Slashdot Mirror


UK Wants To Ban Computer-Generated Child Porn

An anonymous reader writes "UK Home Secretary John Reid has urged a ban on computer-generated images of child abuse, including cartoons. The Register asks if this would criminalize role-playing gamers, and what about Hentai? Currently, such images may be illegal to publish under the Obscene Publications Act, but they do not come under child pornography laws. The attempt to criminalize possession of virtual images mirrors the attempt to criminalize possession of 'extreme porn' which would also include fake images, as well as photos of simulated acts involving consenting adults (as discussed on Slashdot). A petition on the Government's new website urges an end to such plans."

544 comments

  1. What's the big deal? by Giant+Ape+Skeleton · · Score: 3, Funny
    What's wrong with cartoons depicting child abuse?

    It's not like we're talking about images of Mohammed or something!

    --
    The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.
    1. Re:What's the big deal? by soulshinejam · · Score: 1

      Oh, now I'll need a fake ID to buy ultra-porn.

    2. Re:What's the big deal? by Rob+T+Firefly · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That makes me wonder where the "virtual child abuse" line is drawn. There are lots of non-porn instances in pop culture. Can South Park still kill Kenny? Can Charlie Brown still get whacked with a baseball and go flying off his pitcher's mound? Can Popeye still chase Swee'pea around a construction site? Can God still tell Abraham to kill his son Isaac in the Christian Bible? And don't get me started on the mythological dysfunctional families in the Greek, Roman, Egyptian, Norse, and other ancient polytheistic pantheons that most kids learn about in school.

    3. Re:What's the big deal? by neoform · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We should also ban images depicting murder.. and books.. and movies.. and talking about crime.. and thinking about crime.. and thinking.

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    4. Re:What's the big deal? by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What's wrong with cartoons depicting murder?

      The question is always, "By allowing this stuff to exist are we providing an outlet for an antisocial impulse, or are we feeding an antisocial desire?"

      It is rarely so clearcut. When the cops bust a pedophile, and he has a huge collection of child porn, they blame the porn for the pedophilia, but it's a chicken and egg problem.

      It's my feeling that people who are prone to committing these types of crimes will do it regardless of the existence of these videos, so the creation of these videos should be allowed in the hopes that they'll fill some of the kiddie porn niche that is currently filled by actual kiddie porn.

      You can't fight supply and demand. The regular sick exploitive stuff is already illegal, and yet still being made. Until you can find some way to make people not want this stuff, the existence of an animated substitute that doesn't involve a financial incentive for live action child porn doesn't seem like a bad thing.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    5. Re:What's the big deal? by theStorminMormon · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I don't mean this as a blanked defense of the proposed law by any means. I do, however, think it's a fallacy to compare reading/viewing sexual child abuse to reading/viewing a murder, theft, or other crime. In the case of other crimes, the depiction is entirely separate from the depicted. Reading about a bank robber does not make you a thief.

      Pornography is a little different, however, in that it exists as the interaction between the subject and the material. The whole point of pornography is to not just be a depiction of some sexually-arousing act, but to actually arouse.

      To make you analogy work, we should put separate depictions of porno in the same category as depictions of murder, rape, theft, vandalism, whatever and put actual porno in a different category. Not neccessarily a criminal category, but certainly a category in which the consumption of the media is the act in question.

      -stormin

      --
      The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
    6. Re:What's the big deal? by Billosaur · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This points out the blurring of the line between fantasy and imagination, and reality and causality. You can stop such artwork from being drawn and distributed (maybe), but you can't legislate what goes on in the mind of the creator of such work (yet).

      Look at the CGI work that is done in movies. As computer-generated characters look and sound more like real actors, does what we can do to them change? No more violence, bestiality, child abuse depictions in movies? Take it a step further -- assume a CG character could be made alive via AI. Does this character now have the protection of the law? Can a CGAI character be made to perform in a gratuitously sexual manner?

      Technology advances and as it does, it makes the moral distinctions we carry even more ambiguous than they were before. The question is, how do we handle this? At what point do we say enough?

      --
      GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
    7. Re:What's the big deal? by Total_Wimp · · Score: 5, Insightful
      In the case of other crimes, the depiction is entirely separate from the depicted. Reading about a bank robber does not make you a thief.

      Pornography is a little different, however, in that it exists as the interaction between the subject and the material. The whole point of pornography is to not just be a depiction of some sexually-arousing act, but to actually arouse.

      A) Horror films invoke fear, and many depictions of murder are designed to give the viewer a viceral charge, espcecially of revenge. Clearly fictional works of violence work very hard to arouse the emotions of the viewer.

      B) So what if someone gets aroused by a cartoon depiction of kiddie porn? "No child was harmed in the creation of this film." I abosolutly have no tolerance or empathy with child pornographers. I loathe them as the lowest form of existance. But that's because they hurt kids. If no kids are harmed, I don't really care how you get your jollies.

      TW
    8. Re:What's the big deal? by Vicegrip · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh come on. The point of a horror novel is to scare you. The point of a murder drama is to empathize with the victim. The point of trash-mafia books it to make you feel like you are in the gangster culture-- to feel what it's like to be a thug.

      A well written book draws you into its story and compels you to finish it. I don't read books so I can observe disparately what is going on in the story.

      I for one do not want the government to start down the slippery slope of deciding which of my thoughts should be illegal. Thank you very much.

      --
      Do not spread "09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0" over the internet, thank you.
    9. Re:What's the big deal? by XTbushwakko · · Score: 1

      Extreme torture is depicted by real actors in films like Saw III and The Hostel, this should also be illegal than.

    10. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      o
      \|/ -- Naked twelve year old girl!
      / \

      0
      \|/ -- Naked prophet Muhammad!
      / \

      There, now I can never go to the UK *or* the middle east!

    11. Re:What's the big deal? by Andrewkov · · Score: 1

      I thought the ban on the porn was to protect the children who are harmed by creating said porn. If there is no market for it, less will be created, and less kids forced to be performers in those movies.

    12. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I do, however, think it's a fallacy to compare reading/viewing sexual child abuse to reading/viewing a murder, theft, or other crime. In the case of other crimes, the depiction is entirely separate from the depicted. Reading about a bank robber does not make you a thief.

      Hmm, what if someone would force you to read or listen to child porn? Would it automatically transform you into child abuser (say, unless you are a prosecutor, or judge, ... or member of a jury, oops...)?

      The point of that parallel is that the fine line which makes you something is drawn nowhere out of your own head. IMO there is no actual difference in reading depiction of crime made from criminal's viewpoint and reading child porn. If you enjoy imagining (or imagine enjoying) doing a thing described, then you are (at least potential) abuser, however none can tell what is in your mind! That is why law applies on things that are done (or prepared to be done, although that may be a moot point), not things which are thought of.

      Pedophilia is taboo theme of modern society and the panic and paranoia it stirs implies that it seems like everyone is afraid of their own mind, afraid of immersing into abusers mind, afraid that they might like what they see and "become monsters" themselves - remember back then when horrors started first exploiting of vampirism, lykantropy and zombies, various "undead"... the striking point was that you don't die, but instead live as self-loathing freak... well it was then, before todays' disgusting glorifications and "fancification" of that scares of yesterday).
      It (say, i.e. "Pedophilophobia") is quite similar state of mind as homophobia, only in this case allegedly justified by care for wellbeing of innocent human beings.
    13. Re:What's the big deal? by SkunkPussy · · Score: 1

      Hmmm I think although I mostly agree with your argument, do you not agree that people reading e.g. murder novels may experience adrenaline and other effects?

      --
      SURELY NOT!!!!!
    14. Re:What's the big deal? by neoform · · Score: 1

      slippery slope?

      These are lawmakers, they speak another language, it's called 'legal precedence'.

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    15. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You clearly don't understand, so let me explain the rules for you:

      1) Violence is OK!
      2) Sex is NOT ok.

    16. Re:What's the big deal? by AndersOSU · · Score: 4, Informative

      Just for slashdot's education, based on my non-lawyer reading this has been illegal in the US for some time:
      (a) In General.-- Any person who, in a circumstance described in subsection (d), knowingly produces, distributes, receives, or possesses with intent to distribute, a visual depiction of any kind, including a drawing, cartoon, sculpture, or painting, that--
      (1)
      (A) depicts a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct; and
      (B) is obscene; or
      (2)
      (A) depicts an image that is, or appears to be, of a minor engaging in graphic bestiality, sadistic or masochistic abuse, or sexual intercourse, including genital-genital, oral-genital, anal-genital, or oral-anal, whether between persons of the same or opposite sex; and
      (B) lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value;

      ...

      (c) Nonrequired Element of Offense.-- It is not a required element of any offense under this section that the minor depicted actually exist.

      source
      (emphasis mine)

    17. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at the CGI work that is done in movies. As computer-generated characters look and sound more like real actors, does what we can do to them change? No more violence, bestiality...

      What movie was that again?

    18. Re:What's the big deal? by j00r0m4nc3r · · Score: 1

      I think they're afraid it encourages and validates these peoples' fucked-up ideas and eventually the will start thinking, "Gee these cartoons are boring... I think it's time I tried the real thing!"

    19. Re:What's the big deal? by bigpat · · Score: 1

      In the case of other crimes, the depiction is entirely separate from the depicted. Reading about a bank robber does not make you a thief.

      Pornography is a little different, however, in that it exists as the interaction between the subject and the material. The whole point of pornography is to not just be a depiction of some sexually-arousing act, but to actually arouse.


      You have never heard of people being aroused by violence? Are not violent video games interactive and designed to cause adrenaline rush from the prospect of hunting down your opponent or the threat of being killed yourself. I am sure that some killers will be turned on by watching violence and that some pedophiles will likewise be aroused by watching depictions of despicable sexual acts. I think it is a valid fear. But it is also a valid fear that violent non-sexual predators will be engaged in violent images and simulations in a way that I am not comfortable with.

      But we have to draw the line somewhere. And we should draw that line at actual physical violence or some real attempt at it. Punishment of thought crimes are not healthy for a society. Everyone offends and everyone can be offended. If we set the bar too low for defining what are actual crimes to be punished, then we will no longer live in a society of laws, but rather we will live in a society of discretionary authority.

    20. Re:What's the big deal? by commodoresloat · · Score: 4, Informative

      But the U.S. Supreme Court has struck down such provisions as unconstitutional; see Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition (here's an article about the decision). I'm fairly sure the provisions you highlighted would fall under this decision and thus could not be enforced.

    21. Re:What's the big deal? by ray-auch · · Score: 0

      Shrek for one, aside form Ogres & Princesses, you've got clear inter-species (even more confused since the animals are voiced by humans) bestial abuse:
      blockquote>
      Donkey: [desperately talking] I don't want to rush into a... physical relationship... I'm not that emotionally ready for a... uh... commitment of this... uh... magnitude! Really, that's the word I'm looking for, magnitude... Huh! Hey, that is unwanted physical contact! Hey! What're you doing? Okay, okay, okay... let's just back up a little and take this one step at a time... I mean, we should really get to know each other first, you know, as friends or maybe even as pen pals, you know, coz I'm on the road a lot, but I just love to get a card... Hey, hey, hey, don't do that, that's my *tail*, that's my personal tail, you're gonna tear it off! I don't give permission to... Hey, what're you gonna do next? Oh, no, no, no, no... no!

      This is a harmless wee donkey being abused by a bloody great dragon, I mean how abusive do you need to get ?

    22. Re:What's the big deal? by DrLang21 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually a Supreme Court ruling in 2004 against the COPA act of 1998 declared unconstitutional it's banning of virtual child porn due to the excessive coverage of items under it. The PROTECT Act of 2003 reinstated the illegality of virtual child porn. In April of 2006, the clause banning virtual child porn was also rulled unconstitutionaly broad.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    23. Re:What's the big deal? by Total_Wimp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Agreed. But for some reason these people aren't willing to admit that watching horror movies doesn't make you a mass murderer and playing GTA does not cause you to join the mob, therefore watching fake kiddie porn is unlikely to turn you into a rapist. Even those that are pretty hardcore against violence in the media very rarely say it will cause adults to do horrible things.

      But even in pornography, based on my anecdotal evidence, the incidence of real life participation in threesomes among my porn-watching friends is quite rare, for the most part their wives wont let them go near the nether regions, and people of my advanced years don't have a snowball's chance in hell of having sex with a college-aged woman. Nor do we look for it, because we know our wives will leave us. In other words, it may be all good and fine to suggest that sick and twisted fantasies will lead to sick and twisted behavior, but there's very little evidence that this will actually happen.

      TW

    24. Re:What's the big deal? by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

      I also forgot to mention the overturning of the CPPA of 1996 by the Supreme Court (as mentioned by someone else) in 2002 for similar reasons. So the legality of virtual child porn changes on a yearly basis right now.

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    25. Re:What's the big deal? by AndersOSU · · Score: 3, Informative

      My reading of the CNN article is that it was struck down because it failed to account for the SLAPS test (standard since Miller v. California.) It seems that the law in the Cornell source I linked has that base covered. I don't know if there are some finer details that escaped me and so maybe you're right and it is unenforceable, but it seems to me that this section has been re-written since the 2002 decision.

      I'd be interested if anyone has any more details or a better understanding than I do.

    26. Re:What's the big deal? by Katmando911 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Wow you just drew a "Naked twelve year old girl!" on top of a "Naked prophet Muhammad!"...that's hilarious

    27. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      calling Thought Police.This man is commiting a thoughtcrime.

    28. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Ironic, isn't it. Since by all accounts, the Prophet was rather fond of 12 year old girls. Even married one or two.

    29. Re:What's the big deal? by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

      "for some reason these people aren't willing to admit that watching horror movies doesn't make you a mass murderer and playing GTA does not cause you to join the mob"

      They arn't?

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    30. Re:What's the big deal? by Total_Wimp · · Score: 1

      Ok, you got me. All these people are crazy. If I want to live in their world, I guess I'm gonna have to get used to "My Little Ponies" and "The All Rainbow Channel".

      But the truth will eventually come out. I'm sure that will lead to a massive suicide rate, thus proving them wrong. I regret that I have but one life to give for sex and violence in the media.

      TW

    31. Re:What's the big deal? by SamSim · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That line isn't nearly blurred enough yet. How do you accurately determine the age of an individual who doesn't exist except as a virtual construct or a drawing? What if the character's purportedly sixteen but looks like she's fifteen? What if she's thirteen but looks like she's seventeen? What if it's a 30-year-old woman's mind transplanted into a twelve-year-old cloned body? What if it's a shape shifter? What if it's an adult character drawn in chibi style? What if she's drawn from the back and her age is completely unclear? What if it's so dark in the drawing you can't tell what's going on? What if there are just haphazard lines on the page and you can't tell if it's even a person?

      What happens when you realise that all you are actually looking at is marks on a piece of paper or patterns of light on a screen, and nobody was actually hurt to create them?

    32. Re:What's the big deal? by jasen666 · · Score: 1

      Have you (everyone) seen pictures of people dressed up at halloween, where they used a doll or dummy to portray what looked to be a child attached to their groin? I've probably seen at least 3 this year, at least one of which was a guy dressed as a priest.

      According to this law, it's considered child porn to take a picture of them, or to send a picture of them to someone.
      I wonder if they could stretch the law and attempt to apply it to the person who made the costume?
      Could you imagine being arrested for child porn just because you wore a stupid costume?

    33. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The last time I checked, all of those scenarios you listed did not involve sexual activity. That is what is being discussed.

    34. Re:What's the big deal? by heson · · Score: 1

      Relax, that law is only intended to frame dissidents. (and your suggestions for new laws will come later, when needed)

    35. Re:What's the big deal? by bendodge · · Score: 0

      Well, good for the UK. Pornography wastes huge globs of time and ruins many marriages. It has no advantages to society whatsoever.

      As a side note, I didn't know computers generated any kind of pornography! I thought humans did that.

      --
      The government can't save you.
    36. Re:What's the big deal? by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Banning something hardly ever lowers the market for it...Witness illegal drugs. So there is still exploitive child porn being made, because there are still people who are willing to pay for it.

      Putting out a non-exploitive alternative may make the exploitive stuff less profitable, and thus lower the amount of it being made.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    37. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when the cops bust a jewel thief, they find a large trove of treasure.

      they don't blame diamond rings for the crime.

    38. Re:What's the big deal? by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      you can't legislate what goes on in the mind of the creator of such work (yet)

      Rest assured, the Blair government will trya as had as they can to find a way to do exactly that. At this very moment, Gordon Brown is planning a tax on thinking, regardless of the fact that he has yet to find a way to implement it.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    39. Re:What's the big deal? by skarphace · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Well, good for the UK. Pornography wastes huge globs of time and ruins many marriages.
      How does it waste time? Okay, if someone is excessive about it, I can understand that. But I still think you're overgeneralizing. As with marriages, that's up to interpretation. I for one would require a wife to look at some form of porn daily. heh
      It has no advantages to society whatsoever.
      I totally disagree. Here's some advantages I can pull out of my ass...
      1. Provides an escape for people with unusual fetishes that can not participate in them in reality
      2. Provides a nice 'release' for those of us without a female. Much easier to choke the chicken with a little mental 'lube'.
      3. It's good entertainment
      Most of this can be excused as opinion, but, I do think it has some value to society(including myself).
      --
      Bullish Machine Tzar
    40. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question is always, "By allowing this stuff to exist are we providing an outlet for an antisocial impulse, or are we feeding an antisocial desire?"

      Is there supposed to be a difference between the two? An outlet does feed. Are you suggesting that an existing desire can be starved out? That flies in the face of conventional beliefs over sexual recidivism.

      The question should be whether it will create or inflate an existing desire beyond the outlet's ability to sate more than it will sate any desires to act out the impulses on a real victim.

      Just take it as read that some may get pushed over the line and others may get pushed back. The goal should be to have more pushed back than over.

      Our zero-tolerance society though wants to out all the witches^H^H^H^H^H^H^H pedophiles, so you get policies that uniformly push non-offenders into offending so that they can be caught and punished or driven to suicide (and use the resulting increase in victims to further drive the policy), and then labeled as sexual deviants for the rest of their lives.

      There will always be offenders; policy should seek to minimize offenses. Creating more offenses inflates the number of offenses and offenders and victims.

      We are approaching the day when a child discovering masturbation on his or her own will get registered as a child (self-)molester for the rest of his or her life.

      (And who said they just wanted to ban animated simulations?)

    41. Re:What's the big deal? by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      Banning something hardly ever lowers the market for it...Witness illegal drugs.

      And witness kids being arrested for possessing drug-like substances, such as a plastic bag of powdered sugar brought to school for a Home Economics cooking class.

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    42. Re:What's the big deal? by c0y · · Score: 1

      It is not a required element of any offense under this section that the minor depicted actually exist.

      This is meaningless doublespeak that won't last. A minor is a "person under the age of eighteen years". How does a prosecutor prove that a cartoon or CGI image is under 18? It is not a person - since it does not exist it cannot have an age to be measured against a statutory definition.

      If the person depicted doesn't exist no crime has been committed.

      The movie Quills is relevant here....

    43. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think if you read what he wrote in context to the article and tons of discussion going on on the same topic I think you should be smart enough to apply the situations he listed to what everyone in here has been talking about the entire time all the way down the bottom of this page.

    44. Re:What's the big deal? by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

      Actually, the ruling was pretty clear that the reason for child porn laws is to protect the children that are used as models. Read Kennedy's majority opinion, which specifically cites as the reason for the child porn laws "the State's interest in protecting the children exploited by the production process." There's an intrinsic relation between real child porn and the exploitation of children. There is no such relation with "virtual" child porn. Such statutes would effectively criminalize themes that have been a part of popular culture for centuries.

    45. Re:What's the big deal? by pseudorand · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why why aren't all the sites that try to make girls who are supposidly just 18 as if they were younger illegal. Even if she really is 18, wouldn't that fit the description of "appears to be, of a mintor engaging in...".

    46. Re:What's the big deal? by theStorminMormon · · Score: 1

      A) Horror films invoke fear, and many depictions of murder are designed to give the viewer a viceral charge, espcecially of revenge. Clearly fictional works of violence work very hard to arouse the emotions of the viewer.

      You missed the point. Horror films arouse feelings of fear. They depict murder, rape, torture, but the point is not to engender the feeling of torturing someone else, is it? You don't watch Saw III to experience the feeling of killing people. At least I certainly hope you don't. So yes a feeling is illicited by horror, but not the feeling we want to discourage. The point of a depiction of murder is not to make us feel like we're murdering people. The point of porn, on the other hand, is to make us aroused in sympathy with the actions portrayed on screen.

      B) So what if someone gets aroused by a cartoon depiction of kiddie porn? "No child was harmed in the creation of this film." I abosolutly have no tolerance or empathy with child pornographers. I loathe them as the lowest form of existance. But that's because they hurt kids. If no kids are harmed, I don't really care how you get your jollies.

      There are two arguments against kiddie porn. The first is that it's directly abusive of children. Clearly this applies only to real child porn. The second is that it leads to deviant behavior. If this idea has scientific merit, than it doesn't really matter if the images are from real people or not, does it?

      -stormin

      --
      The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
    47. Re:What's the big deal? by theStorminMormon · · Score: 1

      Oh come on. The point of a horror novel is to scare you. The point of a murder drama is to empathize with the victim. The point of trash-mafia books it to make you feel like you are in the gangster culture-- to feel what it's like to be a thug.

      Your first example (horror) is flat-out not what you want to say. It's an example of what I'm saying. That when we watch most depictions of evil violence the intent is for us to empathize with the victim. This makes watching horror the opposite of watching porn, not the same thing! Regarding "what it's like to be a thug", I have to wonder if you seriously believe that. There's a difference between "playing the bad guy", which usually doesn't involve any actual evil intent, and actually wanting to get the real feeling of smashing another human beings face in. I don't believe that you really think trash-mafia books are ways for people to get a "hit" of sadism or socio-pathic criminal behavior.

      Yes books always draw you in. But there's a difference between empathizing with a character and actually acting out the same impulses of the character. The point of porn - and this is biologically obvious - is to stimulate erotic behavior as if we were involved. When this involves legal sexual behavior - no matter how weird - then fine. But when it involves mimicry of child-molestation than I have a serious issue.

      The simple point is that, as I believe Aristotle observed, character emerges from actions, and actions emerge from thoughts. When you play Halo I don't think you actually have thoughts of murder and combat. When you play GTA I think you probably do, but I don't think it's clear-cut enough to warrant a ban. I would just rather not play the game myself. But when it gets to the point where people are not only observing child molestation, but actually acting it out in their minds, then I say we've got a serious problem even if the porn was created without using actual children.

      On a final thought - if child porn is not a type of communication not covered by free speech, then it's hard to imagine any type of communication not covered by free speech.

      -stormin

      --
      The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
    48. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The real question I have is why at all would anyone want to see these things in reality or even in a fantasy world?

      Those who rely on freedom of artistic expression and freedom of speech, will say that they should be allowed to create such things.

      I do not agree, because while I believe in the Freedom of Speech and the Artistic expression I also hold those standards to
      "Educational" purposes. And since everything we do and say and create is an expression of some sort, we all know it has an effect on the development of all people exposed to it. And since we all know that it is truly wrong in "Reality" to let such things happen to children period, then why would anyone in their right mind believe for one moment, that Fantasy, or Art, hold MORE relevance over a truly unjust and evil act when preformed in reality? Art should not be allowed to glorify and evil or harmful event in anyones life.

      I can only see it being used at all in an artistic way, when such an offensive act occurs in the fantasy portrayal there must be an end result to the person/s who have committed such a wrongful act. "Action/Reaction" These person/s get caught and are brought to justice for the harm that they did on the child in the art piece. Now this would clearly benefit as an educational expression instead of blindly leading the way for any creation of art to not be held accountable for its "depictions and lessons". As with people, whom all are judged based on their actions, their creation is done with action, so therefore their creation will be judged.

      And my opinion of judgment is of an educational purpose. If you fail to teach or relay a positive outcome from a negative action, then you are only supporting the wrong this in fantasy. And we all know that dreams are fantasies and while not everyones dreams come, we all do try to make them a reality, this fantasy has been see already in reality and there should be no need to revisit it for any reason except to learn that it is a wrong and evil thing to do to begin with.

      If you think this is untrue then YOU can be the victim in your fantasy or someone else's fantasy world or maybe a victim in reality and then you may have a different perspective on these matter of "freedom".

      There is a reason and logic that must need to be held at all times, and this is most certainly one of those times.
      We are protecting our children and teaching each other the rights and wrongs in life.
      One never stops learning till they day they die.
      So the adults in my opinion better learn this. It is a very simple lesson.

      When art that depicts negatives without positive outcome is valued or defended in such a way that it becomes more important than
      the true knowledge of right or wrong in "reality", then it most certainly is an abuse of freedom and knowledge.

      Child Porn or harm in any way is absolutely unacceptable, even in the artistic world.

      Tim M

    49. Re:What's the big deal? by mdwh2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      What if the character's purportedly sixteen but looks like she's fifteen? What if she's thirteen but looks like she's seventeen?

      Not that it affects your point, which I agree with, but note that although the age of consent in the UK is 16, in 2003 the age for the purposes of child porn was raised to 18.

      So you can have sex with a 16 year old, but soon, draw a cartoon of a sexy naked 17 year old, and it's prison for you...

    50. Re:What's the big deal? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Reading about a bank robber does not make you a thief.

      And masturbating over a person's image without the person's consent does not make you a rapist.

      I take your point that pornography has this difference, but it's not clear to me that this difference is relevant when considering what should be a criminal sex offence.

    51. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not a required element of any offense under this section that the minor depicted actually exist.

      This is meaningless doublespeak that won't last. A minor is a "person under the age of eighteen years". How does a prosecutor prove that a cartoon or CGI image is under 18? It is not a person - since it does not exist it cannot have an age to be measured against a statutory definition.

      If the person depicted doesn't exist no crime has been committed.

      The movie Quills is relevant here....
      Just remember this isn't America, its the communist regime of Tony Blair... Mind you I read the Daily Mail, the embodiment of completely inaccurate FUD i.e. British press, but still, don't believe they can't find a way of making this stick.
    52. Re:What's the big deal? by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Wow this guy is a quick one... lol

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    53. Re:What's the big deal? by shmlco · · Score: 1

      Gordon Brown is planning a tax on thinking, regardless of the fact that he has yet to find a way to implement it.

      Anyone alive has the ability to think, ergo, everyone alive is taxable.

      Now, let's talk about that cemetery full of dead people...

      --
      Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
    54. Re:What's the big deal? by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      The AI argument is a strawman in this case. Assuming we created AI, we'd have to evolve a whole set of laws around their creation and treatment, so hypothesizing that we could make AI's do snuff child porn, so digital kiddie porn is bad, is a bit of a stretch.

      As it stands, we already have out movie characters doing awful stuff to other movie characters. I mean "Saw" 1,2,& 3...Touristas? I've seen movies that I heartily wish I could unsee where there was no CGI to speak of...and no porn either.

      I think there really is no point in defining an arbitrary limit...How would you do it? What would be the criteria? It's ridiculously difficult to define things like obscenity already...Just put a rating on it, so people know what they're getting into, and call it a day.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    55. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Screw that, will I be able to still draw my stick man and woman having sex, or will they have to be drawn to scale now (for fear of being portrayed as little kids)?!

    56. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'd be interested if anyone has any more details or a better understanding than I do

      I don't recall the details, but I believe that one registered offender in Californis got his parole violated by having child porn THAT HE HIMSELF HAD DRAWN when his PO showed up for a surprise visit. If that ain't thoughtcrime, there isn't any.

    57. Re:What's the big deal? by foreverdisillusioned · · Score: 1

      On the contrary, I've spent some wonderful, high-quality time watching porn together with my girlfriend (probably wife, in a couple years.) Usually, it's her idea. I find it to be a far more worthwhile way to spend a couple hours than, say, watching the latest insipid crap that Hollywood has cranked out.

    58. Re:What's the big deal? by Vicegrip · · Score: 1

      I don't believe that you really think trash-mafia books are ways for people to get a "hit" of sadism or socio-pathic criminal behavior.

      And my point is I don't trust the government to safely and consistently make the distinction you have arrived at in any case whatsoever. I respectfully disagree you with respect to Aristotle: actions emerge from thoughts, but this is not a grounds for concluding that a specific thought must lead to a specific action.

      The human mind is what it is and we barely understand ourselves; you would trust others to police yours?

      --
      Do not spread "09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0" over the internet, thank you.
    59. Re:What's the big deal? by Total_Wimp · · Score: 1

      You missed the point. Horror films arouse feelings of fear. They depict murder, rape, torture, but the point is not to engender the feeling of torturing someone else, is it? You don't watch Saw III to experience the feeling of killing people. At least I certainly hope you don't. So yes a feeling is illicited by horror, but not the feeling we want to discourage. The point of a depiction of murder is not to make us feel like we're murdering people. The point of porn, on the other hand, is to make us aroused in sympathy with the actions portrayed on screen

      You take on the role of the victim in a horror film until the very end, then you take on the role of the killer. You may ask, "so what? Neither role is evil." This may be true, but the thrill you get from killing the bad guy is very real. You experience the joy of the bad guy's death.

      In other movies, like Porky's, you get the thrill of being the voyeur. You get to watch naked teenage girls shower without their permission.

      Finally, in movies like "Natural Born Killers," you absolutely become the predator. You are very happy to kill, and the movie does this quite purposefully.

      As a guy pointed out earlier in the thread, there are those who would want to ban even these. They say they encourage deviant behavior, much like you suggest kiddie porn might. I won't claim that this is impossible. Some people are more prone to acting on suggestion than others. Why take a chance that someone will try to kill, rape, spy, or do other activities depicted in these films?

      But this is very dangerous. The position is flat-out censorship of ideas. It's making the depiction of thought illegal, even if that depiction does no harm. To make expression of thought illegal, especially if it's on the flimsy chance that one in a million will want to act on those thoughts is criminal. As a crime perpetrated on the whole of society, it's extremely grave. It should not be tolerated.

      Child porn is disgusting, and even more disgusting the younger the victim. Rape of anyone is horrible. But if you get a sexual arousal out of the _thought_ of these things, I feel I cannot judge you. You are entitled to your thoughts, no matter how horrible they are. Ever have a bad breakup where you fantasized about killing the person? Ever pictured an especially bad coworker or boss had a serious accident, or that you got to hurt them yourself? Have you ever seen a high-school girl and thought, "she is smokin' hot!" Have you ever considered going to jail for expressing any of these thoughts? Kiddie porn is horrible, but I will not be party to imprisoning those that merely depict their feelings or thoughts of it. As long as no one is harmed in order to make it, there must be no limitations on the expressions of our ideas.

      TW

    60. Re:What's the big deal? by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      So you can have sex with a 16 year old, but soon, draw a cartoon of a sexy naked 17 year old, and it's prison for you.
      What about Sun Page 3 girls? Although I'm not a regular subscriber and haven't been following this debate closely, I'm sure they only have to be over 16 don't they?
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    61. Re:What's the big deal? by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      But even in pornography, based on my anecdotal evidence, the incidence of real life participation in threesomes among my porn-watching friends is quite rare, for the most part their wives wont let them go near the nether regions, and people of my advanced years don't have a snowball's chance in hell of having sex with a college-aged woman. Nor do we look for it, because we know our wives will leave us. In other words, it may be all good and fine to suggest that sick and twisted fantasies will lead to sick and twisted behavior, but there's very little evidence that this will actually happen.
      Unfortunately for your argument, it's not the normal majority that you have to worry about, it's the small percentage who do act out their fantasies (sick or othersise).

      If a couple of hundred people end up having threesomes, anal sex, or whatever, that's up to them and no harm done. But if a couple of hundred people end up raping children, that's a different story altogether.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    62. Re:What's the big deal? by Total_Wimp · · Score: 1

      So why not just ban all media that can lead to sympathies with the subject matter when the subject matter is a felony? Why chose child pornography over, say, murder? Hate to say it, and I know I'll never be in such a situation, but if I had to make a choice with my kid, I know I'd prefer she not die at he hands of someone all jacked up from playing Grand Theft Auto.

      TW

    63. Re:What's the big deal? by clarkcox3 · · Score: 1
      Well, good for the UK. Pornography wastes huge globs of time and ruins many marriages

      As to wasting time, all forms of entertainment are wastes of time in exactly the same manner as pornography. Additionally, if porn ruins your marriage, then, in all honesty, your marriage was already in trouble to begin with.
      --
      There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
    64. Re:What's the big deal? by theStorminMormon · · Score: 1

      This may be true, but the thrill you get from killing the bad guy is very real. You experience the joy of the bad guy's death.

      Yeah, but killing bad guys isn't evil. That's the point. There's nothing wrong with identifying with the victim, or with empathizing with the hero who kills the bad guy. There's not a problem with empathizing with bad characters either. But when you identify with a child molester, I think there are moral ramifications and psychological ones.

      It's not about suggestion. It's not even just role-playing. Otherwise being the Sith in star wars would be immoral (and I don't think it is). The feelings of killing jedi or prostitutes are not actual feelings of committing murder. The feelings of watching porn stimulate the actual biological response of sexual stimulation. That makes it quantifiably different than the other things you mention.

      But if you get a sexual arousal out of the _thought_ of these things, I feel I cannot judge you. You are entitled to your thoughts, no matter how horrible they are. Ever have a bad breakup where you fantasized about killing the person? Ever pictured an especially bad coworker or boss had a serious accident, or that you got to hurt them yourself?

      First of all, know. I've never fantasized about killing someone even after my worst break up, and I've never pictures a bad coworker or boss in a serious accident. I've *joked* about such things, but fantasizing about it would strike me as seriously disturbed. But *not* illegal! I wold never try to ban what someone thinks. We're talking about more than thinking, however. There's no proposed law against fantasizing about raping children (and I would campaing against one if there were). There's a proposed law against turning those thoughts into videos/pictures and distributing them. That's more akin to making a serious depiction of killing someone after you break up and spreading it around. Even *that* is not necessarily illegal, however. Porn is different for the reasons stated above.

