  136. When will I get paid for all that I made? by 4D6963 · · Score: 1
    I'm a great filmmaker, pornographer, video game creator and software developper then.

    So why won't I get any money for all of the good stuff that I made, uh? Who can I sue to get my money?

    --
    You just got troll'd!
  137. here's a sick thing to do by digitalgimpus · · Score: 4, Funny

    Using a text editor of your choice, write the following in a file:

    "LOVE"

    save, and burn to a CD-R

    You can now say you legally made love with your computer!

    1. Re:here's a sick thing to do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Using a text editor of your choice, write the following in a file:

      "LOVE"

      save, and burn to a CD-R

      You can now say you legally made love with your computer!


      Oh Noes! My computer is 8 years old.
      Now I'm in trouble!

  138. 99% against? Think again. by poptones · · Score: 1

    In this article it mentions "children" but most of the references are to teenage boys. There is no specific mention of "boys appearing to be as young as seven" or any of that sort of language - it mentions teens and puberty many times.

    The hysteria that is driving most of the english speaking nations to new depths of fear, hate and paranoia - fueled in large part by a planetary alignment between religious zealots and hardcore feminist zealots - has resulted in a ridiculous all-encompassing definition of "child pornography" that includes virtually anyone under the age of 18. Old Penthouse magazines featuring 16 year old french girls can now be prosecuted as "child pornography." Pictures of teenagers who would willingly be doing that stuff anyway - who willingly ARE engaging in sex acts and posing for pictures (some even photographing themselves) - can be prosecuted as child pornography.

    Protecting children from exploitation is fine - but not when it costs otherwise innocent people their liberty. We would not tolerate locking up all alcoholics to prevent a few traffic accidents, and we should not be tolerating these laws against what are essentially thought crimes.

    You cannot "protect" children from life - attempts to do so only leave them naive and prime candidates for exploitation as young adults. These ridiculous taboos against otherwise NORMAL HUMAN BEHAVIOR are creating a seriously fucked up and perverse culture... and we have the teen pregnancy and AIDS statistics to prove it.

    1. Re:99% against? Think again. by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      We are in agreement, generally, and it is an excellent point that "condemnation creep" tends to result in censorous borderline cases. (Basically, this is what got Randall McMurphy in trouble in One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest....)

    2. Re:99% against? Think again. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      A little dab'll do ya. HAHAHA!

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  139. If children don't want to be in porn.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...they should stop being so god damn hot!

  140. Viewing leads to more demand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So the more Jenna Jameson DVD's I watch, the more I want to go out and rape blondes?

    I'm not condoning abuse; physical abuse of *anyone* of *any* age is wrong. But people need to realise that males are naturally attracted to females and they don't just somehow instantly turn attractive when the earth has circled the sun 18 times since their conception.

    Since when did acknowleding that a 14 year old is hot become the same as raping babies?

  141. Re:Three points (Refuted) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "That so called "twisted" idea of morality is based on the moral reasoning from a deontological point of view. "

    Exactly the problem. Kant was purely an ass, as anyone who has read him thoroughly should know. Utilitarianism is not in competition with deontological ethics, it replaced it.

    "Based on the preponderance of education one receives by a vast majority of people in any given region..."
    Not so. The habits of any number of places would shock you, and you don't have to go back to ancient Greece or Rome. There are even a few cultures in odd spots where child sex is as mandatory as vaccinations are here. (Certain small tribes in New Guinea and the Himalayas) They don't seem to be any worse off than their neighbors. Now perhaps they are all damned to hell for the culture they were born to, but short of that hypothesis it looks like the "morality = ethics" idea is shown to be BS. It also looks like most of the problem is not do to the sex per se but of the cultural reaction to it. To put it in perspective, those New Guinea tribesmen wonder how our people can fail to be brought down by the disgusting immorality of men and women living together, menstruating women going around and touching men's things, and so on. Why are they the crazy ones?

    Add to that the fact that most "child porn" is nothing of the sort - in some jurisdictions clothed shots (swimsuits etc.) count, in others non-nudist simple nudity, in most any nude shot with any hint of sexuality will count, and in only a handful is actual abuse of the child required for it to be considered porn. Also, for the purposes of the statute the age limit is set at the absurdly high level of 18. There are not even exceptions for the age of the posessor, so far as I know, so a teenager could be prosecuted for posessing lewd pictures of themselves or of their boy/girl-friends.

    Our culture also condemns homosexuality, as do many, and all your arguments apply there too. You are saying that people always have the ability to choose their desires and their thoughts, and that is false. Further you are saying that people should live every aspect of their lives to please the unexamined demands of shriveled up old screeching moralists.

    If people mutually enjoy something, then it should be unpunishable, and others' opinions should count for nothing. If coercion is involved, as when children are forced into the prison of school, then that too should be determined by the desires and benefits of people in proportion to how much they are affected and what obligations they have freely undertaken. When it comes to coercing people, there is no reason that we should judge someone to have been coerced solely on the basis of age but on capacity relative to the least capable person who can make such a decision. We have no a priori reason to condemn coercion in matters of undress or sexuality more than other matters such as freedom of movement, which is routinely denied to children, and for that matter, a priori, there is no reason not to consider coercing a person to not have sex at least as grave a crime as coercing them to have sex.

  142. Re:From the title, I thought he was protesting por by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

    Me too. From what I figured even in the summary, he downloaded it, printed it out, and held a bonfire because he felt it was evil - and was prosecuted for printing it. That would have made even less sense.

  143. Wait... by nukeade · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you read the court decision, it says he had a video camera concealed in his shower to video tape people including foreign exchange students, one of which did testify at the trial, without their knowledge.

    If they were underage at the time, this sounds exactly like my definition of making child pornography. While I agree that there should be different degrees of punishment for different degrees of a crime and that allowing an electronic crime to be raised to the next degree by choice of storage media is a dangerous precedent to set, this guy sounds guilty as charged to me.

    ~Ben

  144. Don't burn snuff films! by Dell+Brandstone · · Score: 1

    If you know what's good for you, you do NOT want to burn a snuff film; They'll knock down your door, try, and convict you of murder.

    Oh yeah. Good times.

    --
    [ a directive occured while processing this error ]
  145. Tautology. by Ben+Varrey · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "The recidivism rate for successfully treated offenders is staggeringly low." I just want to point out that your climactic statement, upon which your plea for understanding and compassion was apparently based, is probably the most misleading thing I've read all day. You said, "successfully treated." That's the rub, isn't it? Most sex offenders are not "successfully treated," although most go through a system of court-ordered treatment that ultimately fails. Unfortunately, most sex offenders are not "successfully treated," and so go on to commit further acts of violence against the most helpless members of society. In fact, it seems that upwards of 50% of child rapists such as yourself (and remember, those are the ones who are actually caught and convicted--quite a minority among pedophiles) are not, in fact, "successfully treated," but are instead repeat sex offenders. So why not rephrase your statement, make it a little less tautological, and say something like "the few child molesters out there who are caught, incarcerated, treated, released, and aren't caught having sex with 12-year-olds probably aren't commiting a sex crime at any given moment"? Then you could follow it up by saying "unfortunately, most child rapists hop right out of the prison system and into a little girl's panties." That would be a little more accurate, I think.

    1. Re:Tautology. by Random+Musing · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You said, "successfully treated." That's the rub, isn't it? Most sex offenders are not "successfully treated," although most go through a system of court-ordered treatment that ultimately fails.
      When I first drafted my original post, I hadn't included the word "successfully." When I added it, I knew it would raise an eyebrow or two.

      What I mean by "successfully" is someone who completes the counselling, where "completed" is determined by both the psychologist and the patient. Anyone who is going simply because they are ordered by the court and has no remorse or desire to learn and understand and change will have a very hard time falling into the "successful" category. Not impossible, but certainly very difficult. However, the majority are quite willing to understand the pattern of relapse and deal with the issue. They simply want to get back on with life.

      In fact, it seems that upwards of 50% of child rapists such as yourself (and remember, those are the ones who are actually caught and convicted--quite a minority among pedophiles) are not, in fact, "successfully treated," but are instead repeat sex offenders.
      The figure of 50% is seriously significantly higher than all the research I have seen on this topic, and believe me, I have seen a lot of research.

      Figures vary based on studies, of course, but studies I have seen indicate that the number is more like 10-15% of offenders who are run through the system actually reoffend. And the number of offenders who are actually treated is lower still. This is, incidentally, lower than recidivism rates for non-sex offenders. There is a basic overview here whose numbers are more in line with the kind of research I've seen in the last decade.

      You're certainly right that the majority of pedophiles who have committed a crime have not been caught. There is also a large number of those who have not committed crimes yet, but are so afraid to talk to somebody about the problem that instead they let it simmer inside them until they end up offending. Then there are those who have committed an offense, feel remorse and guilt about it, but are terrified to talk to a professional about it because any psychologist is legally bound to report even vague admissions to the authorities. I would expect this class of people is far more likely to reoffend, and that many would never get caught and/or get any help. But the truth is that researches know very little about the class of pedophiles (whether they have offended or not) who never get arrested. It's very difficult to make assumptions (or generalizations) about these people because there's simply not much data.

      The general impression that sex offenders have extremely high rates of reoffense is perpetuated in part by the media. After all, you certainly don't hear about those who offend once and never again. You hear about those who reoffend, even though they are truly a minority.

    2. Re:Tautology. by Random+Musing · · Score: 1
      I said:
      Figures vary based on studies, of course, but studies I have seen indicate that the number is more like 10-15% of offenders who are run through the system actually reoffend. And the number of offenders who are actually treated is lower still.
      I want to clarify a poor choice of words. What I meant by "the number of offenders who are treated is lower still" is that for those offenders who complete treatment, the recidivism rate is even lower than 10-15%.
    3. Re:Tautology. by nursegirl · · Score: 1

      His writing would have been more accurate if he had said "The recidiviwsm rate for offenders treated using published best practices is staggeringly low." Unfortunately, all of the research I have read is on dead trees, and a quick Google search couldn't find me printed documentation on the recidivism rates of people in programs like Circles of Support and Accountability, but the reports I've read say about 3% of the most high-risk offenders reoffend when in a CoSA group, as opposed to 95% without.

    4. Re:Tautology. by Ben+Varrey · · Score: 1

      I have never, not once, found reference to a study that suggested child sex offenders (not generalized run-of-the-mill rapists) had a recidivism rate that low. Perhaps you could give me some good old MLA documentation. As it is, I'm assuming that you're referring to the population of sex offenders as a whole, not child rapists in particular, which I understand have extremely high rates of reoffense when not successfully treated, as you had the opportunity to be.

  146. Those poor bastards! by Ben+Varrey · · Score: 1

    "As for the poor bastards who get themselves in a predicament with a kid..." I know! Those poor guys. Tut tut. Now their social lives are over. Jesus Christ, you just made me physically ill.

    1. Re:Those poor bastards! by Theatetus · · Score: 1

      OK, what about that family in Texas that ran the day care and went to jail for a few years after child molestation charges that, in the end, turned out to be completely false and fabricated by child psychologists?

      Or that French "pedophile ring" that went to jail for a few years and just last month had to be set free and paid a lot of money because it turned out the case was based on false accusations?

      Plenty of crimes are horrible and child molestation is certainly one of them. And to the extent that a market for child porn facilitates the molestation of children there's obviously a compelling societal interest in cutting off the market that overrides individuals' rights to view any material they please. But as always you have to have a trade-off: you can't simply lock away anyone accused of having child porn on the basis of the accusation. (That also brings up the legally troubling question of "virtual" child-porn: porn that is either made by modelling software like Poser, or made with legal-age models who are then "youngified" by digital aging software... no child is involved in the production of either of those, but there still seems to be a societal interest in preventing that.)

      Anyways, he's not just talking about real pedophiles having their social lives ruined; he's talking about innocent people having their careers and even lives put in grave jeopardy by society's hysterical reaction to any accusation of sexual activity involving a minor.

      --
      All's true that is mistrusted
    2. Re:Those poor bastards! by TallMatthew · · Score: 1
      Those poor guys. Tut tut. Now their social lives are over. Jesus Christ, you just made me physically ill.

      Joe goes to a bar.
      Joe meets a 16-year old who got into a bar with fake ID
      16-year old tells Joe she's 23
      Joe bangs 16-year old and ditches her afterwards
      Crying 16-year old reports Joe to parents
      Joe is a rapist, must register as a sex offender wherever he lives

      Now that makes me physically ill.

    3. Re:Those poor bastards! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, what about that family in Texas that ran the day care and went to jail for a few years after child molestation charges that, in the end, turned out to be completely false and fabricated by child psychologists?

      Or that French "pedophile ring" that went to jail for a few years and just last month had to be set free and paid a lot of money because it turned out the case was based on false accusations?


      People must have some marginalized group to be the brunt of their own self-hatred.
      Now that burning witches is no longer in style, they've had to redirect their attention
      to pedos. Who knows what group will be next.

