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Gonzales Wants ISP Data Retention To Curb Child Porn

$RANDOMLUSER writes, "The AP is reporting that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales testified before the Senate Banking Committee today and called for Congress to require ISPs to preserve customer records, asserting that prosecutors need them to fight child pornography. 'This is a problem that requires federal legislation,' Gonzales said. He called the government's lack of access to customer data the biggest obstacle to deterring child porn. 'We respect civil liberties but we have to harmonize this so we can get more information,' he said." Gonzales added that he agrees with a letter sent to Congress in June by 49 state attorneys general, requesting federal legislation to require ISPs to hold onto customer data longer.

53 of 454 comments (clear)

  1. Privacy for the Incidental by fragmentate · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm all for catching the distributors of child pornography. I hope they find all the freaks exploiting these children.

    However, I know that they never stop there. If they have the information they won't use it for just investigating cases of child pornography. Furthermore, I don't trust their techniques of catching the predators.

    Many years ago (1998, or 1999) there was a crackdown on the alt.binaries.erotica.* groups to catch distributors of child pornography. Instead, what they did is arrest hundreds of people victimized by the distributors. Sure, many of those hundreds were intentionally seeking pictures of children. But many others were falsely accused because they blindly downloaded "all new articles."

    The way this happened was quite simple... Much like the spambots of today, these distributors taint many, many groups with their filth. It's a sort of scorched earth policy, perhaps. Regardless, I don't trust the government to know the difference between the incidental versus the intentional.

    The primary reason being the weapon they would potentially wield against people that choose to speak out...

    "Oh, look, in 2002 you downloaded DSC_1000.JPG from a newsgroup, and it was depicting an unclothed child... LOCK 'EM UP!"

    Privacy protects the innocent too, you know...

    1. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The government wants to keep a copy of everything you do online in case it needs to check to find out if you did something it doesn't like. Kiddie porn today, advocating voting rights for immigrants tomorrow. Once the data is there, it can be subpeonaed, for whatever legal reason a Bush-appointed judge signs off on. Reading Trotsky? The government will know. Reading about particle physics on Amazon? You must be building weapons of mass destruction. When Gonzalez says it's only for kiddie porn, he knows it's not true, because he's a lawyer.

    2. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny
      stumbled on a bunch of nekkid kids wearing boxing gloves

      Naked kids!?!? That's absolutely horrible! No child should ever be naked, because the naked human body is a disgusting, vile thing.
    3. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by FLEB · · Score: 5, Funny

      stumbled on a bunch of nekkid kids wearing boxing gloves.

      So? Are you saying you're against fighting child porn?

      --
      Information wants to be free.
      Entertainment wants to be paid.
      You just want to be cheap.
    4. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by mdwh2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Or what about porn that involves some 17 year old?

      Strange but true: In the UK, it's legal to shag a 17 year old, but now as soon as you take a photo, you're guilty of making and possessing child porn (the 2003 Sexual Offences Act bizarrely raised the age for appearing in photos from 16 to 18, despite the age of consent remaining at 16 where it as always been).

    5. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'd gladly agree to this, prividng I can access to Gonzales' online records. Frankly, I think in the area of privacy, if a member of government isn't willing to disclose his own, then he shouldn't be allowed to ask for it from anyone else.

      After all, it's not as if Gonzales has anything to hide, right?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by elucido · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Does the law really work in such a way where you can be supeonaed based on what link you clicked on? Shouldn't you arrest the person who created the link?

      If you arrest people simply for clicking links, and not the people who actually put the links on the internet, what stops a person from putting up links which say one thing but take you to somewhere else, then you get arrested? I mean a spam bot could arrange it so that everyone gets spammed with bogus links and then what?

      The way the internet is designed, you don't really know what you'll see at a link until after you see it. The only person who really knows, is the one who actually created the link in the first place.

      You may be correct, it likely is not just for kiddie porn, because if people can be arrested for just clicking on a link or downloading a file, it becomes impossible at that point to use the internet safely without falling for some sorta trap or clicking on some sorta link that is illegal to click on, hell a script could make you click on it, a virus could download stuff onto your computer and use it for storage, so you see this is basically ridiculous. This does not mean people will not try to make it the law, as laws don't have to make technical sense whatsoever, but due to how the internet is designed and the culture of the net, if a law like this passes everyone would be guilty, have you ever downloaded an mp3? Of course. Ever downloaded a movie without paying for it?