      Kiddie porn is horrible, but I will not be party to imprisoning those that merely depict their feelings or thoughts of it. As long as no one is harmed in order to make it, there must be no limitations on the expressions of our ideas.

      I'm not so sure no one is harmed...

      -stormin

      --
      The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
    65. Re:What's the big deal? by theStorminMormon · · Score: 1

      I respectfully disagree you with respect to Aristotle: actions emerge from thoughts, but this is not a grounds for concluding that a specific thought must lead to a specific action.

      It's not deterministic, it's stochastic. Watching child porn does not guarantee you will rape a child, or even try to. But it does make that more likely (in my opinion and according to my own reading of Aristotle).

      The human mind is what it is and we barely understand ourselves; you would trust others to police yours?

      This is not policing of the mind! I don't care what people think about. I'll fight any law that tries to legislate thoughts. No matter what those thoughts are. We're talking about making and distributing child porn, not just thinking about it. It's like the difference between fantasizing about how to blow up the Statue of Liberty and actually developing a specific plan that would work and publishing it on the Net. Te act is bad either way, but we can only legislate the latter and not the former.

      -stormin

      --
      The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
    66. Re:What's the big deal? by Quietly_Confident · · Score: 1

      I wonder how you can accurately tell the age of a cartoon character in order to establish if they are a minor... The Simpsons debuted on December 17, 1989 (Happy 17th Birthday tomorrow Lisa Simpson ;0)

      --
      http://www.doreymedia.com - Accessible Web Design in Surrey UK
    67. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      This points out the blurring of the line between fantasy and imagination, and reality and causality.

      I must thank you for your very succinct description of the Bush administration.

    68. Re:What's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because guys of all ages want to fuck 16 year old girls.
      16 is like a magic number.. when you were 12 you wanted to bang your 16yr old baby sitter. When you were 16 you may have been boning your 16yr old girlfriend. 20, 25 and 30yr old men all want to bang 16yr old hotties and they probably won't but they'll definitely watch porn and think about it. "barely 18" is about the best we can get thanks to all the righteous hypocrites that would deny that they too want to fuck 16yr old girls in order to damn those of us who don't deny it to hell.

  2. Oh noes! by PsyQo · · Score: 1, Redundant

    What's next? Banning computer generated or drawn beastiality?
    That would mean the tentacles have to go too!

    1. Re:Oh noes! by omeg · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That /is/ next. See, they will never be able to accurately define which drawn cartoons can be seen as child porn and which can't. That, in turn, will allow them to effectively ban a much wider range of them; in the end, all cartoon pornography is vulnerable.

      I don't particularly care for cartoon pornography, especially when it depicts children, but I really wonder if it is the right way to ban it. Does anyone know of studies that prove this kind of stuff to be benevolent or malevolent? I don't ever recall hearing facts being stated when someone argues for this kind of stuff to be banned.

    2. Re:Oh noes! by spyrochaete · · Score: 1

      Let's just ban the polygon and we won't have to worry about computer generated smut ever again.

    3. Re:Oh noes! by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Reminds me of a post once where someone asked why China's Ministry of Truth was so effective at censorship.

      By not saying "You're prohibited from discussing topics X, Y, and Z" and instead just hauling people off to prison when they decide the line has been crossed, people censor themselves far more effectively.

    4. Re:Oh noes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Diaper fetichists are crapping themselves already.

      Oh and btw, John Reid's got a babyface so let's just wait for the inevitable ironic twist to the story.

    5. Re:Oh noes! by leupi · · Score: 1

      How would anyone know if the 'cartoon' is over or under 18? Seems to me that that would open up the proverbial can of worms...

    6. Re:Oh noes! by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      No, it wouldn't.

      They just arrest anyone they think they can pin the crime on and the results filter down based strictly on how much cash you have for a decent attorney.

      Great way to put all the poor people in jail.

      Solves a lot of social problems doing that you know.

      And by jail I mean "penal colony"

      and by "social problems" i mean "moral complications"

      and by people I mean "automated robots". :-)

      Stewed

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    7. Re:Oh noes! by pipatron · · Score: 1

      Hell yeah! I hate those lame 3D games anyway. *goes back to his amiga*

      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
    8. Re:Oh noes! by spyrochaete · · Score: 1

      Shhhhh don't suggest more platforms for scrutiny. I don't need the feds outlawing Leisure Suit Larry.

    9. Re:Oh noes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like the sound of this. No loopholes. And it just goes to show people can police themselves when they feel it matters. /away China

    10. Re:Oh noes! by smchris · · Score: 1


      Historically, one of the big voices in this was Andrea Dworkin. Minneapolis brought her into town many years ago to try to pass a thought crime law illegalizing anything that a given viewer might find pornographically stimulating. The idea was given a rather lengthy hearing.

      It is ridiculous of course. There is probably at least one person on the planet who is driven to violent, uncontrollable lust by Hello Kitty!

    11. Re:Oh noes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have seen the Hello Kitty porn, and it is terrifying. Rule #34.

  3. Its getting quite difficult to tell the difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Its getting harder and harder to tell the difference between real and computer generated images, so I think this is a good thing.

  4. I imagine it won't be too long before.... by Whatsisname · · Score: 1

    I imagine it won't be too long before the petitions are flooded with "DESU DESU DESU"

    1. Re:I imagine it won't be too long before.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nobody ruins petitions like Gaston.

    2. Re:I imagine it won't be too long before.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Petition's closed.

    3. Re:I imagine it won't be too long before.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are forgetting rules 1 & 2: #1 You do not talk about the /b/ #2 You do not talk about the /b/

    4. Re:I imagine it won't be too long before.... by Metostopholes · · Score: 1

      If you signed it as "Candle Jack", would the petitio

      --
      "With rare exceptions people cannot use that picture to masturbate, therefore it is not the internet."
    5. Re:I imagine it won't be too long before.... by Frozen+Void · · Score: 1

      Talking about /b/ lowers IQ by 20% each minute.
      And this is only a rough estimate

    6. Re:I imagine it won't be too long before.... by the_greywolf · · Score: 1

      I submit that the estimate is 95% accurate.

      /d/, however, has a slightly greater impact on IQ.

      --
      grey wolf
      LET FORTRAN DIE!
    7. Re:I imagine it won't be too long before.... by cluthu · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. I signed it Candle Jack and nothing bad happ

  5. Mixed Blessing by Orclover · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sounds like a long overdue idea at the forefront but where does the line get drawn? Do they stop at the internet "fantasy" sites that have started popping up or will they suddenly include Anime? What about some Mod for The Sims that some kid cooks up that makes all the characters naked? Would hate to think some poor bastard out there gets 10 years in prison for mixing together the perfect nudist colony on his sims block. Any chance they will just limit this to the internet pr0n sites that have cropped up?

    --
    I am Jack's complete lack of surprise. -Fight Club
    1. Re:Mixed Blessing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Would plain nudity qualify then? If so, does this qualify:

      (_|_) - butt of a minor

      Either way, I sympathize with the intent but I doubt it will do any good in practical terms.

    2. Re:Mixed Blessing by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      or will they suddenly include Anime?

      At least Pretty Sammy/Magical Project S is safe, after all, in the original story, Sasami is 700 years old!

      Now if only there was such an excuse for Nanoha...

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    3. Re:Mixed Blessing by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      > Sounds like a long overdue idea at the forefront

      sounds like one, but it isn't

      Keep the fuck out of my drawing book, mother fuckers.

      There's a world of difference between fucking a baby and some pixels.

      Reid is a fucking Nazi. I hope he dies soon.

      Did I make the depth of my feeling plain enough ?

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
    4. Re:Mixed Blessing by mikerich · · Score: 1
      Reid is a fucking Nazi. I hope he dies soon.

      Actually he isn't.

      He did use to be a Marxist and he did accept hospitality from Serbian war criminal Radovan Karadic whilst Sarajevan civilians were being shelled in the streets - but he's not a Nazi.

      Just one question - is he worse than Blunkett?

    5. Re:Mixed Blessing by D-Cypell · · Score: 1

      Just one question - is he worse than Blunkett?

      Yes, but not by much.

    6. Re:Mixed Blessing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is NO excuse for Nanoha.

      (Arf, on the other hand...)

    7. Re:Mixed Blessing by Bertie · · Score: 1

      Every time you think the new Home Secretary can't possibly be any more of a knee-jerk reactionary populist short-termist idiot than the last one, they manage to surprise you.

    8. Re:Mixed Blessing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple nudity is (legally) not considered pornographic.

    9. Re:Mixed Blessing by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      (_|_) - butt of a minor
      Are you from the US by any chance?
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    10. Re:Mixed Blessing by DrSkwid · · Score: 1

      They're starting to make Michael Howard look sane !

      --
      There are places where the networks are not touching,and there are places where they are-Boeing's Lori Gunter
  6. I'll be the flamebait by balsy2001 · · Score: 1

    I hate to tell people what they can and can't create on their computer, but if there were a situation that warranted it this might be it. I guess the real question is whether this starts down the slippery slope.

    --
    GENERATION 27: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    1. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I hate to tell people what they can and can't create on their computer, but if there were a situation that warranted it this might be it. I guess the real question is whether this starts down the slippery slope.

      As soon as start restricting anything people do *without hurting other people* on a moral basis, you're already slipping on the slope. I understand banning real child porn because children are hurt making it, and I can understand banning photoshopping greenbacks because the fiduciary system, and society in general is hurt, but whatever people do that hurts no-one should be nobody's business to regulate or ban, including peddling or collecting Nazi-ware, which is banned in Europe for some stupid reason I might add.

      Any state trying to prevent you from making or watching Hentai smells of police state. Plain and simple. And given the UK's recent track record in this domain, I can't say I'm surprised.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    2. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Mr2cents · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I disagree. I thought that the reason those photo's are forbidden was becauce you'd need to abuse children to make such photo's. If you just draw something on your computer, you're not harming anyone. Sure it's sick, but is that a crime?

      --
      "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
    3. Re:I'll be the flamebait by balsy2001 · · Score: 1

      Very good comment, I agree but for some reason it just doesn't feel quite right. But alas, feeling is not a good reason to make a law.

      --
      GENERATION 27: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    4. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I hate to tell people what they can and can't create on their computer


      Obviously you don't if you go on to agree with it, so don't go around making false claims to make yourself look better.

      As with any other tool, I'd have no problem with society criminalizing certain acts that people commit with computers (or with swords and chainsaws). But I see no need to legislate morality on people over what is essentially drawings - whether it be on paper or on a screen. This is a breach of the first amendment if politicians on these shores were ever to embrace it. As for the real stuff, laws are in place.
    5. Re:I'll be the flamebait by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      I can understand banning photoshopping greenbacks because the fiduciary system, and society in general is hurt

      I can't. In fact, that sounds remarkably like the other side of this issue! It's not the photoshopping that's harmful; what's harmful is the act of trying to pass the result off as real money. Therefore, it's that act that should be (and is) illegal, not the photoshopping.

      In the same way, it's the real child porn that's harmful, not the animated kind, so only the former should be illegal.

      --

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

    6. Re:I'll be the flamebait by aadvancedGIR · · Score: 1

      Absolutelly, it would be like banning the sexylosers comics because one of the caracters is necrophiliac. RTFR 'extreme porn', eck, that's also in the plan.

    7. Re:I'll be the flamebait by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 1

      To some people (religious fundies of all colors), being sick is a crime.

    8. Re:I'll be the flamebait by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's hard to say, "Yea, people should be able to create animated child porn and collect Nazi memorabilia" because most people feel that that crosses an ethical line. No "decent" person should want that stuff, so who are we hurting when we ban it? Bunch of sickos? Who cares?

      But that's a bad precident to set, where the majority arbitrarily decides what is and is not acceptable for society. As long as no one is hurt/exploited/etc, society should be able to tolerate oddball fringes.

      The Nazi stuff is a good example. Europe is working hard to remove any hint that Nazism ever existed, but is that good for society? I've got a copy of the Krampf on my bookshelf at home...It's an excellent reminder of how some pointed hate rhetoric tailored for the masses can screw up the whole goddamn world. It's especially nice because there is a lot of that rhetoric still in play in the world, and it's good to be able to put it in it's proper category.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    9. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It's not the photoshopping that's harmful; what's harmful is the act of trying to pass the result off as real money. Therefore, it's that act that should be (and is) illegal, not the photoshopping.


      Be that as it may, have you tried scanning any bank notes recently? Any version of Photoshop since CS has had code to detect the notes from major currencies ($, pound, euro etc.) and won't let you edit it. Which is annoying if you're trying to produce teaching materials for covering shopping with non-english speakers.
    10. Re:I'll be the flamebait by mikerich · · Score: 1
      I hate to tell people what they can and can't create on their computer, but if there were a situation that warranted it this might be it. I guess the real question is whether this starts down the slippery slope.

      You might hate telling people what to do, but the corrupt authoritarian technocratic millionaires who run New Labour thrive on telling people what they can't do, what they must do, what they must pay to do it, where they can do it and where they can't, what they can eat, drink or smoke when doing it (and what they cannot), when, where and how long they can protest about not being allowed to do it - sorry not that one - what they can say to do it and what they must report to the authorities if they see someone else doing it.

      There is no aspect of life too small for New Labour to feel that they shouldn't exert total control; they may not understand it - hell they usually don't - but they are terrified of not controlling people (apart from Rupert Murdoch who controls them). To back it up - more than 3,000 new criminal offences since 1997 - that's just about one new offence every day since they came to power.

      In fact their only saving grace is that they give me a good laugh when visiting the US and I hear how the Bush administration is the worst threat to freedom in history. After the American horror stories I take a deep drink and say 'Well you thought Dubya was bad, let me tell you about Tony...'

    11. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Hubbell · · Score: 0

      "I, as a responsible adult human being, will never concede the power to anyone to regulate my choice of what I put into my body, or where I go with my mind. From the skin inwards is my jurisdiction, is it not? I choose what may or may not cross that border. Here I am the Customs Agent. I am the Coast guard. I am the sole legal and spiritual government of this territory, and only the laws I choose to enact within myself are applicable." -Alexander Shulgin, PhD, Chemist and author, at the DPF Conference, November 1996

    12. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rememeber the other law the reid came up with

      How about changing the above to:

      "As soon as start restricting anything people do *without hurting other people without their informed consent* on a moral basis"

    13. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't use photoshop to scan the image and you won't have a problem. In an argument with someone over differences between new and old US $20 bills I was able to scan them at 1200dpi resolution with no problem at all using ACDsee and its built in photo editor - then I was able to open the image in Photoshop and play with it all I wanted - manipulated the image etc - it was annoying to have to do the extra step but it worked fine.

    14. Re:I'll be the flamebait by nasch · · Score: 1
      It's not the photoshopping that's harmful; what's harmful is the act of trying to pass the result off as real money. Therefore, it's that act that should be (and is) illegal, not the photoshopping.
      You're saying if the FBI (Secret Service?) finds a box full of counterfeit money in your basement, they should have to wait until you actually try to use it before they're allowed to do something about it? And you're serious about this?
    15. Re:I'll be the flamebait by MentalMooMan · · Score: 1

      You touch on a good point there:
      Sure, on the internet, you can argue either way for anything you like, and it won't affect your life. However, try to argue an unpopular point in RL, especially something as controversial as child porn, then the uneducated masses will shun you.

      In reality, this law will meet very little opposition, and anyone who does disagree with it, and tries to voice their opinions will be labeled a "paedophile sympathiser".

      A slippery slope indeed...

      --
      43rd Law of Computing:
      Anything that can go wr
      fortune: Segmentation violation -- Core Dumped
    16. Re:I'll be the flamebait by AlHunt · · Score: 1

      >$20 bills I was able to scan them at 1200dpi resolution with no problem at all using ACDsee and its built in photo editor

      Did it spend OK?

      --
      1 in 4 Maine children in struggle with hunger.
    17. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "As soon as start restricting anything people do *without hurting other people* on a moral basis, you're already slipping on the slope."

      like...eating peyote or smoking pot or having unmarried or gay sex...uh-huh

    18. Re:I'll be the flamebait by linders · · Score: 1

      peddling or collecting Nazi-ware, which is banned in Europe for some stupid reason I might add. let me fix it for you

      peddling or collecting Nazi-ware, which is banned in a few European countries for some stupid reason I might add.

      Not trying to be an ass, just gets old, that as soon as one European country does something, has some law, people think we all do
    19. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Kjella · · Score: 1

      The Nazi stuff is a good example. Europe is working hard to remove any hint that Nazism ever existed, but is that good for society?

      While Nazi memorabilitia in private hands is a debated issue, I think most of Europe would take great offense at the claim that we're trying to deny nazism. There's history classes and museums and mounments and memorial days and so on and so forth, and the memorabilia carries a great stigma with it. It is not those who wish to preserve history that buy it, it is those trying to revise history, glorifying Nazi Germany. While it does crash with some of my ideas on personal freedom. those laws are predominately used to present Nazis in their true context as racists, perpetrators of genocide and warmongerers, not to cover it up.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    20. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Taevin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I can't speak for mrchaotica, but I would say yes. If I want to make counterfeit money in my basement, it's really not the business of anyone else. Until I actually do, or attempt to do, something illegal with it, why should I be punished? As a hypothetical example, what if I had some sort of bizarre fetish involving paper bills? I should be punished for using a reasonable substitute rather than damaging real currency? A silly example, sure, but I hope it illustrates the larger problem. We simply cannot (or at least, should not) force intent on people, at least not without substantial corroborating evidence.

      It's just one of those slippery slope problems. It's just stupid and wrong to ban something just because you find it immoral or because it could be used for something illegal, especially if it still has a legal use.

      As a side note, yes, it is the Secret Service that deals with counterfeiting. In fact, that was the agency's original purpose and was under the Department of the Treasury before the lolwtf?!!-fest that is the DHS.

    21. Re:I'll be the flamebait by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      But being a racist and a warmonger is not illegal, nor should it be.

      Perpetrating genocide is.

      Glorifying genocide is not.

      Simple.

      Thought vs action. Speech vs movement.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    22. Re:I'll be the flamebait by nasch · · Score: 1
      If I want to make counterfeit money in my basement, it's really not the business of anyone else. Until I actually do, or attempt to do, something illegal with it, why should I be punished?
      You might want to rephrase that, since making counterfeit money is illegal, no matter what you do with it.

      It's just one of those slippery slope problems. It's just stupid and wrong to ban something just because you find it immoral or because it could be used for something illegal, especially if it still has a legal use.
      I don't agree. There must be a balance between the importance of any legitimate use for the thing and the state's interest in preventing counterfeiting. I think we can agree it's important to prevent counterfeiting, so any legitimate use would also have to be important to be permitted. IMO there is no legitimate use for counterfeit money accurate enough to pass off as real. If you want to do your money fetish thing, you should be allowed to make generally real-looking bills that have some obvious factor about them that makes them useless to try to pass off. Mickey Mouse instead of a dead president, 7 1/2 dollar bill, whatever.

      I'm wondering what you would think about another example. Should I be allowed to have military weapons as long as I haven't actually used them illegally? Anti-personnel mines, machine guns (not automatic rifles, machine guns), grenades, tanks, rocket launchers... I just collect them because I think they're neat. No problem?
    23. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Yinepuhotep · · Score: 1
      I'm wondering what you would think about another example. Should I be allowed to have military weapons as long as I haven't actually used them illegally? Anti-personnel mines, machine guns (not automatic rifles, machine guns), grenades, tanks, rocket launchers... I just collect them because I think they're neat. No problem?
      Absolutely no problem. If anything, you should be allowed to play with them BEFORE the military is. If it's not legitimate for private citizens to do it, then it's not legitimate for their proxy (AKA: government) to do it.
      --
      Gun control: The belief that a woman, raped and strangled with her panties, is morally superior to a dead rapist.
    24. Re:I'll be the flamebait by nasch · · Score: 1
      If it's not legitimate for private citizens to do it, then it's not legitimate for their proxy (AKA: government) to do it.
      Imprison people, for example. Levy taxes. Treat with foreign governments. Make laws. You sure about this?
    25. Re:I'll be the flamebait by g1zmo · · Score: 1
      But that's a bad precident to set, where the majority arbitrarily decides what is and is not acceptable for society.

      I'm not trying to frame this as an argument either for or against anything in particular, but I think that's exactly what a society is supposed to do. The bad precedents come about when small minorities decide what is or is not acceptable for everyone else.

      --
      I have found there are just two ways to go.
      It all comes down to livin' fast or dyin' slow.
      -REK, Jr.
    26. Re:I'll be the flamebait by mrchaotica · · Score: 1
      You're saying if the FBI (Secret Service?) finds a box full of counterfeit money in your basement, they should have to wait until you actually try to use it before they're allowed to do something about it? And you're serious about this?

      Yep. Who's to say I wasn't going to use it for an art project or something (like a 'dollar-mâché' bust of President Bush, for example)?

      --

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

    27. Re:I'll be the flamebait by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      You might want to rephrase that, since making counterfeit money is illegal, no matter what you do with it.

      Way to miss the point, buddy.

      Should I be allowed to have military weapons as long as I haven't actually used them illegally? Anti-personnel mines, machine guns (not automatic rifles, machine guns), grenades, tanks, rocket launchers... I just collect them because I think they're neat. No problem?

      Last I heard it was not illegal to self-manufacture any firearm (much like the minuscule hole in the DMCA which does allow you to manufacture your own tools for circumventing copy protection) except perhaps a potato gun in some states/municipalities.

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    28. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Greatmoose · · Score: 0

      FYI, you ARE allowed to own just about all of those items, provided you have paid the "tax" stamp, usually $200, and have secured the proper license, if needed.

      --
      Clearly I forgot to equip my +5 Codpiece of Karma.
    29. Re:I'll be the flamebait by nasch · · Score: 1
      Way to miss the point, buddy.
      How is that missing the point? If you meant "unethical" you should have said so. If you meant "hurting someone" you should have said so. You said "illegal". I'm not into guessing what people mean based on what they actually say, so I asked if you wanted to rephrase. And I still don't know if you do or not.

      Last I heard it was not illegal to self-manufacture any firearm (much like the minuscule hole in the DMCA which does allow you to manufacture your own tools for circumventing copy protection) except perhaps a potato gun in some states/municipalities.
      Really, I can make my own SAM launcher and missiles and that's OK? That doesn't seem right, but maybe so. And IIRC they closed that loophole so it's now illegal to even roll your own tools. I could be wrong on that. I haven't looked it up because I don't mind breaking the DMCA anyway. :-)
    30. Re:I'll be the flamebait by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1
      Way to miss the point, buddy.

      How is that missing the point?

      He's (summarizing mrchaotica (681592)) saying it shouldn't be illegal. Countering that it is illegal misses their point entirely!

      If you meant "unethical" you should have said so. If you meant "hurting someone" you should have said so. You said "illegal". I'm not into guessing what people mean based on what they actually say, so I asked if you wanted to rephrase. And I still don't know if you do or not.

      No, I said you missed the point. There's something else rather basic to this discussion that I think you've missed: I'm not Taevin (85092), and neither of us is mrchaotica (681592). I'm HTH NE1 (675604). (You are nasch (598556).)

      I think I'll just quietly step away from this conversation now. I don't feel comfortable communicating with people who can't tell one poster from another even when it's spelled out in front of them.
      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    31. Re:I'll be the flamebait by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      I guess the real question is whether this starts down the slippery slope.

      I think we're already on the slippery slope. Pseudo-photos of child porn were made illegal in 1994. My understanding of the difference is that that only covers things which appear to be a photo, so realistic images, photo manipulations etc. This new talk is about any depiction, including cartoons.

      Other signs of the slippery slope are the extreme porn law also mentioned in the summary, extending the idea of fictional child abuse to any simulated sexual activity which might depict something showing serious harm, or could be likely to result in serious harm.

      Furthermore, groups like mediawatch-uk are pushing for possession of a wider range of pornography to be a criminal offence, including R18 material. This includes any porn with sexual activity - so, film yourselves having sex, even for your own private use, and it's three years in prison! And the worry is that the Government appear to be listening to these campaign groups.

      The slope is feeling very slippery.

      It seems to me that there's a general push to make anything which might come under the Obscene Publications Act to also be illegal for possession, but the Government are pretending that this is more comparable to child porn laws than obscenity laws. And it's worse than that, in that these new laws do not require proof that the material would "corrupt and deprave", which is required for a conviction under the OPA.

    32. Re:I'll be the flamebait by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Eh. So it's okay for the majority to decide that, for example, English is the official language of this country, and refuse to provide any resources to anyone who is not fluent in english. That would be a desicion by the majority about the mores/norms of society. How about deciding that all unwed mothers under a certain age must have an abortion? Or, conversely, that all abortions, even in cases where the mother will certainly die without one, are illegal? Those are drastic examples, but they cut right to the core of why it's bad to allow the majority to decide what freedoms other people should be allowed.

      I think, by definition, a free society is one that tolerates views that run counter to majority opinion. Sure, computer generated kiddie porn is not exactly the ideal of free expression, but as soon as you start limiting freedom just because you don't like what people are doing with it, you have problems.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    33. Re:I'll be the flamebait by nasch · · Score: 1
      I think I'll just quietly step away from this conversation now. I don't feel comfortable communicating with people who can't tell one poster from another even when it's spelled out in front of them.
      Haha! Fair enough, although it isn't "spelled out in front of [me]". All I see is the name of the person I'm immediately replying to. I'm sure if I went to some extra effort I could get it all laid out, so you may call me lazy. I don't appreciate the implication that I'm stupid, but then again I have no reason to care what you think of me anyway.
    34. Re:I'll be the flamebait by pafrusurewa · · Score: 1
      Europe is working hard to remove any hint that Nazism ever existed
      Not true at all. I don't know where you are from but we here (were Hitler was from) are inredibly well-informed about the Third Reich. The point of all these anti-Nazi-symbol laws is to prevent that from ever happening again - not that I necessarily agree that that's a solution or that it works but the intention of these laws is not at all to forget. And our school system makes damn sure that children know all about the evils of Nazism. Too much really, kids are making jokes about it because it's so prevalent.

      Oh, and it's "Mein Kampf". "Krampf" translates to cramp ;-).
    35. Re:I'll be the flamebait by Taevin · · Score: 1
      You might want to rephrase that, since making counterfeit money is illegal, no matter what you do with it.
      As other posters have already pointed out, I fully understand that it is illegal, I'm saying that I believe it shouldn't be so.
      I don't agree. There must be a balance between the importance of any legitimate use for the thing and the state's interest in preventing counterfeiting. I think we can agree it's important to prevent counterfeiting, so any legitimate use would also have to be important to be permitted. IMO there is no legitimate use for counterfeit money accurate enough to pass off as real. If you want to do your money fetish thing, you should be allowed to make generally real-looking bills that have some obvious factor about them that makes them useless to try to pass off. Mickey Mouse instead of a dead president, 7 1/2 dollar bill, whatever.
      I'm a little tired and don't feel like arguing this point much except to say that I believe that I should be able to do whatever I want up until it harms someone else in some meaningful way (yes I know that's somewhat gray; who decides what's "meaningful?"). Basically, running the largest and most sophisticated counterfeiting operation in the world in my basement is not harming anyone until I try to take the money out of my home and use it. Once I try to buy a tank (getting a little ahead of myself here...) with that money, well, then the Secret Service is welcome to have their way with me.
      I'm wondering what you would think about another example. Should I be allowed to have military weapons as long as I haven't actually used them illegally? Anti-personnel mines, machine guns (not automatic rifles, machine guns), grenades, tanks, rocket launchers... I just collect them because I think they're neat. No problem?
      I think I've already hinted at this but, yes, no problem. Requiring licensing and training is a reasonable compromise, but other than that, I don't think it's necessary to restrict those items. Really, what makes a soldier (training excluded since it would be required) more capable of handling such weapons? See, I'm one of those loons that thinks knowing a homeowner has a firearm acts as a very strong disincentive to violate their property. If I'm not going to enter their home knowing they might have a handgun, I'm definitely not going to fuck with them if I think I might be mowed down by a machine gun on the way to the valuables.

      Equally important, having military grade weapons distributed throughout the populace is definitely beneficial should the need to use them ever arise. It discourages abuse of military power by the government and makes it much more difficult for an enemy (foreign or domestic) to destroy a large percentage of the weapons/ammunition supply with a few strategic strikes. I think that the idea that this would cause mass panic and destruction is a bit absurd; look at Switzerland for example. Estimates from 2001 put the number of assault rifles stored privately at about 420,000. Some estimates put the total number of all firearms at 3 million. Not bad for a country of only 7.25 million people. Hell, it's my understanding that it's quite common to see militiamen walking about doing their daily business with their weapons slung over their shoulders. So no, I really don't see the problem.


      Okay, I admit it. I really just want to be able to point to my M1A2 Abrams Tank sitting on my front lawn and say "fuck off" the next time someone tries to show me their shiny new Hummer/SUV. Can you blame me?
    36. Re:I'll be the flamebait by nasch · · Score: 1
      Okay, I admit it. I really just want to be able to point to my M1A2 Abrams Tank sitting on my front lawn and say "fuck off" the next time someone tries to show me their shiny new Hummer/SUV. Can you blame me?
      Yes, that sucks! My front lawn isn't big enough for an Abrams! Waaaaaaa!
    37. Re:I'll be the flamebait by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      Any state trying to prevent you from making or watching Hentai smells of police state
      Bugger, I think that is the only good argument for having a police state I have ever seen.
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    38. Re:I'll be the flamebait by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      As a hypothetical example, what if I had some sort of bizarre fetish involving paper bills? I should be punished for using a reasonable substitute rather than damaging real currency?
      My client contends, your Honour, that the facts bear a different interpretation than the rather sordid picture presented by the prosecution.

      In plain terms, my client sincerely believed that his Labrador had been bitten by a venomous bee in the region of his canine genitalia, and he was merely attempting to rescue his beloved pet from an agonising death by sucking out the poison.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  7. Ban bad thoughts too by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What would constitute a child in a drawing? Would one of the figures have to be small? What if the creator said it was a midget? Would it have to say it was a child in a caption? Would it have to have pigtails or some streotypical childish feature? Would they ban people from play acting as kids during sex?

    How about realizing that you can't legislate away all the bad things in the world.

    --
    It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    1. Re:Ban bad thoughts too by BenjyD · · Score: 1

      Exactly, I doubt this will ever get beyond committee stage in Parliament, it's just too hard to define. That, and the lack of any clear victim.

    2. Re:Ban bad thoughts too by PingSpike · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You hit on all the points I was going to make. Its easy to get caught in the shock factor of "they're disgusting perverts!" but if you think about the implications of this law its a pretty dangerous precident. Child pornography laws already tread into some pretty iffy areas here in the US. (There are examples of parents being arrested for innocent naked pictures of their babies, although no convictions that I know of)

      You already touched on this...but I still feel like expanding. Sure, this might stop a few people from creating some hardcore fake porn featuring kids...but a fake child is hard to quantify isn't it? No one is going to write "kiddie porn" on their works so that leaves it up to the discretion of some fat busy-body somewhere to decide. Its a little easier to make the laws featuring real humans, since its easy enough to seperate them into 18 and not 18.

      It is a slipperly slope, because once you stop using their actual age as a factor and instead the appearance of their age all bets are off.

    3. Re:Ban bad thoughts too by testadicazzo · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Do you know the robert crumb cartoon "big baby"? It's a character that looks like a huge curvy woman with a baby head sucking on a pacifier who just says "goo" and thinks cocks are big pacifiers, and cum is just like mothers milk. When she appeared on the cover of the "complete crumb" reprints he put a little blurb saying "relax folks, she's 18", for what I guess are obvious reasons. In the stories there's no reason to think she's 18.

      outlawing child porn to protect children is reasonable. But outlawing thinking about child porn, whether it be in a drawing or CGI is just though policing, and I'm thoroughly against thought police. In the example of R. Crumb, he was originally thought of as a big pornographer, and had a lot of troubles becuase of the things he decided to draw about. But the things he drew, although they were absolutely certainly without a doubte graphically depicting sexual child abuse in a cartoon form, are gradually being thought of as art rather than horrible seedy pornography. His stuff routinely gets shown in art galleries in the US and across Europe now, and consider pretty sides of the human psyche.

      I actually tried to bring this debate up at a party, shortly after the netherlands initiated a debate about outlawing virtual child porn (what happened with that anyway?). Everyone at the party (it was an office party, not really friends. I just wanted to bring up something more interesting than the banal shit they were bandying around) was grossly offended at the idea of virtual child porn, and one particularly stupid individual told me that once I had children I would understand that virtual child porn was wrong.

      Well, I'm not young, and I've been around the block a few times, and it's my considered opinion that pretending that certain things don't exist, and censoring their depiction or discussion don't eliminate those things. I don't think they even reduce them. I'm not sure of it, but I think open discussions and the ability to confront such things, and other peoples thoughts, ideas, and fantasies, even when grossly disturbing, actually helps reduce these things. It's the same reason I think it's reprehensible that some school libraries choose to censor mark twain, since his work depicts racism. It's anti racism, but they don't care. They don't like the fact that he shows an ugly side of American history.

      Put another way, and I guess I'm ripping this off of Noam Chomsky, freedom of speech is measured by how much freedom one has to say things we don't like to hear (or in this case see). Stalin and Hitler were perfectly content to let people communicate ideas and concepts they approved of, but we don't say they supported free speech.