  147. Re:fuck post by zxsqkty · · Score: 1

    Really? You mean you actually went through the bother of signing up for an account here so you could post this? Thanks so much. Your devotion to duty is heartwarming.

    --
    Caution: May contain nuts.
  148. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whoa there Jeremi... sounds like you might be a future threat...

  149. In Another News... by jack_csk · · Score: 1

    Burning your software to CD-Rs as a backup is equal to programming new software (in other words, you own the copyright?!).

  150. but that doesnt make sense by databank · · Score: 1

    Not the child porn stuff I don't think anyone would agree that he should have it let alone burn it to a cd. However, the concept of "creating a new media" shouldn't apply to burning a cdrom because then technically. Nothing was actually "created". All a CDROM is is a disc with little pits in them that bounces a laser off of them representing 0's and 1's.

    The "NEW" media creation doesn't actually occur within the CDROM. If I pick it up, I don't just see what files are on there or what documents it may contain. All you see is a piece of plastic with a shiny side on one side of it and maybe a label on the other.

    Now the minute I look at it through a software program that interprets the files, THEN DISPLAYS IT on a monitor screen is it really a "*new*" form of media.

    In other words, storing data is nothing more then "storing data". There's a big difference between "storing data" and "viewing data".

  151. What about RAID? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What if he was using RAID 1? is he therefore liable for 2 copies?

    What about RAID 5? Is he liable for having $diskquantity copies, or only $diskquantity(1/(diskquantity)) copies?

  152. Re:Good... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There have always been people attracted to children, and there always will be. In a way, for a small percentage of the population, pedophilia is normal. No amount of punishment or liberal-blaming will change that fact.

  153. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    as much as I like the nailing Pedophile's balls to walls

    Now that's a pretty specific fetish.

  154. Stupidity of some arbitrarily large power of ten by errordactyl · · Score: 1

    This is bullshit. The act of coercion that results in two children having sex is the act of creation. If you base your prosecution on the creation of something that did not exist, how can you not prosecute also the authorities whose memories of the child pornography constitute the creation of something that did not previously exist?

    --
    $_.=["a".."z"," "]->[rand 27] while !/just another perl hacker$/;
  155. Sorry no by gijoel · · Score: 1, Funny

    You still owe RIAA money. It's just that now you have to pay them back for marketing, distribution and the video for the song you just downloaded.

    I estimate you owe them $40,000

  156. Re:How about a sexual definition? by Gorimek · · Score: 1

    That's a coherent argument I don't have much problem with. I just wish they would stop calling it "child pornography".

  157. Is paedophilia really an illness? by Quizo69 · · Score: 1

    I'm curious - why is it that you consider a sexual attraction to children an illness that has to be cured?

    Do you consider homosexuality or lesbianism an illness that has to be cured? If yes, why. If no, why not, and why do you distinguish the various sexual attractions from one another on a sliding scale of "normal" to "ill"?

    What about ephebophiles (those who are sexually attracted to teens who have begun to develop sexually but aren't attracted to proper children who haven't hit puberty yet)? This group in particular would seem to encompass almost all males if you judge it solely by the amount of "teen" porn on the net (though 99% of that porn is in actuality showing 18-25 year olds who look younger).

    As previous posters have said, people cannot help their natural sexual attractions and forcing them to change is in my opinion far more harmful due to the repressive nature of the "treatments".

    I ask all this because I classify myself in the ephebophile category and certainly don't think I am in any way "ill" as you put it. Over time I have come to know what I find most attractive in girls, and the traits I covet most (small breasts, hips, youthful face, wide eyes and mouth, small nose etc etc) are those that teenage girls exhibit, hence my realisation that I am in fact an ephebophile. I married a girl who had these features even though obviously she is older than 18, and for me personally that was enough from a sexual attraction perspective.

    It also means that because I am comfortable with my own sexual persuasions, I also have a greater understanding for those who are homosexuals or lesbians, or any other type of pideon-hole you care to put someone in.

    Since you are a girl according to your sig, I assume (perhaps incorrectly) that you like guys? Presuming you do (but modify the question to suit if not), ask yourself honestly, WHY do you like guys? When you can answer that honestly (good luck, I can't answer WHY I like teenage girls, I just do), you will hopefully see that others can no more help their sexual persuasion than you can help yours.

    It's how you deal with that that shows your level of tolerance for those who are different from yourself.

    It might also be instructive for you to do some research into the Japanese interest in Lolicon manga and why it is quite widespread and accepted there. Societal structures that establish what is "right" and what is "perverted" differ widely around the globe, so if that is the case, why is it that Western "values" are somehow right and others are wrong?

    I think in the end, all humans have a sexual attraction, and that all of them are in fact a normal part of being human. That we marginalise some because of societal/religious notions speaks volumes of our evolution and just how far we have yet to go before we understand and accept all of our diversities instead of killing and otherwise tormenting each other over them.

    1. Re:Is paedophilia really an illness? by porcupine8 · · Score: 1
      I only briefly scanned your post, because it's long and seems to say the same thing over and over again. But here's my response:

      Sexual relations with an entity that is unable to give informed consent are unethical, in my opinion. Although there may be a few precocious tykes, the vast majority of prepubescent children are unable to give informed consent, because they are not capable of fully understanding the consequences of sexual actions. Therefore, having sex with them is unethical. Now, I'm not going to argue that once a kid reaches 18 they're magically capable of this - there are plenty of 14/15-year-olds who know exactly what's up, and plenty of 20-year-olds who still can't quite comprehend the consequences. But for the purposes of law, you have to draw the line somewhere. Whether we've drawn it at the right age is an issue entirely up for debate.

      Pedophiles have two choices: suppress their natural urges, or harm children and get in trouble. I doubt most of them have a real desire to harm children - it's just what happens if they act on their urges. Personally, if *I* had an urge that could only be satisfied in a way that harmed others, I would prefer to lose that urge and have it replaced with less-destructive urges than to have to constantly struggle with it and never be able to fully indulge it. And urges to hurt people aren't entirely foreign to me, though they are in no way sexual. But I do know that they're a symptom of mental illness, and I would rather be medicated and not have them than be forced to fight against them all the time. It's just better for everyone involved.

      --
      Warning: Apple/Nintendo fangirl. Likes her electronics cute & cuddly. May be rabid.
    2. Re:Is paedophilia really an illness? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When are you going to recognize that sexuality is a natural part of the life process, and that the consequences of sex between two consenting individuals is no different for a 15 and 22 year old than it is for a 60 and 25 year old?

      In some repressed fashion, you're either disappointed with your current mate, jealous that you can't attract anything more desireable, or else completely ignorant.

    3. Re:Is paedophilia really an illness? by hkmwbz · · Score: 1

      The urge to have sex with someone is not the urge to hurt them. Unless you are into S/M of course.

      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    4. Re:Is paedophilia really an illness? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "Sexual relations with an entity that is unable to give informed consent are unethical, in my opinion. Although there may be a few precocious tykes, the vast majority of prepubescent children are unable to give informed consent, because they are not capable of fully understanding the consequences of sexual actions"

      This is the cornerstone of pedophilia/child porn criminalization, and the problem is, it does not have any foundation. Sex DOES NOT HAVE any consequences. Other than possible impregnation of one of the partners, which does not apply in our situation because at least one of the partners has not reached puberty yet. You don't even need knowledge of human anatomy to consent to sex. There's no reason a 10 year old should be less capable of understanding the consequences of sex than a 25 year old.

      Sex is not necessarily harmful to children physically. A child is more likely to get severely physically hurt during soccer game than during consensual sex. There's no mental harm, either, humans don't have genetic memory that tells them that sex is evil and sexual experiences have to be traumatizing. If it's there, it's usually been planted by parents & preachers and would prevent a child from consenting anyway.

  158. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by srmalloy · · Score: 1
    This is a somewhat scary decision, as much as I like the nailing Pedophile's balls to walls. For example, that case in Vermont that made the news about the judge giving the guy 60 days, I'd have given him 40 years.

    And the followon to that story, where the judge changed his sentence, giving him something on the close order of forty years. But you have to read down to find out why he handed out the original sentence -- the mental health bureaucracy had originally said that they wouldn't take him for treatment until after he'd finished his jail term, so the judge issued a sentence that would get him quickly into a mental treatment program. After the mental health director changed their policy, and stated that they would accept him while serving his jail term, the judge modified his sentence to one appropriate to the man's crime.

  159. Copying Britney Spears Videos = Making Child Porn? by nick_davison · · Score: 1

    But your Honour... I didn't copy these Britney Spears albums, I made them!

    Don't sweat too much about it. So long as you didn't burn copies of her first few videos to CD, from before she turned 18, this case doesn't affect you.

    If, on the other hand, you have copies of the school girl video, there're simply no two ways about it: You're a sick paedophile and deserve hard time in a pound me in the ass institution. Just because it was on MTV, it doesn't make it OK.

  160. fiddling while Rome burns by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in so many ways our culture is paralyzed while some very damaging things are growing. apparently we can't decide or have a consensus what is proportionate, how to punish, when to pre-empt... so we sit on our hands and have these wellmeaning debates.

    and this is to say nothing of searching for the roots. WHY do so many people go into aberrant mode to cope with life... consume pornography, abuse children or spouses, cheat in business, etc.

    as protected expressions of freedom or as creative art these behaviors have long crossed the line. for those that do these things, they are compulsions, not freedoms. addiction is involved. for the rest of us, they are at times invasions of our rights... don't the rest of us have a right not to be assaulted by graphic images, have our bandwidth stolen, or have our kids fall victim to an abuser?

  161. ORWELL by drDugan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    so a man was prosecuted for copying an IMAGE

    I am very much against porn, ESPECIALLY child pron, where lives are destroyed by the process of "making" it

    however, images are just information, and this ruling is now squarely in the realm of a thought crime: having these thoughts == burning these bits to a disk. the act of a human moving bits from one medium to another should never be a crime (by itself).

  162. Kill them all by cgenman · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That would deter crime.

    Our justice system isn't just about deterrence. There is a theoretical sense of balance to it, in that the punishment should fit the crime. If you break a minor law, you recieve a minor punishment. Break a major law, and receive a major punishment. That's why people don't recieve life inprisonment for running stop signs. Sure it would deter the crime, but at what cost?

    The fact of the matter is that downloading a copy of a crime that somebody else committed is not the same as committing that crime yourself. They are two distinct actions, and by lumping them together the moral high ground occupied by the system gets extremely muddy.

    1. Re:Kill them all by alexo · · Score: 1


      > Our justice system isn't just about deterrence. There is a theoretical sense of
      > balance to it, in that the punishment should fit the crime. If you break a minor
      > law, you recieve a minor punishment. Break a major law, and receive a major
      > punishment.


      Your legal system ("justice" has nothing to do with it) isn't just about deterrence. There is a theoretical sense of balance to it, in that the punishment fits the means of the accused. If you can afford a better lawyer, you receive a minor punishment. Get a less expensive lawyer, and receive a major punishment.

      Yes, mod me "off topic" to oblivion but it needs to be said. Often.

    2. Re:Kill them all by loraksus · · Score: 1



      No, but you do have judges who sentence minors (plea of no contest) to 30 years in prison for doing so.
      http://davidfeige.blogspot.com/2005/11/sick-ric-ge ts-whupping-on-oped-page.html

      Which, really, is the exact same thing - especially when you consider the substandard medical care in prisons and the transmission of hiv and other diseases between inmates. Now, I realize that you might say "well, that judge is batshit crazy and should be removed from the bench, so it isn't really a fair comparison" but the fact of the matter is once on the bench, judges are almost never removed.
      For example, the judge who shaved his balls, used a penis pump and jerked off while presiding over a murder trial (in May '03) was still on the bench and doing the same shit in September '03. Yes, he eventually was removed, but if you were sentenced by the jerkin' judge your sentence still stands.
      The fact remains that the "justice" system has no effective checks and balances on the actions of judges, so if judges decide that they want to start handing out 30 year sentences for running stop signs, they can for the duration of their term and depending on local policies, even the worst rulings won't be available for review for several years after sentencing (the whole "you have to serve x% of your sentence before we look at your case thing)

      The fact of the matter is that downloading a copy of a crime that somebody else committed is not the same as committing that crime yourself.
      Absolutely, but the judge was probably up for re-election and wanted to look "tough on crime". Add in a jury of impressionable idiots and you get the result of this case. Speaking of the jury, they are completely to blame for the results of this case. They could of have nipped it in the bud at the trial and called bullshit on the prosecutor's argument, but they didn't and this had to go to appeal.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
  163. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    And the background to the story--that the parents of the girl knew that the man had an "interest" in their daughter and were well aware that, when they allowed their daughter to visit with the man, they often slept in the same bed together?

    At that point doesn't it become a case of parental consent? Shouldn't the parents be charged with some sort of child endangerment?

    Or is society really on a blindfolded witch hunt?