      You see, it's impossible to not be guilty when the crime is downloading. If the crime is uploading, then yes you should be guilty if distributing it is illegal.

    7. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by cgenman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      For a fun exercise, try sending an HTML e-mail to the US Congress with an image of child pornography embedded. Bonus points if you're not a US citizen.

      By simply having checked their mail that day, every member of congress will have violated the law about recieving and posessing. Under the Child Pornography Prevention Act of 1996 that subjects all of congress to a MANDATORY minimum sentence of 15 years.

      That, at least, would do a great deal of good for the country.

    8. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by LordNightwalker · · Score: 5, Insightful
      When Gonzalez says it's only for kiddie porn, he knows it's not true, because he's a lawyer.
      Absolutely; we all know how porn works. You don't just download it once, and then jack off to it indefinitely. You always need fresh material. So if you want to catch someone who downloaded kiddy porn once, just wait till he does it again. Just like us regular porn leechers the kiddy porn downloader also needs his regular fix. All you have to do to catch him is get a court order to sniff his traffic and wiretap his phone/cellphone, and sooner or later you'll catch him redhanded. Sure, you won't catch the guys who downloaded that stuff just once. Big deal; those guys probably downloaded it by accident (or perhaps out of curiosity); after checking out what the hell it was they downloaded in the first place, they found out it wasn't what they thought it was, or they weren't interested after all, and erased the crap.

      Or hey, how about you just get a court order to search the suspect's computers? Kiddy porn is far too hard to come by for those guys to just delete it after three wank sessions, and chances are you'll even find photos and magazines stashed away somewhere at his place. Same logic applies to the distributors btw; you can't distribute what you don't have.
      So there's really no reason to ask for longer data retention for the reasons quoted. That's just a cover story; I wonder what the real story is though...
      --
      Install windows on my workstation? You crazy? Got any idea how much I paid for the damn thing?
    9. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by russ1337 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      of course, someone has to look at the pictures first to determine if it is, infact, child pornography...which by default would make them guilty.
      I travel a bit, and have all my regular photos on my PC at home as well as a few family photos on my work PC. Ocassionally someone in the family has a new kid or whatever and you always get the obligitory photos and ocassionally photos of the first bath etc. I am absolutely petrified to have those photos on my computer - so I delete them. Reason: Should some TSA agent decide to search my laptop and *think* that a kid in a bubble bath photo which was sent to me by a family member or close family friend is kiddie porn. - it would take too long to resolve, and would be far too difficult. I'd probably be arrested and there'd be something on the file -

      All that UNTIL AN EXPERT says "oh, wtf, this is just some kid having a bath sent to him by a family member"... too late. The damage would be done.
    10. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Give me 15 seconds access on your work or home computer and I can get you fired and likely put into prison for years with no evidence it was anyone but you.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    11. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by AGMW · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Something very similar happened in the UK a year or so back. Some new legislation was tabled that would mean it would be an offence to not provide the decryption key to data if it was suspected that the encrypted data contained evidence of a crime, and you were asked for the key. People told the Home Secretary that you might not know the key, etc, but the law was still going ahead.

      Someone committed a crime, verified by a lawyer, and the evidence was encrypted and emailed to the Home Secretary. He now was in possesion of evidence of a crime that was encrypted and he didn't know the decryption key.

      Unfortunately, he wasn't arrested and put in prison!

      It seems it's one rule for politicians and another for the rest of us!

      --
      Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
      handmadehands.co.uk
    12. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
      Or, more generally: can you get punished for possessing child pornography if the child in question is yourself

      http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/04/05/girl_charg ed_with_child_porn/

      Why, yes. Yes you can. Pretty insane, no?
    13. Re:Privacy for the Incidental by honkycat · · Score: 3, Insightful
      So if you consider yourself to be a good person, you should be doing everything that you can to prevent the abuse to women and esp children. If not then you are no better then the person that is committing the acts.
      I know this is flamebait, but it hits on one of the major fallacies used to promote this sort of assinine semi-constitutional (at best) law. "We must do everything possible to fight child pornographers." This is jingoistic bullshit and nothing more. Everything and I mean EVERYTHING we do is weighed in a cost-benefit analysis. If it costs too much for too small a benefit, then it just doesn't make sense.