      So yeah, kiddie porn is creepy and disturbing. But if no one was hurt in the production of such kiddie porn, it must not be made illegal. Same goes for depicting violent and nasty or disgusting sex acts. Deal with it, reality contains many creepy and difficult to face concepts. If you don't like them, stick you head as deep in the sand as you must. If you want to shelter your kids from these facts, then stick their heads in the sand too. But don't be surprised if they suffocate, and especially don't be surprised when they find themselves unable to deal with real dangers, threats and disturbing concepts that they might one day have to face.

    4. Re:Ban bad thoughts too by dragonsomnolent · · Score: 1

      Thank you, that slippery slope is not one I care to slide down. If my wife wants to dress up like a high school cheerleader when we have sex, does that make me a pedophile? NO. But if we filmed it, would that make it kiddie porn? Logically, no, but if that law passed, it could. Thus the law runs contrary to logic, thus the law is flawed. Please, people of Great Britian, stop this before it's too late, and your country gets as fscked as mine (The U.S.) There are other questions one could pose, but they are more dealing with pedophila itself and not the topic at hand.

      --
      I got nuthin
    5. Re:Ban bad thoughts too by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      There are cases of men being convicted of child porn posession for having cut-out images from a Sears underwear catalogue.

      The lynchpin in that trial was that he was a sex offender.... therefore the images were intended to be arousing to him..... and thus were porn.

      Wouldn't that line of reasoning make it illegal for a pedo to go in public.... period... i mean if you see something (anything) and are aroused, it's a crime, right? Why are printed images so special? heh

      I won't even go into the guy in California who got 45 years for licking a kid's foot (bleh, but 45 years?)

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    6. Re:Ban bad thoughts too by spudnic · · Score: 1

      Simple solution, then. The images have to have been generated at least 18 years before release.

      --
      load "linux",8,1
    7. Re:Ban bad thoughts too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not only that but if you consider that some things like age can be arbitrarily applied to things like anime. The main character LaBlue Girl is actually 16, but magically becomes 18 in the U.S. version - no other changes required.

    8. Re:Ban bad thoughts too by terrymr · · Score: 1

      For the record the USA already passed basically this law some years ago.

      It failed in the Supreme Court on the basis that making a movie or play of Romeo & Juliet would be a felony and that in any case it was trying to prevent a thought crime.

    9. Re:Ban bad thoughts too by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      So yeah, kiddie porn is creepy and disturbing. But if no one was hurt in the production of such kiddie porn, it must not be made illegal. Same goes for depicting violent and nasty or disgusting sex acts. Deal with it, reality contains many creepy and difficult to face concepts. If you don't like them, stick you head as deep in the sand as you must. If you want to shelter your kids from these facts, then stick their heads in the sand too. But don't be surprised if they suffocate
      Oh, I see, so the child porn manufacturers are actually just doing all the kids a favour by preparing educational material to warn them of the potential dangers?
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  8. Hentai becomes illegal in UK? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But won't outlawing the tentacle innovation destroy future work places?

    Being a pedophiliac certainly isn't much worse than being a politican and no children are harmed in Hentai.

  9. The difference is by oliverthered · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In real child porn a child is being abused.
    In 'virtual' child porn no children are being abused.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    1. Re:The difference is by omeg · · Score: 1

      They could be created after real images. Or anyway, I personally don't think that no cartoon child porn maker has ever used real images as example for their drawings. Furthermore, it could be argued that this kind of stuff existing could alter the behavior of pedophiles.

    2. Re:The difference is by oliverthered · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Guns din't kill people, people kill people.

      Just look at the levels of gun ownership in Canada

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    3. Re:The difference is by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Furthermore, it could be argued that this kind of stuff existing could alter the behavior of pedophiles.

      Indeed -- argued both ways, no less! It could alter the behavior by making them want to act on their urges with real children more, or it could alter the behavior by satisfying their urges so they no longer feel the need to go after real kids.

      --

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

    4. Re:The difference is by spiritraveller · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They could be created after real images.

      Real images are already illegal. You going to ban something because people **might** have been inspired by something that is illegal?

      I guess we'll have to get rid of all the Beatles albums from Sgt. Pepper's and onward, since they **might have been** inspired by illegal drugs.

      Or anyway, I personally don't think that no cartoon child porn maker has ever used real images as example for their drawings. Furthermore, it could be argued that this kind of stuff existing could alter the behavior of pedophiles.

      Anything can be argued, but studies on pornography have shown that its legalization accompanies a **reduction** in sex crimes.

      The reality does not jive with your theory.

    5. Re:The difference is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      which raises the real crux of the issue, whats wrong with child porn?

      Until we answer that question is seems a little strange to try and legislate on the issue. I personally feel that a child being abused is what makes child porn wrong as well as the particularly disturbing thought that the child who is subject to the abuse will never be able to make sure that all the images are gone. Some people though see the problem with child porn is the thoughts it creates and could be part of a pattern leading to child abuse. I'm not sure if this is the case - I can easily see how it might prevent real abuse on children - so I think that this issue is one we really need to decide on before we legislate, as well as maybe trying to do research into what the causal relationship with child porn and peadophiles is.

    6. Re:The difference is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In 'virtual' child porn no children are being abused. Yet.

      No one is an island. It's not like people are sitting here existing in a vacuum. Watching child porn affects you and you affect other people you interact with. A child may not be a victim at the creation of the porn, but it's virtually guarenteed that the person watching it is going to be affected. And what kind of affect do you think masterbating to children has on your brain? What is your brain associating with an orgasm? It's not a "safe outlet", it's conditioning the brain to associate sexual pleasure with children. If you can't see how that is a bad thing then I guess we have nothing left to say to each other.
    7. Re:The difference is by Psx29 · · Score: 1
      They could be created after real images. Or anyway, I personally don't think that no cartoon child porn maker has ever used real images as example for their drawings. Furthermore, it could be argued that this kind of stuff existing could alter the behavior of pedophiles.

      I personally believe that no FPS has been made without real animals(people) hurt in the process. And playing GTA makes me wanna go out and shoot a cop...

    8. Re:The difference is by theStorminMormon · · Score: 3, Informative

      Indeed -- argued both ways, no less! It could alter the behavior by making them want to act on their urges with real children more, or it could alter the behavior by satisfying their urges so they no longer feel the need to go after real kids.

      This sounds like the kind of wishful-thinking with which most Slashdot readers react to anti-porn news of any kind.

      Our experience in the investigation of these crimes also signals a strong correlation between child pornography offenders and molesters of children. In Operation Candyman, for example, of the 90 people arrested thus far for their participation in the child pornography e-group, 13 of them who chose to make inculpatory statements admitted to molesting a combined total of 48 children

      http://www.fbi.gov/congress/congress02/heimbach050 102.htm

      Child porn does not sate a desire to molest children, it inculcates this desire. If banning artificial child porn makes child porn hard to come by and thereby dampens the demand for the real thing (or molestation), then it's a great idea. Even if it doesn't, I'm a little tired of this idea that free speech extends to pornography. Somehow I doubt that was original intent of the Founding Fathers.

      Very well. Commence flaming.

      -stormin

      --
      The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
    9. Re:The difference is by JuicyBrain · · Score: 1

      Exactly !

      Looks like, with time, we forgot why child pornography is bad... Because it hurts children !
      If no children is hurt, what's the point of censoring it ?
      Should we ban monopoly money because it might make people rob banks ?

    10. Re:The difference is by Frozen+Void · · Score: 2

      If guns kill people, then pencils misspell words, cars make people drive drunk and spoons make people fat.

    11. Re:The difference is by jejones · · Score: 1

      What person who doesn't already have that association in his or her brain is going to watch the stuff?

    12. Re:The difference is by mutterc · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Somehow I doubt that was original intent of the Founding Fathers.

      Pornography certainly did exist during the time of the Founding Fathers (heck, it probably dates back to the first cave paintings). I imagine if they didn't want free speech protections to apply to porn, they could have said so.

    13. Re:The difference is by dfghjk · · Score: 1

      "Furthermore, it could be argued that this kind of stuff existing could alter the behavior of pedophiles." ...and adult porn may alter the behavior of rapists, and guns may alter the behavior of murderers, and money could alter the behavior of thieves.

    14. Re:The difference is by dfghjk · · Score: 1

      The US government has always been the most reliable, unbiased source of information on this subject ;-)

      I see no reason to believe that child porn works differently on the mind of a pedophile than adult porn works on those who desire adult sex. Furthermore, there is an assumption here that pedophiles desire to molest children and that porn increases that desire. Not all pedophiles are criminals, though the government would have you believe differently.

      In any event, the subject isn't child porn, it's cartoons. If outlawing cartoons is justifiable in the case of underage sexual depictions, I see no reason why the scope shouldn't be much broader. We shouldn't allow drawings to encourage *any* socially unacceptable behavior. The justification is the same.

    15. Re:The difference is by Qzukk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This sounds like the kind of wishful-thinking with which most Slashdot readers react to anti-porn news of any kind.

      While your wishful thinking is applied to EVERYTHING ELSE. Videogames do not make me go out and kill people. Advertisements do not compel me to go out and buy tampons. Reading Agatha Christie does not force me go out and poison people. Reading Mercedes Lackey is pretty interesting, but the Last-Herald Mage failed to turn me gay.

      And porn does not make me go out and rape people.

      If, after exposure to any of these, you have a hard time controlling whatever impulses you have, then you have a problem that you will need to solve. Leave me, and the rest of the properly functioning society, out of it.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    16. Re:The difference is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "or it could alter the behavior by satisfying their urges so they no longer feel the need to go after real kids."

      Insightful??? Man I wish there was an *IDIOT* tag for modding!

      Regular pornography exists in abundance, but men still chase women in droves trying to get laid.
      Jerking off to porn and having sex with an actual human being are two quite different things, and even keeping in mind the demographics of this site, I think most of us would have to agree to that.

      More access to child porn will accomplish nothing to stop children from being abducted and abused.

    17. Re:The difference is by omeg · · Score: 1

      And that's the exact reason why we should get some facts on this. What is the effect of (cartoon) child porn on pedophiles? Does /anybody/ know? I've never seen any scientific reports on this myself. While I'm not specifically looking for these kind of reports, you'd recon that after having done this discussion on such places as forums and IRC channels a few times, you'd stumble across one of them at some point.

      The Japanese have legalized the creation and selling of this material, and they must have their reasons. Maybe they've found that it's benevolent to those who /need/ it? Maybe it stems from a consensus that says such minorities should just be able to do whatever they want, regardless of ethics? Or maybe people are simply too busy minding their own business?

    18. Re:The difference is by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow - you managed to accurately quote the FBI, yet managed to completely distort the quote into supporting your argument. Note that he says "correlation", and nothing about "causation". You are merely implying that the two are identical. Nice try.

      BTW, I'm quite glad that free speech extends to pornography. For the simple reason that I suspect that your and my ideas of what constitutes pornography are vastly different. I have no desire to foist my definition on you, and I expect the same of you. Now piss off and stop quoting the founding fathers - you have no idea what their intent was if it wasn't written down. And what they wrote directly contradicts your fantasies.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    19. Re:The difference is by Zenaku · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Even if it doesn't, I'm a little tired of this idea that free speech extends to pornography. Somehow I doubt that was original intent of the Founding Fathers.

      Don't elevate "the intent of the founding fathers" to some kind of pedestal. I'm a little tired of the idea that the intent of the founding fathers defines the intractable limits of our rights. They were men, not gods. They didn't intend freedom of speech, or assembly, or the right to bear arms, or the right to due process to extend to black people, after all. They didn't intend voting rights to extend to females.

      --
      If fate makes you a motorcycle, you become a motorcycle.
    20. Re:The difference is by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      More access to child porn will accomplish nothing to stop children from being abducted and abused.

      This is not the question. I'm not sure that many people will disagree with you. There is no proof at all. but taht's the thing... there is no proof at all in EITHER direction... so the the question remains:

      Does the prohibition on virtual porn have such a compelling public interest that we can tolerate a substantial weakening of the first ammendment to support it?

      Now it's a harder question, isn't it?

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    21. Re:The difference is by ray-auch · · Score: 1

      Regular pornography exists in abundance, but men still chase women in droves trying to get laid.


      According to mainstream scientific concensus, men have been doing so for many 1000s of years _before_ they started to make the earliest cave drawings, let alone porn.

      The sexual behaviour patterns drive the creation and aquisition of the porn (as in inferior, but easier to obtain, substitute), not the other way round.

    22. Re:The difference is by shish · · Score: 1
      spoons make people fat.

      No, mcdonald's food is responsible for people being fat. This has been settled in court already :P

      --
      I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
    23. Re:The difference is by tinkerghost · · Score: 1
      Our experience in the investigation of these crimes also signals a strong correlation between child pornography offenders and molesters of children. In Operation Candyman, for example, of the 90 people arrested thus far for their participation in the child pornography e-group, 13 of them who chose to make inculpatory statements admitted to molesting a combined total of 48 children

      Hmm, 13/90 = 14.4%. Not a huge issue there. Of course that's just as pointless a statistic as any of the ones you just marked. Ohh, there is a strong correlation, in which direction? If
      pr0n->molest => .144
      and
      molest->pr0n => .900

      Then you have a strong correlation between molesters possesing pr0n, but not between people possesing pr0n being molesters. Note that, since this is statistics, these types of arguments are wrong to begin with, you're looking at degree's of union, not correlations.

      The question to ask is "What is the degree of union between possession & molestation, specified as percentages of both populations."

      You follow that with the questions of violent games/violent acts, violent movies/violent acts, depictions of rape/rape .... Then, when you have a real body of work, you look at everything & make a decision if putting the money/effort into this is going to be worth it, or if it's better spent elsewhere. Until you have that body of work, ancedotal numbers are pointless.

    24. Re:The difference is by owlstead · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and those law inforcement agencies have clamped down on the drugs problem in the same way as well. Like *that* is working. Wishfull thinking goes both ways, and neither one may even be correct in the real world. It need not be black and white - as some floundering sons of founding fathers are finding out at this time. Pfff.

    25. Re:The difference is by booyabazooka · · Score: 1
      I'm a little tired of this idea that free speech extends to pornography.
      I think you are missing something essential in the concept of "free speech". It means that you do not get to make decisions like this.
    26. Re:The difference is by computational+super · · Score: 1
      it's conditioning the brain to associate

      Thinking about it conditions the brain, too. And you were thinking about it! You thought about it so hard you wrote about it! You've set off an inevitable chain of events that can only end one way. Can I assume that you'll hand yourself over to the authorities before you become a danger to your community, or am I going to have to report you myself?

      Burn the witch!

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    27. Re:The difference is by theStorminMormon · · Score: 1

      I imagine if they didn't want free speech protections to apply to porn, they could have said so.

      Either that or that it was so obviously not within the realm of the intentions that it didn't occur to them to specify. In any case, they might have been a little busy with the business of not losing a war or two and trying to keep a new nation afloat to specify, don't you think?

      -stormin

      --
      The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
    28. Re:The difference is by p0tat03 · · Score: 1

      "This sounds like the kind of wishful-thinking with which most Slashdot readers react to anti-porn news of any kind."

      I'm not going to suggest that child porn somehow *alleviates* a molester's desire to molest. But it still comes down to the classic chick and egg situation: did the child porn lead to the act? Or did the guy's screwed up little mind lead to both child porn *and* the act?

      Not so clear now, is it? Correlation doesn't represent causality, yadi yada.

    29. Re:The difference is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In any case, they might have been a little busy with the business of not losing a war or two and trying to keep a new nation afloat to specify, don't you think?

      No. Just no.
    30. Re:The difference is by grahammarsden · · Score: 1

      Our experience in the investigation of these crimes also signals a strong correlation between child pornography offenders and molesters of children. In Operation Candyman, for example, of the 90 people arrested thus far for their participation in the child pornography e-group, 13 of them who chose to make inculpatory statements admitted to molesting a combined total of 48 children http://www.fbi.gov/congress/congress02/heimbach050 102.htm This is a classic fallacy of the "Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc" argument ("after this, therfore because of this") resulting from a self-selected group. You arrest people for child porn offences and, big surprise, you find that some of them have molested children. But what exactly does that prove? That child porn made them molest children or is it rather that their desire to molest children made them view child porn? Child porn does not sate a desire to molest children, it inculcates this desire. What, apart from the above fallacy, is your proof of this? This is the same argument that the UK Government is using to try to ban "extreme pornography" because Graham Coutts was convicted of the murder of Jane Longhurst after "viewing sites like Necrobabes". The argument was that because he'd looked at the pictures, he then went and killed her. But his conviction has been ruled as Unsafe by the UK Courts of Appeals because there is no proof of this claim. If banning artificial child porn makes child porn hard to come by and thereby dampens the demand for the real thing (or molestation), then it's a great idea. Even if it doesn't, I'm a little tired of this idea that free speech extends to pornography. Somehow I doubt that was original intent of the Founding Fathers And I'm a little tired of the idea that "Freedom of Speech" means "Freedom to say things that *you* agree with", but not otherwise.

    31. Re:The difference is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Very well. Commence flaming.

      Don't delude yourself -- your bullshit isn't worth flaming. Maybe mooning. Drop the pose.

    32. Re:The difference is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Either that or that it was so obviously not within the realm of the intentions that it didn't occur to them to specify. In any case, they might have been a little busy with the business of not losing a war or two and trying to keep a new nation afloat to specify, don't you think?

      Given that they explicitly specified that any power not explicitly granted to the government was denied to the government, either they did not want to give the government the power to stop pornography, or they should have thought a little harder since the bill of rights was written after the war was won (5 years prior) and before pyromaniac Canadians started burning things down (40 years afterwards).

      Within the context of this article, back then, artists regularly painted children posed nude, without a problem at all. In fact, child pornography wasn't illegal in the US until 1977, and in Europe, a few years later, so apparently not only did the founding fathers "not think of it", neither did two centuries of their descendants.

    33. Re:The difference is by theStorminMormon · · Score: 1

      In fact, child pornography wasn't illegal in the US until 1977, and in Europe, a few years later, so apparently not only did the founding fathers "not think of it", neither did two centuries of their descendants.

      Are you so sure they even were really aware of child porn? I haven't brought up this statistic so far because I've been unable to track the source down, but I'm confident that I read an article that stated that before the internet child porn was virtually stamped out. Now it's much, much more prevalent than it was 20 years ago because of the accessibility. I believe - although I admit I don't have the facts yet - that a similar thing happened earlier in the 20th century. There was no child porn until technology made it accessible (ability to develop your own photos, copy VHS tapes). So no law was required before then. Child porn finally makes it on the radar, public outcry results in a crack-down, and it's reigned in. Enter the internet, and it's on the rise again.

      I'm all for another crack down. I'll be honest - I think all porn is sick. But I have no interest in outlawing porn made with adults. I don't watch it, but you can. When it comes to child porn, however, I think we need to put the rights of children ahead of the rights of perverts. And yes, I think children are endangered even by porn that does not involve actual children in the filming.

      -stormin

      --
      The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
  10. If it offends ME ban it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I'm just an Ordinary Average Guy (apologies to Joe Walsh)
    I am an example of an average person, and I take the responsibilities of representing the average person.
    Anything that offends me, therefore, must offend average people.
    non-average people tend to have these weird fetishes and ways of speaking and bizarre cultural beliefs and, well, I'm just going to say it...the offend me.
    Therefore all non-average people offend average people and we must ban them all so that the only beliefs & cultures left are the average ones.
    Thus, everybody wins!
    You cannot argue with logic.

    1. Re:If it offends ME ban it by Frozen+Void · · Score: 1

      Borg Logic.

    2. Re:If it offends ME ban it by Loco+Moped · · Score: 1

      Anything that offends me, therefore, must offend average people.

      Funny. But I believe that if the truth were known, the people who insist that drawings or other depictions will encourage others to commit illegal acts do so because they KNOW, deep down, that such things have a very strong influence on THEM, and they fear that they will give in to their own demons.

      Other, more normal people look at stuff like this and walk away, knowing it's fiction.

    3. Re:If it offends ME ban it by gfreeman · · Score: 1

      You cannot argue with logic.

      My wife would disagree.

      --
      Ceci n'est pas un sig.
  11. Where's the balance point? by erroneus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    At what point is it a good idea to attempt to regulate thoughts, feeling and their expression? At what point does it become bad? I find myself asking that question at every turn when I see laws regulating "morality."

    Some easy cases for regulation is in the constant sexually oriented marketing and the results it has on children. We like to turn a blind eye to the fact that "adult targetted advertisment" affects the way young developing minds perceive the world. (Yet at the same time, we recognize the fact when we are talking about tobacco and alcohol advertising?)

    I don't feel up to making cases against regulation -- I think they don't need to be stated -- I think they are pretty obvious. It's just bad to attempt to control thought.

    But perhaps what needs more control is the attempts at controlling thought themselves!!! Better controls on advertising. Better controls on laws on morality. Those kinds of controls might actually have a better chance at addressing the causes of the problems and not just the symptoms. The way I see things, frustrated and confused children growing up to be frustrated and confused adults are the problems and these crimes against children are the symptoms.

    1. Re:Where's the balance point? by voice_of_all_reason · · Score: 1

      At what point is it a good idea to attempt to regulate thoughts, feeling and their expression?

      As soon as the government can get away with it

      Seriously, almost every single one denegrates towards this batshit-crazy stuff in the end before it's overthrown.

    2. Re:Where's the balance point? by Kopl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is NO regulating thought. I find such an idea disturbing. Freedom of thought should be a more fundamental right than even freedom of speech. There is a better alternative. Law. Let them know that when they do do something illegal they will be arrested(and not enjoy the results). Morality doesn't just disappear when it isn't enforced. Most people eventually gain it.

      --
      Disagree with me? Tell me why, but follow these rules.
  12. Roald Dahl? by BenjyD · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I expect they'll be arresting Quentin Blake for his illustrations of child abuse in Roald Dahl'sMatilda then.

  13. Thinking this through by Bragador · · Score: 1

    Ok so they want to forbid drawings made on a computer in which kids are doing it with adults. Since the real thing is already illegal and since it doesn't stop the more dangerous pedophiles to trick kids into posing for them or to simply kidnap them, how is this law supposed to bring fear to these persons ? Also I prefer that these persons get off from virtual pictures that look real than from real pictures where child were molested. In other words, this is a stupid and useless law that is only on the table to trick the public into liking the government. Instead of thinking about votes, could you think of the children ?

  14. How do you outlaw the Web? by jdavidl · · Score: 1

    While I am all for preventing child abuse, the problem with this is... how do you outlaw images that come from a different country? You can go to servers all over the world from the UK. Or is it just applicable for websites that are hosted in the UK? Why not just require all sexually-related material to be placed on a .XXX domain to make for easy filtering? This would be a pretty easy, almost binary yes/no question as to whether it should be on a .XXX domain. Part of the answer, IMHO: there is way too much money out there in commercial pornography and all of the related stuff in the industry, and no one wants to lose that money, or cause that money to be lost.

    1. Re:How do you outlaw the Web? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple, when you take your computer to PC world for a new drive to be installed they will report you to the police. :-)

    2. Re:How do you outlaw the Web? by jdavidl · · Score: 1

      So that's why all those secure file shredding programs are making so much money...

    3. Re:How do you outlaw the Web? by Pinkfud · · Score: 1

      Yes, and IMO there should be no nation allowed to make laws about an institution that is, by nature, international.

      --
      The world is my oyster. That's why it's always in a stew.
    4. Re:How do you outlaw the Web? by jdavidl · · Score: 1

      Governments need to be able to make laws about communications technology, but those laws really should only be specifically aimed at servers contained within their borders. Otherwise you get into censorship, which with the Internet is nearly impossible. Broader agreements at the international level could help address or control global issues like criminal activity. That's why I advocate moving all erotic sites to an .xxx domain. An international agreement would provide for far better filtering. But how to accomplish this is beyond me at this time.

  15. Pictures of Washu would be okay, though by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even though she looks like a little kid, she's actually several thousand years old. Plus, she's the universe's greatest scientist, so she's the perfect sex symbol for geeks.

  16. pr0n st4rs with Turner syndrome, too? by denis-The-menace · · Score: 1
    --
    Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
    1. Re:pr0n st4rs with Turner syndrome, too? by JeremyBanks · · Score: 1

      A Law and Order SVU episode summary is a source? :P

    2. Re:pr0n st4rs with Turner syndrome, too? by matt328 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I would have linked directly to the article on Turner's Syndrome.

      Thanks alot, now I'm sucked into the vortex.

      --
      Check out the cave on the east side of lake Hylia. Strange and wonderful things live in it.
  17. More short-sighted legislation from the UK by jrq · · Score: 1

    Here you go with another well-intentioned, but poorly thought out piece of legislation. The kind of thing that they're trying to prevent is obviously repugnant, but, as with all government-driven restrictions on expression and speech, you end up casting the net far wider than anticipated. These things are much better left for the market place and society, in general, to sort out.

    The nanny state grows larger every day!

    As far as I can tell, any episode where Homer throttles Bart would fall foul of this, and who wants to miss out on the "Why you little..." sound bite?

    --
    My UID is prime!
  18. Correct... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Provided that this isn't somehow feeding a problem that would lead toward behavior.

    I'm not saying it is, and perhaps it would prevent the need by some to act. I don't know.
    It seems to me that there isn't much available in terms of successful treatment of pedophilia.

  19. Wow. by s31523 · · Score: 1

    People must have some serious problems if they are taking the time to generate this kind of stuff.

    1. Re:Wow. by owlstead · · Score: 1

      Yeah, lack of money most probably. Porn sells.

    2. Re:Wow. by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      People must have some serious problems if they are taking the time to generate this kind of stuff.

      Heaven forbid that people expend time and effort to get sexual gratification, in a manner which does not involve harm to others. Showing this level of ethics must represent serious problems.

      And what about all those people who take the time to chat up women and go on dates, when it'd be far less effort to rape someone? They must have serious problems.

    3. Re:Wow. by HeroreV · · Score: 0
      And what about all those people who take the time to chat up women and go on dates, when it'd be far less effort to rape someone? They must have serious problems.
      The difference is that many people have decided that dating to get sexual gratification is normal and good while jacking off to drawings of kids is OMG gross icky nasty. The real problem is people thinking they have the right to punish people for doing things they think they shouldn't, even when it doesn't hurt anyone. Like when anal sex is illegal due to certain people deciding that anal sex is gross.
  20. Hentai? Yeah, baby!!! by sigmoid_balance · · Score: 1

    I for one welcome our new Hentai-tycoons-on-UK-market overlords.

    But now seriously speaking, you know all those 14 yo looking girls in hentai are probably supposed to be 18-19 for them. We see the japonese women as younger than they really are, and they see the white women as older also.

    1. Re:Hentai? Yeah, baby!!! by Code+Master · · Score: 1

      I just realized this the other day when I found out all the Asian people I work with a many years older than I thought.

      --
      The Code Master
    2. Re:Hentai? Yeah, baby!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, a lot of the characters in these hentai animations are actually lower than 18 or 19 years old. However, to avoid problems with importing these into the US, they usually TRANSLATE the Japanese so that it makes them 18 or 19 years old. I've actually heard their real ages spoken (usually 16 or so) and watched the subtitles say they were 18 or 19.

      The biggest indication of this is usually with the clothes these animated "women" are wearing. Most of the time they are still in school uniforms which would indicate that they are either in junior high, or high school.

    3. Re:Hentai? Yeah, baby!!! by Rhone · · Score: 1

      I'm not into Anime, but from what I've seen of it, the girls in Anime usually:

      1. DO look very young
      2. DON'T look anything like any Asian people I've met, young or adult (and one of my best friends is a Japanese female in her early 20's).

      Now, I understand that the girls are generally meant to be adult in the storylines (well, admittedly I'm assuming that since I don't watch Hentai), and I'm not in favor of any sort of censorship in this area, but I don't buy your explanation for why the girls look pre-adult.

    4. Re:Hentai? Yeah, baby!!! by MaWeiTao · · Score: 1

      Those girls in hentai are young. They're all high school girls, at best.

      And asians don't necessarily look younger than westerners. In many cases they do, but that's because of culture and fashion more than any genetic trait. The fashions coming out of Japan, and influencing much of Asia all tend to be more child-like. It's all about looking as young as possible. Contrast that with the US where the trends among young people is to look older. Of course this is all driven by corporations and the entertainment industry. And interestingly, this gets reversed at about the age of 30. From that point on Westerners generally look younger than their Asian counterparts.

      Back to the original topic... This looks like thought control to me. I can understand the rationale behind this, but I think this is yet another example of the government being overly protectionist and the citizens not wanting to be responsible for anything.

    5. Re:Hentai? Yeah, baby!!! by mattsucks · · Score: 1

      But now seriously speaking, you know all those 14 yo looking girls in hentai are probably supposed to be 18-19 for them. We see the japonese women as younger than they really are, and they see the white women as older also.

      Yeah, but how old are the tentacle beasts? Ever consider that??? HMM? WON'T SOMEBODY THINK OF THE CHILD-TENTACLE-BEASTS?!?!?!?!?

  21. Oh noes... by Yetihehe · · Score: 1

    This means my firefoxy wallpaper will be illegal, it's too cruel.

    --
    Extreme Programming - Redundant Array of Inexpensive Developers
  22. Canada... by cbirkett · · Score: 3, Informative
    It's already illegal in Canada. Our criminal code practically outlaws dirty thoughts. Writing in your diary about sex with someone under 18 is enough to get you brought up on child pornography charges. Apparently it is much better if you go out and actually do the deed with a 14 year old (age of consent here).


    http://lois.justice.gc.ca/en/C-46/280586.html#Sect ion-163.1

    --
    "My fellow Americans, these are not the droids the nation is looking for."
    1. Re:Canada... by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      That's funny... It means Canadians can't produce movies illustrating "lolita" behavior as the film with the same name did. Not that I care for such movies really, unless they'd have a really good script, in which case they'd be our loss. I also have to wonder if Brooke Shields actually suffered any psychological trauma from the recording of that movie? If not, and if it's not common, who are we protecting in this case, really?

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    2. Re:Canada... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is Canada a Mormon country?

    3. Re:Canada... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please see (6)(b):

      (6) No person shall be convicted of an offence under this section if the act that is alleged to constitute the offence

      (a) has a legitimate purpose related to the administration of justice or to science, medicine, education or art; and

      (b) does not pose an undue risk of harm to persons under the age of eighteen years.

  23. Moo by Chacham · · Score: 4, Interesting

    We must ask for the facts sometimes, because perhaps it has lost its original meaning in the emotional charge the masses have given to it.

    I remember watching the debates on the flag burning amendment. One Representative burnt a napkin with a flag on it at the podium saying that if we ban flag burning, that action would be illegal.

    Regardless of the issue of flag burning, he had a point. Even those who are for the amendment don't intend it to go that so far as destroying any image resembling a flag, so perhaps they need to take a step back before blindly banning things under the name of patriotism.

    I find the same point to be applicable here. Whether stopping child porn will help protect the children or not is irrelevant, those who promote child porn bans by saying it will help, probably don't intend for it to ban all images resembling it, and they need to take a step back before blindly banning things under the name of thinkofthechildren.

    There is another, at first helpful but then noticeably nefarious, movement here. Some find pedophilia in-and-of-itself to be so loathesome they want to strip all pedophiles of everything, regardless of whether it helps the children or not. This then would become an issue of freedom. If there is no victim, and they keep to themselves, why should anyone else care. If it is because it may in the future hurt a child, again, perhaps they need to take a step back before blindly banning things under the name of thinkofthechildren.

    1. Re:Moo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One Representative burnt a napkin with a flag on it at the podium saying that if we ban flag burning, that action would be illegal.

      If I were there, I'd have stood up at the podium, said "If you were a Boy Scout, raise your hand". Then asked how many of them remember how to dispose of a flag properly, and just gone back to my seat and sat down. The simple fact of the matter is that I don't trust the incompetent ignoramuses that get elected (hm, but if I had been elected and was there...) to not screw things up with an overly general law.

      Personally, I think Hillary's law had the right idea: ban inciting violence by burning a flag, the same law has passed supreme court muster previously for cross burning, sadly the Republicans killed it because of the not-invented-here syndrome and because if such a thing were actually passed, they'd have to come up with some new pie-in-the-sky promise for their voters.

    2. Re:Moo by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There is another, at first helpful but then noticeably nefarious, movement here. Some find pedophilia in-and-of-itself to be so loathesome they want to strip all pedophiles of everything, regardless of whether it helps the children or not.

      From the owner of www.perverted-justice.com and creator of "To catch a predator" on Dateline NBC.

      (and this is a direct quote)

      My goal is not to protect minors...It's to go after pedophiles...it's because pedophiles are disgusting people...That's why we go after them.

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    3. Re:Moo by Chacham · · Score: 1

      From the owner of www.perverted-justice.com and creator of "To catch a predator" on Dateline NBC.

      (and this is a direct quote)

      My goal is not to protect minors...It's to go after pedophiles...it's because pedophiles are disgusting people...That's why we go after them.


      That sounds scary. Mob rule being promoted by an individual. At least he's true to his name "perverted justice".

    4. Re:Moo by Tesla+Tank · · Score: 1

      Holy crap. Putting aside what you said for a second, I congratulate you on the first MEANINGFUL use of the Slashdot tag system.

      yes, no, maybe?

    5. Re:Moo by Chacham · · Score: 1

      I congratulate you on the first MEANINGFUL use of the Slashdot tag system.

      Heh, thanx.

      Originally, my comment was different, and i meant the tag as a commentary of a joke. Then, as i started getting serious, i rearranged everything, and this came out.

      Who knows, tags may yet be useful. :)

  24. Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illegal?? by SpecialAgentXXX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are plenty of websites out there that feature "barely legal" young women who are 18 and over. They usually have them dressed in schoolgirl outfits or acting like a "girly high school girl." Would that be considered illegal because it "simulates" an underage girl?

    As for cartoons, how the hell does a court determine whether or not the drawn picture is of an underage girl, or a "barely legal" 18 year old? And why is this such a big deal? I thought the whole point in stopping child porn is because it exploits and abuses the children. Who is abused when an artist draws pictures? For there to be a crime, there has to be a victim. Where's the victim?