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  164. Re:How about a sexual definition? by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    No joke. There's a vast difference between the fellow in Alabama who was caught (with his wife) using a 3 year old girl and a 17 year old boy as sex-toys... and a 20-something who happens to pick up a 17-year old with a fake ID who's practically jumping on him.

    In the eyes of the law, however, they're both the same.

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  165. As a father by Karem+Lore · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I think this man should be imprisoned for the maximum length of time that jsutice will allow...and then some.
    The story doesn't mention if he used these images, it could have been a business for him, but he was feeding an abnormal desire that should be crushed whenever it surfaces.

    Cut his nuts off I would if I could, but I can't.

    --
    When all is said and done, nothing changes...
  166. RTFR! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously. Read the ... ruling. This was not an activist decision. The judge pretty much ruled on the letter of the law. If anything, it was the law itself that was faulty. It states that reproduction of kiddie porn onto diskettes or other computer storage devices is the same as producing kiddie porn. The judge applied the law as written. The judge was only doing his/her job.

  167. 17 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
    Even the most softcore porn featuring a 17 year old is illegal, yet incredibly hardcore material from the follow day that she turned 18 is legal... .


    Thank God for tomorrow!

  168. Taboo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > so they all should hang Sadly, half of all fathers should hang then. I was recently shocked to hear about a survey on a respected TV news channel (no tabloid) in which 56% of questioned women responded that they had been sexually abused by their father.

    1. Re:Taboo by briancarnell · · Score: 1

      Of course what is not shocking is that some troll would come along to slashdot and post such nonsense, conveniently without citation -- some TV station somewhere said something. Yawn.

    2. Re:Taboo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hard to believe? Yes, then it MUST be a lie.

  169. Re:How about a sexual definition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah IMO it shouldn't be the same.

    There was that high school teacher who was charged with <a href="http://www.tranceaddict.com/forums/archive/t opic/63406-1.html">"raping"</a> 14 year old boys.

    "She faces five to 20 years in jail on each charge, if convicted. "

    20 years per charge...

    Rather steep assuming it was consensual (given reports I bet it was - it was the parents who told the police, and it's boys we're talking about ;) ), if I was one of the 14 year old boys, I'd probably be more traumatized by her going to jail for 20 years than for anything she did to me. Sure one could say it's wrong, but to say something she did to me was so horribly wrong that she should go to prison for 20 years, won't make me feel better.

    I bet the boys knew about sex already anyway..

    If it was all consensual etc, I doubt they'd change their minds years later and think she was so evil.

    Sure, we should discourage such things - since teenagers aren't very good at predicting long term consequences of their actions ( most adults don't seem that great either ;) ), and for many people sex forms powerful psychological and physical bonds. Get bonded to the wrong person and boy you're in trouble.

    But still I think there's something wrong - the punishment doesn't seem to fit the crime, compared to other crimes (murder, nonconsensual rape)...

  170. You misunderstand the problem. by raehl · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If you're going to trade in kiddie porn or rape children at all, it doesn't matter what the penalty is. You're a sicko, and sickos don't sit there and thing "Well, I'll do it as long as I won't get more than 10 years." People who commit sexual crimes against children are sickos, and the punishment is mainly about removing them from society.

    We punish kiddie porn traders very hard because:

    - It's a strong indicator the person is likely to commit a more serious crime later, so let's get them out of society for 20 years once we've figured out they're a sicko insted of waiting until they act on it
    - Kiilling the market for kiddie porn is just as important as killing the supply.

    1. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by fbjon · · Score: 2, Insightful
      How do you define a "sicko"? How interested in children/young people/minors must a person be before you can break out the "sicko" stamp?

      It's no use being a reactionist fool, you know. Try being constructive instead, such as not bunching people who download some porn together with people who molest, rape, and murder children. I mean, who's the problem?

      Sure, killing demand is a great way to curb the problem, but throwing people in prison will not help! , because it is equivalent to sticking your head in the sand. Treatment, psychological help, and a way to talk intelligently about this problem is what we want, not a lyching campaign.

      I mean, we're civilized and intelligent people, right?

      (and no, I'm not talking about child abusers and killers, I'm talking about normal people. Yes, someone who "loves children" could be a perfectly normal human being, has this concept grasped you all yet?)

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    2. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Oligonicella · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How do you define a "sicko"? How interested in children/young people/minors must a person be before you can break out the "sicko" stamp?

      Apparently you didn't read your parent's post -- "trade in kiddie porn or rape children...sexual crimes against children". That sounds prettly explicit and restrictive to me.


      It's no use being a reactionist fool, you know. Try being constructive instead, such as not bunching people who download some porn together with people who molest, rape, and murder children. I mean, who's the problem?

      Where, oh where, did you get that your parent was doing this? Only spoke of child predators, not porn parties. That little connection appears to have sprung from your brain, not parent's.


      ... but throwing people in prison will not help!

      Sure it does. The same way taking a serial killer out of the public pool does. The count of their victims stops. That is not desireable, why? Please be specific.


      I mean, we're civilized and intelligent people, right?

      Civilized people protect their society from internal predators.


      ... I'm not talking about child abusers and killers, I'm talking about normal people.

      Your parent was talking about child abusers and killers, not normal people.


      Yes, someone who "loves children" could be a perfectly normal human being, has this concept grasped you all yet?)

      Sure (without the quotes), it just wasn't the topic.

      Why the quotes? Does that really mean someone who has sex with children? In that case; no, the person is not "a perfectly normal human being".


    3. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by fbjon · · Score: 1
      Ok, the parent didn't talk about that, but that's what this thread is about. It always irks me whenever I see this think-about-the-children "lock them all away, the longer the better, justice be damned!" approach.
      The same way taking a serial killer out of the public pool does. The count of their victims stops.
      Right, but it doesn't actually do anything to stop the problem. The big problem is, as I see it, not with the individuals, but with the entire industry. I'd also wager that people who have (or would like to have) sex with children are much more common than serial killers, but I'm just assuming here.
      Civilized people protect their society from internal predators.
      By throwing them in jail? Is depriving people of freedom the best solution? It's certainly the easiest! (read: cop-out) Sorry, but I can't twist my brain into believing that the end justifies the means.
      Does that really mean someone who has sex with children? In that case; no, the person is not "a perfectly normal human being".
      And I'll agree. But what about the subject at hand, someone who downloads child porn?
      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
    4. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We punish kiddie porn traders very hard because:

      - It's a strong indicator the person is likely to commit a more serious crime later, so let's get them out of society for 20 years once we've figured out they're a sicko insted of waiting until they act on it


      Along with adult traders of adult porn. They may have illicit sex.
      And anyone who plays GTA, let's lock up those sickos too, before they hijack an auto.
      No need to wait for them to act on it.

    5. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      "Does that really mean someone who has sex with
        children? In that case; no, the person is not "a perfectly normal human being". If it were socially generated, or treatable by "therapy", the problem wouldn't be totally cross-cultural and worldwide (which it is).

      And I've concluded that it probably IS "normal", as part of the genetic hardwiring in all species. The desire to have sex with underaged individuals is not unique to humans; the males of every warmblooded species will attempt to rape underaged females whenever possible, and often do so by preference. Their hardwiring says "get YOUR genes into her offspring before anyone else can do so".

      But since such behaviour is deemed undesirable in a civilized society, we've been selecting against individuals who can't stop themselves from giving in to their animal instincts; indeed, in western society we've probably largely removed it from the gene pool, by imprisoning the offenders. After all, most people don't reproduce much while incarcerated.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    6. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      You know... at one time... I believed the "civilized society" argument.

      When my former employer mailed to me a BACK-BILL for $1256 after they had fired me, though, even my last shreds of perception of a "civilized society" were blown away. I'm typically an eternal optimist... but when a former employer can pay you (via direct deposit), fire you, wait 6 weeks, and then demand that money back in a legal letter (with threats of debt collection)...

      Well... there is no such thing as "civilized society". Society is just as animalistic, might-makes-right, and vindictive as it has ever been.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    7. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Well, actually I agree with you (but was hoping to escape the kneejerk mods as flamebait :) Unfortunately I grok exactly where you're coming from, from my own bitter experiences.

      "Civilized society" is tolerably stable at the macro level, but at the micro level it tends to break down the instant someone can take advantage at someone else's expense. IOW, whenever might-makes-right can bully its way to the fore.

      One might even view gov't as the ultimate in "might makes right".

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    8. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1
      Well, actually I agree with you
      Sweet. The little candy next to your name says you're a friend of a foe... but you seem to be a pretty reasonable person.
      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    9. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "..in western society we've probably largely removed it from the gene pool, by imprisoning the offenders. After all, most people don't reproduce much while incarcerated."

      Those dirty auzzies!!!

    10. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Onan · · Score: 5, Interesting
      If you're going to trade in kiddie porn or rape children at all, it doesn't matter what the penalty is. You're a sicko, and sickos don't sit there and thing "Well, I'll do it as long as I won't get more than 10 years."
      There is no surer way to fail to solve a problem than to declare the other people involved to be evil, or subhuman, or completely irrational.

      No matter how disgusted you are by their actions, the people that you're trying to discourage fro this behaviour are, in fact, human beings. They are capable of rational thought. And if you want to stand any chance of effectively altering their behaviour, you have to accept this and choose methods that will actually apply to them.

      Our sexuality is generally something that's handed to us without any choice on our part. These people whom you're demonizing have been handed a very problematic sexuality, but in all other ways they're very much what you'd consider normal people leading normal lives. Sure, some of them might be murderous crack-fiends; about the same percentage of them as of people as a whole. Some others of them will be brilliant neurosurgeons who spend their careers saving others' lives; again, about the same percentage as of anyone else.

      This assertion that anyone with any interest in child porn is doomed to commit "a more serious crime" later is certainly bunk. This is the worst kind of justification for irrational punishment: "even if he hadn't done anything bad yet, he would have at some point, I'm sure."

      (Another great recent example of this type of failure was President Bush labelling anyone who acts against the US as "evil". "That's right folks, they're not human beings who are making choices that we'd like to change because of societal and economic factors! They're just pure unadulterated evil, which handily gets us out of having to do the hard work of actually understanding those societal and economic factors and addressing them directly!")

    11. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Eol1 · · Score: 1

      "but when a former employer can pay you (via direct deposit), fire you, wait 6 weeks, and then demand that money back in a legal letter (with threats of debt collection)"

      Umm was this money owed you or an accounting error? You can't hate your employer for making an accounting error and then you spending your ill gotten gains. I have been in this boat myself. If you are overpaid, it is your responsibility to not spent that money and return it to them. You knew that wasn't your money and didn't want to let them know you were overpaided because you were fired and pissed .. thats your fault, not theirs.

      --
      De Oppresso Liber
    12. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      Yes. It's always my fault. No matter what it is. Even if it isn't my fault, it is my fault.

      Many companies will "overpay" employees as a favor. It's happened to me before. "Here's a few extra hundred dollars to help you so that you don't get screwed until you find another job."

      Cut your sanctimonious crap. I signed no contract which required me to audit them.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    13. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by iamhassi · · Score: 1
      I think it sounded better re-written:

      If you're going to jaywalk or speed 10 mph over the speed limit at all, it doesn't matter what the penalty is. You're a sicko, and sickos don't sit there and thing "Well, I'll do it as long as I won't get more than 10 years." People who commit traffic crimes are sickos, and the punishment is mainly about removing them from society.

      We punish traffic violators very hard because:

      - It's a strong indicator the person is likely to commit a more serious crime later, so let's get them out of society for 20 years once we've figured out they're a sicko insted of waiting until they act on it

      - Kiilling the number of traffic violators is just as important as killing the ability to violate traffic laws.

      I found what you said interesting:
      "- Kiilling the market for kiddie porn is just as important as killing the supply."

      is that why it's it's legal to possess up to a certain amount of pot in some states?

      if killing the market is as important as killing the supply why are you allow to possess small amounts of pot in some states, or why do they get lessor sentences than drug dealers? Shouldn't are jails be full of teenagers serving 10 yr sentences for being caught with a joint?

      possessing something and distributing or dealing something are very different offenses and they should not be treated the same.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    14. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by iamhassi · · Score: 1
      "- It's (to trade kiddie porn) a strong indicator the person is likely to commit a more serious crime later, so let's get them out of society for 20 years once we've figured out they're a sicko insted of waiting until they act on it"

      you know this is the same argument they use to try and ban games like GTA, right?