      Even child porn/abduction/abuse is not so awful that it trumps any conceivable objection to a law that might in some way reduce it. For example, why not pass a law that allows a parent to kill any adult who looks at their child. Don't you know that 99% of child molesterers have seen their victim in the presence of a parent before they molester them?? It's for the children! But, no, of course, that is ridiculously out of proportion and no one would ever seriously propose such a thing. It's not even a good example of humorous legal hyperbole, but it illustrates one thing -- no one is willing to go "to any length" to save the children. There is some cost at which it is no longer worth it.

      Exactly how much we're willing to "spend" (maybe "give up" is a better word) to prevent these crimes is up for some debate, but you can't ignore the analysis based on the nature of the crime. Personally, I believe that an abusive oppressive government is a frightening enough thing that we need to keep it on a very tight leash, even at the cost of some heinous crimes going unpunished. "Better that ten guilty men go free than one innocent man be punished" is the doctrine -- note that it doesn't go on to say "unless a politician with an agenda believes that innocent man might have abused a child; then let him fry."
  2. Root Password to the US Constitution by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Child Porn"

    --
    Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    1. Re:Root Password to the US Constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      ...and the alternative is "terrorism".

    2. Re:Root Password to the US Constitution by glwtta · · Score: 4, Funny

      There's an "alternative" root password? Oh crap, the Constitution is running on NT, isn't it?

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    3. Re:Root Password to the US Constitution by maxwell+demon · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes, that's why there are so many exploits. They mainly use buffer overflows in the incoming money interface. That is, put enough money to the correct politicians, and you'll control the government.

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    4. Re:Root Password to the US Constitution by syousef · · Score: 3, Funny

      Running on NT? Does that mean MS no longer supports the constitution? Is that a General Protection Fault?

      --
      These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  3. Any time you hear... by DragonWriter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ..."we respect civil liberties, but..." you know the next part is going to be bad.

    Its almost like "I'm not a racist, but..."

  4. "Harmonize" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Interesting bit of Newspeak there...

  5. Abusing children is the most horrible crime by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Especially abusing them for more political power.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  6. If it's really about CP, they'd say it in the law. by VidEdit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Child porn is just an excuse. If protecting children was really the point, the proposed law would limit all subpoenas of data retained under this law to child porn cases. The law doesn't do that, ergo they are lying through their teeth.

    --
  7. It Takes A Village to raise a Prisoner by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Interesting
    From TFA: "We need information. Information helps us makes cases."
    - Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez.

    Number 6: Where am I?
    Number 2: In the Village.
    Number 6: What do you want?
    Number 2: We want information.
    Number 6: Whose side are you on?
    Number 2: That would be telling.
    We want information... information... information.
    Number 6: You won't get it.
    Number 2: By hook or by crook, we will.

    Come to think of it...

    Number Six: Everybody votes for a dictator.

    ...and also...

    Chessmaster: "You must be new here. In time, most of us join the enemy - against ourselves."

    I guess it takes a village to raise a Prisoner as well as a Child.

    The thing I miss most about the Republican wing of the Party is the wing that asked questions like "What would the Democrat wing of the Party do with these powers?"

    I just wonder how long the Democrat wing of the Party that's currently asking these sorts of questions will last when they're handed power in 2008?

  8. In Soviet America by WillAffleckUW · · Score: 3, Insightful

    everyone loves having all their Internet records made available to Commissar for spying on our personal lives, because we are all in loving with our Comrade Bush and his Politburo and know they would never lie to us!

    --
    -- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
  9. Who was the holdout state AG? by isaac · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Gonzales added that he agrees with a letter sent to Congress in June by 49 state attorneys general, requesting federal legislation to require ISPs to hold onto customer data longer.

    Who was the lone holdout state attorney general who didn't sign on to this executive branch power grab? I'd like to consider moving to that state.

    -Isaac

    --
    I am not a lawyer, and this is not legal advice. For Entertainment Purposes Only.
    1. Re:Who was the holdout state AG? by Jim+Logajan · · Score: 5, Informative

      If I got this right, it appears the attorney generals who didn't sign were in Guam, Indiana, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Northern Marianas, Palua, and Virginia. Okay - you say some of those aren't states? Well, neither are American Samoa, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, or the Virgin Islands, yet those were included in the list of alleged "49 state attorney generals" who signed the letter. Source: http://www.atg.wa.gov/releases/2006/Documents/DRLe tter.pdf

  10. if you don't have anything to hide... by User+956 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We all know that this is just a ploy so they can spy on you... "Please, think of the children!" seems to be the most abused reasoning for spying... it's just bs that anyone would buy this.

