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ISPs to Create Database to Combat Child Porn

BlueCup writes to tell us that several media companies are banding together to create a database of child pornography images to help law enforcement officials combat distribution of questionable material. In addition to the database several tools and new technologies are also planned but most notable is what some perceive as a willingness to cooperate which critics say has been lacking in the past. From the article: "Each company will set its own procedures on how it uses the database, but executives say the partnership will let companies exchange their best ideas — ultimately developing tools for preventing child-porn distribution instead of simply catching violations."

40 of 595 comments (clear)

  1. Yeah. by Dibblah · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is a great idea. With a couple of tiny issues.

    ISPs have long said that they are just carriers and are not responsible for the content they provide access to. As soon as the technological solution for implementing a "content filter" is there, RIAA and friends will _require_ ISPs to use it for that purpose as well.

    This is completely ignoring the technical stupidity of trying to "fingerprint" media that is _not_ going to be transferred in plaintext.

    1. Re:Yeah. by Threni · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > This is completely ignoring the technical stupidity of trying to "fingerprint" media that is
      > _not_ going to be transferred in plaintext.

      And even if it is, it's trivial to come up with a way of altering images so that they look identical but where every bit is different to the original.

      I'm sure the Chinese government would literally kill to have a way of tracking the movement of files too.

      But yeah..kids...photographs...the internet...

    2. Re:Yeah. by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't think so. It will be more like other content filters, and spam filtering. Used as a selling point for their ISPs but not mandatory. If this were the trend I would expect it would be mandatory for all ISP to scan for viruses on everything. (Being that viruses effect the economy more and politicians worry more about money then people)
      Besides I rather have someone like a teacher arrested because they found Child Porn on his PC, vs. Having him just work there for years not knowing because the ISP has blocked the traffic.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    3. Re:Yeah. by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Besides I rather have someone like a teacher arrested because they found Child Porn on his PC, vs. Having him just work there for years not knowing because the ISP has blocked the traffic.

      See, that's the problem -- "rather 100 innocent jailed than one guilty man go free." It's supposed to be the other way around.

  2. So this is like... by Powercntrl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...stopping the proliferation of nuclear weapons by creating a massive stockpile?

    --

    ---
    DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.
    1. Re:So this is like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, but the bad guys will still have nukes. Making statistics that say "they only have 0.1% the number of nukes we have" doesn't fix that.

      .. and *WOOOSH* goes the sound of the joke.. :-)

    2. Re:So this is like... by Jugalator · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Stockpile of what? Not actual nuclear weapons anyway.

      It's like stopping the proliferation of nuclear weapons by creating a stockpile of blueprints telling what various nuclear weapon looks like so they can easier be detected.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    3. Re:So this is like... by enrevanche · · Score: 5, Insightful
      This will probably only work against particular instances of an image. Change the resolution or compression rate even slightly will look like a whole new image. Zipping images with a password and/or various compression rates etc. will make this difficult also. This may catch the easy suspects though.

      If you only store a small piece of information per image, the number of false positives will make the whole thing useless. Store too much and your storing the image.

      Using SSL etc. will make it impossible.

      The analogy with nuclear weapons would be similar, change the box, add a few decoy parts, paint the others a different color and the original "plans" or pictures are worthless, the machine won't detect squat. A human expert probably would.

      I think this is probably all B.S., i.e. it's someone's idea of how they will make a lot of money in consulting and software developemnt. All the ISPs will buy into to say that they are doing something even though they know it is B.S.

      This is really a socialogical problem which is hard to fix and this makes just it sound like everyone's doing something. They dont have the answer. If pcs of 100 people are confiscated and their personal lives invaded for every one person caught, this is a vast injustice.

    4. Re:So this is like... by Firethorn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      One would tend to think that a checksum/hash code would be sufficient. You need a fingerprint, not a copy of the act.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    5. Re:So this is like... by jetmarc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > One would tend to think that a checksum/hash code would be sufficient.
      > You need a fingerprint, not a copy of the act.

      That might be correct for examination of files. However, we're talking about ISPs here. It is not very far fetched that an ISP would try to match TCP/IP packets. That would require a fingerprint of a part of the image (impossible to produce without the original image).

      My point is that an "ad hoc" database won't be useful without the original images. Sooner or later a user will come up with a new (incompatible) usage mode. Without the original images, the database can not support it.

      The statement "Each company will set its own procedures on how it uses the database" just asks for it.