      According to your logic the following content should be ban:
      -- any movie, picture or video game depicting violence, including murders, rape, etc
      -- any movie, picture or video game depicting any crime, since the desire to see this type of contect is "a strong indicator the person is likely to commit a more serious crime later"
      -- you may want to consider throwing books on the list that depict the above content since that might give someone an idea to commit crimes.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    15. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Never thought of it as "candy" before... now I'll never have any other name for it [g]

      [goes to look] In our only point of common relationships, one of your freaks is also one of my fans.... [scratching head] .... you don't seem too unreasonable yourself {g} -- Except for a few special cases, I gave up marking "friends" as a hopeless proposition... there must be a couple thousand people here whom I'm friendly with! So I just count all my fans as friends. :) -- And I don't mark foes, since occasionally one might say something worth reading!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    16. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      I don't mark foes because I think it's pretty childish to spread hate. But I do mark friends for people who have expressed similar points of view. Sometimes I go back and check my "friends" list to make sure that people have continued to post/participate.

      I checked my friends list a few days ago. I had about 4 or 5 drop off (out of 20-30). By comparison, about 1/3 of my freaks haven't posted since 2005.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    17. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      The sole reason I subbed here is because of the Relationship Change Notification function. Before that, I'd periodically go thru the list hoping to catch the new ones, since I like to then go root up a bunch of their posts, try to figure out what we have in common (or not as the case may be), and drop 'em a few replies. Even then, sometimes I have no clue what attracted 'em to my humble list.

      All my freaks but two are just common trolls. Of the two, one is a novice Mac fanboy, and the other is a rabid anti-M$ie (who occasionally makes a good point that I'll reply to, even if he doesn't see it). Oh well, can't please 'em all, especially if you're politically incorrect!

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    18. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Eivind · · Score: 3, Informative
      It's very easy to divide the world in two. "sickos" and "normals", "evil" and "good" etc. It's also very typical American. Even your president doesn't matter any better: "If you're not with us, you're with the terrorists."

      The real world ain't black and white. It's ridiculous to claim that, say, Norway is a terrorist-supporter simply because the Norwegians thougth other actions than outrigth invation was more apropriate for Iraq. I *hope* that not even Bush really means that.

      In real life, we're friends. Friends sometimes disagree. Sometimes you even tell a friend that some idea of his is, in your opinion, silly, stupid or worse. That doesn't make you a enemy. On the contrary.

      It's similar with child-porn. Everyone wants to end abuses of children. That's not the issue. The issue is that the world ain't black and white.

      In lots of countries, for example, you can be put behind bars for *years* for, for example, posessing a video of a 16 year old having sex. In the same country where actually *having* sex with the same 16-year old is fully legal. (that's the case for Norway for example, because age of consent is 16, but "child-porn" is any porn with under-18s.)

      Or worse yet: For posessing pictures of a person who is on the pictures dressed up as/behaves like being 15 years old, while *actually* being proven to be 18 years old. (this is so because "child-porn" is defined as being, *OR* appearing to be under 18)

      Or even worse: I've got letters, written by my girlfriend at the time (Hi Marianne!) when we where *both* 16 that would undoubtedly qualify as porn, and thus child-porn. Technically we can *both* be convicted of posessing child-porn, unless we burn all the old letters, simply for posessing letters sometimes describing what we where (fully legally!) doing to eachothers.

      Think I can't top this ? How about imprisoning for *years* the 15-year old who writes down some of those thougths and ideas that *every* healthy person of that age has ? The law makes no distinction if the porn is purely fictious (as in your daydreams about the girl in your class) or involves *actual* sexual acts. The law also makes no difference if you yourself are 15 or if you're 50. There's a name for say a male that is 15 year old and has sexual fantasies about girls. The word is: normal.

      "Punish everyone strictly" would mean giving these people, and many more, a multi-year prisonterm. If that's your idea of a fair justice-system, then I'm glad you're not voting in my country.

    19. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      You should be put away for life, maybe executed. (I hope you get the joke)

      Realistically speaking... being put to death immediately is far better than what society will do to you, in terms of vigilante stalking and poisoning your on-the-job relationships, should you be caught "talking dirty" with anyone under age 18.

      Society is a fucked up beast. The alternative is what? Live in the woods? Is that really an acceptable option in a world where a stable house and home is natural.

      No. The bottom line is simply,"Don't get caught." Premeditate everything you do. But is that right either? That we should have to live in a conctant state of paranoia?

      Even 1000 years ago there is a reasonable expectancy that the wolves won't be stalking your campsite as long as the fire is burning. Society has done nothing but regress PAST the point of naturality.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    20. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Eivind · · Score: 1
      Realistically speaking... being put to death immediately is far better than what society will do to you, in terms of vigilante stalking and poisoning your on-the-job relationships, should you be caught "talking dirty" with anyone under age 18.

      First, that's your opinion, not mine, and I highly doubt that that's true for most parts of the world. If it's true for USA, then I pity those living there. A 25 year old flirting with a 17 year old is not a problem for anyone, that's called *normal* in any non-hysterical context.

      Indeed, in most of the world, even for these two to have a sexual relationship would be perfectly legal.

      USA has this strange split. On one hand you have very strict (puritanical even) laws, on the other hand you have like the highest incidents of teenage-pregnancies in the western world, so obviously teenager are fucking just asmuch in the USA as elsewhere. So it's like, oficially forbidden, but everyone is doing it, "don't get caugth" like you say seems to sum it up pretty well.

      I belong to those people who find it stupid to have laws against behaviour that is voluntarily, that harms noone, and that everyone is doing anyway. That just serves to undermine the respect for laws in general.

      This is made *worse* by stupid people who are unable to *think* but resorts to pure emotionalism the second anyone mentions "children" or any other holy cow. (I say this as the father of a young child btw) "Oh my God, won't somebody please think of the children !"

      The only cure is to stay rational, question the premises, argue facts.

      In the case of USA, it may be a lost cause, there's every sign you are degrading into a religious-conservatism swamp of superstition and hysteria. But I actually care enough to atleast bother trying. USA used to mean something positive. I never approved of *all* that you do, and I never will. But I approved of a lot, and I'd like that USA back pretty-please.

      On the positive side, most of the rest of the western world is significantly less hysterical.

    21. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by elrous0 · · Score: 1
      If it's true for USA, then I pity those living there.

      There are juveniles in the U.S. in prison right now for having sex with girlfriends of the same age. It's not the norm (especially if they don't get caught), but it can happen.

      -Eric

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    22. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1
      First, that's your opinion, not mine
      Oh. I get it. You're establishing, up front, that you're lecturing me.

      Let's establish one thing right away. I am your superior. Not the other way around.
      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    23. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Eol1 · · Score: 1

      So lets say you go to Taco Bell. You hand the cashier a $20 for a $1.99 meal. He hands you $8.01 back and you step right to wait on your food. You get bored and count your change, notice the cashier shorted you $10 (maybe he decided to keep it, thought you handed him a $10, or forgot to give you a $10). You are telling me YOU WOULDN'T ask him for your missing $10 because you fucked up by giving him a $20. And if you did ask for it back, you are ok with him tell you to go fuck yourself because he never agreed t be audited by you. Same deal.

      Corporations are big and accounting errors happen. You have a responsiblity to give back illgotten gains back. And yes there are laws that confirm this. Your just upset because they fired your ass, I wonder why. Could it be your complete disregard for the law and problems with authority.

      Unless of course you think that that Taco Bell cashier has ever right to keep your $10 after your confront him about it. I have my doubts about that though.

      --
      De Oppresso Liber
    24. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      I've been in both situations--both where I've overpaid and where I've underpaid (or gotten more change back than I was supposed to). In all situations arguing with the cashier never solves anything because nothing can be proven.

      Corporations sometimes make "mistakes" and sometimes they "overpay" an exiting employee as a gesture of generosity. Paying me, waiting six weeks, and then asking for the money back (and threatening to put a black mark on my credit record) is criminal. Not only have they falsified information to the IRS but they're exercising extortion. I signed no contract which requires me to audit them.

      "Illgotten"? That's what generosity is called these days, huh?

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
    25. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I don't mark foes because I think it's pretty childish to spread hate."

      IANTGPP (I am not the grandparent poster.)
      There are legitimate reasons for marking people foes that have nothing to do with hate-mongering or political viewpoints.
      I don't mark foes to spread hate.
      I mark foes because their posts are usually off-topic, contain so many logic/spelling/grammar errors that they are unreadable, or because their posting format is so annoying (tons of vertical whitespace, the entire post is monospaced, etc.) that it distracts me from the thread.
      Oh, yeah, and because they prefer emacs to vi (those SCUM).

    26. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Eivind · · Score: 1
      No. I'm establishing that what you said is purely opinion, and unlikely to be shared by everyone. I frequently hear, in defence of the capital punishment (I realize you wheren't using it in that sense) that it's "more humane" than a lifetime prison-sentence anyway.

      Thanks for playing.

    27. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Eivind · · Score: 1
      Out of curiosity, do they, on account of stone-age role-patterns on principle imprison the male, and let the female off, or do they imprison the female ? Or do they imprison both ?

      It's interesting, by the way, how many react strongly negatively to what I wrote in the GP, but yet don't want to come out and tell me what exactly is wrong with the argument. I've had no less than 5 people foe me since I wrote it, which is more than I managed in the last 3 years combined.

      It seems I was rigth some people shut their brain down and go into emotionalism when certain holy cows are on the scales.

    28. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by mink · · Score: 1

      They will imprison both. Though IMO there is a certain amount of what you call "stone age role patterning" involved.

      When an underage guy scores with an older woman, he is generally viewed in a positive light for "getting some" while the woman is "a horrible monster preying on children". This is usually also the case for an older man and a under age woman, but the woman is also viewed in a negative light. Often when the ages are close the woman is ignored and the male (if the older) is treated as harshly as the adults above.

      Now take this with a lot of sodium chloride as it's just what I have seen around me in my life and with some news stories. I'm sure somewhere there is a better source for the information you are asking about.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
    29. Re:You misunderstand the problem. by Eivind · · Score: 1
      I know. It's just -- well, people need to start thinking. When I was in Univeristy, we had a course -- "Computers in society" or some such, with ethical and moral issues that come up with the use of computers. A fun course with *lots* of outside guest-lecturers.

      Among them, Inger Marie Sunde, at the time head of the Norwegian Polices computer-crime department. It scared me at the time to discover that high-ranking people in the police would come to a university and deliberately lie, or atleast twist the truth to become unrecognizable, in order to get more police-powers. (she wishes for anonymous access to the internet to be outlawed, and records to be delivered to the police directly from ISPs without a court-ruling for example)

      One example: She claimed that over 400 children a year are abducted in the USA alone after meeting with pedophiles they've learnt knowing on the internet. I thougth the claim sounded strange at the time, and asked here why we never hear of these *daily* occurances in the news if that's so.

      She had no ready answer, and also no source for her number. She promised to provide a source by email after the lecture, but never did. Instead I investigated a bit on the Internet after the lecture and found the (likely) source of the number:

      Turns out its reasonably common that girls (primarily) around the age of 16-17 run away from home by essentially fleeing to boyfriends they have that live on their own (which often means they're 18 or over). In this day and age, offcourse some of those boyfriends are people they met over the net. (I myself met both a former girlfriend, and my wife over the internet)

      Now, it may be that various laws are broken if a 16 year old runs away from home and stays with her 18 year old boyfriend that she learnt knowing by IRC. It's just a *tiny* bit misleading to characterise this problem as "predatory pedophiles on the internet abducting children."

      Besides, young people have run away from home with their partners for aslong as humanity has existed, the fact that these days they young people sometimes learn to know eachothers over the net is completely secondary.

  171. Don't get it twisted... by thedletterman · · Score: 0

    Making pornography and making music are two entirely different things. Pornography is not only content, but a medium as well. Playboy makes pornography when it takes pictures of naked women, just like artists make music when they perform songs. However, when playboy publishes their photographs into a magazine, they are again, making pornography. A magazine is a medium, and a CD is a medium.. but a CD is not music, and a dirty magazine is pornography.

    --
    Any fool can criticise, condemn, and complain, and most fools do. - Benjamin Franklin
  172. Taboo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe this is off topic, but I was recently shocked to hear about a survey on a respected TV news channel (no tabloid) in which 56% of questioned women responded that they had been sexually abused by their father. (And maybe the remaining 44% of fathers are just too "shy" but would like to do it too...)

  173. CCTV by ajs318 · · Score: 1

    I got wondering the other day, what happens if an under-age child undresses within sight of a CCTV camera? Does that automatically make the CCTV tapes child porn, and the staff in the monitoring station nonces? Should they be placed on the Sex Offenders' Register and barred for life from having jobs where they might come into contact with children?

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  174. some definitions required here by trandism · · Score: 2, Insightful

    first of all pls define "child"... The majority of societies have defined the 18th year of an individual's life as a threshold... anyone knows how did this come? Because AFAIK nature strongly disagrees and makes females able to reproduce at a much earlier age... Moreover, i don't know about USA with christian-conservatism that has arised there recently, but in Europe the majority of boys and girls start their sexual experiences earlier than this threshold..

    furthermore, pornography is NOT a crime by itself.. or else pls convict De Sade, Nabokov (for lolita) and many others.. sadly, US courts are capable of even that..