    And their logic is always "If you don't have anything to hide, you don't have anything to worry about". To which I say, "If I don't have anything to hide, why do they need to spy on me?"

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
  11. Is it really a growing threat? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Gonzales acknowledged the concerns of some company executives who say legislation might be overly intrusive and encroach on customers' privacy rights. But he said the growing threat of child pornography over the Internet was too great.

    The growing threat of child porn? Is it really that big of a threat?

    I've surfed the tubes and found some pretty perverse pr0n, but I have never run across any child porn. I have absolutely no clue how anyone could even go about finding the stuff. And yet, Gonzalez and the gov't claim it is a huge threat. A threat so great that we must intrude on the privacy rights of all law-abiding citizens. Do we have any real evidence to back up the claim that child porn is such an enormous threat that we must take extraordinary measures? No, we don't.

    We have to take the government's word for it, because no one is allowed to independently research child porn. To do so would violate the law. I've heard that the amount of new child porn material has increased in the past few years. Conversely, I've also heard that all of the child porn that's out there is the same old material that has been circulating around for 20 years. But we have no way to know for sure. The government keeps a database of child porn for themselves, and prosecutes and harshly punishes anyone that so much mistakenly downloads an image in their browser cache.

    This push by Gonzalez to mandate ISP data retention smells very fishy, especially considering that we, as citizens, have no way to verify that child porn is as serious a problem as he claims.
    1. Re:Is it really a growing threat? by Some_Llama · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "We have to take the government's word for it, because no one is allowed to independently research child porn."

      Reminds me of this other great threat to america, i believe it is called marijuana. The government has told me many times that it is very bad for me, although i cannot find out for myself because it is illegal. Scientist have tried to do independant studies to find out if this "drug" is indeed harmful but the government will not allow them too because it is illegal.

      Strange but true..

  12. Re:Massive Cost by hoggoth · · Score: 4, Funny

    > pedabytes of information

    or in this case "Pedo-bytes" of information...

    --
    - For the complete works of Shakespeare: cat /dev/random (may take some time)
  13. Moo by Chacham · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The worst about all this is, that it has never actually been shown that CP is bad. Or at least, that it is any worse than the adult version.

    The main issues stated are:

    1) It hurts children to make it.
    2) It causes people to want the real thing.

    The first is obviously not what they are after, since:

    1a) They go after the consumer with full force, when this helps little. (It only helps the content creator only if he sells it.)

    1b) They go after voyeuristic photos and "model" shoots. The amount of actual CP where the child is hurt has never been shown to be significant.

    The second reason, has never been proven either:

    2a) The is an equal and opposite force that people would release tension through this, instead of going after the "real" thing.

    2b) Pedophilia is defined as a mental disorder, so "normal" viewers will shouldn't be affected by it anyway. Only someone who already wants it, and doesn't know it, would be affected. This is most likely not a significant amount of people.

    As such, i believe the real reason is not any of those given above. But until it is delineated, and the laws address it by protected people from harm (that is, make sure there is an actual (potential) victim as opposed to regulating behavior) there should be no barring of CP different from the Adult version. And, as for invading privacy, that's is going to take a lot more doing than this vagueness.

  14. Key words: Data Retention (not child porn) by tinrobot · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They want retention so they can continue to expand the domestic spying program. Simple as that.

    Child porn is just the catch phrase they can use to ram it through congress.

    I can see the campaign ad -- "Congressman X voted against protections from child porn!"

  15. Protection tools? by twitter · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Are there any tools that can be used to mask real browsing habits by randomly sampling and following links from sites like Google News or Wikipedia? It would be nice to have something like that going 24/7 so that your actual traffic would be drowned in a sea of noise. It would also considerably raise the cost of the invasion, required by law or not. I don't like my ISP looking over my shoulder to begin with. That big brother wants to share the view is disturbing but not much different from the existing corporate invasion.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  16. Child Porn My Behind by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They're hardly even trying to come up with believable lies any more. They think they can just throw around the "protect the children" meme and we'll all just line up like good Christian Soldiers.