  25. will the law be applied retrospectively by infolation · · Score: 1

    If such a law came into effect, what would constitute possession?

    Would a computer owner who had previously stored such images on their computer be required to delete them? Or securely delete them (multiple overwrites)? Or scrub their entire hard-drive with Darius Boot and Nuke? Thermite? etc.

    I'm always interested to hear the UK goverment tell its citizens that possession of data on computers will be made 'illegal' from a fixed date onwards. The same woolly legal thinking applied to the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, which criminalizes the possession of data that the owner encrypted but is unable to decrypt when demanded to do so by the police.

    1. Re:will the law be applied retrospectively by Jugalator · · Score: 1
      Would a computer owner who had previously stored such images on their computer be required to delete them? Or securely delete them (multiple overwrites)? Or scrub their entire hard-drive with Darius Boot and Nuke? Thermite? etc.

      One thing's for sure about child porn possession... I've had stories of drives not entirely wiped when resold in case of returns by customers and still with all data not wiped. In case you'd be a second owner of such a, usually a bit more cheaply sold and thus more attractive to some to buy, you'd better be sure that stuff was never on it in case you'd have hardware troubles in the future. Because there have likewise been stories of those turning in customers because they "found" (don't ask me what gives them the right to scan your drive -- they can and do it) illegal material on the drive. I think you'd have quite a hard time proving it wasn't you that stored them, but a former owner.

      This is just one problem I have with overzealous laws like this that become sort of "blunt" in how they work, lacking a better term. I have nothing against legislation stopping this stuff to be spread, but why not be satisfied with making it illegal to spread and get child porn, just not possess it? It would close a heck of a lot of problematic scenarios IMHO and work pretty much as well as usual.
      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  26. It's utilitarianism vs. rights by hey! · · Score: 1

    You point out an important distinction, between the public interest in protecting children, and the public interest in promoting virtue.

    To play the role of devil's advocate for a moment, there are reasons other than paternalism to promote public virtue in this case; these interests may not be unrelated.

    Virtual child porn has two effects:

    (1) It provides a more acceptable alternative to child porn with real children, removing the economic incentive to produce it.

    (2) It encourages its users to view children in general as objects of sex gratification.

    Personally, I doubt anybody produces live child porn purely for profit. I'd expect there must be elements of sexual sadism, voyeurism and/or exhibitionism involved for somebody to do something so reviled. Therefore I think the loss of economic incentive will have less effect on production than expected.

    On the consumer side, the encouragement of sex gratification through a more acceptable means may actually increase demand for live child pornography, especially among those whose fixation has a strong element of sadism or voyeuerism not satisfied by virtual models. Put it this way: if you have a drinking problem and a smoking problem, chances are any time you have drink in your hand you're craving a smoke. Drink enough and you'll end up smoking too.

    Argued from a utilitarian viewpoint, there may be little difference in the need to ban virutal and real child porn. From a basic rights (deontological) perspective the distinction between virtual and real is sharper. Virtual porn is not a violation of a specific child's rights.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:It's utilitarianism vs. rights by oliverthered · · Score: 2, Insightful

      (2) It encourages its users to view children in general as objects of sex gratification.

      Just like topless men are going to turn me into a Gay.

      More to the point, I've looked at porn, I've looked at some fairly gratuitous porn but I'm not going to go out and rape someone.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    2. Re:It's utilitarianism vs. rights by hey! · · Score: 1
      It isn't orientation that changes, it's habit.

      If you were gay, then looking at topless men would probably lead to looking at bottomless ones.


      More to the point, I've looked at porn, I've looked at some fairly gratuitous porn but I'm not going to go out and rape someone.


      That's not to the point at all. It's more like watching porn stars leading to an interest in "reality" porn.
      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    3. Re:It's utilitarianism vs. rights by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      That's not to the point at all. It's more like watching porn stars leading to an interest in "reality" porn.

      It is the point, what are we trying to protect?

      If were trying to protect kids then looking at kiddie porn doesn't actually harm those children it's the making of the porn that's the problem.

      I also believe that rapeiests and murders don't usually go out and rape and murder just because they've seen something on TV or played a video game, there already prety fucked up in the first place and would probablbly have killed and raped without minor things that work with their perversion.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  27. It's actually current practice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Many UK ISP's already block access to illegal pornographic content (involving children) on web sites hosted abroad - if the content is hosted in the UK it's simply removed by the provider on request/instruction.

  28. Logical move by aadvancedGIR · · Score: 1

    What else should we expect since so many english politicians were recently caught in dirty affairs.

  29. Did you know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...that [in the US] baby boys have to play baby girls in diaper commercials because of laws against ANY broadcast of a topless female? (See also, Super Bowl Janet)

    Now, let us consider how unlikley it is that anyone has been upset or put-off by this harmless simulation of something illegal.

    You've been tricked into thinking you're looking at a topless girl, but it's actually a topless boy in drag... that makes it ok? Isn't it most likely that a topless girl would have been used instead with a minor re-write of the law? Should this be considered an offense at all? Does context make all the difference?

    This is just some fuel for the fire. Draw your own conclusions.

    1. Re:Did you know... by SPQR_Julian · · Score: 1

      Can you give a source for this please?

  30. Diverting from real issues by NorbrookC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is it just me, or does it seem like every time there are real issues that need addressing, but require a lot of effort and a change in government policy, said government comes up with some diversionary issue?

    "We need to reevaluate our Iraq policy." "Right, here's a measure we need to fight child pornography!" "We've got an immigration issue." "BTW, did we mention this epidemic of child porn?" "We have to look at healthcare costs" "Look! Kid porn! Child molesters!" It's a quick hot-button issue that allows them to spend immense amounts of time pontificating, while diverting public attention from any lack of work on real issues.

    That's not even asking the question of "Why didn't the last 10 laws you passed on this subject work, or why didn't you enforce them?" Which is the question I'm asking of them. Until they have a good answer, I letting them know that I expect them to stop trying to divert me, and get to work on real issues.

    1. Re:Diverting from real issues by infolation · · Score: 1

      Correct. And this story arrives on the day that Tony Blair is interviewed by police for two hours about cash for honours.

    2. Re:Diverting from real issues by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      It's just you. Sort of. All governments constantly come up with stupid issues all the time. The correleation is merely preceptual bias, like people thinking there's more crime during the full moon.

    3. Re:Diverting from real issues by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 0, Troll

      It doesn't work because penalties for violations against children are sometimes unpunished and people feel outraged. I'm sure you are one of those people who hate Bill O Reilly at Fox because he is a right wing blowhard or something but while you are complaining about Health Care crisis (which is tied to illegal immigration to a degree), and Iraq, he is complaining about JUDGES who sentence CHILD RAPISTS (the real kind) to PROBATION, or very short terms in jail.

      This is PURE INSANITY. These people should be tortured to death (IMHO), publicaly. And I'm against the death penalty!

      Our society is SICK, because we hide everything distasteful from the public. And people think we have an open society! We don't. Criminals have more rights than victims, convicted criminals have even more rights than average citizens. People in Jail should ROT (no health care, dental care, sex change operations ... NOTHING) until they get out. Technology is NOT a right, Health Care is NOT a right. These are privileges of an advanced technical society. RIGHTS are not something that technology provides, they are things you are BORN WITH, whether in the jungles of South America or in New York City.

      Guess what? People get sick and die. It is a part of life, distasteful as it is. Little children deserve to live in a world that doesn't have sick perverts preying upon them, where parents cannot let their kids play outside for fear of the worst.

      If you think Society is better because we can make childless child porn, or allow it because of some slippery slope arguement, you're just as stupid as the judge who thinks that a child rapist needs therapy, and probation. Sorry if I sound so outraged on this, but I am. It is because we don't really think about the consequences of our ivory tower arguments and debates.

      We have lost all "judgement" because of slick lawyering and ivory tower debates. Personally, I don't want to live in a society so free that I am bombarded with child porn because some ivory tower argument about freedom of speech. Those same ivory tower arguments that allow me to be bombarded with regular porn today. Society isn't any better because of it either.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    4. Re:Diverting from real issues by dragonsomnolent · · Score: 1

      You are absolutely right. Locking up an 18 year old man for life because he had sex with his girlfriend 2 days before she turned 18 is more important than insuring that the children you are so interested in protecting have adequite healthcare. WAKE UP! I understand your frustration, but banning a cartoon is not going to stop a pedophile. True 45 year old men dicking 10 year old kids is wrong, and they should be locked up. But get real. I don't fear for my children getting molested every time I send them outside to play. Does it happen to children, yes, is it a real threat, yes, but so is a planetoid craching into earth. What do they have in common, if they came to pass? They would both fuck my (and my children's) world all to shit. But be realistic, you can warn you children of dangers, you can do everything to keep REAL perverts from hurting them, but it has been researched that watching pornography actually decreases the likelyhood of a sex offender to offend. So please spare me your "watching porn makes you commit sex crimes, think of the children" line. I do think about my children, every day, and I do not fear that someone is going to watch a Hentai movie and then think about molesting my child. That is an irrational fear, and giving into it will eventually lead to whatever you do with your significant other for kicks being outlawed too.

      --
      I got nuthin
    5. Re:Diverting from real issues by Loco+Moped · · Score: 1

      If you think looking at cartoons will make you a child molester, then you are right. ABOUT YOURSELF. Not anybody else. Learn to deal with it.

    6. Re:Diverting from real issues by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      You obviously don't have a clue what case I am talking about. I am talking about a MIDDLE AGE MAN who RAPED a 9 year old girl over the course of YEARS who was sentanced to "Probation" because the judge wanted him to get "counseling".

      So go back into the hole you came out you ignorant twit.

      And I wasn't talking about fictional cases of slippery slope arguments of ivory tower types like you. The fucking world is screwed up because of people like you, who think that "criminal justice" is about Rehabilitation, and not Punishment. I don't give a flying rats ass if these douche bags of human refuse are ever rehabilitated.

      The thing of it is, true judgment can make the case between a 22 boy / 17 yo girl, or even 19 / 16 or 18 / 14 or 18 / 11 or ... Oh wait, you see, slipper slope arguments are stupid. I don't see why 14 year olds need or should be having sex, period. I don't see how 16 year olds should be either. I barely see how 18 year olds can be, because most 18 year olds cannot really deal with the consequences of it. I barely was able when I was 23, and I was mature 23 (or so I thought).

      So, while you can sit high and mighty in your ivory tower, the rest of us have to live with the consequences of your stupid pet theories that do NOTHING to protect society, but only lead to perversion. This world is creepy, and stained, and you may like it that way, but I don't. So why should I have to put up with it anymore than you should put up with mine? Because yours servers some high and mighty "goal", or because mine is more pragmatic?

      So, take your slippery slope argument and screw yourself with it all you want. I don't want it anywhere near me or my children, thank you very much.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    7. Re:Diverting from real issues by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Stupid

      It is WANTING to look at child porn that is sick. It is WANTING to draw it that is sick. It is ACTING on those desires that is sick. I don't want Child Porn anywhere near me because I don't want the SICKOS that create it, and consume it anywhere near me.

      Of course, it is always easier to blame the victims than the perpetrators. I'm sick because I don't like it. riiiiiight

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    8. Re:Diverting from real issues by dragonsomnolent · · Score: 1

      Did I say that a 45 year old having sex with a 9 year old should get probation, no. I said that in that case, prison is where he should go. But what about that 18 year old having sex with his girlfreind 2 days before she turns 18? Should he also go to jail for life? And for what it's worth, I don't agree with teenagers having sex either. The age of consent (in most of the U.S.) is 18, like it or vote to change it, but it sounds like you don't think 23 year olds should have sex either, because you could barely deal with the consequences. So let's just make the age 50, then we don't have to worry about children at all, since there wouldn't be any. You may have had a hard time dealing with it, and I feel sorry for you. But don't push your shit on me. I ask the same of you. (BTW, father of 4 7,2,1,and 3 months so don't say "you wouldn't feel that way if you were a parent either)

      --
      I got nuthin
    9. Re:Diverting from real issues by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      People in Jail should ROT (no health care, dental care, sex change operations ... NOTHING) until they get out.

            Congratulations on stepping back 300 years. This is a human rights violation. Jails are supposed to be for rehabilitation, not punishment. Punishment for crime has gone out of style. That's the reason capital punishment is also a human rights violation - with the disclaimer that signing nations who practiced it BEFORE signing will be allowed to continue with it, but if they ever abolish it they can't bring it back without violating the treaties. Welcome to the 21st century.

      These people should be tortured to death (IMHO), publicaly.

            Ok, so he's a child molester, and that makes him "bad". But you're a murderer, and that makes you "good"?

            Why not just shoot them around the back of the courthouse? Better yet - let's go back to the system we had before, where anyone can accuse anyone of anything, and then they duel it out and God decides who was "right"? Or maybe we should get the King to decide, based on people's accusations? Or how about anarchy, and anyone can shoot anyone that just looks like a child molester?

            Crime will always happen, regardless of laws. Laws do not grant rights, however, laws take them away. I personally want as few laws as possible, so I can have as many rights as possible. And no, I don't care for child porn, either cartoon-style or otherwise.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    10. Re:Diverting from real issues by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "But don't push your shit on me."

      Exactly how do we have a society where nobody pushes "their shit" on anyone else.

      The problem isn't 19 year olds having sex with 17 year olds. It is the slippery slope arguments by the idiots in ivory towers. It is stupid judges who think they know better than everyone else, who sentence child rapists of the worst kind to probation. It is people who cry like babies because people like O Reilly call attention to these outrages.

      People caught messing with little kids, should be thrown into a special kind of hellish prison, and the key tossed aside. I don't mean 19 year olds screwing with 17 year olds, I'm talking the true sicko perverts.

      "so don't say "you wouldn't feel that way if you were a parent either"

      I wouldn't begin to think of it. People who make such a statement are stupid. Most parents and even most people I know are very protective, it is the SICKO people who don't give a flying fig about kids that ruin it for the rest of us. You don't have to be a parent to see this.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    11. Re:Diverting from real issues by dragonsomnolent · · Score: 1

      Funniest thing is, I agree with your main point, sicko child molesters should be locked up. The details we disagree on, I personally believe that public money would be better spent on healtcare for children rather than on prisons to hold anyone and everyone who looks at a picture of a cartoon that is supposedly depicting a 17 year old girl. I also think that the money would be better spent on healthcare than locking up someone for a number of many other "morality" crimes. What I do with my wife in our bedroom is our business, I don't want the cops arresting me for child molestation if she dresses up in a cheerleader outfit just because she looks like she could be 17 if she did. No more than I think it should be illegal for an animated feature depicting 17 year old girls having sex, or real actors over the age of 18 dressed up to look 17. No children were hurt. This has nothing to do with the asshat of a judge who sentanced a child molestor to probation for screwing a little girl, and for what it's worth, I hope that judge is no longer on the bench. This has everything to do with not putting more people in prison for stupid shit (like watching a movie where 25 year olds have sex dressed up like cheerleaders), and using that money instead to make our lives better.

      --
      I got nuthin
    12. Re:Diverting from real issues by terrymr · · Score: 1

      bizarre. I always thought it was understood that honors were handed out according to how much money you gave to the right politician.

    13. Re:Diverting from real issues by terrymr · · Score: 1

      First let me say that judges do make bad decisions.

      Second, when the idea of judges was invented it was believed that they do know better than everybody else because a) they are usually trained in the law and have experience in legal practice and b) they have to sit through the whole trial rather than listening to the little bits Nancy Grace chooses to play for you.

    14. Re:Diverting from real issues by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      a) Trained in the "law" is a fallacious argument. The law is set up to require lawyers to decipher it. Judges are lawyers, most congress critters are lawyers, most public executive branch officers are lawyers. Do you see a problem here? The law should be easy enough that a layman can understand, and clear enough that judges cannot pull crap out of their asses to let 45 yo child (8-9 yo) rapists out on friggin "probation" because the "feel" that the system is "unfair". Idiot judges like this ruin for everyone. Screw a 8 year old, get locked up and key tossed away. What is so hard about that?

      b) I've been on trial, for something I didn't do. Lasted four days. Relevant testimony could be summed up in 45 mins. Cops arrested me, for being "drunk in public", and when I clearly stated "I'm not drunk nor in public" (I wasn't) they had to change their story, three times. The cops were asshats, trying to cover their butts. However, because I'm white, and rich, I can't sue for false arrest. Had I been minority or poor, I could have played the race card and win. So, I have a particularly jaded view of "trials", and I think that people like Nancy Grace could summarize the trial nicely, in an hour show.

      Just think about the SCO crap. How much of that is lawyers lawyering and how much is actually facts that affect the case? I think I could do a full hour program, summarize the case, even giving SCO all the benifit of doubt that I could muster, and it would be as clear as it is to most of here on slashdot, two or three years later. The case is about simple facts, something that SCO has failed to provide any of. All the lawyers lawyering is not for the sake of justice, but because all it takes is one idiot judge to pull some esoteric reason out of his ass to screw it up.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    15. Re:Diverting from real issues by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "Congratulations on stepping back 300 years."

      Right. Because 300 years ago, there were not health care, dental care, or sex operations, those uncivilized human rights violaters.

      "This is a human rights violation."

      So is imprisonment. So is handcuffing people. So is shooting them to stop them from killing someone. So, lets not stop anyone from doing anything, lets just hug them until they feel better because that will rehabilitate them.

      "Jails are supposed to be for rehabilitation, not punishment."

      You sir, are an idiot. First off, imprisonment is a violation of human rights, the right to be FREE. So, by your own warped view, we shouldn't even have prisons, if you are going to be consistant. Charles Manson should be free to walk around FREE because anything less is a violation of HUMAN RIGHTS.

      "Ok, so he's a child molester, and that makes him "bad". But you're a murderer, and that makes you "good"?"

      Ok, so he's a child molester, and that makes him "bad". But you're a imprisoner, and that makes you "good"?

      The difference is that HIS actions(child rape) dictated the response(imprisonment/death penalty), one that is agreed upon by society in general. Do you want to live in a society where it is okay for 40 year old men to have sex with 8 year old girls, without consequences? Any consequence you can think of is a violation of "civil rights" at some level, which makes your whole point moot.

      "Crime will always happen, regardless of laws. Laws do not grant rights, however, laws take them away."

      Agreed! Like I said, I am against the Death Penalty (not for any reason you would understand). So, let us instead build a prison, where the prisoners can do anything they want to each other, for the worst of these child rapists and murderers. Give them the freedom to do to each other what we don't want them to do in the rest of society.

      The worst kind of hell is designed by those that deserve it the most.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    16. Re:Diverting from real issues by Ambassador+Kosh · · Score: 1

      Wow you are really sick. Your moral values would allow you to torture someone to death? That is just sick. If a decision is made that someone has done acts that are so horrible that they can not remain in the society and they are to be killed your obligation is to kill them in the most humane manner possible. A single gunshot to the head, poison etc but it must be quick and painless. The very idea that it would be okay to torture someone for any reason is just sick. What kind of person are you that you would actually want to watch or be involved with torturing someone and feel better for doing it? Why do you get a rise off of causing other people pain? How are you any better?

      The only outcome I can see of your views is to make society vastly worse.

      Also how can you possibly be bombarded with porn? I have had email accounts for about 14 years now and used spam filters later when they became necessary and I have not been bombarded with porn. Heck I have seen very little actual porn. A default spamassassin will block it all just fine. If you just browse the web in general you won't find porn either, you have to go looking for it. I have not seen any porn on developer sites, games sites, hardware sites (motherboard, video card etc), regular stores etc. What are you doing that you get bombarded with porn?

      It sure seems like you have bought into a culture of fear about the world and want to take your views out on other people. Go ahead and check the fbi and other organizations on crime statistics. Violent crimes of all types have been going down for over 10 years now and that includes crimes against children. If you where okay with letting your children play outside 10 years ago it is even safer now. You are being controlled through fear not through reason. You believe the world is a certain way and you only listen to those that affirm your beliefs. Don't let things like actual facts about sexual crimes against children going down intefere with your "knowledge" that these things are on the rise and more dangerous then ever. Don't let our fears about all the horrible things that can happen to children interfere with the facts that these things are all in decline and have been for a long time.

      As long as you fear all of these things you can be trivially controlled to do and support stupid things. By the time you wakeup you will realize you have no control left since you gave it all away.

      --
      Computer modeling for biotech drug manufacturing is HARD! :)
    17. Re:Diverting from real issues by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      You sir, are an idiot. First off, imprisonment is a violation of human rights, the right to be FREE. So, by your own warped view, we shouldn't even have prisons, if you are going to be consistant. Charles Manson should be free to walk around FREE because anything less is a violation of HUMAN RIGHTS.

            "The core binding commitment of the international community is that imprisonment will not be arbitrary or discriminatory and that prisoners will be treated with humanity and with respect for their inherent dignity as human beings. In particular, prisoners will not be tortured or subjected to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.
            But the requirement of humane treatment is much broader than merely the elimination of torture and other inhumanity. It requires that no prisoner "be subjected to hardship or constraint other than that resulting from the deprivation of liberty [itself]". This is "a fundamental and universally applicable rule" which "cannot be dependent on the material resources available" in the country."

            From - UN Human Rights Committee, General Comment No. 21 (1992), paragraphs 3 and 4. This General Comment can be consulted at www.unhchr.ch/tbs/doc.nsf/MasterFrameView/3327552b 9511fb98c12563ed004cbe59?Opendocument

            And you sir, have certain anger management issues. I'm not the only idiot. It seems the entire UN are idiots too.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    18. Re:Diverting from real issues by Kuvter · · Score: 1

      Agreed. We could spend all that time and money they spend talking about arguing about child porn, to maybe feed and cloth homeless children.

      --
      "To be is to do." --Socrates
      "To do is to be." -- Aristotle
      "Do-Be-Do-Be-Do..." --Sinatra
    19. Re:Diverting from real issues by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      I personally think deprivation of liberty is cruel and inhumane. Now that I have defined "imprisonment" in such a way that it, itself is a violation of the whole statement against "cruel" and "inhumane".

      I don't think that "dignity" (arbitrary) is a human right. What is "dignified" for you may be completely unacceptable by another society. Muslims might define it as "Burkah" for women. A nudist may think that clothes are un-dignified.

      And what defines "hardship"? Does living in tents in a desert? What about the Troops in Iraq? What about Bedouin tribes? Again, what is a "hardship" for one person is normal life for another.

      Elimination of torture? I can think of a few people who would complain about that, as well. LOL

      "It seems the entire UN are idiots too."

      Indeed, it is. They complain about the inhumane wall in Israel, the inhumane wall between Mexico and the US. It is really easy to define things in such a way that it violates their "Human Rights Committee" view of things. This is the same UN that had Lybia on its human rights committee, right? While the UN is complaining about US and Israeli "abuses", it is not lifting a finger to stop Darfur, the very thing its charter was designed to prevent. The UN is useless, as it hasn't prevent a single war yet.

      "And you sir, have certain anger management issues"

      I don't have anger management issues because I'm angry. I pity the poor soul who doesn't get angry over anything.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  31. US Title 18 by lostboy2 · · Score: 1
    IANAL but I thought CG depictions of child sexuality are already illegal in the United States. The relevent code, I think, is Title 18, Chapter 110 -- in particular, see Section 2252A and Section 2256.

    From 18 USC 2256:
    (8) "child pornography" means any visual depiction, including any photograph, film, video, picture, or computer or computer-generated image or picture, whether made or produced by electronic, mechanical, or other means, of sexually explicit conduct, where--
    (A) the production of such visual depiction involves the use of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct;
    (B) such visual depiction is a digital image, computer image, or computer-generated image that is, or is indistinguishable from, that of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct; or
    (C) such visual depiction has been created, adapted, or modified to appear that an identifiable minor is engaging in sexually explicit conduct.
    and
    For purposes of subsection 8(B) [1] of this section, "sexually explicit conduct" means--
    (i) graphic sexual intercourse, including genital-genital, oral-genital, anal-genital, or oral-anal, whether between persons of the same or opposite sex, or lascivious simulated sexual intercourse where the genitals, breast, or pubic area of any person is exhibited;
    (ii) graphic or lascivious simulated;
        (I) bestiality;
        (II) masturbation; or
        (III) sadistic or masochistic abuse; or
    (iii) graphic or simulated lascivious exhibition of the genitals or pubic area of any person;
    I'm guessing that simple nudity would not be considered child pornography, then. But, I suppose that depends on what constitutes "lascivious exhibition".
    1. Re:US Title 18 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the key phrase is "indistinguishable from". Most of the stuff that will be banned by this UK legislation is not indistinguishable from a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct. For example, few would confuse porn involving actual children and lolicon.

    2. Re:US Title 18 by Jugalator · · Score: 1

         o
        -+-
        / \

      Tee-hee... This is John, 13 years old, stark naked in a full frontal pose.
      Made you regret you clicked on this link, didn't I ??

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    3. Re:US Title 18 by Jugalator · · Score: 1
      graphic sexual intercourse, including genital-genital, oral-genital, anal-genital, or oral-anal, whether between persons of the same or opposite sex, or lascivious simulated sexual intercourse where the genitals, breast, or pubic area of any person is exhibited;

      "lascivious simulated sexual intercourse"

      Seems they closed the legal loophole for creating sites with underage genital-nasal sex and not call it sexually explicit. ;)
      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    4. Re:US Title 18 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > 8A the production of such visual depiction involves the use of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct;

      I do believe that this means that the item in question needs to involve an actual minor in the creation of it to be illegal, this means that drawings that aren't of real children are not illegal in the US.

    5. Re:US Title 18 by 0a100b · · Score: 1

      Who is to decide if a drawing depicts a child or an adult that looks and behaves like a child?
      Who still remembers the Roger Rabbit film, is Baby Herman a child or an adult?

    6. Re:US Title 18 by Jens+Egon · · Score: 1

      Indeed, here in Denmark the police asked for (and got) similar legislation, because they thought some cartoons were made by applying 'filters and stuff' to actual photographs.

    7. Re:US Title 18 by nekokoneko · · Score: 2, Informative

      IANAL but I thought CG depictions of child sexuality are already illegal in the United States.

      You would be wrong. The Supreme Court has ruled that banning CG depictions of child sexuality is a violation of First Amendment rights. See for example http://supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/00-795.ZO. html

  32. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by Jugalator · · Score: 1
    As for cartoons, how the hell does a court determine whether or not the drawn picture is of an underage girl, or a "barely legal" 18 year old?

    You zoom in really much on the pixels, and if they have fewer than 18 age rings on them, the pixels are too young. :-p

    Seriously, yeah, that judgment would be entirely left up for the law to make, and with as exaggerated erotica the computer generated art I've seen can be, that should be an interesting judgment to watch to say the least.
    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  33. Sailor Moon's going to get IEd :P by Ariastis · · Score: 1

    Guess now Sailor Moon & al. are going to have to show ID cards before being tentacle-fucked :P

  34. Tacitus by kahei · · Score: 1


    The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the la -- hang on, I posted that yesterday or something.

    Are we reaching a situation where vague, ill-defined laws that basically criminalize whatever's unpopular or unprofitable or unlucky are actually being made faster than I can quote Tacitus? In the UK I'd say we are.

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
    1. Re:Tacitus by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Brazil is worse. Last time the number of laws we have was in the 1.5 million range. Good luck we, the Brazilian people, have this custom of just ignoring it all. But more law-abiding countries surely have a huge problem on the horizon.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
  35. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by danpsmith · · Score: 1
    For there to be a crime, there has to be a victim. Where's the victim?

    You must be new here. And by here I mean to organized government.

    --
    Judges and senates have been bought for gold; Esteem and love were never to be sold.
  36. Things must be going pretty damn well... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

    ... if progress can only be achieved by outlawing thought-crime.

    What I'd really love to see is some way to put a cost on creating legislation. Just so that people can't just create legislation for the sake of looking good.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  37. The old, what is child porn debate? by Wellington+Grey · · Score: 2, Insightful

    O
    /|\
    |_
    / \


    So... is that ascii drawing child porn? What if I say it's a drawing of a child?

    -Grey

    1. Re:The old, what is child porn debate? by rumplet · · Score: 1

      (_____) E( )3 ~~~V~~~ || V || Look, it's ascii goatse.

    2. Re:The old, what is child porn debate? by rumplet · · Score: 1

      Er, damn should have selected plain text.
      It was rubbish anyway.

    3. Re:The old, what is child porn debate? by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      So... is that ascii drawing child porn? What if I say it's a drawing of a child?
      You could say it was the Dalai Lama tapdancing for all the similarity it has with anything.
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  38. Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And why is this such a big deal? I thought the whole point in stopping child porn is because it exploits and abuses the children.

    So there are at least two issues here. One is legislating morality. Lots of people in power like to do that. It's not justified.

    Second is preventing crime. The theory is if you take a mentally unstable person and bathe him in child porn, virtual or not, he's more likely to actually commit a crime acting out what he's been exposed to. So, by removing the stimulus, you prevent the crime.

    I don't know how much data there is on that, but the hypothesis at least has merit for study.

    Further, there's the issue of whether preventing said crime is worth the infringement of the rights of those without the tendency to act out their crimes. There's no acceptable regime that can limit the ban to those actually likely to be affected.

    Our society is all over the place on this issue. On one hand, someone can't smoke next to me in a restaurant because their smoke probably causes me harm. On the other hand, we haven't banned motor vehicles from roads, where people do walk on foot and a very real number of people are killed by the fact that there are cars on those roads.

    In the end it's all a careful balancing of trade-offs.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    1. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      but the hypothesis at least has merit for study.

      Not in the US. The supreme court was very clear on this point. The child porn laws only exist to protect the immediate victims. If there are no immediate victims, there is no crime. They flat out rejected the idea that the laws exist to remove "temptations" or anything of that sort, they said such a law would be unconstitutional and violate the first amendment.

      So it really doesn't matter if there is a link, not in the US. The supreme court has rejected the idea of thoughtcrime, thankfully.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    2. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1
      If there are no immediate victims, there is no crime.

      Two issues to cover, then:
      1. Anti-smoking rules would seem unconstitutional then - depending on my genome there's a good chance the carcinogens in second hand smoke won't even affect me, and if they do, I won't get lung cancer for decades, and then only an increased chance, not a definite probability. I can't see the immediate victim there, as much as cigarette smoke makes me hack. Air and river pollution are probably in the same school of thought.
      2. The crime at hand wouldn't be a thought crime, it'd be possession and/or production of the material. That's why this new law is being considered in the first place, as I understand it. And, as far as I know we still have 'hate crime' legislation on the books so the SCOTUS needs to get moving on one of those if they want to be out of the thoughtcrime business.
      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    3. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by vorpal22 · · Score: 1

      Second is preventing crime. The theory is if you take a mentally unstable person and bathe him in child porn, virtual or not, he's more likely to actually commit a crime acting out what he's been exposed to. So, by removing the stimulus, you prevent the crime.

      I strongly disagree with this kind of preventative measure: the same could be said of violent videogames, rap music, etc. Why should the rest of the population have to cater to a small mentally unstable minority because of the possibility that they may commit crimes? This is, IMO, just further hysteria over the pedophilia issue, and punishing people for completely victimless actions.

    4. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      The supreme court has rejected the idea of thoughtcrime, thankfully.

      In this case.

      You know most child pornography laws state that any image of a child "intended to cause arousal" is child porn, whether clothed or not.

      There are many court cases where the prosecution has been successful in prosecuting someone even when the case hinged on "what was this person thinking or feeling at the time they viewed this image and what might their intent have been in doing so?"

      How is this not thoughtcrime.

      The example i have is the man in New Jersey who was arrested, tried, convicted and jailed for a collection of underwear catalogues of young boys.

      He was convicted based on the evidence that he at one time in the past had "real" child porn, and therefore it was conclusive that he "intended" these underwear catalogues to be arousing, therefore, he had thousands of child porn images...... that happened to also be Sears underwear catalogues.

      hmpf.

      Thoughtcrime indeed.

      Stewed

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    5. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The theory is if you take a mentally unstable person and bathe him in child porn, virtual or not, he's more likely to actually commit a crime acting out what he's been exposed to. So, by removing the stimulus, you prevent the crime.

      By this logic, 'gangsta' rap music should be illegal in the highest degree.

      Take an underprivledged kid, put them on the street and bathhe them in masoginistic, violent, crime ridden lyrics and he's more likely to actually commit a crime acting out what he's been exposed to. So, by removing the stimulus, you prevent the crime.

      Now that I've said it that way, does it not reflect on how absurd the argument is?

      Stewed

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    6. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      By this logic, 'gangsta' rap music should be illegal in the highest degree.

      And there's a grey area between dissuading a negative influence and making it illegal. Bill Cosby is well known for getting hell for saying that the gansta rap ethos is hurting the black community and that parents should keep their children from it.

      It would be useful to have some data on it. If you could quantify 250,000 deaths per year directly attributable to gansta rap would it be worth having around as a society? Wouldn't it then be analogous to shouting Fire in a crowded theater? If it were 5 the answer may be different. This just shows the issue needs study and data before anybody can make any good decisions.

      I recognize that there are those who think shouting Fire should be protected speech and that they're never going to agree.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    7. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Why should the rest of the population have to cater to a small mentally unstable minority because of the possibility that they may commit crimes?

      Hey, if I could get an M-60 I would. I think it would be great to take down to the range and see how much confetti I could make of some targets. That would be a rip-roaring good time.

      I also have a tree stump that wouldn't stand up to a stick of dynamite but I wind up having to wrap chains around it and tug it out with my truck. That I can't get either at WalMart are stupid laws, from my perspective, because I'm not going to go kill people with either.