    As for the making=burning debate, i really don't get it.. What is the important difference of downloading ("making" a file on a HDD) and burning ("making" a file on a CD-ROM).. What about USB sticks, Magnetic Tape and other storage media?

    It is society's collective hypocrisy to throw a porn-downloader in jail, while flooding Thailand with sex-tourists every damn summer

    --
    www.lemonodor.com A mostly Lisp weblog
    1. Re:some definitions required here by slim · · Score: 1

      furthermore, pornography is NOT a crime by itself.. or else pls convict De Sade, Nabokov (for lolita) and many others..

      If the statute book has a law written in it that says "Pornography is illegal", then porn is a crime. That's how law works.

      However Lolita is not porn. So even in countries where porn is illegal, Nabakov would walk free. Read Nabokov, then watch "Cum Gargling Sluts 6" and you should notice the difference. Sade, I'll reserve judgement on.

      Mind you, obscenity is notoriously difficult to define (Justice Potter Stewart: "I know it when I see it", 1964). Unfortunately the best we can do is rely on a general consensus in our particular society, and hope that our courts reflect that. Bear in mind that something can be obscene without being pornography -- some of the artworks produced by Jake and Dinos Chapman, Paul McCarthy, etc. push the boundaries of decency (in a necessary and valuable way) without being porn.

  175. Paedophile by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not pedophile, for the last time, learn how to spell Yanks!

  176. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Actually, the judge increased it to only 3 years. I was like, the man molested her for four years, he should get at least that amount of time. Then again, I think 10 years per is more fair, but I'm not the judge.

    I can see the judge's point about the treatment, but like other posters have stated, if it was my daughter, I'd have killed him. I won't try to justify it as anything but murder with revenge as the motive.

    The whole 'At least he can't do it to anyone else' is a meager excuse after the fact.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  177. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    Actually, if you research the background on this particular case, you'll find out that, if you were the parent of the girl, you were donating your girl to this man.

    What? You didn't know? The parents knew that the man had an "interest" in their daughter. The parents knew that, when their daughter stayed with the man, they slept in the same bed. If this man is convicted then the parents should also be charged with some sort of child endangerment. At the point that the evidence is at this really becomes a case of parental consent.

    Oh. You didn't know that? Well, that's what you get for reading the carefully selected news in the public media.

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  178. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    If that is indeed true, it sounds almost worse than letting your kid stay with Michael Jackson.

    That would indeed be a sticky trial. Were the parents stupid, suckers, incompetant(criminally), or negligent? Probably a combination of the above, but in what porportions?

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  179. Always the case in the UK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AFAIK UK law makes no distinction between downloading and creating child porn.
    Although I think a court of law probably will when it comes to sentencing.

  180. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    I know this is out on a limb for the sake of debate... but...

    Dismissing entirely the possibility that the parents recognized that the young girl actually expressed an interest in having contact, au naturale, with the man?

    It's been shown that children as young as 3 or 4 will begin taking a pleasure response from stimulating their sexual organs. Is it really unnatural for a 10-year old to want to have sexual contact?

    Or does society have a dirty little secret that's used to rile up the ignorant masses? Check out the numbers. Average age of first contact for girls is down to 15. That's the AVERAGE. The same studies which report the average age also report that the average psychological health, related to sex, is normal.

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  181. Yeah, if I warez moviez I create them!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I create! I create! I create!

  182. Was There Intent to Distribute? by qazwart · · Score: 1

    I read the appeals court's opinion. It stated that there were over 50 CD-Rs in the man's possession. It didn't state whether or not this was a "personal" collection, or the guy was possibly distributing them.

    My assumption is that the prosecutor argued that the sheer number of CDs showed an intent to distribute. This is considered a valid argument even if there is no proof that the man actually distributed anything. The same type of argument is made in drug cases all the time. If someone has a few ounces of marijuana on him, it is assumed to be for personal use. If that person has three or four kilos, it is assumed that person is a distributor. If you are caught with contraband, you don't need absolute proof that you intended to be a distributor. Just the amount of contraband can show that.

    1. Re:Was There Intent to Distribute? by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      The opinion quotes the statute, which does require "intent to distribute."

  183. Think carefully by typical · · Score: 1

    Just so you know, I've been educated by experienced psychologists. If what I say is wrong, then to hell with all of their reputations and experience.

    That is an argument by authority. That is acceptable in the event that two people are making assertions based purely on their reputation, but not when someone asks specifically for factual support. If the authority is justified, one should be able to support these claims.

    It's also true that in other cultures they mutilate genitals.

    Okay, this is actually goes against your point. There was a significant social push in the US to eliminate female circumcision in other countries. Why? Because it offended US sensibilities.

    On the other hand, in the US, it's just fine to circumcise males. Why? Because there is Biblical support for the practice. Now, both practices involve slicing up someone's (usually a baby's) genitals with the intent of making sexual sensation less pleasurable later in life. Granted, female circumcision involves more significant surgery, but it's a quantitative difference, not a qualitative one. To a culture that does not accept male circumcision, this is also "mutilation of the genitals".

    There is no advantage to having any kind of sex with children.

    Nor is there an advantage to masturbation, post-menopausal heterosexual sex, sex while using condoms, homosexual sex, sex where a chemical or hormonal contraceptive is being used...

    If you're going to take this route, you need to argue why these other forms of sexual gratification are acceptable.

    This is clear evidence that sex with children is wrong and damaging. If it was ment to be, then it wouldn't hurt. It is not a cultural phenomenom.

    The age at which we set as minimum for sexual activity is most definitely a phenomenon that changes as a function of culture -- it varies based both on time and physical location.

    And at least a naive reading of that argument is patently absurd -- by that logic, no woman should ever have sex for the first time.

    Check out this site for more information

    I did. I was really more interested in debating the legality of pornography than the problems associated with sexual abuse, but I figured, hey, might as well address this too. I was hoping for something that described physical issues, but it started out "Do you have any idea of the damage to a soul..."

    The problem is that most of the arguments used in the paper seem flawed or to avoid the question. For example:

    Are the negative effects of child sexual abuse due solely to societal disapproval of pedophilia?

    Now this is an interesting question. However, after raising the question, the author never seems to actually answer it. He gave an example where the variable was whether or not a child was sexually abused rather than whether or not the child was raised in a culture with or without societal disapproval of pedophilia, which clearly does not answer the question. He then addresses varying the reaction of a mother. This is not varying the societal values, this is varying a single reasonse. If the problem is an inability to reconcile major conflicting inputs (as would seem most likely to me), the study has not addressed the question.

    Isn't it true that some children desire and initiate sexual contacts with pedophiles?

    Frankly, I don't think that this is relevant to whether or not sexual behavior in children is a problem or not. Children will initiate all sorts of activities that can be harmful to them -- I don't think that the author even need treat this as an argument that sexual behavior in children is acceptable. However, the author again ignores the question, and instead starts a tirade on how pedophiles "court" children.

    Shouldn't children be permitted to engage in sex with adults if they so choose?

    This was listed under "morality", and while I'm looking for pragmatic arguments and almost skipped it, it did address informed

    --
    Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    1. Re:Think carefully by SilverspurG · · Score: 1
      On the other hand, in the US, it's just fine to circumcise males
      To do one better there's the practice of cutting open the tip of the male penis, ostensibly to relieve what is known as "meatal stenosis" resulting from (again, purportedly) from circumcision.

      In reality it's an insurance scam for doctors who don't want to identify abusive parents when they bring their young sons in over childhood bet-wetting (which is most often psychologically induced by abusive parenting).

      Nothing better than going through life with the head of your dick cut open like a filet mignon. But no one seems to mind. Males are expected to "just take it".
      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  184. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Firethorn · · Score: 1
    It'd be a little different if we had an absolutely effective birth control means, and have eliminated STD's. Still, in this case the contact was when she was 6-10 years old.

    These guys have it:
    "Nobody can really compare a relationship in which the victim is 15 years old to one where she's 6," said Steven Wright, Cartner's lawyer. "While both criminal, they're very different circumstances."
    Statutory rape can be a bit iffy for the older teenagers. I have alot more sympathy for a sub 25 year old sleeping with a 15 year old than a 38 year old doing it to a 6 year old. Still not happy with them, but it wasn't too long ago that 15 year olds could marry in most states. Given the better nutrition, girls are maturing quicker, and you pretty much need to check ID's to tell. Between fake ID's, alchohol, and a willing girl, and it's a situation I can see happening to a unwary guy. The way most laws are written, the girl is pretty much allowed to try to trick you in any way she can, and it's still your fault if you fall for it. The idea with statutory rape is that the kid is too young to realize the consequences of his or her actions in an adult fashion. The difference between many 15 year olds and 18 year olds is often very slim today in that regard.
    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  185. That's such a calous opinion... by FatSean · · Score: 1

    So rather than spend some money and help these people into a life where they can follow that most basic, essential urge and yet not get AIDS...

    You want them to oppress themselves with laws about who can have sex with who? Shit, while you're at it, why don't you outlaw having more than 1 child?

    We should have invaded Africa instead of Iraq. They need Freedom even more than the Iraqis!

    --
    Blar.
    1. Re:That's such a calous opinion... by be-fan · · Score: 1

      I really think you missed my point completely. What I was getting at is not that these oppressive laws about sex are right, but rather that they do serve their purpose. However, the fact that they are useful does not make them right. Laws need not only be useful, but they need to be just.

      --
      A deep unwavering belief is a sure sign you're missing something...
    2. Re:That's such a calous opinion... by Carpe+PM · · Score: 1
      why don't you outlaw having more than 1 child?

      Because then we would be China! But Paul Ehrlich would approve - and Malthus.

  186. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Actually, if you research the background on this particular case, you'll find out that, if you were the parent of the girl, you were donating your girl to this man.

    I've read the story on multiple major news sources, such as CNN, and even a local source, the Burlington free press. If this is true, well, sheeesh. The 'parents', if this is true, don't deserve to be. Still, looking at the statistics, most pedophiles pick kids of parents who are 'enablers'. Whether they outright allow it, are incompetent, or are simply too trusting of an authority figure(priest, teacher). The vast majority of parents wouldn't have given this guy the opportunity to even start.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  187. Getting off topic here by surfingmarmot · · Score: 1
    Quite a few of us are getting way off topic here. While all the punishment and justive talk is interesting and this guy is a voyeur and pedophile, it is straying from the point.

    To quote some evidence from decision: "Lohman agreed that police had no information or evidence that defendant took any of the original pictures or made any of the original videos found on the CD-Rs."

    Further " -3- Defendant argued against bindover on the counts related to the CD-Rs, contending that the burning or saving of images or data onto a CD-R does not rise to the level of producing, creating, manufacturing, or making child sexually abusive material. Defendant further argued that the transference of the images from the Internet to his computer's hard drive and then to the CD-Rs constituted nothing more than the storage of data. Defendant maintained that at most there was only evidence of possession of child pornography pursuant to MCL 750.145c(4)"

    To get back on point, the issue is not punishment or justice or whether possessin is illegal (it is only for _child_ porn in most cases), it is whether burning some images to a removable optical medium is PUBLISHING and DISTRIBUTION.

    So let's examine this arguments implication through some hypothetical cases.

    1. Is copying your DVD collection to removeable optical media illegal--I thought it was legal under fair use of purchased material?
    2. Is wrting it to a hard drive?
    3. It the drive is removable or external?
    4. What about flash cards?
    5. In fact viewing a web site actually copies some or all of it to a cache in DRAM is that PUBLISHING AND DISTRIBUTION?
    6. What if I back the cache up along with my system to DVD+RWs?

    This over-zealous and poorly considered decision materially blurred the line substantially and might just have handed th RIAA and MPAA the equivalent of the 'A Bomb' depnding upon how far this is stretched. Right now, thankfully, this is not a ferderal court or in an infulential state supreme court. Let's hope it is an anomaly.

    1. Re:Getting off topic here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Packet-writing software was bundled ten years ago with $1100 2X CDR burners.

      It was just a big floppy that any apps directly saved to, and ejected like Macs did.
      Equal to 450 1.44MB disks - more like a hundred, since it lost 20MB per session.

      The decision wouldn't happen in '97 with floppies. Technology or political changes?

    2. Re:Getting off topic here by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      the issue is not punishment or justice or whether possessin is illegal (it is only for _child_ porn in most cases), it is whether burning some images to a removable optical medium is PUBLISHING and DISTRIBUTION. The words "publishing," "distribution," "possession," and all of their variants do not even appear in the statute under which the defendant appealed. The issue is whether burning images of kiddie porn to a CD-R constitutes making "child sexually abusive materials." The statutes defines such materials to include any "computer storage device... containing such a photograph... or any reproduction, copy, or print of such a photograph..." You begin with a blank CD-R. You finish with a CD-R containing kiddie porn. You made "child sexually abusive materials."