    There are a few boogiemen that never seem to fail those that would take our freedoms. Terrorists, Kiddie Porn, Welfare Moms, Liberals and Bill Clinton are some of the most reliable. A few decades ago it was "Satan Worshippers" "Communists" and "Castro" that were the standbys.

    Anybody else sick of this BS?

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
    1. Re:Child Porn My Behind by shmlco · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Unfortunately, we're not the ones that have to line up. All they have to do today is name the bill the "Child Protection Act of 2006" and most of the politician's hands are automatically tied. Vote against such a thing and you can bet that come next election your opponents will be touting your apparent love for child pornographers and child molesters in every television ad.

      "Jim Davis voted AGAINST a bill that would have protected CHILDREN from dangerous preditors and pedophiles..."

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    2. Re:Child Porn My Behind by DrJimbo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's not meant to be a believable lie. It is a clever political ploy developed by Karl Rove. The people currently in the White House are desperate to keep Republican control of the House of Representatives. If the Democrats gain control of the House while Bush is still president, he is going to be investigated out the wazoo and many people close to him will face jail time.

      It is meant to be an unbelievable lie. It is meant to cause a reaction. Then Ken Mehlman can send out emails to the party faithful telling them how the evil, evil Democrats support child pornography. It was designed to get you riled up so they can use your reaction to inflame their base.

      If you think this sounds far fetched, I encourage you to get on the GOP email list. The person who had my email address before me was on it and I haven't unsubscribed. The only thing the Democrats have going for them is almost every single issue and that may not be enough. Things are bound to get very, very ugly.

      --
      We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
      -- Anais Nin
    3. Re:Child Porn My Behind by jafac · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm not the only one who believes that it's creepy as hell to NAME a bill.
      They usually have numbers. They should be referred to only by their number. Slapping a name on a bill is a dishonest labelling for the purpose of marketing.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  17. We respect civil liberties but ... by rminsk · · Score: 5, Insightful
    We respect civil liberties but ...
    If you respect civil liberites how can there be a but?
  18. How about retaining info on gov't employees? by quincunx55555 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why stop with ISPs and child porn?

    I think all communications with attorney generals, congress persons, cabinet members, etc should all be retained, reviewed, and utilized when corruption is evident. That'll keep our children safe!

  19. Nothing New by homer_ca · · Score: 4, Informative

    Abu Gonzales has been pushing ISP data retention since at least early this year, and he's invoked all the usual boogeymen to get it passed: terrorism and kiddie porn.

    He's tried:
    -meeting privately with the major ISPs to ask them for voluntary compliance
    -getting Republican Congressman James Sensenbrenner to introduce a bill that went nowhere.
    -somehow persuading Qwest to endorse legislation

    I don't mean to pimp Cnet. Search any tech news site for "ISP data retention" and you'll see the history of this.

  20. Re:want to find it by QCompson · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What a scary world we live in when I am frightened to even click on your link for fear of seeing pictures, which despite my total lack of sexual interest in, could still land me in prison, just for having viewed them on my computer.

    Of course your link could be some sort of joke, a link to pictures of baby elephants or something, but I guess I'll never know.

  21. I have a better idea, Mr. Gonzales ... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How about you stop pulling the "terrorism" card and "child porn" card, and tell us why, in no uncertain terms, you need to keep prying into our lives. What evidence do you have that proves, beyond any shadow of a doubt, that such additional monitoring will help stamp out child pornography? What justification do you really have for your stance? I'm talking hard numbers ... how many cases have been successfully prosecuted (i.e., resulting in prison terms) for child pornography as a direct result of ISP data retention? Wiretapping (in spite of the billions spent upon it) has not justified the cost in terms of viable prosecutions, and I see no reason to think this will prove otherwise. And I'm very serious, Mr. Gonzales, partly because your current rationale makes little to no sense whatsoever, and mostly because I just don't believe you. If you want to do this to us, for God's sake prove it to us, make us understand why we need to give up still more of our precious Constitution. I would fully expect that the nation's ATTORNEY GENERAL would be capable of presenting such a case to the American public using honest facts, not trigger-words, emotional ploys and outright fiction.

    A bit disappointing, really.