    6. Re:So this is like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is really a socialogical problem which is hard to fix

      Rubbish. It's (fairly) easy to fix. The trouble is that it's been demonised so much that it's turned into a "thoughtcrime".

      Here's an idea. Remove all laws against copying, selling and downloading child porn, but keep the laws against things that actually involve the children - like statutory rape, child abuse, etc. This makes it more likely that police will be able to find images of kids being abused, partially because the black market won't be so hidden and partially because it's more likely that the illegal stuff will be photographed. If the police have images of abuse, they can crop out everything but the kid's face and stick it on a milk carton with "do you know this kid"-style messages, thus actually tracking down the kids that are being abused and stopping the real crime, not the symptom.

      Unfortunately, this tactic would involve scaling back the paranoia and hatred and making a distinction between people who actually abuse children and people who are attracted to underage people. That's not a distinction society is willing to make, in my opinion, we collectively seem to like having people that we can point unreserved hatred at.

  3. The big problem by damburger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Child porn is the darkest side of the internet. Its the thing all net users should be on guard for, and the argument invoked against the internet by countless alarmists.

    However, I don't agree with this database. Keeping these images, even for law enforcement purposes, is a violation of the privacy of children who have already been subjected to a horrific violation. Leave them alone already.

    --
    If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    1. Re:The big problem by ultranova · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Child porn is the darkest side of the internet. Its the thing all net users should be on guard for, and the argument invoked against the internet by countless alarmists.

      Bullshit. In the 10 years I've been using the Internet, I've come accross child porn one (1) time, and even that looked more like two kids playing doctor than any pedophilic photo setup. If that's the "darkest side of the Internet", then the Net's brighter than the surface of the Sun.

      No, what's happening here is simply another censorship / surveillance system being built with the mantra "think of the children". And the makers do think of the children - they think of those children in the future, all grown up and in chains and get a hardon from that.

      So no, all the Net's users should not be on guard for the infinitesimally small chance that they happen upon CP by accident, anymore than all the people in Real Life should be on guard for the infinitesimally small chance that the guy passing you on the street happens to be a terrorist. Yeah, it's possible, but even if it happened, what the heck are you going to do - you sick pervert looked at the picture, so by law you should go to prison, since such pictures incite people to such acts, so you can't now be trusted anymore, right ? And what were you doing on a netsite where pedophiles hang out at, anyway ? You must be one too !

      Every time I hear "think of the children", I think of the future of those children and want to cry. Well, actually I want to protect those children by beating the living crap out of whoever it is trying to enslave them this time, but crying is more socially accepted.

      However, I don't agree with this database. Keeping these images, even for law enforcement purposes, is a violation of the privacy of children who have already been subjected to a horrific violation. Leave them alone already.

      Do you honestly think that those who are building this censorship & surveillance system are doing it for the childrens sake ? No, it is something that will be used to put those children into chains, once they grow up.

      Don't be fooled by their lies; these people care nothing for the children, or anyone else for that matter; they only care about power.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    2. Re:The big problem by Firethorn · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ah, sounds like antivirus retasked to looking for cporn. Shouldn't be too hard, millions of viruses, millions of images.

      Still, I'm scared of how much 'for the children' there is today. It's become the clarion call of those who want to take our rights away.

      I mean, think about what else this can be used for, and you know it will be used for other things. Looking for copyrighted media, anyone?

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    3. Re:The big problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's a pity that I already used my mod points because I agree 100% with you.

      I have been using the Internet for 20 years. Before the web was invented, I saw hardcore porn pictures floating around in the alt.* newsgroups and on some ftp servers, including on a server that I was administering (the unprotected incoming directory was used by some porn traders until I discovered it and deleted the whole stuff - no, I did not keep a copy). Some of it was rather nasty: zoophilia, BDSM, deep fisting, lots of fetish stuff and so on...

      Later, when the web was invented and started to grow, I started seeing porn popping up on many web sites. Although the number of porn sites has been growing steadily, I would say that the amount of porn that you can be exposed to by accident is not larger than 10 or 20 years ago. The amount of porn that you can find if you are actively looking for it may be a bit bigger, but not much (taking into account all sources of porn that existed then and that exist now: magazines, tapes and now the web).

      But during all that time, I did not see a single child porn picture (save for some censored pictures illustrating articles about how to fight against child porn). Of course I'm not actively searching for that because I find the idea disgusting. But I am convinced that those who make so much publicity around the fight against child porn are overstating the problem and (most likely) have a hidden agenda that I cannot agree with.