  188. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    If you're going to resort to statistical arguments ("vast majority"), then the vast majority of parents wouldn't approve of their children killing another person either. Yet society teaches them to love and worship a child which enter military service. The vast majority of parents wouldn't want their children to enter into spamming or debt collection, yet many of those people end up extraordinarily wealthy.

    I'm not defending the offender. A truly despicable person. I'm just saying that you shouldn't finalize your argument with statistical majorities. 99% of us are, in some way or another, not in the statistical majority.

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  189. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    Not to be a jerk, but...

    Everyone keeps harping on these "consequences". Just what would those be if both parties just keep their mouths shut about the fact that they were doing the ba-hon-go behind closed doors?

    That's like saying there are consequences the first time you drink a beer... placing some sort of voodoo magic over it. I don't agree with deliberately seducing an unwilling 6-year old... but if a 15-year old purports to be 18 so that she can drop you in the sack, whose fault is it?

    And why is this always gender one-way except for the stray major media case?

    It seems to me that society has a dirty little secret which makes for good *awe* *shock* *horror* *gasp* media headlines.

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  190. "After reviewing the dictionary definition" by ildon · · Score: 1

    This is highly disturbing in and of itself.

    1. Re:"After reviewing the dictionary definition" by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      Disturbing? I find it comforting that appellate judges take the time to verify that what they think the law means is what most of society thinks it means.

    2. Re:"After reviewing the dictionary definition" by ildon · · Score: 1

      So would you be comforted if the next version of Websters defined "theft" to include "copyright infringement"? This would move an entire class of crime from civil to criminal. That's a huge shift.

      Laws are not written with knowledge of what a word may come to mean in the future. Judges should rule on the original intent of a law, not what a word within the law means in a dictionary. The meaning of words can change. The law should not change with the meaning of the word. The law should only change with the changing of the law by legistators.

    3. Re:"After reviewing the dictionary definition" by FishinDave · · Score: 1
      So would you be comforted if the next version of Websters defined "theft" to include "copyright infringement"? This would move an entire class of crime from civil to criminal. That's a huge shift.

      So huge you didn't even notice it, did you? :-)

      See http://kb.iu.edu/data/aliv.html

      The meaning of words can change. The law should not change with the meaning of the word. The law should only change with the changing of the law by legistators.

      Absolutely right. When construing a statute, judges do indeed consider what its words meant at the time the statutes were written. Their overriding objective is to determine the intent of the legislators who wrote the statute.

      The meaning of the word "make" used by the appellate court has been in common use since the Middle Ages.

  191. Re:How about a sexual definition? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

    I just wish they would stop calling it "child pornography".

    Actually, isn't "child" exactly the right word? If you use something like "pedopornography" or "prepubescent pornography", then you make it a sexual definition. The word "child" refers to someone who is socially immature, not necessarily sexually immature. It refers to someone who hasn't lived long enough to learn what the consequences of his or her actions may be. It's the same "child" in the phrase "think of the children".

  192. Re:How about a sexual definition? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish they would make a distinction between "child" and "prepubescent". Legally, in many/most states, "child" can be applied to any individual under 18. Prepubescent porn is sick. Getting hot and bothered by a well developed 16 year old riding your lap is a whole different story. Check yourself next time you're at a family picnic (now it's incest, too) and your cheeky cousin decides to have fun jumping on you during a wrestling fight. You might end up in prison.

    Normal, conscientious and religious males will get up and walk away and find a cold drink of water while trying to convince themselves that their cousin(ette) wasn't trying to work them up. That doesn't make it any more legal.

  193. who cares by Soviet+Assassin · · Score: 1

    when it comes to child pr0n, it doesnt matter in my book. when something like that is downloaded anything the person viewing should have that rights taken away and beaten senseless. sure the courts decision was totally bogus and normally i would be all for helping the dude. but not in this case, the guy is getting what he deserves (or maybe not). he should be put away for some time whether the court spazzed out or not.

    --
    Menya zovut Shnur :P
  194. Just another publicly elected judge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, what can you say: that's what happens when a judge is elected (just stupid americans i nutshell)

  195. Interesting Legal Dilemma by miles_thatsme · · Score: 1

    I don't think it has any bearing on copyright lawsuits. It arises largely as a result of a terribly-worded statutory provision. In Canada, the provisions are much clearer, with separate sentences for each of four crimes: "making" child pornography, "distribution" of child pornography (each max 10-year sentence), "possession" of child pornography and "accessing" child pornography (each max 5-year sentences) (http://www.canlii.org/ca/sta/c-46/sec163.1.html). The possession provisions have been subjected to constitutional scrutiny.

    As previous posts indicate, this decision is problematic because possession without distribution should certainly not bear the same penalty as creation of child pornography. The Michigan appellate court got itself tied up because there is no reference to "distribution" in the provisions--so the Court decided it couldn't countenance distribution bearing the same penalty as possession.
     
    Aside from the obvious policy problems the decision generates, it's also premised upon a very poor statutory construction. First, the court has improperly imported the word "reproduction" from the definitional provision and substituted it for "production" in the offence provision, which runs contrary to principles of statutory interpretation.
     
    Second, the Court neglected to consider that the definitional provision applies to both the child pornography "creation" provisions and the "possession" provisions. Obviously, the Legislature intended to criminalize the *possession* of both originals and copies of child pornography, which is why the word "reproduction" appears in the definitional provision.
     
    Third, although section MCL 750.145c(2) should really be broken into subsections, there are clearly three types of offences of increasing distance from the true *creation* of child pornography: 1) activities directly with the child ("persuades, induces, entices, coerces, causes, or knowingly allows a child to engage in a child..."); 2) completed crimes of production ("arranges for, produces, makes, or finances"); 3) incomplete crimes of production ("attempts or prepares or conspires to arrange for, produce, make, or finance"). There is the same *underlying* criminal activity to each--*production* (not reproduction) or child pornography, or the person creating it.
     
    Fourth, there's a principle called "ejusdem generis" to be applied in interpreting statutes--lists of words are taken to have related meanings. In this case, the verbs "arranges for, produces, makes, or finances" should be given similar meanings. In this case, the shared meaning must reasonably involve *creation* of child pornography.
     
    Fifth, the mental element to the offence (mens rea), specified in the end of the provision, may not make any sense in the context of simple media reproduction. If you ask me to simply burn a copy of your CD with child pornography, I could be caught by this offence, without knowing *anything* about the content of the CD, simply because the photos on the CD "includes a child or that the depiction constituting the child sexually abusive material appears to include a child". If one is involved in filming or financing the original creation of the child pornography, that would likely not be the case.
     
    Sixth, there's a maxim of "strict construction" applied to criminal statutes, at least in Canada (and I would think all over the Western world): in the case of legislative ambiguity in criminal provisions, they are to be given an interpretation most favourable to the accused.

    All in all, this is a somewhat embarrassingly unsophisticated judgment to come from an appellate court. And alas, I have little hope that your Supreme Court, based upon its current composition, would correct these clear errors.

    1. Re:Interesting Legal Dilemma by FishinDave · · Score: 1
      Miles, if you are studying or practicing law, stop before you get sued.

      this decision is problematic because possession without distribution should certainly not bear the same penalty as creation of child pornography.

      Distribution is not at issue. The issue is whether the defendant "made" child porn. If he made a warehouse full of it and never distributed or intended to distribute any of it, he still earned 20 years under Michigan law.

      Aside from the obvious policy problems the decision generates..."

      I don't know about your private policy, but public policy clearly opposes any increase in the amount of child porn existing in society. The defendant inarguably increased the amount of child porn in existence, first by reproducing a particular item on his hard drive in the process of downloading it from a remote server, and second by copying that local copy to CD-R - not just once, but many times!

      it's also premised upon a very poor statutory construction.

      This is where you truly make a fool of yourself. You toss out legal terms and define them in utterly unheard of ways. You claim the appellate court did things that the record shows it never did. You raise speculative issues that did not arise in this case.

      there's a principle called "ejusdem generis" to be applied in interpreting statutes--lists of words are taken to have related meanings. In this case, the verbs "arranges for, produces, makes, or finances" should be given similar meanings. In this case, the shared meaning must reasonably involve *creation* of child pornography.

      Horseshit. "Ejusdem generis" means no such thing, particularly when it would yield such absurd results as equating "creation" with "financing" or either term with "arranging for."

      http://law.web-tomorrow.com/twiki/bin/view/Main/Ej usdemGeneris

      First, the court has improperly imported the word "reproduction" from the definitional provision and substituted it for "production" in the offence provision, which runs contrary to principles of statutory interpretation.

      The court did no such thing. It correctly noted that the production (making) of reproductions (copies) of child porn is a crime under the plain wording of the statute.

      the mental element to the offence (mens rea), specified in the end of the provision, may not make any sense in the context of simple media reproduction.

      Irrelevant to this case. The defendant did not assert that he did not know what he was copying to CD-R.

      there's a maxim of "strict construction" applied to criminal statutes, at least in Canada (and I would think all over the Western world): in the case of legislative ambiguity in criminal provisions, they are to be given an interpretation most favourable to the accused.

      More horseshit. "Strict construction" is an interpretation based solely on the literal meanings of a statute's words, without regard to externalities such as leglislative intent or words that the legislature did not include.

      The Michigan statute does not include the word "creation" or any variant of it. It includes the word "make." The word has various meanings but none of them is ambiguous. Many of those meanings are applicable to the Michigan statute and consistent with the rest of its language. The court chose, as merely one example, a meaning that is quite pertinent to this case:

      "to bring into existence by shaping, changing, or combining material[.]" Random House Webster's College Dictionary (2001)

      As the court observed, "Defendant acquired child sexually abusive material via the Internet, and he shaped, formed, and combined the material through placement of various selected pictures, videos, and images onto specific DD-Rs, bringing into existence something that had not previously existed, i.e., distinctly created and compiled child-pornography CD-Rs."

    2. Re:Interesting Legal Dilemma by miles_thatsme · · Score: 1

      Miles, if you are studying or practicing law, stop before you get sued.

      If you're in the business of suing anonymous posters on Slashdot on the basis of their comments about binding legal decisions in your jurisdiction, perhaps *you* should quit the business of law.

        Distribution is not at issue. The issue is whether the defendant "made" child porn. If he made a warehouse full of it and never distributed or intended to distribute any of it, he still earned 20 years under Michigan law.

      You have completely ignored the normative/policy aspect to my introductory comment.

        The defendant inarguably increased the amount of child porn in existence...

      This illustrates the perversity of attempting to interpret the provision with no sense for its purpose. It may also illustrate why the US has the highest incarceration rate of any democratic nation. Child pornography can only *possibly* cause harm to the child-victims (and perhaps their personal contacts) and arguably its viewers (cognitive dissonance). *Re*production without distribution by someone already in possession cannot possibly exacerbate the offence. This is a pretty clear signal that "reproduction" should not be read into the definition of "production".

        Horseshit. "Ejusdem generis" means no such thing, particularly when it would yield such absurd results as equating "creation" with "financing" or either term with "arranging for."

      Even by your cited defintion, my description of the maxim was accurate. You failed to note I said the shared meaning must *involve* the same subject matter. I didn't *equate* "creation" with "financing".

      >the mental element to the offence (mens rea), specified in the end of the provision, may not make any sense in the context of simple media reproduction.

      Irrelevant to this case.
       
       

      The mental element is a *required* element of the offence. If you believe that the role of appellate courts is to give such a myopic interpretation of a provision that it is entirely dictated by factual concessions by a defendant, you can cheerfully expect dozens of conflicting interpretations of the same provision. There goes the legal certainty associated with your preferred "plain reading".

      More horseshit. "Strict construction" is an interpretation based solely on the literal meanings of a statute's words, without regard to externalities such as leglislative intent or words that the legislature did not include.

      That's only its exclusive meaning if you get your law from the news. See e.g. R. v. Hasselwander (Supreme Court of Canada) http://www.canlii.org/ca/cas/scc/1993/1993scc57.ht ml where authorities from both the UK and US are cited.

    3. Re:Interesting Legal Dilemma by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      You have completely ignored the normative/policy aspect to my introductory comment.
      Of course I have. How Canada writes its child porn laws is of no significance in this U. S. case.
      Dave - The defendant inarguably increased the amount of child porn in existence...
      Miles - This illustrates the perversity of attempting to interpret the provision with no sense for its purpose.