    Maybe we do need to give up some civil liberties, given the current state of affairs with international terrorism ... certain rights were temporarily rescinded during World War II and were re-established afterwards. Maybe. I've not seen sufficient evidence, as presented by my official representatives in government or their appointees (are you listening, Mr. Gonzales?) that convinces me of this.

    Furthermore, I absolutely do not accept "child pornography" as good and sufficient cause to invoke yet another massive spy campaign against the American public. If the FBI needs more funds to go after these bastards ... so be it. That's why we have appropriations committees. But wholesale monitoring of the entire Internet-using population?

    I think not.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  22. New law by Shawn+is+an+Asshole · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If a law is going to be passed on data retention, it should be passed in the opposite direction. Data retention past 30 days (ie, a billing cycle) should be illegal. Search engine results that link any personally identifying information should be illegal (this includes you, Google). Etc. Punishment should be $1000 per log entry older than 30 days.

    --
    "It ain't a war against drugs.it's a war against personal freedom" --Bill Hicks
  23. Re:Moo by mrchaotica · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Ok, that was one of the more unsettling arguments here. Rather than dwell on the ethics of forcing children to have sex for the purpose of producing pornography, I'll point out the legal points involved here.

    Wow, you just ignored his entire argument! And since you did so, I'll restate it:

    • Most of the people they go after aren't the ones producing the images. Therefore, those particular people never had the possibility of actually harming any children. (That was his point #1a)
    • A big chunk of the stuff they go after does not depict any actual sexual activity. It merely contains unclothed children. (That was his point #1b)

    In other words, if they want to stop child porn they ought to:

    • Target the producers
    • Target the ones making pictures of actual sexual acts
    But do people really have a right to consume something that is illegal to produce?

    It's the production that (theoretically) causes harm, therefore it's the production that ought to be illegal.

    --

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

  24. *What* child porn? by mangu · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I hope they find all the freaks exploiting these children.


    I agree. I'm all for catching the scumbags who exploit children.


    However, there's a question that keeps nagging me every time I see mentions of this so-called "child porn" in the internet. What's exactly that "child porn" people keep mentioning? I get hundreds of unwanted emails every day. I have lost count of all the pornography I have seen in the internet. Yet I never saw one single picture of a child engaged in sex!


    Well, I have seen plenty of images that some people call "child porn", but those are merely pictures of young women who could be of any age between 15 and 30 with shaved pubic hair and small breasts. Anorexic women who have their pictures taken when they are 25 years old do not count as "child porn" in my book.


    Here's one simple rather provoking concept: what if the true perverts are smart enough to avoid putting the images of their acts on the internet? How many videos of bank robberies and drug sales get published in the internet? What makes you feel that paedophiles would be more stupid than other criminals?


    I think the police would be more successful in catching perverts if they tried to investigate the typical acts of perverts instead of insisting on that rather sickly curiosity about the acts of honest internet citizens...

  25. Is file sharing good or bad for content creators? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Your point #1 is in fact what "they" are after, the reasoning behind going after the consumers as well as the producers, is that demand creates supply, and cutting off the demand for child pornography will lower the incentives to produce it (whether or not money is directly involved).

    Wait just a second. By downloading it without paying for it, aren't you ... stealing it. You know, robbing the 'artists' that produce this 'intellectual property.' I mean, that's what Alberto Gonzales has been touring America to tell school children on behalf of the MPAA. Downloading without paying for it... that destroys the supply side, and ultimately destroy the art form itself. Now you're telling me that downloading child porn creates supply... So which is it? When it's a Hollywood movie, it's insuring the death of the industry. Yet when it's footage of a fifteen year old being naughty on her webcam, it's creating supply to purchase... How can that be?

  26. You're missing the point by Jeff+Molby · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm completely against legislation like this, but in the interest of having a full discussion, I'll explain why they want this legislation.

    They don't intend to use this against people that they already suspect. Instead, they will identify sites containing illegal images/information and then subpoena the major ISPs for lists of users that have accessed any of those sites. This becomes their probable cause and then they resume normal investigation techniques to solidify their cases.

  27. Re:want to find it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Heh.

    I have viewed child porn - not only that, but repeatedly and semi-deliberately: I'm sure they could lock me up if they felt like it for what I've seen, and therefore had on my computer.