    4. Re:The big problem by QCompson · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I've been using the interweb since 1998 when I was 13, and I have been exposed to child pornography since day one.
      The way these draconian laws are designed, you should be thrown into jail for a very long time. Every child you saw in those pictures, you have personally exploited (or so the theory seems to go). Busting the creeps who take the pictures makes sense to me; busting the saps that look at the pictures seems absurd.
  4. Devil's Advocate by rkcallaghan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What exactly is different between Company A (ISP) and Company B (Offshore Freakshow) amassing a huge database of child porn? Company B is probably even in a jurisdiction where having it is legal by local laws, but Company A is certainly not. We have zero tolerance laws so strict they ruin people's lives for a banner ad containing a legal model that simply wasn't documented properly. So how come it doesn't apply here?

    ~Rebecca

  5. wont work by mtxf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    how many ways can these pictures be hidden?

    zip, rar, and other compression formats
    encrpyted
    hidden inside other files (stenography)
    the list goes on...

    these people should learn, you cant fight the internet

    1. Re:wont work by mboverload · · Score: 4, Insightful
      People who view child pornography are NOT IDIOTS. Stop treating them like it.

      I'm sick of this mentality that criminals (esp terrorists) are not as smart as you or I. They know just as well as we do they can throw it in a zip or rar file (It's probably a better way for them to transfer the files, anyway!). In fact, IF THEY AREN'T SMART THEY GO TO JAIL. I think that's a pretty strong motivation for covering their ass.

    2. Re:wont work by f1r3br4nd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      1. Perhaps the purpose of CP hysteria is to give law enforcement broader powers that can be used to bust idiots they don't like in general, be they CP idiots or some other type of idiot which can be made to look like a CP idiot.

      2. Like any male adult with a sex drive who isn't a lying sack of shit, you admitted that sometimes individuals that haven't quite reached the age of consent turn you on. I applaud you for your integrity, but think about what you said right afterward: these pragmatic reasons you talk about amount to the laws being so screwed up that you're afraid to do what you want with your own computer in the privacy of your own home. And unless you believe law = ethics, the ethical argument falls apart when you realize there are perfectly civilized, modern, and inhabitable countries where the age of consent falls anywhere between 15 and 18. The US is an anomaly in treating every individual under 18 as a child (except for purposes of administering the death penalty, of course).

  6. Everything about this seems... by bluemeep · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ..."Yucky" I guess would be the best word. Not just the fact that they're planning a corporate sponsored mecca of kiddie porn, but things like this too.

    AOL, for instance, plans to check e-mail attachments that are already being scanned for viruses. If child porn is detected, AOL would refer the case to the missing-children's center for further investigation, as service providers are required to do under federal law.

    Sounds like one of those 'good on paper' ideas that later spins itself into a slavering monster that eats half the internet. What's to say they don't start scanning for other things? Is the RIAA going to be knocking on my door because I sent an AOL member a Metallica MP3?

    1. Re:Everything about this seems... by pubjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The thing I really hate about this stuff, the people who say "If you're not doing anything wrong you don't have to worry". But consistently, when law enforcement starts treating everyone as potential criminals, innocent people are affected, sometimes very adversely.

      How many people have been seriously inconvenienced when trying to take a flight because the system has flagged them as a potential terrorist? A lot more innocent people have been inconvenienced than terrorists have been caught. Now, imagine the same situation but applied to this...

      We can just laugh off being tagged as a potential terrorist and tell it as a funny story to our friends and work collegues. Would you do the same thing if you'd been investigated by the police as a potential paedophile? I could see it happening quite easily - send a photo of your kids in the bath to their grandma, AOL system tags it, police come knocking at your door and take your computer and all your archives away. You get the computer back a week later with an apology from the police. But the damage is done, your neighbours and work collegues have found out why the police visited... It's a nightmare scenario but I'm afraid it's going to happen. And perhaps, more innocent people are going to be investigated than real paedophiles caught, as is the cause with "the war on terror".

    2. Re:Everything about this seems... by pubjames · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With this specific system, this is impossible to happen

      That was just one example of how an innocent person might be flagged, there are many others I can think of. For instance, we all know that people who have very insecure Windows machines. Say they get infected by a worm that then emails kiddie porn. The same scenario applies... Visit from police, computers taken away, the shy funny looking guy in the office who everyone thinks is a bit weird commits suicide because everyone thinks he must be a paedophile since he was investigated by the police...