      What's worse is that I'm not even able to, at this point, mount an insurrection against the government, should it start to oppress its people, because they have MOAB's and F-35's and I have a .22LR. That's practically unconstitutional if you consider the founding principles, but we don't have a society any longer where these freedoms are allowed. The conscious choice to give up freedom for security has been made in these cases. Most people are not used to these freedoms so they don't miss them.

      Also, go back and read my comment. My advocacy was for study and data. What is done with that data is a separate issue, but it's a bad idea to ever make complex decisions without accurate information.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    8. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      1. Not necessarily, because this case hinges on an enumerated freedom specifically guaranteed by the constitution, free speech. Laws that infringe on freedom of expression have a pretty high bar, higher than most laws.

      2. Material that deals with child porn but doesn't actually involve children is an exercise in thought. Banning them would be an attempt to control what people can talk and think about.

      Hate crimes: Yes, You are probably right. A crime is a crime, but a crime due to some political position is probably protected speech, in so far that it involves the political position. Adding extra punishment because of the political motivation of the criminal is likely a violation of the first amendment.

      Terrorism falls under the same thing, although you could probably argue that the intent is a sort of mass extortion or blackmail, and extortion and blackmail aren't protected speech.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    9. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by Loco+Moped · · Score: 1

      Second is preventing crime. The theory is if you take a mentally unstable person and bathe him in child porn, virtual or not, he's more likely to actually commit a crime acting out what he's been exposed to. So, by removing the stimulus, you prevent the crime. Good point. And a very good reason for banning the Bible. It's chock full of rape, pillage, and genocide. Damn those Gideons!

    10. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      What's worse is that I'm not even able to, at this point, mount an insurrection against the government

            Don't worry. When the time comes you'll be able to get your hands on plenty of hardware. There's always someone willing to finance a revolution. If some Iraqi peasant can get his hands on an AK47 I'm sure you can.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    11. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by terrymr · · Score: 1

      So there are at least two issues here. One is legislating morality. Lots of people in power like to do that. It's not justified.

      The bulk of criminal law is about legislating morality. Its about punishing behavior that society doesn't approve of : murder, robbery, rape etc.

      Otherwise I agree. The creation of "gateway" crimes, x leads to y so we must ban x, is dumb.

    12. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by asuffield · · Score: 1
      Second is preventing crime. The theory is if you take a mentally unstable person and bathe him in child porn, virtual or not, he's more likely to actually commit a crime acting out what he's been exposed to. So, by removing the stimulus, you prevent the crime.

      I don't know how much data there is on that, but the hypothesis at least has merit for study.


      As a subject for research, perhaps. As a legal theory, not at all. Paedophilia is legally considered to be a specific mental disorder. It cannot be caused by looking at pictures - you either are or you aren't. They use this in court all the time (to get higher and more punitive sentences), so they don't get to turn around and introduce a contradictory principle just because it's politically convenient. I don't even care whether this is a medically sound theory - it is inexcusable to set up a contradiction like this. Even a bad, wrongheaded law is better than a law which says different things depending on what the politicians want it to say today.
    13. Re:Legislating Morality vs Preventing Crime by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      there's a grey area
      You must be new here, we only do black and white.

      Perhaps a simple example will clarify this.

      Microsoft and Sony are black, Apple and Nintendo are white.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  39. grooming by Spaham · · Score: 1

    Hi !

    like most people, I started by wondering why cartoons needed to be banned since no child was molested in doing it.
    But then I remembered what other uses those cartoons (and real photographies/movies) get put to.
    They're used for grooming. Paedophiles may use those to show the kids and explain that it's an OK thing to do,
    "see, everyone's doing it", that kind of thing...

    So I guess the line is where you start to over protect or when people start to lose any kind of freedom.

    1. Re:grooming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's already a law against that. Why do we need another one? So we can throw two charges at them instead of one? It also opens the floodgates against those who would -never- conduct such actions.

      If they just want our lawyers to have more ammunition against those paedophiles they do catch, then this is the wrong way to do it.

    2. Re:grooming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what, exactly, makes you think outlawing such images would prevent such a thing happening?

      In fact, in your example, would they use cartoons, or other, "easily" available, illegal material?

    3. Re:grooming by skorch · · Score: 1

      I think you're going to have to show some evidence of this sort of thing actually happening before you can even begin to justify making nebulous laws to regulate it. Even then, that wouldn't condemn the "art" itself, just the illegal use of it in this hypothetical "grooming" you pulled directly from your ass. Just about anything can be used in an illegal manner if you want it to, just as you can't blame and regulate forks if someone were to stab people with them. In this situation of grooming you speak of, the people involved could just as easily (if not more so) use already illegal real child porn they made themselves, rather than some cartoons. What they're doing is already illegal (seducing children), so how would illegalizing the cartoon child porn they're using help prevent it? "oh we can't do that now, the cartoons are illegal,"

    4. Re:grooming by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Man i was in my kitchen cutting carrots thinking "how great is my new knife" when suddenly i realized....

      My knife could be used to kill someone.

      So I threw it out the window and proceeded to cut my lettuce with a spoon.

      Then I realized my spoon could be......

      OK right...

      having sex with kids is illegal.

      making a doodle on a piece of paper doesn't need to become illegal in order to accomplish the enforcement of the previous statement.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    5. Re:grooming by Loco+Moped · · Score: 1

      ...you can't blame and regulate forks if someone were to stab people with them.
      Oh really? Isn't the UK where they're trying to license kitchen knife sales?
      Can forks be far behind?

    6. Re:grooming by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      They're used for grooming. Paedophiles may use those to show the kids and explain that it's an OK thing to do,

            Pedophiles regularly use small animals in order to lure children. Perhaps we should ban puppies and kittens too.

            AS A PARENT it's YOUR DAMNED JOB to make sure that your kids know about sex, and know that some conversations are ok and others are not - until they're old enough to think for themselves. Don't trust the "government" to do it for you with a ridiculous law.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    7. Re:grooming by Spaham · · Score: 1

      waow I'm amazed at how people get excited about this topic.
      I was merely trying to explain why some people might want to ban cartoons, not advocating it !
      relax

    8. Re:grooming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Paedophiles may use those to show the kids and explain that it's an OK thing to do,
      "see, everyone's doing it", that kind of thing...

      So the next time a pedophile takes a child to see the original of Michelangelo's David, we should send in the jackbooted fucking nazi cops to smash it with sledgehammers. Fuck the bastards.

  40. and who definies child? by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    because of the internet who gets to decide what the age of a child is?

    and what are the physical characteristics are we going to measure it by?

    and whats constitutes porn? Provocative poses? Skimpy clothing? No Clothing? touching or not touching?

    too many ways to bite everyone in the ass

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:and who definies child? by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      guys have been arrested, tried, convicted and jailed for having a stash of underwear catalogues in the US (Granted, these are previously convicted sex offenders, but still).

      So... "all of the above"?

      Stewed

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    2. Re:and who definies child? by tinkerghost · · Score: 1

      A guy was just arrested last week in the US for making child porn --- he took pictures of fully clothed children piled on top of each other in a playground --- with the parents permission.

    3. Re:and who definies child? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      and whats constitutes porn? Provocative poses? Skimpy clothing? No Clothing? touching or not touching?

      If the "extreme porn" proposals are anything to go by, porn will be defined as: "material that has been solely or primarily produced for the purpose of sexual arousal".

      Note, there is no requirement for the image to be sexually explicit - so it need not involve sexual acts or nudity, this would cover anything which could be considered erotic.

      It's also odd that laws about possession are based on assumptions on the intent of the producer. Quite how one is expected to know the mind of the producer when you are viewing a particular image on the Internet, I don't know.

  41. Bullshit by Orrin+Bloquy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This was Ashcroft's pathetic argument. I've worked with the application that's used to generate 99.9% of all CGI porn out there (Poser), and its models are instantly recognizable. The lighting and rendering options are prosumer level at best, but more importantly the artists who create Poser porn have NO INTEREST in making their work indistinguishable from photography.

    This is not a trivial point. CGI porn is created by artists who don't have the skills or talent to draw it themselves, not Hollywood-level techs looking to circumvent the law. And their paysite customers are comfortable in the knowledge that possession of images of recognizably non-real events means no exploitation of real-world models. No victim, no crime.

    The unspoken presumption here is that what pervs want more than anything is photorealistic images which defy distinction. The number of people who subscribe to sites with hand-drawn furry porn says otherwise.

    Maya is the gold standard for images indistinguishable from photos. People take college-level courses to learn it, never mind master it, and the investment of time and money is inconsistent with the ROI they could get using it to make loli porn.

    When the police's argument devolves to "this means the burden of proof is still on us," I honestly don't give a fuck.

    --
    "Made up/misattributed quote that makes me look smart. I am on /. and I must look smart."
  42. Arguing both ways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indeed -- argued both ways, no less! It could alter the behavior by making them want to act on their urges with real children more, or it could alter the behavior by satisfying their urges so they no longer feel the need to go after real kids.

    Ok... here's my two cents:
    I don't agree with the latter part of that argument. From my point of view and doubtless that of every victim of a pedophile, their parents friends and family there is something seriously wrong with pedophiles on a very basic level. Determining what what caused this defect in their psyche is something i'll leave to the scientists, details don't really interest me, there is so patently obviously something wrong with these people I don't need to know the specifics. Advocating that we should tolerate pedophilia and try to direct pedophiles towards using virtual child porn is not an attempt to solve this problem it is simply treating or rather alleviating a symptom. Pedophilia just like any other form of rape is about control more than just sex and I don't think any hardcore pedophile will be satisfied with virtual playthings for very long so in the end virtual child porn will not achieve anything more than just postpone the inevitable a little while longer.

    1. Re:Arguing both ways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Pedophilia just like any other form of rape is about control more than just sex

      Pedophilia is a state of being, rape is an act.

      I don't think any hardcore pedophile will be satisfied with virtual playthings for very long so in the end virtual child porn will not achieve anything more than just postpone the inevitable a little while longer.

      You claim willful ignorance of what makes pedos tick and then you try to speak authoritatively about how they think. Which is it?

    2. Re:Arguing both ways by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You are confusing things.

      MOST CHILD ABUSE is perpetrated by non-pedophiles. These are "situational molestors" to scientists who study this and they are triggered by power and violence. These people are highly unlikely to look at child porn. These people are highly likely to have mental illness.

      The rest of child abuse is perpetrated by pedophiles. These are "preferential molestors" to researchers and they are highly likely to be interested in child porn, however, are very unlikely to be seeking the violence/power/domination relationship and often see themselves on the same level as the child, as a peer (of sorts). Within this group, there are actually very low rates of mental illness and according to studies, most in this group are regarded as "highly normal" by psychologists except that they are attacted to children.

      Fred Berlin and Johns Hopkins University, probably the world's most prominent researcher on this topic, says that with these people, their attraction is most effectively studied in a similar contest to other, more normative "sexual orientations", and not studied as a mental illness, because it, clinically, has more in common that direction.

      The trick is that differentiating these two groups is critical to understanding the issue.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    3. Re:Arguing both ways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The rest of child abuse is perpetrated by pedophiles. These are "preferential molestors" to researchers and they are highly likely to be interested in child porn, however, are very unlikely to be seeking the violence/power/domination relationship and often see themselves on the same level as the child, as a peer (of sorts). Within this group, there are actually very low rates of mental illness and according to studies, most in this group are regarded as "highly normal" by psychologists except that they are attacted to children.

      The actual definition of the word is "an emotional and often sexual attraction to prepubescent children." It is not common for someone emotionally attracted to another person to intentionally cause them harm.

      One might argue that paedophiles are the LEAST likely to harm a child. But then, we're not allowed to say that, are we? The moral furor in this country knows no bounds.

  43. Negima! by alexgieg · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry for UK fans of Negima!: Magister Negi Magi. It's one of the funniest manga teen comedies I've ever read, but due to the protagonist being a 10-year old who is surrounded by partially naked teen girls, it might end up being targeted by such a dumb law. How absurd!

    --
    Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    1. Re:Negima! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh, I second that! Have you seen the new anime series for it?

  44. What came first, the attraction, or the image? by CyberLord+Seven · · Score: 1
    Check out the cover to this month's Air Brush Action.

    Now let's just assume that Dru Blair decides, for whatever reason, to paint a naked child and post it on the internet. Is that a violation of the proposed law?

    Humans have always created images. Humans will always create images. The computer is just another tool that happens to also be good at distribution.

    Even in cultures that frown upon "realistic" images art is created. Now, I don't know what is going through the minds of those that look at the abstract decorative art in Islamic culture, but I'm sure they have their share of pedophiles as well as other things I would classify as freakish.

    People who suggest such draconian laws and principles just don't understand human beings. Human beings are creative, and versatile. Even if you lock a man in a dark room, his mind will conjure images that he finds pleasing.

    Bottom line, you cannot legislate imagery. I suggest that if we were to travel to 19th century Iraq, or Iran we would find "realistic" images, just as we would find "porno" in Queen Victoria's London.

    --
    We have always been at war with Eurasia!
    1. Re:What came first, the attraction, or the image? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Humans have always created images. Humans will always create images. The computer is just another tool that happens to also be good at distribution.

      Let's go into the monasteries and burn all the manuscripts. It's well known that some bored monks drew little figures with hardons and such like while "illuminating" the manuscripts.

      The world has gone fucking nuts when they start retroactively censoring the language in "Saving Private Ryan".

      It also leads to perversions like the case in the midwest where some bitch complained that a five year old boy touched her same-aged daughter on the butt. When asked if the boy had put his hand on the girl's rear end, she said, "No, it was on her front butt."

      Isn't that little girl going to grow up with a healthful attitude toward sex? If you think so, think about it the next time you put your dick into your wife's or GF's "front butt".

  45. But virtual murder is A-OK, right? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think if there's one word that describes the so-called western "democracy" that would be hypocrisy.

  46. ...because it perpetuates behavior..... by Berserker76 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Lets face it, having any type of image, either real or computer generated, de-synthesizes its viewer to the actual criminal act of molesting a child. This in turn makes it easier for themselves to justify or at least in some form allows them to rationalize that what they are doing is ok. Who knows how many more innocent victims there have been because of the availability of this type of material on the internet. We have all seen "To Catch a Predator" on TV.....this exact type of material is creating an epidemic in this country. Whether it is real or computer generated material, it is wrong, it is disgusting and anyone who would defend it in the name of freedom of speech or expression needs to seriously question their own moral judgment. I would even be curious to see if since the internet becoming main stream if cases of child molestation have increased due to it making this type of material more readily available.

    1. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by wes33 · · Score: 1
      de-synthesizes
      I don't think this means what you think it means :)
    2. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by Berserker76 · · Score: 1

      ..yes you are correct, I meant desensitize, the dangers of slashdotting at work are clear!! =)

    3. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by fox1324 · · Score: 1

      Desensitizes. Regardless, we are all rational human beings, and I seriously doubt any amount of desensitization would allow an otherwise-normal person to rationalize abusing a child. Your argument that viewing child porn might lead one to act on it is bad because it does not hold the child-predator 100% responsible for his/her actions (it blames the porn). If anything, you and others who hold similar beliefs are doing society a disservice by allowing for the possibility that the fault could lie ANYwhere else. Don't think for one second we won't see the "porn made me do it" defense if this idiocy keeps up. (I bet someone with legal knowledge could cite me a case right now actually). Also, I dont think its true. Child predators have been around long before magazines and the internet were created.

    4. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Child sex abuse claims have dropped drastically over the last decade according to the US Department of Justice...

      Your argument just submarined like an airplane without wings... but i'm glad you were curious about the actual statistics instead of blindly accepting the drivel that mass-media puts out.

      "an epidemic" is a media catchphrase used to scare people into watching their crappy infotainment broadcasts and it is marketing FUD.

      The "epidemic" of school shootings is in the same boat... school shootings have dropped by 900% since the late 80s... but "we have an epidemic" is a pretty common phrase on news stations when discussing school shootings too, isn't it?

      Don't believe the mass media. Dateline once strapped TNT on the back of a truck to "demonstrate" how a faulty gastank could cause explosions in some SUV. They almsot destroyed the sales of that entire line of SUVs in the process. Real journalistic.

      And to quote the "leader" of the Perverted Justice group who runs "To catch a predator" (yes, a direct quote)

      My goal is not to protect minors...It's to go after pedophiles...it's because pedophiles are disgusting people...That's why we go after them.

      There is the crux of the issue. People like feeling indgnant, because it makes them feel morally superior.

      It's human nature.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    5. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by Loco+Moped · · Score: 1

      Lets face it, having any type of image, either real or computer generated, de-synthesizes its viewer to the actual criminal act of molesting a child.

      Only to you, sir.
      Only to you.

    6. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by Dunbal · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Lets face it, having any type of image, either real or computer generated, de-synthesizes its viewer to the actual criminal act of molesting a child.

            Proof, please?

            By the way, I guess I am doomed to become a child molester, since I regularly see and touch naked children every day as a physician? I might as well shoot myself now and save myself the embarrassment of a trial and then having to register as a "sex offender", right? Correlation does not equal causation. It would be interesting to see some randomized trials before jumping to the conclusion that looking at this art makes you a pedophile. Males of any age are naturally attracted to young females. Heck, there's a reason why women are smaller than men, have more fatty tissue than men, and have softer skin than us. It makes them look young. Attractive to men.

            I don't look at this kind of stuff, and I don't necessarily agree with it. But I think this kind of law is a dangerous precedent without any real evidence that it is causing harm. People are being sexually stimulated ALL THE TIME by TV/advertising/fashion ANYWAY. This is just another drop in a raging torrent, IMO.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    7. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Regardless, we are all rational human beings"

      What planet do you live on? Just read 99% of the replies to this topic and you'll know better.

    8. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by Berserker76 · · Score: 1

      First off, after much research I could not locate anything that states that child sex abuse has dropped dramatically the past decade.

      I did, however, found this:

      http://republican.sen.ca.gov/web/36/projectkidsa fe/stats.asp

      I basically found the same data on several web sites. 1 in 3/4 girls and 1 in 7 boys are sexually abused before they are 18 years of age. What else do you need to know, what more research did you need to do before you realize how serious of a problem this is in our country.

      I am certain that most of you have not seen what sexual abuse does to a child, how it empties their soul, or see how it effects them the rest of their lives. Until you see it first hand what it does to a person, I do not understand how you can make a sound moral judgment on either side of the argument.

      And lets face it, when someone is arrested for sexually abusing a child, they do not find pictures on their computer of rainbows and puppy dogs, they find child pornography in the form of pictures, video's, stories and probably computer or cartoon animated pornography that depicts young girls.

      And I am not attempting to try to be morally superior then anyone, I am just a person who cannot understand how anyone can argue against the elimination of any medium that depicts the abuse of children.

    9. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Nobody is arguing against outlawing the abuse of children.

      But outlawing virtual images depicting it....

      Is much akin to outlawing fictional murder on TV. When someone is arrested for murder, they probably have watched many movies containing murder and perhaps played video games containing murder.

      There is some circumstantial evidence that this can bias people toward murder.

      But some people find enjoyment and stress release in watching movies that contain murder. You can find special effects shorts that are nothing but a graphic, bloody murder, with no story... made simply for "look, i did it" value of the special effects.

      The only reason this is a hot issue is the percieved "specialness" of the whole category of crime.

      People cite disparate statistics.... people say that 35% of women are sexually abused, but then cite that 90% of those abused have massive emotional trauma...... but population studies show us that less than 2% of women have 'massive emotional trauma'.... the numbers don't add up, there is a leap being made somewhere in there.

      I recognize that some cases result in massive trauma. I recognize that some girls are abused...

      But... wait... you just made a huge local leap here (i just noticed it)

      when someone is arrested for sexually abusing a child, they do not find pictures on their computer of rainbows and puppy dogs, they find child pornography in the form of pictures, video's, stories and probably computer or cartoon animated pornography that depicts young girls.

      Yes, they occassionally do. Those are the stories you see in the media. But you have nothing but anicdote to show for it. In fact, frankly, I can't recall ever having heard anything more than anicdotal on this and i've done some extensive reading......

      I'm calling BS on that "most who are arrested for abuse have pictures" claim. I don't think it's provable, nor do I think it's even true. See if you can prove me wrong. I highly doubt it.

      I think you're inventing for the sake of proving your argument.

      Stew (who likes a good debate now and then)

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    10. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      medium that depicts the abuse of children.

      That's it right there. Drawings are drawings. Who exactly is the victim? There's a world of difference between a hentai artist who draws loli/shota, and Roman Polanski actually jamming his thumb up some poor girl's ass at a party. Oops! Did I just "depict" child abuse? I guess typing that graphic sentence makes me a child abuser, according to your broken logic.

      Let's keep jail cells ready for people who actually harm other people. Drawing something offensive harms nobody (and offending someone isn't harming them). Heck, can't you authoritarian types be happy enough that nonviolent drug users are being sent to jail over victimless acts? We don't need more people sent to prison, wasting our tax dollars enforcing thought and speech crimes.

    11. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by Soul-Burn666 · · Score: 1

      It is also most likely they will find a copy of Microsoft Windows. So lets jail everyone who uses it.
      It is also most likely, over 50% that the offender is a male. Lets just lock up all males.
      Moreover, 100% of all offender breathe air. Lets just lock up everyone who breathes.

      Correlation does not equal causality.
      Citing that in most cases of X, Y is also present doesn't mean that Y is a sign of X.

      A large portion of people have porn on their PCs. Does that mean they are more likely to go out and rape women?
      A portion of people has cartoon "child" porn (in perens because it is not REAL). Does that mean they are more likely to go out and rape children?
      A large portion of people plays violent games all the time. Does that mean they are more likely to go out and shoot people?

      And on the other side:
      Do Christian priests watch porn in their pastime? Probably not. Were there cases of child abuse? Yup.
      Did they have porn in the biblical age? Not really... Were there cases of rape and sodomy? Yes.

      --
      ^_^
    12. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by QCompson · · Score: 1
      Whether it is real or computer generated material, it is wrong, it is disgusting and anyone who would defend it in the name of freedom of speech or expression needs to seriously question their own moral judgment.

      Anyone who modded you insightful needs to seriously question their own intelligence.
    13. Re:...because it perpetuates behavior..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I am just a person who cannot understand ....

      Next time, just stop there, before making a damned fool out of yourself.

  47. Let's not play word games by msobkow · · Score: 1, Insightful

    We're talking about child porn that tries to play games with legal loopholes about whether a child is actually harmed. It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal". It's the same problem that is caused by allowing pre-teen and teen models to be dressed up as if they were adults by clothing advertisers.

    Comparing South Park's creative and repetitive killing of the self-repairing Kenny to someone trying to portray a realistic scene of rape and torture is disingenuous at best. No one would ever confuse Kenny with being real, but when you consider the stellar work done by SquareSoft, Pixar, or the team behind Ghost in the Shell 2, it's pretty clear that we can do the synthetic actors that Lucas fantasized about years ago.

    Even Hentai isn't a fair comparison, because while the material is deeply disturbing "tentacle sex demons" ties in with some Japanese religions and folklore. It is an excellant example of a storyline where you don't want live human actors, but that doesn't mean it should be suppressed by people who don't understand the cultural significance.

    When's the last time some sicko dressed up as a Japanese sex demon and tried to molest a horde of young women?

    When's the last time a child got dragged off by a paedophile to be raped in darkness and terror?

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      When's the last time some sicko dressed up as a Japanese sex demon and tried to molest a horde of young women?
      I don't know what Hentai you've been watching...
    2. Re:Let's not play word games by flitty · · Score: 0

      "When's the last time some sicko dressed up as a Japanese sex demon and tried to molest a horde of young women?"

      I don't want to know the answer to this question. I mean, what's the difference between japanese sex demons and furries?

      --
      Whether or not there is some sort of god, I'm not supposed to say/god is a word and the argument ends there-Smog
    3. Re:Let's not play word games by truedfx · · Score: 1
      We're talking about child porn that tries to play games with legal loopholes about whether a child is actually harmed.
      What makes you think that? I see nothing suggesting that in either the summary or the article.
    4. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wow, the only thing missing is

      "THINK OF THE CHILDREN"

      Your post is a series of "yes, but" and "what if".

      What if child porn incites pedophiles? Is there any evidence at all of this? No, there isn't. People claim it's "common sense" and site statistics that show 70% of molestors have viewed child porn.

      Know what? I'd bet 90% of married men have viewed straight porn. Can I conclude that porn incites marraige?

      There is no provable connection, nor is there even anicdotal evidence that shows a causal link.

      I, personally, believe that porn is a great outlet for people who would otherwise do freaky things... like that guy in college who had the bestiality porn.... (not joking).

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    5. Re:Let's not play word games by TFloore · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We're talking about child porn that tries to play games with legal loopholes about whether a child is actually harmed. It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal". It's the same problem that is caused by allowing pre-teen and teen models to be dressed up as if they were adults by clothing advertisers.

      How is this different from trying to ban violent video games?

      Either you know the difference between fantasy and reality, in which case CGI child porn should not be banned... or you don't, and violent video games should be banned also, by the same reasoning you use above.

      Be very careful with your thinking, lest it be applied in ways you won't like. Decisions are not made in isolation, and consistency of thought is important.

      --
      This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is... Oops. Frank, I've got your sig again! Where's mine?
    6. Re:Let's not play word games by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal".
      Does it really? Do you have some evidence for that? Or is that just random extrapolation "because it makes sense?" From what I've seen and read, paedophilia is triggered in the vast majority of cases by the abuser having been abused himself. They're merely perpetuating their own experiences. Child porn never caused someone to become a child molester. Besides, are you really arguing that paedophilia has increased since people had more access to child porn?
      The potential benefit of a law has to always be weighted against its potential drawbacks. In this case, benefits are imaginary, while the drawbacks will happen immediately. Or are you planning on relying on all artists labeling their art with "child porn here", so that law-enforcement doesn't have to rely on completely arbitrary yardsticks?
      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    7. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      When's the last time some sicko dressed up as a Japanese sex demon and tried to molest a horde of young women?

      I refuse to answer that question on the grounds that it may incriminate me.

    8. Re:Let's not play word games by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      """It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal". It's the same problem that is caused by allowing pre-teen and teen models to be dressed up as if they were adults by clothing advertisers."""

      Two words for you: "Thought crime."

      "There is no more dangerous error than that of mistaking the effect for the cause: I call it the real corruption of reason." -- Nietzsche

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    9. Re:Let's not play word games by suitepotato · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Then let's ban depictions that glorify rape. They might be encouraging it.

      Then let's ban depictions that glorify murder. They might be encouraging it.

      Then let's ban depictions that glorify fighting. They might be encouraging it.

      Then let's ban depictions that glorify violence. They might be encouraging it.

      Then let's ban depictions that glorify nonconformity. They might be encouraging it.

      Then let's ban depictions that glorify revolution. They might be encouraging it.

      Then let's ban depictions that glorify rebellion. They might be encouraging it.

      Then let's ban depictions that glorify (enter anything you are against here). They might be encouraging it.

      Meanwhile, as people are off looking for pedophiles under every bed, trying to find someone, anyone, else that can be blamed for the ills of their society, their children are keeping busy watching television. They watch commercials for Bratz girls with jeans halfway down their buttocks. They see that the penultimate expression of being a woman is to have jiggly breasts and to have guys slathering like brainless drug-addled fools after them. They see that their parents are liars and hypocrites who treat relationships and marriage like a game to grow bored with and other people's hearts like things to be toyed with. They learn that sex and lust are all that their adults seem to care about.

      At least there won't be any nasty pictures of fictional children having fictional sex. That at least is a consolation when Mrs. Clarkson calls up about her daughter Cindy being pregnant and naming your son as the father. And when your daughter is found taking off her clothes in front of that webcam you bought her, for some guy named Chuck in South Dakota, you can comfort yourself knowing that you were dead set against cartoon child porn.

      Yup. You can sleep a lot better knowing that you had nothing to do with furthering the problems...

      --
      If my grammar and spelling are off, I am [distracted/tired/careless] (take your pick)
    10. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      From what I've seen and read, paedophilia is triggered in the vast majority of cases by the abuser having been abused himself.

      Careful with your wording. Imperical studies show that preferential molestors (aka pedophiles) are slightly more likely to have been abused, but it's not a large number.

      "Situational molestors" (non-pedophiles who get off on the power, etc) are far more likely (into that "vast majority" category perhaps) to have been abused, but that abuse is usually primarily physical and emotional abuse.

      The REAL fact is that there is no known "trigger" that is statistically and emperically consistent with real data and populations. People just like to assume (and say) there is to get their legislation passed or fund thier 501c non-profit.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    11. Re:Let's not play word games by pyr3 · · Score: 1

      We're talking about child porn that tries to play games with legal loopholes about whether a child is actually harmed. It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal".

      Do you actually have proof that it encourages pedophiles to attack children? This is the same argument used against violent video games. Couldn't it be possible that violent people are drawn to violent video games, not that violent video games create violent people? The same applies to this. People that are pedophiles are drawn to this stuff because they are pedophiles... not because the content made them into pedophiles. Most child sexual abuse comes from a friend or family member, not some ambiguous recluse that offers candy to kids on the playground.

      Most pedophiles slowly work their way up to the abuse, perform the act, then deny, even to themselves, that it even happened. The people that you think about that wear their pedophilia as a badge of courage are few and far between. The majority of pedophiles will abuse with or without this material. Pedophiles can be encouraged by regular porn too. They see a regular porn of a girl having anal sex, and they say "I'll try that on my daughter." Should we now ban all porn because it 'inspires pedophilia?' Banning these things based on what you *think* that a minority of pedophiles will do based on it is akin to banning violent video games because of 2 or 3 incidents where someone killed a bunch of people and just happened to like violent video games too.

      Let's carry this a step further. If depicting acts that are not socially and morally acceptable, even in fantasy, should be banned then where do we draw the line? Hollywood has plenty of examples of movies that celebrate poor moral values. Under your logic, movies like "Payback", and the Godfather Trilogy should be banned because they encourage rogues and Mafiosos to continue their illegal and immoral acts. You logic makes a depiction of any illegal act a bannable offense.

      Also, how do you quantify cartoon sex? Yea, there are blatant examples of people raping kids and saying things like "I like raping 12 year olds like you" in the cartoons/comics. But what about more ambiguous examples? What about a 40 year old woman that gets trapped in the body of a 12 year old? Is it child abuse or illegal to see depictions of her having sex in the 12 year old body? How do you quantify the age of someone in a cartoon? Unless they explicitly state their age, there are plenty of characters that are supposed to be teens that look like they are 20. There are also plenty of 20 year olds in these comics that look like they are teens?

      It starts to encroach on the realm of thought more so then the realm of reality. How does any of this differ from someone that only sleeps with women that look like they are 15, even though they are really 21? Should that be illegal too? You also have to account for the real porn out there that is between consenting adults that look like they are teens. Right now that is legal. After this law it would still be legal, but fake depictions of the same thing would be illegal.

      It's the same problem that is caused by allowing pre-teen and teen models to be dressed up as if they were adults by clothing advertisers.

      I would rethink your wording. The other day I saw a billboard of a bunch of maybe 12 year old boys dressed up in blazers and such for Christmas. You could hardly say it was sexual at all, but if you were to ban based on your wording, then things like that would be banned.

      Comparing South Park's creative and repetitive killing of the self-repairing Kenny to someone trying to portray a realistic scene of rape and torture is disingenuous at best. No one would ever confuse Kenny with being real, but when you consider the stellar work done by SquareSoft, Pixar, or the team beh

    12. Re:Let's not play word games by Loco+Moped · · Score: 1

      Best post this week. Won't somebody Please Mod this UP?

    13. Re:Let's not play word games by Moflamby-2042 · · Score: 1

      Would you ban things like "Neon Genesis Evangelion"? It may surprise you that NGE has not even once caused me to go out raping 13 year olds! Shouldn't there be a greater concern for portrayals of violence and torture in film? Which category is more morally bankrupt, showing depictions of killing and torture, or depictions of sex? I'd love UK to get these priorities straight and first ban any show or cartoon with fictional violence in it since it "obviously" encourages the real thing too. Then we can get around to banning any show depicting illicit theft of property and neighbor's ass coveting and whatever's left of the 10 commandments. Maybe this will lead to nobody watching tv nor any movies nor magazines nor comics in any form except pertaining to only the most sterilized topics found in the bible as god intended.

    14. Re:Let's not play word games by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      We're talking about child porn that tries to play games with legal loopholes about whether a child is actually harmed.

      Wait, so whether a girl actually was "dragged off by a paedophile to be raped in darkness and terror" or not is just nitpicking at semantics? I think you lack some perspective on what the crime was - doing it or documenting it.

      It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal". It's the same problem that is caused by allowing pre-teen and teen models to be dressed up as if they were adults by clothing advertisers.

      So the fashion industry is pedos too? Also, all girls that dress slutty deserve to be raped, they shouldn't be allowed to dress up like that. The hyperbole is getting a little thick.

      Comparing South Park's creative and repetitive killing of the self-repairing Kenny to someone trying to portray a realistic scene of rape and torture is disingenuous at best. No one would ever confuse Kenny with being real, but when you consider the stellar work done by SquareSoft, Pixar, or the team behind Ghost in the Shell 2, it's pretty clear that we can do the synthetic actors that Lucas fantasized about years ago.

      Get back to us when Pixar and ILM start doing kiddie porn vids. The cartoons you could make up today are almost as far from reality as you.

      When's the last time a child got dragged off by a paedophile to be raped in darkness and terror?

      ...because of fake kiddie porn? Good question, you tell me. But since you think that pretty much everything else encourages pedos, may I first suggest you introduce the "No mimicing MTV vids by anyone under 18" law. I imagine girls trying to shake their ass like the latest pop idol is more dangerous than anything you've come up with so far.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    15. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal".


      I don't think the individuals in question care how they're state of mind or behaviour is considered, as long as they get their pleasures.