    Of course, the reason I saw it was because I was looking at an experiment in a major news site where they were trialling wikis as a method of responding to editorials. It was linked here on Slashdot, the trolls descended, and one particularly persistent one decided that his vandalism of choice was to post nude pictures of children. I tried to help clean it up, but eventually got sufficiently revolted that I just left - the admins had gone to sleep for the night, and I wasn't going to win this battle.

    Thus, I saw child pornography from viewing a mainstream news site. Clearly, with sufficient power and sufficiently stringent laws they'll be able to get anyone they feel like - it really wouldn't be hard to anonymously plant things, if nothing else.

    Wonderful world, eh?

  28. Re:Politics != Marketing? by jschrod · · Score: 3, Funny
    Yes, of course.

    Marketing is a honest task.

    --

    Joachim

    People don't write Manifestos any more -- what's going on in this world? [Frank Zappa]

  29. We seem to be missing an important point here... by weasel5i2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There's a distinct difference between pornography , erotic art , and just plain 'ol photography.

    A picture of a naked 14-year-old boy or girl, just standing there in a neutral kind of way, not sexually suggestive at all, is completely legal as an artistic shot. My parents have photos of me as a baby, all nekkid with my little baby wee-wee and everything (curses!!) but I highly doubt they could even be considered remotely illegal.

    Now, that same 14-yr-old doing something suggestive or posing in a not-for-kids manner would definitely be considered porn and thusly illegal. I'm not sure what the rules are regarding erotica and minors.

    There are many professional photographers who aren't kiddie-pornographers, who take nude photos of their subjects whether they're of legal age or not.. This could also include medical imaging, as well as anything else it could include which I can't remember right now.

    I wonder how long before someone uses CGI to make artificial kiddie-pr0n.. "but she's not underage, Your Honor! Right here in the code, her age is commented: Nine hundred." Loopholes, glorious loopholes. Just FYI, IANACP.

    --A

    --
    [BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY]: X5O!P%@AP[4\PZX54(P^)7CC)7}$EICAR-STANDARD-ANTIVIR US-TEST-FILE!$H+H*
  30. "Prima Facie" possession by Kadin2048 · · Score: 4, Informative

    You would think so, but I bet that in a lot of cases, they'd just treat your possession of the contraband as prima facie evidence of a crime.

    It's like drug possession -- if the cops toss your car and find a kilo of China White or a handgun with the serial number scratched off in the glove compartment, your insistence that it's not yours may not keep you out of trouble. Just having it, in a place that was under your control, is the crime. A demonstration of intent is not necessary. In effect, it means that the burden of proof is shifted to the defendant to explain themselves, and if they cannot provide a justification for the evidence, they're guilty.

    Frankly I think "prima facie" laws in general are a travesty of justice; we ought to abolish the whole philosophy and get back to a more intent-focused jurisprudence. But of course if you tried to do that, you'd be keelhauled for being supportive of crime and criminals, because in the short term it would make the work of the police harder.

    In general, a lot of "possession" laws (drug possession, weapon possession, pornography, "burglar's tools") are intentionally written this way so that a demonstration of intent is unnecessary, and many laws include the phrase "prima facie" verbatim. (See this Montana weapon law, for example.)

    More information you might want to read:
    http://www.lectlaw.com/def2/p078.htm (deals with torts, specifically in employment law, but discussed the general concept)
    http://dictionary.law.com/default2.asp?selected=15 98&bold=

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  31. 5th Amendment and Encryption Keys by Kadin2048 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I tend to wonder; could a person refuse to divulge an encryption key on Fifth Amendment grounds?

    It seems like this has to have happened before, so there's probably precedent on it somewhere. If you know that by revealing the key, you're going to be incriminating yourself, it seems like you might have grounds for refusal. That would keep you from being charged with contempt. That would also probably allow your spouse(s) to refuse to incriminate you, as well.

    I could also see how a court could rule that an encryption key or password isn't "protected speech" though, in the same way that they've curtailed the First Amendment. IMO, I would think that the encryption key is a pretty big piece of evidence in itself, since it's the only way to show that the plaintext came from the ciphertext; thus disclosing a password or key really is testifying against oneself. Not that logic really plays any great role in modern jurisprudence, as far as I can tell.

    I've seen discussions about this on sci.crypt and other places, but never a definitive answer.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."