      It illustrates your ignorance of the provision's purpose and your unwillingness to read the court's opinion, which discusses the provision's purpose. Whoever causes the amount of child porn to increase will be punished severely. That's the provision's purpose.
      Child pornography can only *possibly* cause harm to the child-victims (and perhaps their personal contacts) and arguably its viewers (cognitive dissonance). *Re*production without distribution by someone already in possession cannot possibly exacerbate the offence. This is a pretty clear signal that "reproduction" should not be read into the definition of "production".
      All three of your declarations are flawed.
      1. Children who have not yet been victims or pornographers are harmed by the existence of child pornographers. They live with the threat that they may be seduced by pornographers or their customers. Their relationships with all adults are impaired by this threat. The obvious solution is to eliminate child porn. That's why Michigan's law severely punishes anyone who increases the amount of child porn in existence.
      2. Reproduction of child porn makes more of it available. Even if it is not actively distributed, more of it means more chances for it to find its way into the hands of others inadvertently. Such is the legislative reasoning. Hence the severe punishment for reproducing child porn.
      3. Once again, you wrongly claim that the court substituted "reproduction" for "production." The statute, which you still don't seem to have read in the court's opinion, criminalizes the production of reproductions from original depictions of child porn and from other reproductions of such depictions.
      You still don't understand the workings of "ejusdem generis." It has nothing to do with giving a "shared meaning" to a list of items. It only restricts general references to a list of items to items of the same kind as those in the list. For example, "cars, trucks, buses, and other vehicles." If a reference is later made to "vehicles," it cannot be applied to planes or boats, because they are not land vehicles.
      The "mental element" of this case certainly is irrelevant. The appellate court was asked by the defendant to decide only one question: whether the burning of child porn to CD-Rs constituted "making" of child porn within the meaning of the statute. The defendant's state of mind at the time he burned the CD-Rs was not at issue, so the court could not rule upon it. (The defendant's state of mind will be contested at trial, no doubt. "I thought I was only moving one copy from hard drive to CD, not making a new copy!" But it is irrelevant to this case before the appellate court.)
      Strict construction grants the benefit of any doubt about a statute's meaning to the defendant only if doubt exists. The appellate court found no room for doubt about whether burning child porn to CD-Rs constitutes "making" child porn, based solely on the literal meaning of the words in the statute and a clear understanding of what happens during "burning:" a new copy of the subject matter is made. All of your amateur jurisprudence that isn't wrong is irrelevant.

    4. Re:Interesting Legal Dilemma by miles_thatsme · · Score: 1

      I don't think you're interested in the merits or defects of the decision at all. You certainly haven't tendered a cogent defence of it. You simply repeat your view of what the decision states, which is scarcely the point of the discussion, unless you have a peculiarly anti-democratic view that there is no such thing as "good law" and "bad law", there is only "the law" (and then I might expect an exposition on the merits of legal positivism or the like). Consistent with that, your comments seem to betray a bias in favour of literalism and "plain meaning"--although you seem perfectly content to offer a *different* view of the "legislative reasoning" and the "provision's purpose". Your unqualified "plain meaning" approach is inconsistent with the principles of statutory interpretation cited in the decision. Your inferred "legislative reasoning" is in direct conflict with the approach in Tombs (*notwithstanding* the Court's finding to the contrary). Finally, if you intend to be insulting, ensure you're casting intelligent insults. "Amateur jurisprudence"? The phrase is senseless.

    5. Re:Interesting Legal Dilemma by FishinDave · · Score: 1

      "Amateur jurisprudence"? The phrase is senseless. OK, Miles, what do you imagine jurisprudence is? You've failed to get the definition of any other legal term correct so far. I can't wait to see how you fumble this one! Before one can declare a law good or bad, one must decide what the law means. That is what courts do. Three Michigan courts have agreed on what this law means: the district, circuit, and appellate courts. Each of the lower courts' decisions was rendered by one judge. The appellate court consists of three judges, who are unanimous in their decision. That's a total of five judges, all presumably experts in Michigan law and the general practice of law, who concur that copying child porn from a hard drive to a CD-R constitutes making child porn within the meaning of the relevant statute. That's quite good enough for me, especially in the absence of any coherent argument to the contrary. Is a law bad because it criminalizes the making of child porn? I dun tink so, Lucy! Is there a difference between making mountains of child porn and distributing it all over the Earth, and making a single copy that is never shared with anyone else? Of course there is. If a law imposed the same punishment for both degrees of violation, then it would be flawed. But such is not the case here. The Michigan law provides a penalty of "not more than" 20 years and/or a fine "not more than" $100,000. It does not mandate a fixed sentence of 20 years and $100K regardless of the degree of severity of the violation. The law allows the specific punishment to be tailored to the specific crime. That is a good law, by any standard. Is there something bad about a law that allows a defendant to be put at risk of severe punishment for what may be a relatively minor violation? Absolutely not! Only the actual sentence received can be judged as too harsh or lenient. All three courts (and 5 judges) ruled properly that the defendant can be charged with making child porn. There is nothing bad about the Michigan statute as it is written.

  196. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Love and worship a child? My parents love me, but I think support would be a better word than worship. I like the term 'approve'. My parents will always love me, they'll even support most of my decisions, but their true approval is reserved for when they agree with my actions.

    The case of 'approval' for killing varies. My parents are prepared for the case of me killing somebody, as I am military. They acknowledge a difference between killing for wrongful reasons(murder), killing in self defense, killing to defend others, and killing as an act of war. For that matter, the possibility of their child killing a person is something any parent of a police officer has to face. Being a police officer, upholding the law, keeping the peace is considered a good occupation, at least for many parents. It doesn't pay the best, but then again, it's usually a good steady career choice. Police don't often get laid off without some significant cause.

    Society teaches parents to approve of military service? Then why is the Army having recruiting difficulties? According to the articles I've been reading, the major problem the recruiters are having are not with the young adults(who are as eager to join up as ever), but with the parents nixing the idea.

    Besides, military service is a fairly rare occupation today. Per the CIA factbook, 3.3% of GDP is dedicated to the military, and that there are 108 million people considered fit for military service(both male and female). Of that, 1.4 million are active duty. That's 1.3% of the eligible population. Out of the whole population of 295 million, about .5%. Most military members are support, not combat ops. Police are about .2% of the population in the USA. There is a statistical significant overlap between police officers and reserve/guard service.

    Spamming and debt collection, interesting choices. Spamming as a career is very new. Still, most kids don't grow up saying 'I'm going to be a Janitor!'. Most spammers don't get rich, and debt collectors, from my understanding, actually tends to run in families. Still, remember I seperate love, support, and approval. Good parents will love their spamming son, maybe support him in his choice of career(not throw snit fits over it), but not approve(Dear, I'd prefer for you to find a new career path).

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  197. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Everyone keeps harping on these "consequences". Just what would those be if both parties just keep their mouths shut about the fact that they were doing the ba-hon-go behind closed doors?
    Happens more than many would think. Still, most 15 year olds still live with their parents, who pay attention to when their kids come home. They may not have a vehicle, which allows somebody to see the older partner picking the younger up. News gets around, or the teen gets pissed and tells during a snit, etc.

    but if a 15-year old purports to be 18 so that she can drop you in the sack, whose fault is it?
    That's why I'm more sympathetic in this case. 15 year olds get tried as adults fairly frequently. A simple means test would be good. "Did the teenager engage in deliberatly misleading acts in order to get the adult to engage in sexual acts?".(rewritten to be gender inspecific)

    And why is this always gender one-way except for the stray major media case?
    Because the consequences are traditionally much more extreme for females than males. I mean, men don't have to worry about pregnancy except for maybe child support. Until DNA testing came along, even if she did bear a child, it took a high level of circumstantial evidence(compared to DNA testing) to get a court to make him pay child support. Women are, on average, more susceptible to STDs than men, etc. Religious values also plays a role, as does the traditional role for women, that places them as lesser in society, to be protected and sheltered*. We're still feeling out the changes of women's emergence, in mass, from the home. Personally, I feel that at least one of the parents should be a stay at home parent until the child is old enough to enter school.

    *As I was writing this I kept thinking about the difference between the role for women in older western society and many areas of the middle-east today. In western society, women were to be protected, even at the possible cost of your life. Men would be sent to prison or hanged for what was effectivly the suspicion of rape. In Iran, a woman who is raped is guilty of adultury or extra-marital sex and faces various penalties unless she can reach an outrageous level of evidence(multiple male witnesses willing to testify that she was forced).

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
  198. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    But you're ignoring facts for media hype. FACT: It takes two to tango. FACT: Many of the men convicted for having sex with a minor were only 50% of the courting/dating behavior. I'm not talking about rape. I'm talking about sex. For many " underage sexual offenders", the supposed victim was just as willing as any high-school jezebel looking to laugh and giggle and get her hormones wet.

    WTF are you supporting? Look. I'm all in favor of abstinence until marriage... but until society makes this a law then you must accept that "underage" girls are going to be tempting, luring, and entrapping "overage" guys. Yet your rhetoric clearly assumes that every single one of these cases involves a 40 year old man and a 1 year old baby.

    Where the fuck do you get off?

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  199. It's simple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's simple. If "burning" and "making" are synonyms, then the verdict makes sense. Since they're not, it doesn't.

  200. Counter to US Policy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does this not sound a bit anti-thetical to US policy governing copyright law at the moment?: in the "act of burning images onto the CD-Rs, something new was created or made that did not previously exist." The intellectual property inherent in the material was most clearly not his own. How can a government policy exist such that they enforce copyright laws yet ignore them where convenient to interdict bystanders? While in this situation the person was breaking the law for 'child pornography,' what about when it concerns a more legitimate, but no less copyrighted material?

  201. 16, not 18, and in-USA marraige still recognized by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The trick is you have to marry the girl INSIDE the USA.

    Once you do that every state and the feds will recognize it and you can move to any state. The only way they can get you is to prove the marraige was invalid in the first place.

    America is not obligated to recognize underage marraiges from abroad.

    The federal age to cross state lines or go abroad to have sex is 16. 18 is for porn and prostitution. Most international "sex tourists" are paying so it's prostitution.

  202. Automated backups by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Hopefully you wouldn't go and burn those files to a CDR

    Some backup programs do that automatically. So much for intent.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  203. Cause to be transmitted may be a crime by davidwr · · Score: 1

    "Causing illegal materials to be transmitted" and "attempting to download an illegal file," i.e. the very act of requesting your computer retrieve the file from a remote computer, is generally a crime even if every bit is sent to /dev/null upon arrival.

    If you are asking if the person could be charged with possession of the requested illegal files, I doubt it.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  204. Leads to other problems by happyslayer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I live in southern Ohio, and we've had an incident from the other side of this argument.

    Basically, 3 college kids came to a car show that had a lot of "adult" activities going on (Mardi Gras type: drinking, girls lifting their tops to show off, etc.) The college kids (from North Carolina, I believe) took some pictures, went back to school, and posted some "what we did on our trip" photos on a web-site. As far as anyone knows (and everyone has stated) there was absolutely no interaction between the college students and the girls aside from the flash of the skin and the flash of the camera.

    Meanwhile, the show had incensed so many of the local residents ("buckle of the bible belt" is particularly apt around here) that they wanted to prevent it from ever happening again. One of the folks search for photos of the event, found a picture of a 17-year local girl who was flashing the camera, and pushed to local county prosecutor into filing child pornography charges against the college kids.

    The kids were indicted, arrested, extradited from North Carolina to Ohio, and now face hard prison time and being branded as sexual predators for life...all because they took photos of girls showing their goodies.

    In my opinion, child pornography is a horrible thing, and anyone who abuses children should be tied to a table alone with the kid/parents and a rack of knives. However, it's just as much of an abuse to subvert the law and ruin multiple lives (the kids, their parents, their friends) to forward your own moral agenda.

    The show was called "Cruise Fest", the county is the Scioto County, Ohio, and the website for the clerk of courts (and therefore the case information) is located at Scioto County clerk of court.

    When I find the actual case, I'll post it here.

    --
    Never confuse movement with action. --Hemingway
  205. RTFD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Relative to the decision itself, this posting is an inflammatory troll. The decision is a perfectly logical application of the relevant laws, which any lay person (such as myself) can determine by actually reading the fine decision rendered by the court. The decision very helpfully quotes the laws in question with emphasis on the sentences that matter.

    The law describes "child sexually abusive material" to include "any reproduction, copy, or print of such a photograph, picture, film, slide, video, electronic visual image, book, magazine, computer, or computer-generated image, or picture, other visual or print or printable medium, or sound recording."

    Surely burning a CD-ROM that includes an image is making a reproduction of it?

    This whole thing is much ado about nothing.

  206. Huh? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

    Are you sure that you replied to the right message? I'm fully aware that there are differences, depending on the various ages and maturity levels. I never once mentioned abstinence. Heck, I even implied that no prosecutions happen in alot of cases where the activity never makes it to the government's notice.

    Heck, I even used a 15 year old as an example. I suggested a test for borderline statutory rape charges.

    Should there be laws in place to prevent older adults from exploiting teenagers? I think so. But there needs to be some protection the other way round.

    Each case should be judged differently, but when you're talking about pre-teens, well, I think that the book should be thrown at them.

    --
    I don't read AC A human right
    1. Re:Huh? by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      AGREED

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  207. You live in a WHAT? by FishinDave · · Score: 1

    A dorm is not a public place. It's an private building full of even more private places. People who leave their dorm rooms without locking the doors do not have enough brains to be away from Mom & Dad, let alone in college.