      If there's a causality link, then consider baning it. If not, let them get their jollies alone, without harming actual people.
    16. Re:Let's not play word games by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Interesting - I haven't heard about distinctions between preferential and situational molesters. As far as I could tell, it was always a combination of the two: it's a lot easier to have power when the other is 3 years old. Can you point me to some sources?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    17. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Sorry, i'm at work and can't go searching around for 'sex abuse' in google too much.

      I think i had an article i squirelled away somewhere when i get home.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    18. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      The important part that many people seeem to miss (even doctors and legislators) is that there are clearly two VERY different groups involved for VERY different reasons and with VERY different tactics.

      That's not to say there isn't likely some cross-over, but there is a vast difference between the core of those groups.

      back to work now....

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    19. Re:Let's not play word games by ozbird · · Score: 1

      No one would ever confuse Kenny with being real

      He isn't? You bastards!

    20. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are an awful lot of "things" that a free society allows simply because some people enjoy them.

      That's the nature of free society.

      I'm glad you don't want to live in a free society.

      Take your desire elsewhere, because I want to live in a free society.

      A victim has to file a complaint. Your grasp of "victim" is deluded so much by your moral indignation at the topic being discussed that you simple shrug and decide to throw methodology and logic out the window in favor of your personal moral interpretation becoming codified in law.

      I see only moderate social benefit to religion, for example, where I see a great deal of damage and strife caused by religions which procliam a "one, true" anything that is worth fighting for (islam, christianity, flying spaghetti monsterism)

      That said, do I have a right, as a politician (if i were one), to ban religion outright because I believe it can be used in nefarious ways and does, in fact, hurt many people?

      Legislate your morality elsewhere. I want to have 3 wives if i damn well please. And i want the government not to recognize marraige as a binding legal contract so they can't each steal half of my assets..... or so my sleazy neighbor can get his part-time-hooker benefits based on a Las Vegas priest's proclimation "I now pronounce you..."

      I think the institution of marraige being codified into a legal contract system with a licence to practice..... that's a travisty of justice and immoral in my opinion.

      We do not legislate morality. Legislating morality is not how our society was built and not how free thinking people would want to excercise their will. That is dictatorship or theocracy... or worse.

      Society should do the minimum necessary to ensure basic freedoms. The more laws, the more corrupted they become.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    21. Re:Let's not play word games by msobkow · · Score: 1

      Two words for you: "Bull Shit"

      Thought crimes would come into play if people were charged with child abuse because they thought a child beauty-contest winner was cute/viable.

      Thought crimes would come into play if there were no media influencing their behaviour. Restricting the influencing material is no difference than restricting website and media content under hate crime laws. "Oh, I'm not actually a racist, I just talk that way." Yeah, right. *spits in contempt*

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    22. Re:Let's not play word games by lewp · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The lack of it isn't going to cause global warming, mass killings, or cute furry kittens to die.

      The same could be said about any sort of "art". No, I don't think artificial kiddy porn has particular artistic significance, but I feel pretty much the same way about death metal. At least I'm smart enough to realize that my taste shouldn't decide what other people can see.

      Any sort of creative work can (and will, quite frankly) be considered obscene by at least one group of people. The valid argument against kiddy porn, of course, is that you have to exploit real kids to make it. If you can remove the actual kids from the equation, I can't see how you can outlaw it and still turn a blind eye to, say, Grand Theft Auto -- which also simulates the most criminal acts in our society and really doesn't have much artistic value -- unless there is some kind of concrete evidence that looking at the simulated/fake stuff causes people to go after the real thing (and AFAIK there isn't, though I'm certainly no expert).

      This is the shit side of the argument, of course, because you're instantly labeled a pedophile, or at the very least against the kids. That's certainly not the case. I just think anytime you ask the government to decide what's "obscene" you're asking for trouble. Let's focus on catching actual child molesters and avoid that mess altogether.

      --
      Game... blouses.
    23. Re:Let's not play word games by LanMan04 · · Score: 1

      They see that the penultimate expression of being a woman is to have jiggly breasts and to have guys slathering like brainless drug-addled fools after them. Penultimate does not mean what you think it means. It doesn't make any sense in this context.
      --
      With the first link, the chain is forged.
    24. Re:Let's not play word games by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Who cares if there is evidence or not?

      I care, and the law had better care too.

      just do what's morally correct. There's no good reason for the material to exist.

      That's not a good enough reason to ban them. You need a compelling reason for them to not exist, and morality is not relevant. You must show actual harm.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    25. Re:Let's not play word games by Jesterboy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Posts like this really make me sad. While I do believe in a free society, and as such you are entitled to your opinion, it troubles me greatly to see such a failure of logic.

      Who cares if there is evidence or not?

      Our legal system cares; it is the basis of our free society that a person is innocent until proven guilty. To me, this is analogous to saying "the constitution is just a piece of paper", and breakdowns in reasoning such as these are what has led to the Patriot Act.

      We don't need years of studies to determine if artificial kiddie porn is detrimental. The lack of it isn't going to cause global warming, mass killings, or cute furry kittens to die.

      Fair enough; why don't we ban rap music, action movies, and violent video games while we're at it? According to your reasoning, since they have some small, unprovable possibility of inciting violence in a miniscule amount of people, and since it won't cause global warming or dead kitties, it's alright. We should also ban speech against the government as it might incite riots. See how easy this goes?

      the person looking for this material is a victim

      Or a potential victimizer. One thing that is always true is that people always want what they can't have. Actual pedophiles probably don't care about this one way or the other; they're going to be pedophiles anyway, and they need medical help. Banning this sort of synthesized pedophilic porn won't do a lick of good for them. For others, I would rather that people out to "satisfy their curiosity" would be able to use this instead of actual child pornography. I personally find it detestable, and would rather it didn't exist, but part of having a free society is the tolerance of others and their rights. I'd rather the KKK didn't exist as well, but as long as they operate within legal limits, they are entitled to their beliefs as well.

      That's the really hard part about a discussion of a truly free society; it means you have to be tolerant of others thoughts and opinions, even when they drastically conflict with your own. I don't know about other countries, but I believe America has a long ways to go if it wants to become an actual free society.

      Or we can succumb to fear and hatred rather than reasoning and tolerance; it's certainly a lot easier, isn't it?
    26. Re:Let's not play word games by j-turkey · · Score: 1
      Someone having a desire for this material alone is an illness that needs to be addressed.

      Ah, so you are advocating mandatory "treatment" for those who partake in thought crimes or possess forbidden information? Remember that in our society, "treatment" equals incarceration. "Diagnosis" equals a conviction, which requires the individual to register as a sex offender and carries a stigma for life (and limits individuals to live outside of many townships as well as carrying restraining orders from schools, etc). I think that George Orwell would have a field day on this one. I'd suggest that you carefully rethink your position on this if you care anything about any kind of freedom.

      --

      -Turkey

    27. Re:Let's not play word games by Hatta · · Score: 1

      We're talking about child porn that tries to play games with legal loopholes about whether a child is actually harmed. It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal".

      Alternatively, fake child porn could provide an outlet for those people to satisfy their urges without harming any actual kids. When fake kid porn and real kid porn are both illegal, they might as well just use the real stuff. And there you go, your law aimed at protecting children has actually harmed them.

      Maybe I'm right, maybe you're right. How's anyone to know without a study?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    28. Re:Let's not play word games by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Restricting the influencing material is no difference than restricting website and media content under hate crime laws.

      Exactly right, those are great examples of thought crimes. The government doesn't have any business regulating any of this.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    29. Re:Let's not play word games by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      No, no, he's right. The ultimate expression of being a woman is refusing to get a job b/c you have "traditional values", forcing your husband to work like a dog to stay ahead of the finance charges on the credit card you fraudulently took out against his bank account and refuse to give up. Then, when he catches you sleeping with the neighbor and threatens to divorce you, bring up allegations of abuse and get your mother to testify that she has known about the abuse for years now. You get to keep the house, which is conveniently close to the neighbor, receive alimony checks, AND slander your husband's name all over town. THAT is the ultimate expression of being a woman.

      Me? I'm a very happily married man; why do you ask?

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    30. Re:Let's not play word games by omeomi · · Score: 1

      It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the pedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal". It's the same problem that is caused by allowing pre-teen and teen models to be dressed up as if they were adults by clothing advertisers.

      Well, that's your theory, and I'm not saying it's wrong, but I'm pretty sure it hasn't been proven either. If it has been proven, or at least shown that there is a high correlation, I'd be interested to see the source. Much like the argument that violent-themed video games or music make teens more violent, it's the sort of argument that folks inclined to "truthiness" and "thinking from their gut" can line up behind, but it doesn't really make it any more true or accurate.

    31. Re:Let's not play word games by computational+super · · Score: 1
      We're talking about child porn that tries to play games with legal loopholes about whether a child is actually harmed. It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children
      • BEDEMIR: There are ways of telling whether she is a witch.
      • CROWD: Are there? What are they?
      • BEDEMIR: Tell me, what do you do with witches?
      • CROWD: Burn, burn them up!
      • BEDEMIR: And what do you burn apart from witches?
      • VILLAGER #2: Wood!
      • BEDEMIR: So, why do witches burn?
      • VILLAGER #3: Because they're made of wood...?
      • BEDEMIR: Good!
      • BEDEMIR: So, how do we tell whether she is made of wood?
      • VILLAGER #1: Build a bridge out of her.
      • BEDEMIR: Aah, but can you not also build bridges out of stone?
      • VILLAGER #2: Oh, yeah.
      • BEDEMIR: Does wood sink in water?
      • VILLAGER #2: It floats! It floats!
      • BEDEMIR: What also floats in water?
      • VILLAGER #1: Bread!
      • VILLAGER #2: Apples!
      • VILLAGER #3: Very small rocks!
      • VILLAGER #1: Cider!
      • VILLAGER #2: Great gravy!
      • VILLAGER #1: Cherries!
      • VILLAGER #2: Mud!
      • VILLAGER #3: Churches -- churches!
      • VILLAGER #2: Lead -- lead!
      • ARTHUR: A duck.
      • BEDEMIR: Exactly! So, logically...,
      • VILLAGER #1: If... she.. weighs the same as a duck, she's made of wood.
      • BEDEMIR: And therefore--?
      • VILLAGER #1: A witch!
      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    32. Re:Let's not play word games by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      And I think that every man attending a church is a victim of brainwashing. So what? Do you care to ask "VICTIM"?

    33. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Restricting the influencing material is no difference than restricting website and media content under hate crime laws.

      You are EXACTLY right!!!

      This is why the government of the US cannot and will not restrict website and media content under hate crime laws. It is completely contrary to the freedoms of the US Constitution.

      Private individuals are more than welcome to censor their viewing and their kids' viewing but the government cannot, by law, do this.

      Nor should it be allowed to.

      Thanks for proving our point accidentally. :-) Make it easier from this end.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    34. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 0

      Using your logic, there's no evidence of God existing. Humans are not living things, but are essentially collections of chemicals. There's no evidence of a soul existing or there being an afterlife, a certainly no consequences for doing anything. Everyone eventually becomes worm food abscent of any feeling, consiousness or memory, so there really is no basis for anyone determining what is right and wrong. Therefore, if I kill someone, there really is no victim and nothing right or wrong about it. So in a free society, I should be able to kill anyone I please. There's slippery slopes on both sides of the mountain.

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    35. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 1

      so you are advocating mandatory "treatment" for those who partake in thought crimes or possess forbidden information

      No, I'm advocating treatment for people who partake in kiddie porn. I'm not asking for some Orwellian society...I don't want someone to have access to child pornography, get hooked on it, and discover later that his computer just isn't giving him enough of a rise, so he decides to lure some neighborhood kid into his house. What is so wrong about that? I'm not some conservative Bible-thumping facist, I just would prefer not to encourage behavior that is outright wrong with material that has no valid reason to exist. A picture or video of a two year old getting raped isn't in the same league as a violent video game or someone getting shot on TV. Period.

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    36. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actual pedophiles probably don't care about this one way or the other; they're going to be pedophiles anyway, and they need medical help.

      But so do homosexuals, communists, and heretics. Don't single them out.
    37. Re:Let's not play word games by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      We're talking about child porn that tries to play games with legal loopholes about whether a child is actually harmed

      The difference between whether a child is actually harmed, or no child is harmed, is a "loophole"?

      Comparing South Park's creative and repetitive killing of the self-repairing Kenny to someone trying to portray a realistic scene of rape and torture is disingenuous at best.

      Except the Government is proposing to extend the law to beyond realistic material - they specifically mention cartoons, which are not exactly realistic.

      I agree with you that Hentai isn't a problem - the problem is that even if we agree that cartoons of baby raping should alone be a criminal offence, chances are any law would be broad enough to include any cartoon which might look under 18, hence covering a broader range of material.

      You and I may know what Hentai is about, but all the police officer will see when your home is raided is a load of "sick perverted cartoons with children in".

    38. Re:Let's not play word games by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Then let's ban depictions that glorify rape. They might be encouraging it. ...

      Shh, don't give them ideas!

      (That we should then ban depictions of rape, murder and violence was the example I used to give when discussing the idea of fake child porn - but now the UK Government is planning to ban fake images of sexual violence (see the "extreme porn" link in the summary)! I didn't mean them to take me seriously... I wonder how far down the list the Government will go?)

    39. Re:Let's not play word games by nsillik · · Score: 1

      So we have two systems of belief here:

      1. We are just physical beings who become worm food and have no afterlife. Therefore the only rewards we can receive are those that are given during our life, and in society those rewards are only given for good (or even mediocre) behaviour.

      2. We can act how we want and cause whatever problems we wish as long as we wholeheartedly believe that Christ is the only living God, begotten by the Virgin Mary....... And then we get to spend a perfect blissful eternity with God in a flawless environment beyond our wildest imagination.

      Which one is more likely to cause problems again?

    40. Re:Let's not play word games by Ligur · · Score: 1

      I know better than to go troll-hunting but then again I'm not that smart.
      Violent video games would by your argument "encourage behaviour that is outright wrong with material that has no valid reason to exist.". The reason for them both existing being the same: pleasure, distraction, entertainment. Not to by any means belittle the evils of child pornography, however, murder is farther to the bad side of my scale. So tell me all depictions of things that are wrong, or even things that encourage "wrong behaviour" should be banned so I can dismiss your opinion outright.

      --
      Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast.
    41. Re:Let's not play word games by Kehvarl · · Score: 1

      Legislate your morality elsewhere. I want to have 3 wives if i damn well please. And i want the government not to recognize marraige as a binding legal contract so they can't each steal half of my assets..... or so my sleazy neighbor can get his part-time-hooker benefits based on a Las Vegas priest's proclimation "I now pronounce you..."

      Sounds good to me, with some caveats. I see no problem with you having 3, 4, ot 40 wives, assuming you and the wives like it that way. On a similar note, I see no problem with one of your wives having 3, 4, or 40 husbands, provided she, you, and the other husbands like it that way.

      As to marriage being a binding contract, that's a good point too. The term "marriage" has a great many connotations, particularly religious or spiritual ones, to many people. This is fine, but has no place in a contractual obligation. Marriage should instead be treated as a private affair or ceremony with no real legal basis; leaving civil unions or other contracts available for legal purposes.

      Basically just agreeing with you here, but we may have some differences when considering actual implementation and details.

    42. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 1

      I don't know the answer to that, but I know allowing computer animations of children getting sodomized isn't beneficial in either scenario....or do you really think so?

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    43. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 1

      I know better than to go troll-hunting but then again I'm not that smart

      so I can dismiss your opinion outright

      Me, a troll? Pot, meet kettle.

      It's a pretty sad world when people can't understand the difference of kiddie porn versus other "entertainment" as you put it. I'm not going down the worn out "where do we draw the line" argument. If you don't get it, I'm not going to sway you. The fact that you classify kiddie porn as entertainment says something. Justifying kiddie porn on the basis of freedom and free society is just as bad if not worse then denying freedoms under the guise of homeland security and fighting terrorism.

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    44. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 1

      I'm actually a moderate to left-leaning Democrat who believes in God, though not the twisted perception of religion and Christianity that seems to pervade Slashdot, or the extreme far right Christians which I despise. I don't think anyone needs an inkling of religious beliefs to understand why child pornography, "artificial" or "real" is wrong. Merely having children and family will open your eyes to this truth. In world that has enough Bad Things (tm) going on, there's no need to introduce the potential for more.

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    45. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      There is no judgement being passed here regarding the relative social merits of virtual child porn.

      In contrast, we are discussing the social ills that crop up when we begin legislating thing which offend us, rather than things which cause us harm.

      The benefit is.... it gives some people enjoyment... just like football, beer, Allah or any number of millions of other things that we do simply because we LIKE it.

      But when do we tell someone "you cannot do that".

      Generally, when it directly hurts someone. Not when it "indirectly, might cause some influence toward" or "may tend to persuade" or "might someday result in a potential for".... no... when it directly removes someone's freedom to enjoy the things that they enjoy.

      In this case, it is clear that *real* child porn does exactly that.... it removes the child's freedom and/or harms that child.

      In the case of "virtual" porn, there is no such argument that does not include "indirectly might" or "could potentially influence" or "may tend to persuade"....

      Do you see the clear and obvious difference?

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    46. Re:Let's not play word games by Ligur · · Score: 1

      Well, it's not about what you or I believe others get out of kiddie porn, that's the whole point.
      This is about expressions of someones imagination. Let's say some pedophiles out there have an additional fetish for bathing suits. How is cartoon kiddie porn different by your standards than any other "harmless" pictures of children in bathing suits that might arouse pedophiles? In both cases no children were (presumably)harmed in the production of the image. In both cases it according to you excites pedophiles to the point where they might act on their impulses. The *only* difference is that in the first case it fits into our personal borders of "ok", and the second it doesn't.
      Who's to say what we like is good and what we don't is bad? Sifting through your arguments that's the only solid one I can find. You don't like it and that makes it bad, and bad things should not exist ergo what you don't like should not exist.
      I accept that things that I don't like exist as long as they don't harm me or others, as long as the things I like that others don't are allowed to exist as well.
      This is basic dude, do onto others. All others.

      --
      Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast.
    47. Re:Let's not play word games by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      I'm an atheist and I think that every religion is brainwashing by definition. "But you can believe in stones as long as you are not throwing them at me",- to paraphrase Dr. Wafa Sultan.

      Anything which doesn't harm to anyone should not be prohibited - that's a matter of principle.

      As long as alcohol and tobacco are not banned (they ARE shown to cause great harm to children) I don't think anyone has the right to tell me what is wrong (BTW, I don't drink alcohol at all, I don't smoke and I don't watch child porn).

    48. Re:Let's not play word games by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      When's the last time a child got dragged off by a paedophile to be raped in darkness and terror?

      The instance rate of children being kidnapped by a stranger and raped is small. It is insignifacntly small. More people win million dollar lotteries than are victims of such a crime, and most people think that winning the lottery is a very low probability event. The statistics for it are not even kept because of the infrequency. The vast number of child-rape cases are by relatives. Second are close friends of the family when they have permission to be with the child. Child abuse of the nature people worry about most is almost non-existant. Yet, people worry about it much more than the parents that have the kid worry about Uncle Teddy coming over, even though Little Caroline says she doesn't like hin very much and would like someone else to babysit her.

      Note, I'm not condining, supporting or excusing child rape of strangers. I'm just stating the fact that it is infrequent, much more infrequent than most people think.

    49. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Who cares if there is evidence or not?

      Say, didn't there used to be a requirement for at least a double-digit IQ for posting on Slashdot?

    50. Re:Let's not play word games by j-turkey · · Score: 1
      No, I'm advocating treatment for people who partake in kiddie porn. I'm not asking for some Orwellian society...I don't want someone to have access to child pornography, get hooked on it, and discover later that his computer just isn't giving him enough of a rise, so he decides to lure some neighborhood kid into his house. What is so wrong about that?

      There's nothing particularly wrong with what you want. However, I believe that the desire that what you're expressing is based upon a faulty assertion. I seriously doubt that a person without pedophillic tendencies will stumble upon child pornography, become hooked on it like it's some sort of drug, and then just become a pedophile. As a non-pedophile, I'm repulsed by child pornography, and no amount of it will change that. Similarly, no amount of scat porn or snuff films will turn me onto these either.

      What we're talking about is banning possession of a certain type of data. This is in place to weed out people who have tendencies toward a certain behavior that is a titanic-sized taboo in our society. I have a feeling that people with these tendencies don't choose them. This is similar to how homosexuals don't simply choose their sexuality. This can be extended to just about any sexual preference (BDSM, erotic asphyxiation, foot fettishes, etc). I'm not saying that prosecuting these people is done with 'evil' intentions. This is under the guise of protecting children -- but how far is too far?

      Furthermore, your assertion is based on a correlation rather than causation; a common logical fallacy. If you can show that child pornography causes pedophiles to abuse children, I'd be right there with you. However, I am only aware of a correlation between child abusers and their use of child pornography.

      Finally, I have a hard time with the fact that in a free society where one has sufficient liberty publish instructions for building a weapon of mass destruction, we designate certain information (be it text, an image, audio, or video) as forbidden. The motivation for this equates to persecuting individuals for thought crimes. In a free society, I just don't believe that mere possession of forbidden information equates to felonious behavior.

      How do you propose that we treat these people? Currently, the only option is prison. So by my numbers, we're putting people in prison to treat them for thought crimes. Since this offense is a sex crime, that person must register as a sex offender for the rest of their lives. The stigma of being permanantly labelled as a convicted felon, a sex offender, and a pedophile (who may have never abused a child) will continue to punish that person for the rest of their life. We're not talking about something like schizophrenia, which can be treated in a voulentary and discreet manner unless it leads to an actual crime or real evidence that the individual will do harm to themselves or others. Do you have a better way?

      I do, however, believe that individuals who manufacture or distribute child pornography should be prosecuted. I just draw a line in how far we should go in order to protect children.

      --

      -Turkey

    51. Re:Let's not play word games by julesh · · Score: 1

      It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal".

      Evidence please. The studies I've seen (sorry, don't have links) have concluded that there is insufficient evidence to come to this conclusion, and that the opposite effect (that access to fantasy material allows those with paedophilic urges to experience them purely as fantasy rather than acting them out on a real victim) may actually be more significant.

      Even Hentai isn't a fair comparison, because while the material is deeply disturbing "tentacle sex demons" ties in with some Japanese religions and folklore. It is an excellant example of a storyline where you don't want live human actors, but that doesn't mean it should be suppressed by people who don't understand the cultural significance.

      By the descriptions I've heard of the proposed legislation, Hentai is very much a fair comparison because a significant proportion of it would become illegal.

    52. Re:Let's not play word games by julesh · · Score: 1

      the person looking for this material is a victim.

      So clearly they must be punished.

      Err... no, that's not right. If they're the victim (and I agree, BTW), we should be helping them. Not sending them to prison for multiple years.

    53. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 1

      But when do we tell someone "you cannot do that".

      When the potential harmfulness outweights the potential benefits.

      Generally, when it directly hurts someone. Not when it "indirectly, might cause some influence toward" or "may tend to persuade" or "might someday result in a potential for".... no... when it directly removes someone's freedom to enjoy the things that they enjoy. In this case, it is clear that *real* child porn does exactly that.... it removes the child's freedom and/or harms that child. In the case of "virtual" porn, there is no such argument that does not include "indirectly might" or "could potentially influence" or "may tend to persuade"....

      I'll agree with your last statement, but does anyone really need a study to remove "indirectly" or "potentially" from their minds? I'd go so far as to say it's naive to think kiddie porn doesn't have a significant behavior-affecting impact on those who use it; you know that real child porn harms children, there's no need for a law or a study to tell you that. Undoubtedly many children who were victimized by child pornographers grew up to be productive adults. Perhaps some where unaware of their vicitimization and never suffered physcologically (spelling?). That doesn't lessen the hideousness of it, nor make a case for it to be legalized.

      The crux of your argument is freedom, the crux of mine is potential harm. I don't see the motivation behind opening a Pandora's box of material that people are living without today just to provide so called "entertainment".

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    54. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 1

      Let's say some pedophiles out there have an additional fetish for bathing suits. How is cartoon kiddie porn different by your standards than any other "harmless" pictures of children in bathing suits that might arouse pedophiles?

      You have to take it in context in which it is used. If I found a swimsuit designer with a wall of pictures of kids in swimsuits, that would be normal. There is a normal use for such a display, the person is in the business of making swimsuits. If I go to some guy's house and he has a wall of such pictures and lotion and tissues nearby, there's something very abnormal going on.

      Another thing to consider is that with mainstream porn, it's basically acceptable to perform what is going on with consenting adults (in western society, standard disclaimers apply). There is no such "consenting adult" behavoir possible with anyone re-enacting what's going on in child pornography. Fantasizing about what is going in it isn't healthy or normal. It's certainly not out of the realm of possibilities that someone exposed to such material for a long time could be desensitized to it and want to perform it for real. While the same could be said of violent material, usually such material is intertwined with a plot in a movie or TV show that often shows the consequences of such actions.

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    55. Re:Let's not play word games by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 1

      It's not the laws per se, but the lack of oversight in their application. Right now there is a law on the books that makes every human being a criminal in the US for possessing a neurotransmitter that can be used for recreational chemistry. They can get a sealed arrest warrant against you, raid your house, kill you, and say that you were a drug dealer. That's from before the war on terror. Part of this is malice, part oversight on the part of the lawmakers.

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
    56. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 1

      Furthermore, your assertion is based on a correlation rather than causation; a common logical fallacy. If you can show that child pornography causes pedophiles to abuse children, I'd be right there with you. However, I am only aware of a correlation between child abusers and their use of child pornography.

      Can I ask you a question and have you answer honestly? Would you allow someone who openly uses virtual child porn but has no history of pedophilia to babysit your kids? Hire them for a job? Let them work at a school? Would you even associate with such a person?

      My assertion is based on correlation to an extent. But have there been any studies to disprove causation? Is there anything beneficial to this material, other than entertainment, albeit very sick entertainment? No. Will eliminating this material stop all pedophiles? No. I won't argue that there could be a pediphile bit/gene. Could virtual child porn further develop such tendencies in those who may have them? Absolutely. In light of this and the fact that our "free society" will continue to go on without virtual kiddie porn, I see no logical reason to allow it. This isn't going to snowball into book burnings and thought police detaining people. The onus is on those wanting virtual child porn to prove that it's not detrimental to society, not the other way around. I'm not going to let an academic excercise in freedom and libery override what is naturally understood as abnormal in most civilized societies.

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    57. Re:Let's not play word games by Isthisagametou · · Score: 1

      "That guy just ain't normal. Get him!"

    58. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      But when do we tell someone "you cannot do that".
      When the potential harmfulness outweights the potential benefits.

      Potential harm vs potential benefits? How do you measure something like that? A potential benefit of a particular individual viewing simulated child porn may be that they don't rape a child later because their desire is already sated to a point where they are able to control their urges.

      The potential benefit here is that there is one less victim of child rape. You could argue it the other way, of course: viewing the porn could potentially increase this individual's desire, resulting in him committing the act he otherwise would have resisted.

      Indeed, banning anything even remotely related to child pornography may potentially cause the supremely powerful aliens who have been monitoring our planet for the last 100 years to decide we're not worthy of sentience and destroy the entire planet. Can you prove that this not a potential side-effect of banning child porn?

      My point: arguing about "potential" benefits or harm is what people do when they're trying to justify their own moral position. Actual benefits and harm are worth considering; but the fact is, we don't know what the real effect of viewing this material is on people. Worse, it's quite likely that it will have a detrimental (to society) affect on some people, while a beneficial (to society) affect on others. How do you legislate that?

    59. Re:Let's not play word games by Ligur · · Score: 1

      "Fantasizing about what is going in it isn't healthy or normal."
      If there was no porn for me to watch, you can bet I'd still be fantasizing about women. The question of healthiness is irrelevant, these are pedophiles, obviously if we agree it is an unhealthy state of mind, them watching kiddie porn, actual or not, is hardly the cause of their condition. On the question of what is normal and not, I think I addressed it in my earlier post. Not for us to judge.
      "It's certainly not out of the realm of possibilities that someone exposed to such material for a long time could be desensitized to it and want to perform it for real."
      While I agree it's certainly not out of the realm of possibilities, that mere fact does not hold any weight in and of it self. It's just like you said, all about the context. I'm sure desentesizing is a factor, however I do not believe it's a given and that a sweeping judgment can be made of any group based on such speculation with any accuracy.
      In my opinion these points are mute in any case, because I believe the right of others to choose freely supersedes my fear of them making the wrong one. But that's a personal opinion and ideology which I don't expect anyone else to conform to.
      What I do expect is some restraint when it comes to banning *anything* from existence. Especially information and art. In this case not art in the sense of beauty but art in the sense of creation from someones imagination.
      You use movies as an example. Allright. How about pictures glorifying murder? How about specific movies glorifying murder? Couldn't we ban them too? Just the ones not showing the consequences? How about anything glorifying or encouraging *anything* that's unhealthy and not normal?
      Look, I'm sorry to rant on like this, I usually try to stay away from slashdot-arguments. I just don't think I know enough to keep anyone from knowing anything, not even what child abuse looks like. I don't think you know enough either.

      --
      Smoke me a kipper, I'll be back for breakfast.
    60. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to tell you this, but the box has already been opened. Why don't you take a swing by http://not4chan.org/ sometime. The fact that it isn't in the public eye doesn't mean it doesn't exist, and to my knowledge no person partaking in that community or others like it has committed the heinous act of child molestation. It's a purely specious argument to say there is potential harm in allowing people to view simulated child pornography in which no child is harmed (important point) when there is no way to prove that any potential harm exists. You are making a similar argument to that which was made in the US after Columbine against violent video games. There is no proof that violent video games cause children to become violent, and there is even little proof that they bring out and expand violent tendencies in those who are already violent. There are deeper underlying issues into why people kill people and why people molest children. Banning material which causes no direct harm is definitely not a solution and definitely is a serious violation of freedom of speech. It's preposterous to think that people would swallow such stupid ideas in the first place, and saddening to realize a majority agree with them.

    61. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      The crux of your argument is freedom, the crux of mine is potential harm. I don't see the motivation behind opening a Pandora's box of material that people are living without today just to provide so called "entertainment".

      "Those who would sacrifice essential freedom for temporary security deserve neither freedom nor security"

      'nuff said, i'm done.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    62. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Know what? I'd bet 90% of married men have viewed straight porn. Can I conclude that porn incites marraige?

      Yes, but whatever you do, please dont tell my wife :S

    63. Re:Let's not play word games by Mad_Rain · · Score: 1

      You need a compelling reason for them to not exist, and morality is not relevant. You must show actual harm.

      Just curious, what is an acceptable threshold for us to consider the "case closed" scientifically?

      Do we need to get a 10,000 person samples of men and women, show them child porn (group A), show them adult porn (group B), and show them no porn (group C) and then let them baby-sit your kid unsupervised over some course of time? Or should we just continue to do our best to gather correlations?

      All the people who are yelling out "Correlation doesn't equal causation" and "there is no research to support that conclusion, therefore it's wrong," in studying the effects of child porn makes me wonder if they have considered the ethics of attempting to study such a dangerous topic.

      --
      "What do you think?" "I think 'What, do you think?!'"
    64. Re:Let's not play word games by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      like that guy in college who had the bestiality porn.... (not joking).
      Yeah, nurse, this guy in college has a real nasty itch but he's real shy, so can you give me, er, him some ointment?
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    65. Re:Let's not play word games by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      There are an awful lot of "things" that a free society allows simply because some people enjoy them.

      That's the nature of free society

      No, a free society is based on allowing everything unless it hurts someone else (more or less).

      You don't seriously think you should allow child sex just because some people enjoy it?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    66. Re:Let's not play word games by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      Someone having a desire for this material alone is an illness that needs to be addressed.
      Ah, so you are advocating mandatory "treatment" for those who partake in thought crimes or possess forbidden information? Remember that in our society, "treatment" equals incarceration. "Diagnosis" equals a conviction, which requires the individual to register as a sex offender and carries a stigma for life (and limits individuals to live outside of many townships as well as carrying restraining orders from schools, etc). I think that George Orwell would have a field day on this one. I'd suggest that you carefully rethink your position on this if you care anything about any kind of freedom
      No, if you can equate this desire with an illness, you would treat it as such, and treatment does not mean incarceration, except in extreme cases (e.g. if you diagnose someone as imminently dangerous to themselves or others).

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    67. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 1

      The key word in that sentence is *essential*. I'd die for this country fighting for essential freedoms. The ability to view artificial kidde porn isn't essential by any stretch of the imagination.

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    68. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Nor is "hate speech" then, frankly, by your merits. The most educated interpretation of the word "essential" is that it is a modifier of freedom (all freedom is essential), not a qualifier (only certain freedoms are essential).

      But feel free to continue shaking your head.

      Do you believe anti-government speech is essential? Do you believe anti-semetic speech is essential?

      Do you believe violent fiction is essential?

      Once you decide, arbitrarily "we can't prove this is dangerous, but we think it might be and I personally don't find value in it, therefore, it is now illegal and carries a 25 year sentences and a lifetime of public shame on the 'registry'" Don't you see how utterly ABSURD that is?

      Just becuase YOU believe something doesn't make it right. When you set the precident that "things we (any group) don't like and don't find personal value in, are utterly without merit and do not deserve to exist". Almost everything "might" be harmful to someone... so once you cease seeing value in other people's expression, you cease to be willing to support their freedom to express it.

      You are SO caught up on "pervs" or whatever, that you completely fail to see the greater precident set by your belief, basically saying "anything that I do not personally see value in, is therefore intrinsically value-less" and that statement is tacitly false, from any angle. Some people see value to it. Therefore it has value. Period. Now, the burden of restricting it is on YOU to prove the harmfulness.

      Prove the harmfulness for me.

      Lay it out clearly with statistics that show artificial child porn causes children to be hurt and I'll bite.