  7. privacy issues... by mtxf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    from tfa: "the goal is to ultimately develop techniques for checking other distribution techniques as well, such as instant messaging or Web uploads"

    so they will be scanning our web traffic in real-time to determin if we are sharing child porn?

    anyone else see this and think something along the lines of "this is just a 'think of the children' excuse to implement advanced monitoring systems, which in due time the govt. will take over 'in the public interest'"?

  8. Re:Wanna bet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I thought the same thing while watching some news report about child porn on television recently. A cop was sitting at his computer doing some clicking as he viewed child porn (obviously the camera didn't show the screen), and he talked about his war against distributors. Something just wasn't right about the way he talked about child porn, almost as if it took effort to disparage it and I got the sneaking suspicion that he had been compromised by it in some way. It made me wonder how much of a risk there is of a police officer developing an addiction to the matter he's sworn to defend against, a la Philip K. Dick's A Scanner Darkly One wonders why cops are allowed to work on this on their own, seems to me it would make much more sense to allow people access to the material only in teams, perhaps mixed-gender.

  9. And of course... by TCM · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...those who speak up against this incredibly stupid idea are just latent child porn users. Voila, more people you can potentially detain if you see fit.

    --
    Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
  10. It's a really delicate subject by KarMax · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Where i work the Child Porn is an important Subject its not my area, but i still know what happens. You can't imagine the pics and videos that the specialist must see.(i never watch any)

    The subject is really complicated, here you have a conjunction action from the top ISP companies, but there are some things we must know.

    AOL, for instance, plans to check e-mail attachments that are already being scanned for viruses. If child porn is detected, AOL would refer the case to the missing-children's center for further investigation, as service providers are required to do under federal law.
    This means that if "somebody" sends to me an image that triggers the filter I'm gonna be a "suspect" (at least for a while) so AOL refer the case and 1 minute later i have an investigation running on my private emails.

    BTW... i don't want to sound paranoid, but this is a "way to start", then the database can include another kind of images (who knows?). Or just filter anything they want. The comparison with the Antivirus system (intentionally and not so technical related) put me more alert.

    I don't want to sound liberal, I'm against child pornography, but i think that this is not the way to fight against it. If some sick-man (A) have a picture of some-more-sick-asshole(B) doing nasty things with a child, he(A) is a sick person but not a criminal, the asshole(B) must go to jail because he abuse (mental and physical) the boy (the other guy(A) must go to a doctor).

    Another idea could be the "infection" of some images/files/videos and leave in the wild (this pedophiles bastards are not technical specialist, the majority of them are teachers, fathers or military related). So we keep track of the files all over, and figured out "sources" where they upload this files not a "single email address" i mean where a lot of files converge from different places. Then, security experts with some legal support, 0wn the server and monitors everything... and the investigation continues.

    Ryan said that although AOL will initially focus on scanning e-mail attachments, the goal is to ultimately develop techniques for checking other distribution techniques as well, such as instant messaging or Web uploads.
    Also the P2P networks has a LOT of "pedophilic" shares, but you can't run after every sick people, you must go to the source and condemn the one who abuse the child.
    I don't like the idea of "monitors everything -> searching for something". I think it must be like i said before... its a HUGE difference.
    --
    Rock and Roll
  11. Duplication of effort by Clovert+Agent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This'll be different in what way from the massive database and set of image search tools that Interpol already maintains? It's not like every signatory agency (including those in the US) doesn't already have access to it, and it's been running for years.

    http://www.interpol.int/Public/ICPO/PressReleases/ PR2005/PR200536.asp

    I've met some of the guys running it, and while I really admire their dedication and achievements, I can honestly say there's no job on earth I'd less like to have.

  12. Re:This can be a problem by 1u3hr · · Score: 4, Insightful
    . It may tend to stay on the Random board and is usually only posted as a shock image, but it still appears on a daily basis."

    So because some asshole posts offensive images, he gets the whole site banned? Once that policy becomes established, think how easy it would be for any determined person to get just about any site blacklisted. Just post some kiddie porn every day for a week, reporting the site immediately after before it can be removed.