  208. Electability. by Grendel+Drago · · Score: 1

    Well.

    Someone's not planning on running for public office for the rest of their life.

    Oh, wait, your homepage is listed as Japan. Does that change things? I don't know how they roll over there.

    --
    Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
    1. Re:Electability. by fbjon · · Score: 1

      That won't be a problem, I suspect. If I couldn't go to office and speak my mind, I wouldn't go in the first place.

      --
      True confidence comes not from realising you are as good as your peers, but that your peers are as bad as you are.
  209. Something to bear in mind... by cr0sh · · Score: 1
    Some people (I don't know if there are any known estimates) who have a predilection for pedophilia actually do want help. Unfortunately, in many state and municipalities the system is set up against them.

    Due to various laws and legal requirements, counselors and therapists are required to report an individual to law enforcement if they suspect the individual to be abusing a child. Many of these people, who would otherwise be helping these individuals, instead turn their names over to LE regardless, just to cover their asses and play it safe, just in case, you see - because they could become liable (ie, jail time, loss of license to practice, civil suits, etc) if they didn't report it.

    Said pedophile then enters the system instead of getting the help they need. Maybe all they end up getting caught with is some "questionable" (or real) child pornography they downloaded off the net. No matter, they will at least land in jail until their trial. Law enforcement, being the caring people they are to these suspects (they are supposedly innocent until proven guilty, right?), book them, places them in the general population of the holding area or whatever, then let's it "slip" to that self-same population that the guy they just put in there is a (suspected, but they leave that part out) pedophile - wink, wink...nudge, nudge. Then they walk away, and the CCTV system has a "glitch", and guards don't respond as the rest of the population act like animals and beat the guy (and/or rape him). If the guy is lucky, he survives with a little (or a lot) of brain damage, maybe a perforated colon (from rape), some (or a lot) of broken bones, etc. More often than not, he is killed in jail before he even makes it to trial.

    All because he attempted to honestly get help before he "went too far". Do you honestly think that people who actually want help for this condition, knowing what the possible outcome will actually be from the system, will actually seek help? Don't bet on it...

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    1. Re:Something to bear in mind... by peterfa · · Score: 1

      Well, I've never thought about that.

    2. Re:Something to bear in mind... by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

      I'm reminded of an early scene from The Shawshank Redemption, where the "fat guy" wails in his his cell "I'm not supposed to be here!" and subsequently gets beaten to death by the guard Hadley.

      It's a cold world. But that's reality.

      --
      fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  210. Universal balance applies to all. by Zencyde · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There is a certain state of good and evil involved in this. While on one hand it is wrong (in our society) to view child pornography, making it (ACTUALLY making it) is a far more severe crime. We all have urges, whether we want to or not, that is what makes us Human. Albeit this is one of the worst social taboos in our society, what he did hurt no-one. Personally, I do not think he should be punished, but instead should be helped. Obviously his surroundings didn't sufficiently teach him what our moral standards are and why we follow them. The true question at this point is, should the courts be punished for perversion of the law? I think an abuse of the system such as this should never be allowed, he never infringed on anyones rights, while the court system did by removing his rights unjustly. In-short, take the guy to a psychologist, and take the judge to a basic morals and ethics class.

    --
    What day is it? Could you please tell me?
  211. That's a flawed analogy, and I'll tell you why. by raehl · · Score: 1

    You're not substituting like things for each other in the statement. Jaywalking != possessing kiddie porn. Nobody has to be molested for you to jaywalk. In order for you to possess kiddie porn, some kid, at some point, had to have been abused. That's why having kiddie porn is as bad as molesting children.

    It's kind of like being the get-away driver for a bank robbery where someone gets killed. Or possessing ivory. Possessing/trading ivory is illegal, even if you didn't kill the animal yourself, because part of the motivation for killing animals for ivory is the market for ivory. Part of the motivation for creating kiddie porn is the market for kiddie porn.

    It's also unfair to compare the crimes in a practicality sense. If you make driving 10 MPH over the limit a crime, you'll end up busting people who speed compulsively, and people who speed accidentally. More importantly, you'll ruin the traffic system because people will be so paranoid about accidentally breaking the speed limit that everyone will drive 15 MPH under the limit.

    There's no downside to giving someone 20 years for trafficking in kiddie porn. The only people you're going to get are the irrational sickos; the rational people won't have kiddie porn because they won't want it.

    1. Re:That's a flawed analogy, and I'll tell you why. by mink · · Score: 1

      Where does fiction, entirely made up, not based on real people/images/stories porn fall in this. If you buy an Ebook of Lolita and burn it to CD with your other Ebooks are you a child pornographer? What if it is a drawing/movie/text involving teenagers under the age of 18 (good ol coming of age story for instance)?

      AFAIK the laws created to deal with child molestation (really we didn't need new laws, we need to enforce ones for rape,kidnapping,harm to a minor, ect) treat all of this the same due to vague and poor wording.

      --
      Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  212. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Reziac · · Score: 1

    "It takes two to tango."

    This brought to mind a potential corner case in which it only takes one... (and which I'm sure some smartassed kid has already done, if only because kids do stuff like this!)

    Is video footage of an underage person masturbating considered "child porn"??

    How about if the kid makes the footage themselves, and distributes it via a webcam that all the world can see?

    In such a case there is only one person involved in creating the "porn", and no "victim".

    But in light of this court decision: Would someone who then downloaded this video be guilty of possessing and even *making* "child porn"??

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  213. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    Legally, in most states, it's probably completely illegal. Morally, however, I have to wonder "what the heck were the parents doing? Off partying with the neighbors?"

    This only demonstrates the state of our society. Governmnet is a horrible parent yet government will still abuse/imprison the very children which it failed to properly parent.

    It really comes down to "you reap what you sow". It's a sad situation for the people who get the raw part of the deal but that's the way the law is. Justice may be blind... but the law has a habit of simply burying its head in the sand.

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  214. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Not only that, but this "parenting by proxy" thing may eventually backfire in other ways, by leading to laws that actively prevent good parenting.

    In my weird hypothetical case of the maturbating teen armed with a webcam, who (besides the suckers who downloaded it) goes to jail? the kid for distributing kiddie porn? his parents for letting him do so? his ISP for "hosting" it? the company that made the webcam, for failing to restrict sales to minors?

    Considering the state of this can and the number of worms, I'd say the real problem is worm porn... and I'd describe the location of the government's head as somewhere more, ah, pornographic. ;)

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  215. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by SilverspurG · · Score: 1

    The alternative being what? To make the laws based on age-difference? No. That can't work. Because every day we have 40-year olds hooking up with 20-year olds. So the alternative is what? Pubescency? No. That can't work. Because I can't honestly support a 30-year old deliberately seducing a 15-year old. The alternative is what? Intent? Well, if we go with intent then 90% of our legal system is screwed. I've long said (and I still do) that I'll never own a firearm becaue there are too many people who I could rightfully shoot dead for the way they've treated me.

    It's a fucked up world. That's the only real bottom line. Either you make it through life or you don't. Anything in-between is just technicality.

    --
    fast as fast can be. you'll never catch me.
  216. Obligatory 'Life of Brian' quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OFFICIAL:
            You're only making it worse for yourself!
    MATTHIAS:
            Making it worse?! How could it be worse?! Jehovah! Jehovah! Jehovah!

  217. hmm by samantha · · Score: 1

    Downloading nasty pictures for presumed viewing is to be guilty of doing the acts implied by the pictures? I know a lot of people would not be happy with this notion concerning our own porn tastes or the level of violence etc. we like in our games and other entertainment. If someone happens to have the leaning toward pre-pubescent sexual attracttion I would much rather they download pictures than actually act out such leanings in real life. Yeah it disturbs us, yeah some kids were victimized somewhere in the making of the pictures which is wrong (unless we are talking about simply pictures of children, perhaps even nude children). But some of the implications of this case are disturbing.

  218. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Yeah. There are just too many corner cases and but-that's-not-what-I-intended and just plain bad luck situations. Laws that try to deal with all of those tend to slop over into non-perps' lives in unexpected ways, generally not for the better.

    Sometimes I think we were better off when justice tended to be more preemptory, but also more cognizant of individual cases (ie. left up to someone's good judgment rather than restricted by regulation). Perhaps so even with the occasional abuse or mistake. I think it also kept people more responsible for their own actions, something the legal system has been helping erode by promoting lawsuits as the first response to any slight.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  219. As usual, most of you are wrong, and a small few a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As usual, most of you are wrong, and a small few are right. It may as well be said again:

    1) In this ruling, there is no attempt to equate originating production with making a copy. Instead, both situations fall under the same definition in the statute (see 2).

    2) When you get through the definitions (in MCL 750.145): of the possible situations that could fall under any of them, this one comes down to:

    "a person who..makes..any..copy..of [any depiction..which is of a child engaging in a listed sexual act]"

    3) This is construed from specific language in the Michigan statute dealing specifically with "child sexually abusive material". Ergo, analogies between this specific ruling and any of the following are meaningless:

      A) any activity occurring outside of Michigan jurisdiction
      B) any depiction which does not fall under the definition of "child sexually abusive material".

    No equating producing with copying, please. No comparisons between backing up your music collections, please. No comparisons between Michigan and the state you live in, or all America please.

    4) The proceeding 3 items and this 4th item have an extremely high degree probability of being entirely accurate, despite any subsequent comment replies to this post alleging otherwise, notwithstanding the "moderation rating" said comment(s) may have.

  220. Pun by Antimatter3009 · · Score: 1

    This is like a pun gone horribly wrong...

  221. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by mink · · Score: 1

    Knowing the types of people who seem to get into prosecutors offices (remember the big town wide witch hunts over child molestation) I suspect they would wait till said teen hits 18 and then charge them with all the child porn laws they can think of him violating.

    --
    Well I've wrestled with reality for thirty five years doctor, and I'm happy to say I finally won out over it.
  222. Re:Sheesh... Commenting on this is scary by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Quite possible; many prosecutors find that witch hunts help their careers more than does mere seeking after justice.

    So at the very least, such a kid would be put on a list of "people to watch", as a future arrest prospect.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  223. Real v. fictitious minors by FishinDave · · Score: 1

    1. Under federal law, (18 U. S. C. 2251 et. seq.) definitions of child porn are limited to visual depictions, i. e., images. You can write anything you wish about minors. The problem with "fictitious minors" is that since the advent of sophisticated computer imaging technology, nearly everyone charged with child pornography has claimed that the images did not depict real minors. 2. In Free Speech Coalition v. Ashcroft (April, 2002), the Supreme Court overturned sections of 18 U. S. C. 2256 which defined as porn any image that "appears to be" or "conveys the impression" that it is of a minor, even if no minor was involved in the image's creation. http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/00-795.ZO.ht ml 3. Congress responded in March, 2003, with a new definition (18 U. S. C. 2256(8),(9), & (11)), that criminalizes any porn image that is "virtually indistinguishable" from an "identifiable minor." http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/analysis.aspx? id=11865 4. 18 U. S. C. 2256(11) says, "This definition does not apply to depictions that are drawings, cartoons, sculptures, or paintings depicting minors or adults." Bottom line: don't make your fake porn so well that an ordinary person using ordinary means of inspection can't tell if it's fake or real. This leaves a lot of room for protected depictions of apparent minors engaging in sexual acts or just standing around naked. The new definition of "fictitious child porn" has not yet been challenged in court.

  224. They do? Please give an example. by FatSean · · Score: 1

    Seriously, laws which legislate morality are never successful without an oppressive regime to enforce them.

    --
    Blar.
  225. Re:They do? Please give an example. by FishinDave · · Score: 1

    Seriously, laws which legislate morality are never successful without an oppressive regime to enforce them. 1. No type of law can be successful without a "regime" that "oppresses" violators by enforcing the laws. 2. All laws are legislations of morality. Morality is a generally accepted code of conduct peculiar to a given society. In South America and the Middle East, bribery is moral. In China, skinning dogs and cats alive to make them taste better is moral. Here in the U. S., neither pratice is moral.

  226. Maybe he made a "collective work"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    'After reviewing the dictionary definition of the word make, the circuit court stated that the bottom line was that, following the mechanical and technical act of burning images onto the CD-Rs, something new was created or made that did not previously exist.' Is this simply a court's overreaction to a scumbag pedophile?

    Probably. However, by burning the collection, the guy did make what's called a "collective work". Collective works are themselves copryightable things, even though they may contain images that the maker doesn't own the copyright to (magazines do this all the time). Though one does hope that they have the rights to make a collective work using those images.

    How the court made the distinction between what sounds like backup copies and creation of a collective work is beyond me. I suspect they did it just to have another legal tool to use against him, but there may have been legitimate points that put into the collective work arena... knowing and deciding the difference is what lawyers and courts are for.

    Disclaimer: IANAL, but I have been recently reading up on US law governing copyrights and how they apply to photographic images (nothing nefarious.. I just want to know what kind of protections my own images get :-).