      But as you see here, clearly many people do not believe that connection exists and it is very possible that it is actually FALSE and could be proven to have no effect.

      We do not have the *right* as individuals to put that restriction on other individuals until we *know*.

      Just because it's "sick" to you.... and even to many people.... doesn't make it qualified to be illegal.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    69. Re:Let's not play word games by tokuchan · · Score: 1

      Please define for me now the function that you would use to accurately determine the age of the participants of a purported piece of drawn child pornograpy. Your function, in order to be useful, must not trigger in the case of false positives. To do so would prevent legitimate artwork—under this law—from receiving legal protection. Go ahead, try, I'll wait.

      So, could you do it? What did your attempt at solution use? Facial recognition? Body size? Use of accepted child stereotypes like pigtails or silly clothing? How do you account for the edge cases where the depicted figure was a shape–shifter, or had their mind transplanted into a 12–year old clone of themselves? How about the case where they are a depiction of a person who is older than they look, or a depiction of a non–human that is very old and wise, yet somehow has the body of a 12–year old? It can probably be shown that just these edge cases make the problem of selecting cartoon child pornography undecidable. The addition of all of the other edge cases that you would have to account for almost certainly make the problem undecidable.

      The fundamental problem with these sorts of regulations and these sorts of arguments are the assumptions that they must inevitably make. You assume that there is some sort of function that correctly maps depictions of people onto their ages without accounting for the author's drawing style, the intended story, or the simple fact that these are nothing more than marks on paper or glowing lights on a screen that are being interpreted by the reader! Further, you assume a causal relationship—in the absence of any supporting evidence, and with an overwhelming amount of contradictory evidence—between depictions of depravity and the desire to commit such acts of depravity. I don't know about other people but, when I watch a violent movie (or a news report), I am not suddenly filled with an overwhelming urge to go out and kill someone. I further posit that those who are filled with such desires have a pre–existing condition that has not been properly addressed by the society that idiots like you purport to be concerned with.

      Although I cannot offer proof that any function to determine violation of this law is inherently undecidable, I conjecture that it is so. Since we cannot reasonably decide what constitutes a candidate for expulsion under this law, and since we must not censor free speech or censure the authors of such speech, we must err on the side of caution. Furthermore, since we have nothing to gain from such a law—no living organism is harmed at all in the production or consumption of this material—we must not approve such a law. To do so is to invite the kind of vigorous mind control and oppression so recently practiced by the USSR and still practiced by China and every tin–pot dictatorship in the world today. So, until you can find a concrete and correct method to determine speech that is actually harmful to the speaker, the listener, and society at large in perpetuity, I will continue to argue against ridiculous laws such as these.

      As Plato once said, "Quis Custodiet Custodes Ipsos?"

    70. Re:Let's not play word games by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      If you had read the discussion more carefully, you would have noticed that it was clearly qualified with a "direct, or likely harm". If an action causes, or is likely to cause harm to someone else, it is no longer protected.

      If someone shows me that 90% (or even 75%) of people who view virtual porn are *going* to go rape a child now (when they wouldn't have before) then I will absolutely support bans on it.

      That simply is not the case... it's not even close to the case. In fact, it might be the opposite of the case.

      Therefore, a free society has no grounds on which to ban this material at this point, other than "moral indignation".

      That is the core of my argument.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    71. Re:Let's not play word games by msobkow · · Score: 1

      That makes no sense. They're perfectly willing to prosecute the most vitriolic KKK members and similar hate-message mongers. What difference the medium?

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    72. Re:Let's not play word games by msobkow · · Score: 1
      A victim has to file a complaint

      Are you saying murder should not be prosecuted because the victim can't file a complaint?

      I completely fail to understand the arguments about "artistic" or "therapeautic" justifications. There just is no rational argument I've ever read or heard that holds under analysis and consideration.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    73. Re:Let's not play word games by Goody · · Score: 1

      This is the same old "where do we draw the line" argument. Why is the speed limit 65 on highway? Why is marijuana illegal? Why do you have to be 21 to drink alcohol?

      I don't see any value in Elvis impersonators, but I'm not for making them illegal. It's not an essential liberty, but it's not conceivable that Elvis impersonators in general do harm to society.

      Again, show me a study that demonstrates child porn doesn't cause latent pedophiles to commit illegal acts. The onus is on the group desiring child pornography, not people like me. I mean for God's sake, it's not like I'm claiming diet soda causes pedophilia. There's not a chance that child porn is going to produce some sort of miracle cure for something. And the vast majority of people in the world have no need or desire for child pornography, so it's not like we are denying individuals something they can't live without. This is hardly a denial of expression. Some people do see value in it, but they are such a small minority of the population, and arguably some percentage of these people have or will commit illegal acts. There's no such thing as a "healthy" use of this material. Sexual relationshops between adults and children aren't normal. Fantasizing about it isn't normal.

      You accuse me of being caught up in the "pervs", but you've essentially sanitized this into an issue about free society. The material is what it is. Framing this in a discussion about freedoms separates everyone from what this material really is. We can sit around all day talking about freedoms and free society, but it doesn't stop the reality of what this material is all about. To some this is a debate about free speech. To those of us that have families, children, and businesses to run, it's another unnecessary piece of social trash to deal with, not some legal precedence or an academic exercise. While I'm sounding like the far right talking heads I despise, it's the truth. What you call a "belief" is actually a belief held by the majority of people in the world. Tieing this to a freedom debate is a diversion, and you can't have realistic position on this topic unless you consider what the material really is. It's not that I have some oddball aversion to child porn, nearly the whole world considers it deplorable. If we have to remove bans on artificial child porn in the name of freedom and free society, then there's really no need for laws banning anything, except perhaps the most outrageous acts like murder. Of course, there's those who take pleasure in murder and suffering and if you believe in the afterlife, it's not so bad dying, so who am I to call it sick?

      Is there a double standard if I'm not concerned about banning things like hate speech or even support the right to it? Sure. If it makes you happy, yes, perhaps I am drawing an arbitrary line, albeit one that is based on a risk assessment. There are risks with every decision. The risks for allowing this material to exist are much higher than without it. The risks to children outweigh the benefits that child porn viewers would receive. Additionally, the risks that a move to make this material illegal would pose to other freedoms such as freedom of expression are minimal. In fact, this material as others have pointed out is already outlawed in the US. While we may be losing freedoms under the guise of terrorism and homeland security, the virtual child porn issue is a non-issue in the grand scheme of things. I doubt you'll find a politician on either side of the aisle supporting a removal of the ban on this material anytime soon. If you feel so moved, please call your representative and see the reaction you get. I doubt you'll find anyone in a position of authority who would support the rights of a child pornography viewer if there's even a miniscule risk to children.

      --
      Tired of being "punished" by the Slashdot $rtbl since 2002. I'm now over at http://soylentnews.org/ .
    74. Re:Let's not play word games by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      They aren't in the US, actually. The supreme court in those cases ruled the other way. Look up Brandenburg v Ohio.

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
    75. Re:Let's not play word games by pkphilip · · Score: 1

      The implication that the inputs we receive - whether visual, audible, environmental, emotional etc or whatever, couldn't possibly have any effect on us is unproven. All evidence indicates the exact opposite. So why should this be any different for porn? To argue that porn has no effect on society at all is a very big assertion and if you want to make such an assertion, you should be willing to back it up with facts.

    76. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Who cares if there is evidence or not?

      I sure as shit don't care about evidence. I see no evidence that killing you would do any damage at all to society, so it just might be prudent for you not to cross my tracks.

    77. Re:Let's not play word games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In this case, it is clear that *real* child porn does exactly that.... it removes the child's freedom and/or harms that child.


      As a matter of fact, it doesn't even have to do that. Children usually engage in sexploration as early as when they are 5 years old. A few days ago I saw two five year old kids engage in.... well, it wasn't simulated anal sex, but it was sticking a semi-erect penis between the buttocks of another kid.

      I am rather sure that neither of these kids was sexually abused. It's just a game.

      Now I am a straight (actually more asexual than straight) male, but let's imagine that I was a homosexual paedophile. What if I took a camera and made some photos, without drawing kids' attention to that and neither discouraging or encouraging them. What if I made lots of pics, picked the best and distributed them (without their knowledge).

      How would the kids be harmed in that case?
  48. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    Would that be considered illegal because it "simulates" an underage girl?

    Yup.

    It's a simple answer. Possibly not the one you were expecting. I'm not sure what the law is at the moment, but there's always demand for it to apply to photographs of somone who "is or appears to be under 18" largely because this makes it easier to prosecute without having the inconvenient defence of the photo being of someone of legal age.

    I make no attempt to defend this asttitude but it seems to be a common attitude.

  49. Another politican jumps on a bandwagon by Viol8 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Fine , ban these virtual images of child porn. Presumably all the carved cherubs and statues in fountains of pissing children will have to go too , not to mention numerous works of art. No? Oh and why's that then Mr Reid? Oh , of course , its called double standards, something politicians are past masters at.

    1. Re:Another politican jumps on a bandwagon by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1
      Presumably all the carved cherubs and statues in fountains of pissing children will have to go too , not to mention numerous works of art.
      Not to mention certain photgraphs.
      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    2. Re:Another politican jumps on a bandwagon by owlstead · · Score: 1

      It's only the most well known Belgium statue (I actually wouldn't know any others anyway):

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manneken_Pis

  50. Only the outlaws have CG child porn by Zorandler · · Score: 1
    Not to mention that just banning these images and making them illegal certainly isn't going to stop them...much like there is a thriving (real) child porn trade now (despite its illegallity), do we really think that by banning these images they will go away?

    Of course not, then only the people who really want them will trade them illicitly...however the freedom of everyone else will have slipped away down that slippery slope in the name of protecting the children.

  51. Don't think of the children? by apparently · · Score: 1

    Think of the children! err, wait, no stop thinking of children! Why are you thinking of children, are you some kind of pedo?!?

  52. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by yuna49 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Oh, come on. Loli characters in hentai often look like their 8-10 years of age and are purposely designed to look that young.

    That doesn't mean I support this type of legislation. Like you, I think that stopping real child pornography is a worthwhile activity because I oppose the abuse of real children. Nevertheless I think it's pure obfuscation to suggest someone can't tell how old a loli character is supposed to be by looking at the pictures.

    I also don't think, as some have suggested here, that hentai artists need to look at real-life children to figure out how to draw animated child porn. Somehow they've managed to figure out how to draw large tentacled monsters raping women without any real-world referents. Human imagination is (thankfully) a very powerful thing.

  53. Sign this by nicolastheadept · · Score: 1

    All citizens of the UK sign this http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/juggle/. Everyone else should check it out, and I recommend Americans form a similar petition to Dubya

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  54. The Road Ahead by Nonsanity · · Score: 1

    Illegal!:    The act
    Illegal:     A recording of the act (photograph, video)
    Illegal?:    A recording of a thought about the act (drawing)
    ILLEGAL?!?:  The thought about the act (Thought Police, here we come...)

  55. Answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kiddie porn! Hey, look, child molesters! Won't you think of the children!?

  56. I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Many of the same people who see no harm in pornography or even virtual child porn are the same people trying to get Joe Camel (cartoon character) away from the kids because it lead kids to smoking.

    I find such a view quite laughable because they use the exact opposite argument for each. "Its just a cartoon, nobody follows up with what a cartoon does" and "Its a cartoon, kids like cartoons and they'll start smoking because of Joe".

    Same thing with violent video games. There is no consistency.

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    1. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by xENoLocO · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Uh, wouldn't it be the same people trying to ban joe the camel are the same people trying to stop things like this, and not the exact opposite?

      For example, although I don't smoke I see no problem with cigarette ads. I see no problem with people smoking openly in public. In a building I can understand a restriction because the smoke doesn't leave, it stays there and becomes a problem. Eyes burn, and I'm even alergic to cigarette smoke. It's unfortunate but it's not the reason for my wanting to get rid of it indoors.

      As for the computer generated child porn, how are you going to "prove" the age of a virtual actor? Once they can blur that line, they're free to interpret it as they wish.

      It's not about perversions, IMO... this is a rights issue. Real child pornography images has real mental (and physical) harm behind it, and that's reason enough for it to be illegal IMO.

      --
      "The need to build the internet comes from something inside us, something programmed... something we can't resist."
    2. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by Neoprofin · · Score: 1

      If fake pedophiles had sweet suits and leather jackets, rode around on motorcycles and sports cars and were frequently surounded by a throng of attractive women maybe people would think pedophilia was cooler.

      Or, maybe children are more suseptable to having their minds altered by what they see and that why we make efforts to keep R rated movies, violent videogames, and yes, even pronography and ciggarettes out of their hands. Saying that violent pornography has no affect on mature adults is up for debate, saying that sex and violence has no effect on forming minds is ignorance.

    3. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by 1u3hr · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Many of the same people who see no harm in pornography or even virtual child porn are the same people trying to get Joe Camel (cartoon character) away from the kids because it lead kids to smoking. I find such a view quite laughable because they use the exact opposite argument for each. "Its just a cartoon, nobody follows up with what a cartoon does" and "Its a cartoon, kids like cartoons and they'll start smoking because of Joe".

      The difference is that if you don't want to see porno cartoons, no one is making you (except perhaps spammers and goatse-style "pranksters"). But if Camel is using Joe's iamge all over the place, I can't avoid it. More to the point, children can't avoid it.

    4. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      saying that sex and violence has no effect on forming minds is ignorance.

      No more so than saying they have an effect and yet not being able to back it up with any reliable measure of said effect.

    5. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One issue is about what sort of images you are allowed to show to adults. The other is about what sort of images you are allowed to show to children.

      Only if you regard children and adults as being equivalent is the issue the same.

    6. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by Fred_A · · Score: 1
      As for the computer generated child porn, how are you going to "prove" the age of a virtual actor?
      Duh, you look at the creation date of the file of course !
      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    7. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      "The difference is that if you don't want to see porno cartoons, no one is making you"

      You must be new to this internet thing. Porn is everywhere, and pornographers are targeting children.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    8. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      Your honor, I swear that the character was meant to be over the age of 18, look boobs, and pubes... (nevermind the diaper)... I rest my case your honor...

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    9. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      You can argue that this is not a child but 40-year-whore transformed into child by magic.

    10. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by geschild · · Score: 1

      The difference being the target audience.

      Childrens minds work quite differently from those of adults (I'm a father of two, I think I have at least some experience.) Kids minds are much more impressionable than those of adults. No wonder, really, they have fewer pre-existing patterns and are much more pliable in all senses.

      The problem is this: conservative adults are using the impressionability of children to justify broad measures, targeting not just content targeted at children but adults alike, to further their causes. Hence the mockingly exasperated use of the expression "Will nobody think of the children?!"

      This is such an example and putting forward the example of Joe Camel against it is therefore a strawman's argument. Joe Camel adverts were most likely expressly targeted at children to get them to use an addictive substance because at a later age they are more likely to be swayed against using it due to them using their discrete thinking abilities.

      These creative expressions, (yes, they're also creative expressions, besides being absolutely reprehensible to people with a less deviant sexual moral, like at least me, and I assume, perhaps to my peril, like you,) should be protected and not prosecuted. What adults do for their own pleasure, without harming anyone (not even just children) in the process, should be at their discretion, even if you disagree.

      Corrolary: I could say riding motorcycles and mountaineering are examples of completely irresponsible behaviour, but as long as the risk to others is small (you mostly risk your own life and limb) there's very little I can bring forward to justify a ban.

      Back on subject: it has been proven over and over again (I'm not backing this up with links to research, I think it is self-evident,) that trying to reduce the demand-side of an equation where people's deepest desires are involved doesn't work. Best to have government aim repressive measures at behaviour that is actually damaging to others (e.g. creation of real child pornography) and to make sure the demand side doesn't rise by making damaging behaviour socially unacceptible in a vocal way. A good example of this last idea is to ban smoking in the presence of non-smokers as has been demonstrated all over the world in the last decade.

      --
      Karma? What's that again?
    11. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by Arramol · · Score: 1

      Would this do? Pornography does indeed have a measurable effect on the human mind.

    12. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Uh, wouldn't it be the same people trying to ban joe the camel are the same people trying to stop things like this, and not the exact opposite?

      Funny, I thought the objection to Joe Caamel was that his nose and upper lip together looked too much like a cock and balls.

    13. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha. That's a brilliant idea. Pornographers, people who LOVE money, targeting children, who cannot possibly give them any money at all. Unless you think Mommy and Daddy will let their kid borrow their credit card to pay for a hogtied subscription? Or maybe you think 17 year olds are kids!

    14. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      You must be new to this internet thing. Porn is everywhere, and pornographers are targeting children.

      I said "except spammers". They're already breaking the law by pushing kiddie porn and bestiality so this proposal will hardly make any difference either way. And I rather doubt they're "targetting children". They just send it to everyone. Kids don't have any money to spend buying porn. They're amoral businessmen, there's no profit in corrupting children.

    15. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 1

      Ummm, no. From TFA: as the panelists themselves acknowledged, there is no consensus among mental health professionals about the dangers of porn or the use of the term "pornography addiction." Furthermore, where are the details of the experimental methods used to "measure" anything?

      You're going to have to try harder than that.

    16. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by pkphilip · · Score: 1

      I am surprised that this post was marked as insightful. Are you arguing that there is no evidence that the environment that we grow in and the influences coming from it has no bearing on us? Do you have any data to back up that assertion?

      I ask this because if what you are saying is indeed true, then we don't have to have legislation in place for banning adults from exposing themselves to children in parks, we don't have to worry about violence in the home affecting children who may not directly be the victims of the attack etc.

      If what you are implying is true, most of psychiatry is bunkum.

    17. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 1

      most of psychiatry is bunkum.

      Do you really need to condition that upon the truth of anything I said? Psychiatry is pretty far removed from hard science. If you see me place a rock in my pocket, does it follow that the rock is in my pocket? You can claim so. But perhaps there is a hole in my pocket. Point being... if you cannot measure an effect, how do you know there is an effect at all?

    18. Re:I'd like to bring Joe Camel into this by pkphilip · · Score: 1

      Ok, so I take it that you have determined, contrary to what experts across the world have determined over decades of research and observation, that environmental factors and the circumstances under which a child grows up cannot possibly have any effect on their mental state as adults; that it has no bearing on their choices, actions etc. You have also determined, after careful research - no doubt, that pornography has *zero* effect on marriages, has no effect on psychosexual development of an individual, has no effect on society.

      May I present you with some evidence which indicates the exact opposite from the Mental Health Research Foundation - a non-religious, medical body.

      http://mentalhealthlibrary.info/library/porn/pornl ds/pornldsauthor/links/victorcline/porneffect.htm

      Some findings which may interest you:
      1. People with higher education and generally higher levels of intelligence are more prone to indulge in pornography.
      2. People do tend to act out what they see in pornography; please see the link for some cases and the effect it has had.

      I do not mean to offend you in anyway, but those who claim that pornography has no effect on society haven't bothered to do the research and are seriously deluding themselves. Please look around and you will find research after research indicating the harmful effects of pornography - and these are all not from nut-job religious zealots.

      Please do not be fooled. Pornography is very harmful. I have personally indulged myself in it and the effects it has had on my life is profound.

  57. Words are not Deeds by The+Monster · · Score: 5, Insightful
    We're talking about child porn that tries to play games with legal loopholes about whether a child is actually harmed. It encourages the direct physical abuse of real children by conditioning the paedophile to consider their lustful and abusive mentality "acceptable" or "normal".
    I don't believe this. I think you've got cause and effect reversed. There's plenty of empirical evidence that suggests that letting people look at porn diffuses their 'lustful mentality' so that they are not as likely to commit an act of physical abuse. That some people's appetites cannot be satisfied by the porn does not equate to the porn causing the appetite itself.

    Let's suppose that you're chosen for a jury in a kiddie porn case. In order to render a verdict against the accused, you'll have to look at the porn. Will this make you go out and rape kids? No, it won't. That's because porn doesn't make normal people commit physical acts against others.

    But even if it were true, it wouldn't matter. Making pictures that 'encurage' activities is the expression of an idea, which isn't the same thing as the activities themselves. If someone abuses a child, they have committed an act against an actual person, which is justly punished. If all they're doing is looking at pictures and thinking about it, no one has been harmed, so there is no justification for sending Men With Badges And Guns to stop it.

    Got that, pervs? Look, but don't touch, m'kay?

    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

    1. Re:Words are not Deeds by skinfaxi · · Score: 1
      "There's plenty of empirical evidence that suggests that letting people look at porn diffuses their 'lustful mentality' so that they are not as likely to commit an act of physical abuse."

      Got any cites for that statement?

    2. Re:Words are not Deeds by msobkow · · Score: 1
      There's plenty of empirical evidence that suggests that letting people look at porn diffuses their 'lustful mentality' so that they are not as likely to commit an act of physical abuse.

      If that's the case, why has paedophilia been on a statistical rise for the past decade or so? What changed in society?

      If access to child porn reduces attacks, why are people charged with possession of child porn discovered after they're charged with molesting a child? Shouldn't those charged with abuse be the least likely to have a kiddie porn collection if your argument is valid?

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    3. Re:Words are not Deeds by fbjon · · Score: 1
      letting people look at porn diffuses their 'lustful mentality' so that they are not as likely to commit an act of physical abuse
      But it also desensitizes people...
      --
      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:Words are not Deeds by AdamKG · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If that's the case, why has paedophilia been on a statistical rise for the past decade or so? What changed in society?
      The fall of the Soviet Union. A significant decrease in mortality in Africa. The change from tapes to CDs and VHS to DVD.

      A general decrease in the quality of Disney movies. Better laptops. A European Union.

      Say, lets roll back all those things and see if the problems go away! ... or could it be that you have a pre-determined answer to your question that you were aiming for?
      --
      groupthink: It's good for self-esteem.
    5. Re:Words are not Deeds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But this argument is based in thought control...

      Do you believe in thought control?

      Are you persuaded by arguments for thought control?

    6. Re:Words are not Deeds by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

      Completely made-up numbers that may show why your logic there is flawed:

      Let us say that 2% of humanity finds the idea sexually interesting. Let us say that 50% of the people who go looking for child porn can find it. Let us imagine that 80% of the people who find the idea sexually interesting but are not able to find child porn end up molesting children, while 20% of the people who find the idea sexually interesting but are not able to find child porn do.

      Our end results: 98% of humanity never gets interested in it in the least. 0.2% of humanity is interested in it but never finds child porn or molests children. 0.8% of humanity molests children but has no child porn. 0.8% of humanity has child porn, but does not molest any children. 0.2% of humanity both molests children and has child porn.

      Out of the 99% of non-molestors, ~0.81% of them (0.8/0.99) has child porn. Out of the 1% of molestors, 20% of them have child porn. In this imaginary situation, child porn is far more common among molestors, and yet the existence of child porn also decreases molestation significantly. In fact, if child porn was available to 100% of the population in this scenario, the molestation percentage would drop to 0.4% from 1%.

      I do not claim any of these numbers are accurate in any way shape or form, I'm just pointing out the apparent mathematical paradox and why it's mistaken.

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
  58. correlation or causation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It should be unsurprising that most child molesters collect child porn. It should also not be too surprising that many child porn collectors have molested children.

    But lets consider another case. I would imagine that a very large percentage of those with marijuana posters or t-shirts or whatever actually smoke marijuana. Smoking marijuana is illegal, but possession of these posters is not. Should the existence of a strong correlation between certain forms of expression and certain illegal acts be sufficient to make those forms of expression illegal? To ban legal activities in order to prevent illegal activities would turn the first amendment* on its head, as the SCOTUS said when this type of law was before them.

    *substitute "free speech" for "first amendment" if you're not from the US.

    1. Re:correlation or causation? by theStorminMormon · · Score: 1

      Smoking marijuana is illegal, but possession of these posters is not.

      Yes, but you're ignoring the function of porn. A t-shirt of marijuana will not give you a buzz by itself. Neither will a poster. But the entire point of porn is to make you feel as if the action were really happening. So that's a little different, don't you think? Porn is *not* just a form of expression, it is fundamentally different than the other forms of expression you mention.

      -stormin

      --
      The Southern Baptist Convention has creationism. On Slashdot, we have porn.
  59. Umm..... by Churla · · Score: 1

    Aren't the anti-child pornography laws in place to protect children from abuse? Which children are being abused in making a cartoon again?

    Then again , anti drug laws are there to protect us from the crime involved in drug trade, right? That's why once a pharmacy manages to legitimize the use of a drug it's suddenly decriminalized.. oh.. wait.. nm

    --
    I'm a fiscal conservative, it's a pity we don't have a political party anymore
  60. That's fucking nuts. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    Wow, and I thought our crazy "18-year-old-boy sleeps with 17-year-old-girl on the boy's 18th birthday and thus becomes registered sex offender for life" was nuts.

    But in Canada, it is illegal to depict having sex with a 14 year old, but it is legal to actually go out and boink a 14 year old (assuming no relationship of trust or authority or prostitution/pornography, apparently). That is truly insane.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  61. Mod to +20 please by bjk002 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Read it people!!! Wake the hell up.

    --
    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
  62. sage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    gb2/b/

  63. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It took me five minutes to figure out you talking about trees.

  64. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by Lugae · · Score: 1

    Your comment makes me think of this law as one step closer to defining Orwellian "thoughtcrimes."

  65. I'd like to keep Joe Camel out of this by Rob+T+Firefly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Joe Camel really has nothing at all to do with this. The violent video games and porn cartoons are directed at adults, and meant to be restricted from viewing or use by children. If you show a child hentai, you're guilty of child abuse.

    The Joe Camel cigarette ads, on the other hand, were directed toward the general public and viewable everywhere, including places children would see them.

    1. Re:I'd like to keep Joe Camel out of this by LionKimbro · · Score: 1

      So, pretty much the entire population of Japan is guilty of child abuse?

      Kids see hentai all over Japan. It's not "directed" at anybody, like it is here.

      The kids see it. They come out fine. It's as simple as that.

    2. Re:I'd like to keep Joe Camel out of this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the rest of the world calls "hentai" is not called that in Japan. Look it up.

    3. Re:I'd like to keep Joe Camel out of this by EinZweiDrei · · Score: 1

      The notion of whether or not the Japanese youth 'come out fine' is worth questioning when one looks at, say, suicide rates.

      But that said, I, like you, don't attribute any measurable fault to the country's prevalent sexual imagery. The worker-bee school system seems more ripe for blame here. I think the Japanese penchant for graphic sexual fantasy is definitely mostly harmless, if not a great steam-release valve.

      --
      Perhaps life really is full of possibilities.
    4. Re:I'd like to keep Joe Camel out of this by LionKimbro · · Score: 1

      You know, it's interesting;

      I'm not entirely confident that the "steam-release valve" explanation is the right one. And I'm not confident that "free speech" is our best argument.

      I do think "steam valve" and "free speech" have value, but I'm skeptical that it's the total picture.

      I think that there is something deeper at work here, and that the situation is worth examining.

      I would like to ask the question: "What explanations, other than steam-release valve, can both explain our interest, and explain the value of, media that depicts taboo acts?" (Sex or violence.)

      Some possible questions: "Why are we compelled to preserve media that depict the taboo?"

      Some possible deeper answers: "Because we want to be free to be honest about our desires, whatever they may be." "Because we want to be able to communicate about our desires, even if we realize that their realization would be bad." "Because we want a society of trust in adults, rather than enforcement of

      Some other questions the debate brings up: "Will we as a society entrust men with dangerous desires?" "Will we as a society labor to direct men away from dangerous desires?" "What does empirical evidence show?" "Should we socially and legally enforce belief in a falsehood (that men are not naturally attracted to young women,) because we can't trust men's behavior if the truth is known?" "How flexible is male sexual interest?" "If we could eliminate male interest in young women, would we do it?"

      I'd be much happier with the discussion if I saw deeper delving into these sorts of questions. Something more than just the "whet-desire thought-control desensitization steam-valve" rehash that we see repeated over and over.

      It may be too late, but: If anyone can, ... please mod this post up? Pretty please?

    5. Re:I'd like to keep Joe Camel out of this by LionKimbro · · Score: 1

      OK, but regardless: What the rest of the world calls hentai, they have in Japan, (whatever they choose to call it,) all over the place.

      The point stands.

    6. Re:I'd like to keep Joe Camel out of this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      did you even read the wiki? commonly used terms include "j hachi kin" (18; prohibited for sale to persons under 18)

    7. Re:I'd like to keep Joe Camel out of this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      What the rest of the world calls "hentai" is not called that in Japan. Look it up. [wikipedia.org]

      Big Fucking Deal (tm) -- if hentai is what the rest of the world uses for this, then use it. If you want to confuse the rest of the world, use one of your pedantic variations. What do you want -- understanding the referent or just confusion?

    8. Re:I'd like to keep Joe Camel out of this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The Joe Camel cigarette ads, on the other hand, were directed toward the general public and viewable everywhere, including places children would see them.

      Which is the problem -- the fucking duplicitous fundamentalists will take their children anywhere thay have to, just to be able to say, "The child viewed it. Make it dead."

  66. OMFGWTF ELF PR0N!!!! by teh_chrizzle · · Score: 1

    every fantasy book/comic/video game ever made features at least one scantily clad "elf princess" which is pretty much a racy illustration of a 15 year old girl... with pointy ears. we have all seen them and gone on to lead normal lives. whole generations of nerds have been raised on this stuff and thus far real world child abuse has been the same as it ever was... tragic and deplorable, but rare. does this mean that all of those CGIpr0n sites can now photoshop in pointy ears and call it "elf porn"?

    --
    sarcasm:
    -noun
    1. harsh or bitter derision or irony.
  67. misleading headline? by troll+-1 · · Score: 1

    I thought the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 already amended the Protection of Children Act 1978 to make pseudo images of child porn illegal anyway. Sounds like this would be extending that to "abuse".

    There was a case earlier this year of someone being arrested under that act. See here

    1. Re:misleading headline? by julesh · · Score: 1

      I thought the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 already amended the Protection of Children Act 1978 to make pseudo images of child porn illegal anyway. Sounds like this would be extending that to "abuse".

      This only refers to photo-realistic images. The new proposal would also cover drawings.

  68. Pick up a pen, commit a crime, harming no-one. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's just ridiculous to make it so you can break the law using nothing but pen and paper, while harming nobody. There is no "clear and present danger", no libel or slander, so why isn't lolicon free speech?

    This is similar to banning GTA. GTA actively encourages violent behavior (offering points for it), but is a fictional representation of violence. Nobody is really being hurt. Lolicon is also a fictional representation. Nobody is really being hurt. What's the difference? GTA has more popular support. You can whittle away at free speech using lolicon, since nobody will publicly defend it.

    I see this move as just another "OMG think of the kiddies! We need to give the governments of the world more control over what people can say!" move. I'm tired of these.

    Disclaimer: I'm a lolicon fan. I admit it.

  69. Decreased violence by dargaud · · Score: 1
    Now it's been proven that when a community gets easy access to porn, the violence towards women tends to decrease. I wonder if the same kind of impact could be studied about pedophilia. Maybe there are some who are content with their stash of hentai who could otherwise turn frustrated and dangerous. Who knows ? Free hentai for every potential child abuser ?!?
    "I love children and would like to have as many as possible. My cell-mate, on the other hand, robbed a convenience store."
    "I'm a children's book illustrator. I don't do it for a living, though -- it's just a hobby. On weekends, I go down to the library with a Magic Marker and draw filthy pictures in the margins." -- Anthony Myers.
    --
    Non-Linux Penguins ?
  70. When to regulate? by Krishnoid · · Score: 1
    At what point is it a good idea to attempt to regulate thoughts, feeling and their expression? At what point does it become bad? I find myself asking that question at every turn when I see laws regulating "morality."

    How about when exposure to those expressions becomes no longer a moral issue, but a scientifically reproducible psychological or even physiological issue? Fast food makes you fat, duh (or maybe not, for the less educated) -- it would be stupid to need a label on your burger to tell you that. But how about the TV and autism correlation ? How about chemically observable effects of viewing pornography and/or violence, producing changes in the brain or addiction (if/when the technology gets good enough to show it one way or the other)?

    As we discover more about this, I have to think this may move out of the morality arena and into the public health and/or disease arena, to be classified alongside (but not the same as) addictive behaviors or drug dependency -- at which point freedom of expression may have another label on it (warning: may reinforce addictive behavior in slashdot readers).

  71. Open-Minded or just plain Dumbass-Minded? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow. Just f'in wow. You people are literally making me sick. Can't we as a society have standards? Try to step out of your ACLU-brainwashed heads for a moment. NO..not everything is Ok you f'in morons! In some cases, not only is it OK to judge your fellow man, but it should be almost mandatory in this case. Child porn, whether real or virtual is WRONG. I'm shocked that even one of you are trying to justify this.

    Do any of you people have children? How about I draw a photo-realistic picture of your sweet little 2-year-old daughter getting her @ss pounded by a gun-totin' Republican? Would that be Ok with you?

    No wonder our society is in such a state. Idiots like those of you who are taking up for this crap, based on some pseudo-intellectual idea of what freedom should be are ruining the world for those of us who can think outside of the classroom. It is because of sheeple like yourselves that groups like NAMBLA and the ACLU are not only recognized, but legitimized.

    Pat yourselves on the back for actually living in the theoretical. What idiots...

    Oh, and while I'm at it...FUCK YOU SLASHDOT FOR ALLOWING/PROMOTING THIS BULLSHIT!!

    1. Re:Open-Minded or just plain Dumbass-Minded? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In some cases, not only is it OK to judge your fellow man, but it should be almost mandatory in this case.

      Okay... you're a cunt.

    2. Re:Open-Minded or just plain Dumbass-Minded? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      How about I draw a photo-realistic picture of your sweet little 2-year-old daughter getting her @ss pounded by a gun-totin' Republican?