  13. Re:Hashing? by irc.goatse.cx+troll · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For that matter, how are they verifying their copy? Obviously if its a 6 year old getting raped you'd flag it and add the hash, but what if its just a girl taking a picture for her boyfriend that leaks out? Especially if its a 16 year old that looks like shes 18? or a 18 year old that looks like shes 16? What about Art? Family photograph from a country where theyre open about nudity(okay, would still be illegal here, but you get what I'm getting at).

    Theres a lot of gray area, and a huge list of hashes isn't going to be very descriptive. While we're at it, they're just flagging files transfered.. What if someone sets up a relayer in a country where its legal and uses it to send kiddieporn to you via email? Click a message, commit a crime and go to jail. Or if someone defaces a site and puts up CP, or if someone just ups random CP to a public site(4chan), or any number of other ways.

    Going after real pedophiles hurting real people would be great, but this isn't going to help and passing this kind of tech off as "for the children" is downright offensive.

    --
    Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx
  14. Re:Wanna bet? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wanna bet that some slimey police exec is helping himself with those images?

    I'd open a book on it, but only at 1/33.

    Just like the Catholic Church is full of pedophiles and pederasts, no doubt "internet" law enforcement is filled with closet perverts who delight in ammassing volumes upon volumes of illicit data. It's probably also filled with those who get their thrills from snooping on other people's emails.

    Let's put it this way. Where's the best place for a criminal to hide. A position of authority.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  15. Re:Wanna bet? by tacarat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is NO way a NORMAL adult will be compromised... really!

    "He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you."
    Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil, Aphorism 146

    ... besides, who at /. believes in the validity of the term "NORMAL" being used as a moral beacon? Everybody can be corrupted. Thankfully not everybody has the same tastes in vices as pedophiles.

    --
    "Common sense will be the death of us all"
  16. So much potential for abuse by Tim+C · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hypothetical scenario 1:

    I piss off the wrong person. This person has access to material of this kind, and a zombie botnet. He arranges for this botnet to spam me with pictures of kiddy porn. The emails are caught by this system and flagged, and suddenly I'm the subject of an investigation. The way that sort of thing works here in the UK, I'm likely to be splashed all over the papers before my innocence is proved (which won't make nearly as large headlines, of course). Even if I am cleared, my reputation may well be shot to hell; people over here aren't too picky when it comes to this sort of thing. A few years ago a tabloid paper raised hell about paedophiles having been released into the community after serving their sentence. Some of the resulting protests saw a paediatrician being hounded from her home - people saw "paed" and thought "paedo". Rationality often takes a back seat where kids are concerned; this could be a very cheap and easy way to utterly ruin someone.

    Hypothetical scenario 2:

    I go on holiday with my family. I take photographs. I email some of these photographs to my friends and parents. Some of them contain shots of my 6 year old daughter in her swimming costume. An overzealous automated process tags this as a false positive, and suddenly we're all under investigation.

    To be honest, scenario 2 doesn't worry me so much; it should be obvious to even the most rabid "think of the children" zealot that the photos are perfectly innocent. It's the first one that gives me grave cause for concern. It would potentially take some effort to prove ones innocence, during which time you're very likely to have been utterly pilloried in the press. If you have kids yourself, they may even have been taken into care for the duration, and are likely to have been teased or bullied about it at school.

    I appreciate that measures do need to be taken to fight against child porn, but given the highly sensitive nature of the subject, I have conerns about implementing any sort of automated system.

  17. Wouldn't it make more sense ..... by ajs318 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Wouldn't it make more sense to arrest people if and when they actually harm a child?

    I have absolutely no problem whatsoever with people who just want to look at pictures. Yes, they may well be pictures documenting a crime that was committed ..... but so what? The kids in the pictures aren't getting any worse just because other people are looking at them. The harm was already done when the pictures were taken, and it isn't going to be undone.

    I say let people jack off into a box of tissues as much as they damn well like. At least once they've spent their pocket money, they're no danger to anyone for a couple of hours. If they're doing more than look at pictures, then by all means go after them. But what a person does within the privacy of their own imagination is nobody else's business.

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
  18. Official stance by Yvanhoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sharing of child pornography leads to more child pornography.
    Sharing of copyrighted music leads to less copyrighted music.

    Find the anomaly.

    In fact, to follow the "think of the children" idea, I believe that such a database would lead with more CP production, as you would have to "replace" the material censored (assuming this measure would be efficient) leading to profits for pornographer producer.
    Just a thought

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  19. Re:Hashing? by FireFury03 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While we're at it, they're just flagging files transfered.. What if someone sets up a relayer in a country where its legal and uses it to send kiddieporn to you via email? Click a message, commit a crime and go to jail. Or if someone defaces a site and puts up CP, or if someone just ups random CP to a public site(4chan), or any number of other ways.

    This is what worries me about the "it's illegal to view $foo" laws - it's entirely possible that you don't know you're about to view $foo until it's too late and you've broken the law. Is there a need to go after people who have simply downloaded something dodgy since they may not have intentionally done so? Better to concentrate on people who are *paying* for content since by paying they are financially supporting the continuation of the crime (the people who haven't paid are not supporting the real criminals).

  20. Gov. sending you child porn? by Revolver4ever · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, the ISP's put this system in place, the GOV hires a bunch of spammers (all under the table of course) to email low grade kiddy porn to everbody who looks like the next terrorist and VOILA instant access to all your information: digital and physical. A kiddy porn investigation gets the judges to write out all kinds of warrants for the FBI and you are powerless to stop it.

    Some asshat senator mad at your company for opposing one of his bills? Send some kiddy porn to you, and start an investigation. Even if they don't find anything, you'll most likely lose half of your cusotmers and most of your respect.

    I'm scared.
    --
    If O2 is good, O3 must be 1.5 times better!
  21. Re:This can be a problem by 1u3hr · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Child porn laws aren't just there to protect the children who are being abused, but also to set clear boundaries as to what is not acceptable. If quasi-child porn were legal it sends the message that there is nothing wrong with fantasizing about children. This isn't calling the thought police - looking at quasi-child porn is a real offence and puts real children in danger. It whets the appetite of the perv.

    This is a commonly held belief. wonmder though why it only applies to sexual fantasy (again, FANTASY, not real ) about children? Look for instance at the NY Times list of best-selling books. Currently the top 5 are:

    1. THE HUSBAND, by Dean Koontz
    2. BEACH ROAD, by James Patterson and Peter de Jonge
    3. AT RISK, by Patricia Cornwell
    4. THE BOOK OF THE DEAD, by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child
    5. TERRORIST, by John Updike
    I think at least 4 of the top 5 are about murder, some presenting killing and rape in great, loving detail. Why then do not the millions of readers of these books find their appetites for murder and rape whetted? Why is it perfectly acceptable for maiden aunts to read Hannibal on a bus? Do any of them go home and crack open someone's skull to eat fresh brains?

    Here this "whetting" argument is often riduculed when Jack Thomson comes out with another vilification of video games.

    Children know that cartoons are not real. They don't think they can fall off cliffs and survive like Wile E Coyote. People can indulge themselves in all kinds of horrible fantasies, and then close the book and live in the real world.

  22. Re:Hashing? by budgenator · · Score: 4, Insightful

    human sexauality is a continum, most of us find the opposite sex attractive, most prefer the same age and discriminate based on things like hair color, body shape ect, fewer are attracted to the same sex but same age; some are farther out on the fringe, it's the way we are born.

    --
    Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
  23. you are all missing the point by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    the point is NOT about the KIND of content. that's just a way to get popular soccer-moms (etc) up in arms and mobilized on your side.

    what is REALLY shocking is that this opens the door for ISPs to get their 'fingers on the bits' (its a data comm term - sorry about the double ententre).

    so far, it has not been 'ok' to let ISPs scan for content and make judgements on it. most ISPs have drawn the line to say that we are just a carrier of bits and we are not RESPONSIBLE for what the user includes in the payload.

    the music and film industry has tried to get ISPs to do their spying. with mixed success.

    but scream 'CP' and you can't publicly NOT support that (and still keep your job). "have you stopped beating your wife yet?" goes the old joke. there's no safe way to answer that. if you publicly oppose such a politically charged idea, you are a boogeyman and an evil person. if you support it, you will pass under the suspicion-radar and will more or less be left alone.

    this is a power grab to OFFICIALLY define an isp's job as net-nanny. first they claim to be protecting the citizenry - but its really far more devious than that. once the gov and the isp's convince joe sixpack that its in their 'benefit' for the net-nannies to read all your content ahead of you, you will NEVER get that level of privacy back again.

    this is a sham. whenever someone says "won't you please think of the children!" you can bet that there are alterior motives going on.

    remember: those in power just want to keep and increase their control level. fingers on the datacomm bits is one thing they've been after for a long time!

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