            If that is what would make you happy, then go ahead. She's 15 now anyway. I wouldn't LIKE it. I'd think it would be in bad taste. If this picture got seen by her friends and she started getting hassled about it, I'd probably even sue you. But I don't think you should be thrown in JAIL for it.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    3. Re:Open-Minded or just plain Dumbass-Minded? by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Wow, I think you just revealed your total and complete ignorance for *blaming* slashdot for this discussion.

      We are all slashdot drones and you are the only human here. Congrats on your psyche being the lone beacon of sanity in the cold, cruel Internet.

      If I called you a fucktard, should i go to jail?

      You're going to draw a picture of my daughter getting raped? Ooooo that's classy. But not illegal, nor should it be.

      By the way, what's wrong with the ACLU? I mean NAMBLA... sure... but the ACLU? Are you a gay evangelical? :-)

      sometimes i make myself laugh.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    4. Re:Open-Minded or just plain Dumbass-Minded? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um...you got me?

  72. Who says it perpetuates behavior? by Roger+Wilcox · · Score: 1

    Lets face it, having any type of image, either real or computer generated, de-synthesizes its viewer to the actual criminal act of molesting a child. This in turn makes it easier for themselves to justify or at least in some form allows them to rationalize that what they are doing is ok.

    Aside from the fact that the grammar in these sentances is questionable, I see no evidence to support what you are claiming.

    We have all seen "To Catch a Predator" on TV.....this exact type of material is creating an epidemic in this country.

    Yes, I have seen "To Catch a Predator," and I have seen no evidence on the show that computer generated images cause people to commit crime.

    Whether it is real or computer generated material, it is wrong, it is disgusting and anyone who would defend it in the name of freedom of speech or expression needs to seriously question their own moral judgment.

    Moral judgement is a funny thing - it varies from person to person. In light of the fact that there is very little evidence supporting the claim you made about child molesters earlier in your post, many people are taking a different moral standpoint than you are. This does not suggest that they need to question their moral judgement, only that they are looking at this from their own angle.

    It seems to me that you are basing your judgement on this issue purely in the visceral loathing that you feel toward people that would hurt children. While this is perhaps an understandable response, I do not consider it a reasonable one. No one wants to see children get hurt, but right now we can't say if images either alleviate or exacerbate the problem, so banning them is not the right solution.

    I believe that we, as a society, need more information before we can decide how best to alleviate the problem of child abuse. I do not advocate inaction, I advocate research. Actual research about child abuse is somewhat of a taboo and sees inadaquate funding and support, but society needs the research if we are to make any headway on the issue.

  73. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by dragonsomnolent · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I understand that you don't defend the attitude you posted about, but I have problems with the attitude, and the biggest problem I have with that attitude is how on earth are you supposed to judge the "age" of a cartoon character by just looking at the picture? (let's just pretend the artist who drew the cartoon left out any references to the age of the character). Sometime's it's hard enough with real people. I posted earlier (in another thread) would it be a crime for my wife to dress up in a schoolgirl outfit to make hserself appear to be a teenager and we have sex? With the pervasive attitued I suppose it would, and that's just wrong. (Flipside of the coin is why if the cartoon character is know to be 17, but looked 35 would it still be illegal). This whole set of laws is just screwed to no end, a tangled mess of shit and now we can't get out of it without looking like pedophiles ourselves.

    --
    I got nuthin
  74. DESU?!?! by StupidMBA · · Score: 1
    I imagine it won't be too long before the petitions are flooded with "DESU DESU DESU"

    Dude, what does Delaware State University have to do with this?

    --
    Don't mod me down: I was joking!
  75. Some Examples Please by MrCopilot · · Score: 1
    Could we have some examples of what would constitute illegal Virtual Child Porn vs what would fall under the radar?

    Otherwise how can we be objective?

    --
    OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
  76. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by argle2bargle · · Score: 1

    As long as the cartoonist draws little cartoon drivers licenses that show the participants are of age, then there should be no problem

  77. Just use TOR by lucat · · Score: 1

    Just use Tor and get rid of this idiocity all at once.
    It is really sick, first they try to convince us that sex = violence and now that drawings = violence.
    Idiots.

    http://tor.eff.org/

  78. +5 Insightful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn, I used up all my mod points on earlier posts already. :(

  79. ok, policing expression of nasty ideas... by thekm · · Score: 1

    Making child porn illegal is about trying to stop the custom that drives the victimisation of children. They can't police the idea though. But if they try and police the expression of an idea (which drawing are expression, no victimisation is taking place unless you have children in sweat-shops doing your in-betweening), then really they're trying to move on to the policing of the idea itself.

    Which is obviously where they're trying to take it, which is absurd. I have the gift of being able to draw, and what if I make my own sketch book of my particular brand of hentai... does that mean that I'm going to get in trouble for expressing whatever disturbed ideas I have in my own head!?... and having my own sketch books in my own posession?...


    This is basically trying to turn anyone with a kink and the skills of expression into a Marquis de Sade. Even the good Marquis shouldn't be denied the right to express whatever he has to deal with within the walls of his own skull.


    (looks like I need to hide my high-school sketch book with interesting drawings of the Ninja Turtles and April O'Niel... or at the very least, stop the sales of it in the UK)

    1. Re:ok, policing expression of nasty ideas... by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Making child porn illegal is about trying to stop the custom that drives the victimisation of children.

            OK, so fall back to a legal definition of "child" when dealing with this. Porn over over 18/21 (depends on locale) is ok, porn under 18/21 is NOT. Now, how are we going to do this with a picture? Do we ask the bitmaps for ID? Is it ok if the art was done 21 years ago, but not ok if it's new? Or do we just outlaw any art that LOOKS childlike? If that's the case - who gets to decide what a child "looks" like? Is a woman with shaved pubic hair now considered a child, because of lack of this secondary sexual characteristic? How about women with small or no breasts, are they "children" now?

            There is SO much that could go wrong with this kind of law. I don't agree with child pornography. But this proposal is one of the silliest kinds of laws, and has great potential for abuse and oppression depending on the prosecutor's own political/religious agenda.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  80. Kiddy Porn by Dudukain · · Score: 1

    According to a recent supreme court ruling, CGI/drawn images of children are protected by the 1st amendment

  81. Age of consent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, I believe that they recent raised (or tried to raise) the age of consent for females to 16. In addition, it appears that gay indivuals under 18 might be in trouble. I wonder how many of these are recent changes but our friendly Federal party...

  82. The question by LihTox · · Score: 1

    In this and many other situations, there is one big question: does a little pornography/violence/etc satisfy the appetite for it, or whet the appetite for it? Do violent video games make people more violent, or do they serve as a useful channel for violent impulses? Does child pornography (real or fake) satisfy the pedophile, or does it make him/her more likely to abuse real children? Everyone seems to have their opinion, but I'd like to see some scientific evidence to back those opinions up. I guess the answer is that it depends on the person: some people are easily satisfied, while some are never satisfied---but maybe people in the latter group would be driven to extremes eventually no matter what their stimulation.

    What makes sense to me is that pedophilia is a sexual fetish, a lot like other fetishes except that it can't be indulged in. Pedophiles aren't necessarily evil people, though they may do evil things. They don't choose to be pedophiles. If simulated child pornography gives them some release and helps them control (or eliminate) their urges, then by damn let's give it to them. Just don't make me watch it too.

    1. Re:The question by Shados · · Score: 1

      I agree with your point. Like i posted in reply to someone else, while there are definately both kinds of people (those that can never be satisfied, and those that are easily), it seems the later group is always, for almost everything, the dominant one.

      Best example is how many studies show that teens who are not put in the dark for all things sexual, and are actualy free to research it, tend to have sexual intercourse MUCH, MUCH later than the rest. This seems, to me, to be a pattern with most everything. If it becomes 100% impossible for pedophiles to see naked kids in any way, shape, or forms, they'll simply go in withdrawal, and go berserk. At least, thats what would happen to me, relatively speaking (aka: with women of my age, obviously) if I was to spend over 3 months without ever seeing a naked female, even fake. I'd go insane. I don't see how a pedophile would be any different. They work by the same "rules", its just their preference in women that are different.

  83. Paedophilia stats are rising by msobkow · · Score: 1

    We can try to stick our heads in the sand as with climate change, but statistics show paedophilia charges and convictions are on the rise.

    Do you have a better explanation than a weak-kneed permissive social attitude or a conditioning by media influences?

    "Think of the children" is a specious argument when it's raised in a context that is (at best) only loosely associated with children. But when the direct victim is children, the argument is very valid. Even hardened criminals with life sentences have children they'll kill to protect -- and sometimes have.

    No one likes a paedophile. It's hard wired at an instinctual level as a biological protection of our own offspring. There is no "moral question" -- it's so important it's a physically hardwired response to view such activities with disgust and contempt.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      We can try to stick our heads in the sand as with climate change, but statistics show paedophilia charges and convictions are on the rise. Do you have a better explanation than a weak-kneed permissive social attitude or a conditioning by media influences?

      How about knee-jerk reactions based on a puritanical social attitude conditioned by pervasive media witch hunts? OF COURSE pedophilia charges are going to go up when you start charging parents for taking pictures of their children.

      . There is no "moral question" -- it's so important it's a physically hardwired response to view such activities with disgust and contempt.

      And this is exactly the reason we as a society need to think calmly and rationally about the issue. There is no moral question concerning abusing or hurting children. But what does that have to do with looking at computer generated images, again? Oh right, nothing. You just view it "with disgust and contempt", so you want to prevent anyone from doing it.

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    2. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Where do you assume this is physically hardwired?

      That is specious and presumptious at best, and intellectually dishonest at worst.

      As far as I know there have existed a number of socieities that have been quite permissive of pedophiles and in some cases made it socially expected.

      This hardly indicates a hard-wired aversion.

      It IS social conditioning of the strongest kind. I'm not saying that this is a bad thing, but you are inventing science to support your moral argument, which is disingenuous.

      Ok, now lets actually address what you SAID.

      statistics show paedophilia charges and convictions are on the rise.

      The only thing that is "obvious" is that media reports of these charges are on the rise.

      Please cite statistics that show charges and convictions are on the rise. Or you can simple let me illustrated that you are ignorant of the facts and are simply pontificating on moral grounds with your "epidemic" "on the rise" claims

      Here, let me do it for you

      Statistics show a decline in child abuse and neglect
      The decline in child sex abuse cases
      national child abuse and neglect statistics continued to decline
      Child-Abuse and Neglect Cases Decline for Fifth Year, HHS Says ...
      national child abuse and neglect statistics reported by states continued to decline
      Statistics Show Decline in Child Abuse
      national child abuse and neglect statistics reported by states continued to decline
      total decline of 39% in identified sexual abuse cases over a 7-year period
      New Child Maltreatment Statistics Show Continuing Decline
      Department of Justice: CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE CASES FALL 31 PERCENT OVER SIX YEARS
      he hotline has seen a 24 percent annual decline in child abuse reports

      I'm sorry, that's just the first two pages out of about 40 in my google search.

      Speaking of head in the sand...

      Stewed

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    3. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by terrymr · · Score: 1

      The stats are rising because it's only *very* recently that victims have felt able to report the violations without them being stigmatized by society. The rising stats are a positive sign that crimes are being reported and prosecuted and not that more people are being victimized than before.

    4. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by terrymr · · Score: 1

      and I blew it by replying to the quote rather than the original post.

    5. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Oh.. and by the way...

      "Think of the children" is not a specious argument used to argue unrelated issues.

      It is a prevent-criticism "have you stopped beating your wife?" type of phrase that is impossible to ethically refuse and is therefore overused when someone wants to pass laws that have some peripherial relation to children. When a virtual image is created, it is an old bald guy sitting at a terminal in France. It is uploaded to a server in Russia that is run by an old bald guy and then downloaded by an old bald guy in New York. "Think of the children" is SO clearly applicable.

      I apologize to old bald guys everywhere for this post.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    6. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Why does everyone assume "the stats are rising" constitutes a conclusive point.

      Read my post below.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    7. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by cswiger2005 · · Score: 1
      No one likes a paedophile. It's hard wired at an instinctual level as a biological protection of our own offspring. There is no "moral question" -- it's so important it's a physically hardwired response to view such activities with disgust and contempt.

      Whether paedophilia is considered "wrong" or whether people feel "disgust and contempt" towards it is a learned response based upon your particular upbringing, and your reaction is about as common as hating someone because they are white [or black, or hispanic, or in the shudra or dalit ("untouchable") Indian castes, etc].

      Note that paedophilia used to be a normal part of many ancient cultures-- go read Homer's Illiad and the Odysseus again, carefully, preferably in the original Greek. What was the relationship between Achilles and Patroclus? Lets see what this says:

      Wikipedia on Achilles

      The relationship between Achilles and Patroclus is a key element of the myths associated with the Trojan War. Its exact nature has been a subject of dispute in both the classical period and modern times. In the Iliad, it is clear that the two heroes (who are also first cousins once removed) have a deep and extremely meaningful friendship, but the evidence of a romantic or sexual element is equivocal. Commentators from the classical period to today have tended to interpret the relationship through the lens of their own cultures. Thus, in 5th century BC Athens the relationship was commonly interpreted as pederastic. Contemporary readers are more likely to interpret the two heroes either as non-sexual "war buddies" or as an egalitarian homosexual couple.

      The Ancient Mediterranean world had vastly different attitudes toward gender and sexuality than those found in 21st century North America or Europe. Although sexual relations between men are well attested, there was no term for, or concept of, homosexuality as such.

      PS: Note carefully that I haven't expressed an opinion about paedophilia. I think child abuse is wrong, and I don't believe that children should be involved in sexual activity until they are old enough to make their own decisions and form mutually consensual relationships. In most of the world and for most of human history this happens in the early teens; only in first-world countries do people live long enough that procreation can be delayed to the late teens or early twenties.

      --
      "The human race's favorite method for being in control of the facts is to ignore them." -Celia Green
    8. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      We can try to stick our heads in the sand as with climate change, but statistics show paedophilia charges and convictions are on the rise.
      Do you have a better explanation than a weak-kneed permissive social attitude or a conditioning by media influences?


      Sure, the same excuse as drunk driving charges and convictions rising in the 80s as MADD claimed drink driving itself was decreasing. The enforcement is increasing. Your stats say nothing about the rates of sexual assault against minors, just that the charges and conviction rates are increasing. I can think of many reasons that might happen while the rate of the crime was constant. That you can't doesn't speak to the veracity of your claim, but your myopia, ignorance, and lack of critical thinking.

    9. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Firstly, I'd like to point out that many convictions which mention "pedophilia" actually have nobody involved who is a pedophile. The term is used more and more loosely in American culture for anybody who has even a remote sexual interest in somebody below the age of 18 (which is just an arbitrary meaningless number). The vast majority of charges and convictions are for statutory rape. Among other things, statutory rape isn't even actually rape. It requires the consent of a party who is not legally able to consent due to their age and that state's laws (the age is different in every state). Beyond that, if the younger party were below the age of 12 or 13 (depending on state) they older party is generally charged with child molestation instead of statutory rape as those are the ages that are expected for a person to go from childhood to adolescence (begin puberty). Only in that case would the person convicted qualify as a pedophile since they had a sexual interest in a CHILD (not somebody who is a minor, aka below the legal age of majority).

      On top of that, pedophilia isn't a crime, and should not be a crime. Acting on it is, and should be. There have never at any time been any person in the US charged and convicted as a pedophile. They may have been charged and convicted as a child molester, but not as a pedophile. And while I'm at it, let me point out that not all pedophiles are child molesters and not all child molesters are pedophiles. Pedophiles have a sexual interest in children and many feel a deep connection with them that is akin to the relationship that most normal adults have with each other when romantically involved. Child molesters are akin to rapists in that they generally commit the act because of the feeling of power and their ability to exhibit control over another person against their will, it has no love or sexual interest involved. Molestation and rape are sexual acts only because that is one of the most brutal and lasting violations of a person that can be committed.

      So, in short for the tl;dr crowd. You are an idiot, please go somewhere else to spout your nonsense.

    10. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Firstly, I'd like to point out that many convictions which mention "zoophilia" actually have nobody involved who is a zoophile. The term is used more and more loosely in American culture for anybody who has even a remote sexual interest in some animal below the weight of 18kg (which is just an arbitrary meaningless number). The vast majority of charges and convictions are for statutory rape. Among other things, statutory rape isn't even actually rape. It requires the consent of a party who is not legally able to consent due to their species and that state's laws (the species is different in every state). Beyond that, if the lighter party were below the sub-species of mammal (depending on state) they heavier party is generally charged with animal molestation instead of statutory rape as those are the weights that are expected for an animal to go from puppyhood to estrus (begin puberty). Only in that case would the person convicted qualify as a zoophile since they had a sexual interest in an animal (not somebody who is a non-mammal, aka below the legal weight of majority).

      On top of that, zoophilia isn't a crime, and should not be a crime. Acting on it is, and should be. There have never at any time been any person in the US charged and convicted as a zoophile. They may have been charged and convicted as a beastialist, but not as a zoophile. And while I'm at it, let me point out that not all zoophiles are beastialists and not all beastialists are zoophiles. Zoophiles have a sexual interest in animals and many feel a deep connection with them that is akin to the relationship that most normal adults have with each other when romantically involved. Beastialists are akin to rapists in that they generally commit the act because of the feeling of power and their ability to exhibit control over another being against their will, it has no love or sexual interest involved. Molestation and rape are sexual acts only because that is one of the most brutal and lasting violations of an animal that can be committed.

      So, in short for the tl;dr crowd. You are an idiot, please go somewhere else to spout your nonsense.

    11. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      The great irony of this is that it's totally true, just like the parent.

      I know a guy in college who was caught humping a sheep (no shit)... but he said he was doing it just because he was lonley, not because he was "attracted" to sheep.

      But there are people who have a genuine attraction to animals (eww), but don't never actually "do it" because they can't get up the guts or whatever.

      I think you were trying to refute, but you actually supported the article.

      Good work :-)

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    12. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No one likes a paedophile. It's hard wired at an instinctual level as a biological protection of our own offspring. There is no "moral question" -- it's so important it's a physically hardwired response to view such activities with disgust and contempt

      Bull-fucking-shit. Your head is hardwired up your asshole. I do, however, hold you in utter contempt for your insistence on parroting such horseshit.

    13. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "paedophilia used to be a normal part of many ancient cultures-- go read Homer's Illiad and the Odysseus again, carefully"

      It's usually ephebophilia (an attraction to post-pubescent adolescents) rather than paedophilia. Ephebophilia occurs everywhere even in the Bible -- the much-venerated Mary for example was between 12 and 15 years of age when she conceived, and shortly after married a considerably older man, things the Gospel writers relate in a matter-of-fact tone that indicates this sort of thing was commonplace (as indeed does the fact that nobody around the couple even bothers to comment about a man of 40 years being accompanied by a pregnant wife who may have been 12 years old).

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    14. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      Achilles and Patroclus...pederast...paedophilia
      That's not a great example, as Patroclus is a young man rather than a child. He is a fellow warrior of Achilles.
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    15. Re:Paedophilia stats are rising by msobkow · · Score: 1

      Nonsense.

      The only biological "excuse" for paedophelia is a latent instinct to breed before a competitor can do so. Anyone whose hardwired instincts for that are out of control or excessive is physically brain damaged -- literally.

      Sometimes it can be corrected like a stroke victim can learn to speak again using a different segment of the brain for speech control, or by singing to exercise a different path of neurons. But I firmly believe the worst cases are incurable and a lifelong danger to society.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
  84. Put this in your pipe and smoke it by deblau · · Score: 1
    Making virtual child porn illegal will make it comparatively less dangerous to make real child porn.

    Here's a disgusting scenario: sicko A has a child, a camera, and a computer. He wants to make child porn. He would have shot his child with the camera, but oops, that's illegal. So he's considering using the computer to make something virtual, but he'll have to learn Photoshop. Now, the UK comes along and says making virtual child porn is illegal too. Now Mr. A thinks, "well, now that it's illegal either way, I don't have to learn Photoshop."

    --
    This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
    1. Re:Put this in your pipe and smoke it by Shados · · Score: 1

      Bingo. I'm so tired of people making laws for the sake of making laws... This would hurt a lot more than it will help. Honestly, ethical prudes aside, who does virtual porn hurt? #1 People who gets offended by it, and these people can simply avoid it (I mean, its not like anyone is advocating making it legal on signs in the street). #2 The hypothetical scenario where virtual porn gave ideas to some sicko. Reality check, all the news coverage on TV of the sickos who keep 12 years old captive for months as sex slaves do exactly that, times 1000+.

      For all we can tell, the amount of sick bastards who go and rape kids after seeing these pictures, are evened out by the amount of sick bastards who are satisfied after fapping at fake porn.

      I remember many studies showing that teenagers who were NOT restricted from seeing porn (normal porn), are less likely to engage is sexual acts at a early age, because they are less curious about it. I doubt pedophiles work any differently.

    2. Re:Put this in your pipe and smoke it by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      Hahahahahahahahaha .... two words for you.... PRONOUN PLACEMENT

      sicko A has a child, a camera, and a computer. He wants to make child porn.

      Maybe it's not as bad as my first reading... but i read it saying that there is a sicko and a child... and the child wants to make child porn... lol

      sorry gah... gramatically, the "he" pronoun is ambiguous and my brain attached it to the closest personal noun, which was "child". hmpf.

      stupid brain.

      lol

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
    3. Re:Put this in your pipe and smoke it by julesh · · Score: 1

      Note that making photoshopped kiddy-porn pictures is already illegal in the UK. This would extend it to posession, and to drawings.

    4. Re:Put this in your pipe and smoke it by deblau · · Score: 1

      OK, I'll claim ignorance on the point. But then what's the difference between photoshopped kiddy-porn and "computer-generated child porn"? Perhaps I should have said 'photoshopped starting from a blank screen'?

      --
      This post expresses my opinion, not that of my employer. And yes, IAAL.
  85. Adult world by lordmage · · Score: 1

    Children are not full citizens of the USA. They do not have the right to smoke, drink, and do other things. Schools can search and seize items without warrants.

    The internet is NOT a Child's right. It is a Citizens of the US right (and other countries.. rights.. based system). Thus anything on the Internet should be considered Adult viewing as default. Children should be restricted from the internet and either placed in DMZ's or just not allowed on.

    I have 2 kids.. they don't touch the internet!

    --
    I can program myself out of a Hello World Contest!!
    1. Re:Adult world by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      mmm "put the children in a DMZ"...

      rock.

      I'm doing a network design now and i pictured a bunch of kids huddled around my web servers with ethernet jacks in their toes.

      mmmmm networks.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
  86. That's Aisha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  87. Why? by rhombic · · Score: 2, Informative

    Lets face it, having any type of image, either real or computer generated, de-synthesizes[sic] its viewer to the actual criminal act of molesting a child.

    Unless you care to provide a source for this "fact" other than your ass, I'm curious why I should "face it". I could argue the opposite, allowing someone who feels such tendencies to view totally computer generated images could reduce the likelihood that they will engage in such behavior in a manner that actually harms a kid. But the honest truth is, I can't pull up any solid, peer-reviewed data to support my point, so I'm not going to insist that you acquiesce to it. And I'd appreciate the same.

    Whether it is real or computer generated material, it is wrong, it is disgusting...

    Well, "wrong" is a particularly nebulous term, and disgusting is a matter of personal preference. I'd be willing to bet, if I sorted through your material possessions, I'd find something that I would consider "wrong and disgusting". Hell, half of my friend's refrigerators in college contained things I would deem "wrong and disgusting". Ought those things be illegal solely because of my feelings towards them? Of course not. Now, if in the process of creating this supposed wrong and disgusting thing, a person victimizes another, that's a whole 'nuther kettle of fish.

    I would even be curious to see if since the internet becoming main stream if cases of child molestation have increased due to it making this type of material more readily available.

    Historically speaking? Almost certainly not. I refer you to the works of Socrates & friends. Or South America, where the age of consent runs from 15 in Uruguay down to 13 in Argentina. What we, today, would term child molestation was mainstream at times in history & in other parts of the world.

    I'd be very careful about advocating laws against thought crimes-- I'd bet good money there's something in your head that somebody else out there thinks is "wrong and disgusting". And hopefully for your sake, they don't manage to get you incarcerated & turned into a pariah for life for thinking it.

    --
    1984 was supposed to be a warning, not an instruction manual.
  88. For the pervs, a link to some virtual CP by foobarbaz · · Score: 1

    Simulated under-age sex, then simulated snuffing of the participants: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0063518/

    Thank me later!

  89. Flame On by crabpeople · · Score: 1
    They really should ban religion starting with the dum dum dum gold plate fucking mormons.

    "If banning artificial child porn makes child porn hard to come by and thereby dampens the demand for the real thing (or molestation), then it's a great idea."

    What a great idea! Worked great for drugs and terrorism right?
    Because someone decides not to do drugs because of the lack of easy availability.
    Because someone decides not to ram airplanes into buildings because piloting planes is hard and its against the law.
    Because someone decides not to molest children because they havent ever seen an image of someone molesting a child.
    Because people have no inherent desires or motivations and always let external stimuli dictate their decisions.

    This my friends is why religion is evil. It makes you think that there are "reasons" for every fucking little thing in the world. It indoctrinates you to think that people are just randomly "corrupted" by magic satan elves or forceably conditioned to believe in different sorts of morals and that morality MUST be programmed into a normal human being, else they dont have any morals. Everything needs to be taught or influenced by something right? Theres no inherent morality? fuck that shit. People are who they are, and you dont need conditioning to turn you good, or turn you bad (if there was even such a thing as good and bad).

    I love how with the "commence flaming" you some how feel that you are being repressed by the 'evil majority'. Religion really makes you think persecution always equates with being right eh? Your such a hypocrite too. If your a guy, you masterbate to something. If you say you don't, your lying. No one can keep that much spunk inside of them. It would back up all the way to your brai-
    oh wait...

    --
    I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
  90. PWND! by Hatta · · Score: 1

    Haha! Msobkow got pwnd!

    --
    Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    1. Re:PWND! by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 0

      *grins*

      this post made me LOL :-)

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
  91. Increased reporting by The+Monster · · Score: 1
    If that's the case, why has paedophilia been on a statistical rise for the past decade or so?
    Increased reporting. It used to be that kids were too ashamed to report being victimized, in a lot of cases because the people molesting them would mind-fsck them into thinking that the kid was in fact guilty. Some of the increased reporting comes from mothers indoctrinating their kids to claim that the ex molestered them so she doesn't have to give him visitation.
    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

  92. How the Web Prevents Rape by The+Monster · · Score: 1
    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

    1. Re:How the Web Prevents Rape by skinfaxi · · Score: 1
      Todd Kendall's,report, while popular with the pro-porn crowd, really isn't very good. Correlation is not causation. You might as well say that World of Warcraft prevents rape, since the numbers of WOW users has gone up while rape incidence has gone down. Or maybe global warming prevents rape. Or...

      (I'm not sure why that report is so popular with the pro-porn crowd. If you think about it - do you really want to claim that it's more likely you would be out there raping women if you didn't have your porn?)

  93. Correlation Does Not Imply Causation by The+Monster · · Score: 1
    If access to child porn reduces attacks, why are people charged with possession of child porn discovered after they're charged with molesting a child? Shouldn't those charged with abuse be the least likely to have a kiddie porn collection if your argument is valid?
    The people least likely to have a kiddie porn collection are the people who don't desire to see kids in a sexual context. Those most likely are the ones who do. Of those who desire to see it, some are able to satisfy that desire without actually touching kids, and others aren't. The cause, both of viewing porn and abusing kids, is the fact that the perv is a perv. There is no evidence that keeping a perv from looking at pictures makes him less likely to abuse a kid.

    There are arguments that assume a cause-effect relationship, but other arguments to counter it. The counter-arguments are generally shouted down by people like Bill O'Reilly and Nancy Grace as apologia for pervs, often with the implication that the apologist must himself be perverted.

    I figure that every minute a perv spends looking at pictures is a minute he's not abusing a kid.

    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

    1. Re:Correlation Does Not Imply Causation by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

      The best part is... that this guy is totally making up his "rising statistics" argument... either out of thin air, or out of mis-information fed to him from the horse's (Nancy Grace) mouth.

      Stew

      --
      There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
  94. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    Well, I suppose the argument is that if someone is looking at underage children then their intention is to do something illegal. The fact that they didn't is not really much of a defence. There is a parallel with other crimes. If I try to murder someone, even if my plan couldn't possibly work, I would stil be charged with attempted murder.

  95. A common misunderstanding... by LanMan04 · · Score: 1
    No flaming required, you are entitled to your opinion...and it is just an opinion, since you provided absolutely 0 evidence that supports it.

    Causation is not the same thing as Correlation. Look it up, I'll wait...

    Done? Now, present me with a study that says that viewing such images CAUSES these urges. Are you certain that it's not the case that people who have these urges *also* happen to be into that kind of pr0n? One *may* be a subset of the other, but they sure as hell aren't equal.

    After all, I like (and view) straight pr0n. Does that make me more or less likely to have sex with a woman at any given moment? What, you don't have any idea? It could be either (or neither), and is extremely similar to the above scenario, except your opinion on the matter won't send me to jail, unlike the people we're discussing in this thread.

    Provide solid, peer-reviewed studies on this (and any other causation-correlation issue) when you make wild claims:

    Child porn does not sate a desire to molest children, it inculcates this desire. , or shut the fuck up, Mormon or not.

    --
    With the first link, the chain is forged.
  96. Re:Explicit girlfriend in schoolgirl outfit illega by dragonsomnolent · · Score: 1

    But what would not be illegal would be producing a movie about trying to kill someone (unless someone actually was going to die) or watching a movie someone else made about killing someone (again, fictional). So how is this different? No one actually had sex with a kid, and no one actually died.

    --
    I got nuthin
  97. A single thought in defense of the bill... by lilnobody · · Score: 1

    I'm by no means for a bill this wide in scope, but I think that it's worth considering that in 10 years, it will be possible to generated images from scratch that are indistinguishable from the real thing. While those images in and of themselves are not necessarily unethical, it complicates the prosecution of real child porn producers immensely, and I believe that stands as a possible reason to allow a law along these lines, albiet a more limited one. Even allow cartoons to continue could allow for 'A Scanner Darkly' style re-animation of actual videos, and then a defense could be used that they are just cartoons and nothing really happened. Just something to consider.

    nobody

    1. Re:A single thought in defense of the bill... by Shados · · Score: 1

      I disagree. A large part of the reasons childs get abused in many cases, is for the single purpose of producing porn. No matter how many laws you set, like with drugs, it will happen anyway. For every computer generated image you find, chances are (not 100% obviously) that its one sicko that considered abusing a child, and decided to wipe out Maya 3D or whatever instead.

      I see things like this a bit like I see prostitution, abortion, etc: it will happen anyway, lets pick the alternative where the least amount of people will get hurt, in other word, lets keep the stuff that doesn't hurt anyone legal in the open, because the alternative means a ton of people will suffer.

    2. Re:A single thought in defense of the bill... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      in 10 years, it will be possible to generated images from scratch that are indistinguishable from the real thing. While those images in and of themselves are not necessarily unethical, it complicates the prosecution of real child porn producers immensely

      Actually, that would be a good thing. Try seeing it from an economic perspective: Suddenly you would have two products, (virtual and real child porn), that you can't tell any difference between. One can be made in Poser, and be downloaded for free all over the internet. The other requires you to send $$$ to a suspect site that might just empty your bank account and never send the pictures, and you'd still risk being arrested for being in their customer database. Which one would you buy, if you were the pedophile?

      If real-looking virtual child porn could be had for free, it would be nearly impossible to sell the real thing, making the people producing the real thing go out of business. No demand -> no money -> no production. Instant end (or very close to end) of the production of kiddie porn. The only child abuse left would be those who are doing it for themselves rather than for the money.

  98. Re: It has not risen, you are dead wrong by StewedSquirrel · · Score: 1

    It has not... this is FALSE information fed by the sensationalist media.

    Read this:

    http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=211770&cid =17243204

    Thanks,
    Stewed

    --
    There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't.
  99. People need to wake up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real question I have is why at all would anyone want to see these things in reality or even in a fantasy world?

    Those who rely on freedom of artistic expression and freedom of speech, will say that they should be allowed to create such things.

    I do not agree, because while I believe in the Freedom of Speech and the Artistic expression I also hold those standards to
    "Educational" purposes. And since everything we do and say and create is an expression of some sort, we all know it has an effect on the development of all people exposed to it. And since we all know that it is truly wrong in "Reality" to let such things happen to children period, then why would anyone in their right mind believe for one moment, that Fantasy, or Art, hold MORE relevance over a truly unjust and evil act when preformed in reality? Art should not be allowed to glorify and evil or harmful event in anyones life.

    I can only see it being used at all in an artistic way, when such an offensive act occurs in the fantasy portrayal there must be an end result to the person/s who have committed such a wrongful act. "Action/Reaction" These person/s get caught and are brought to justice for the harm that they did on the child in the art piece. Now this would clearly benefit as an educational expression instead of blindly leading the way for any creation of art to not be held accountable for its "depictions and lessons". As with people, whom all are judged based on their actions, their creation is done with action, so therefore their creation will be judged.

    And my opinion of judgment is of an educational purpose. If you fail to teach or relay a positive outcome from a negative action, then you are only supporting the wrong this in fantasy. And we all know that dreams are fantasies and while not everyones dreams come, we all do try to make them a reality, this fantasy has been see already in reality and there should be no need to revisit it for any reason except to learn that it is a wrong and evil thing to do to begin with.

    If you think this is untrue then YOU can be the victim in your fantasy or someone else's fantasy world or maybe a victim in reality and then you may have a different perspective on these matter of "freedom".

    There is a reason and logic that must need to be held at all times, and this is most certainly one of those times.
    We are protecting our children and teaching each other the rights and wrongs in life.
    One never stops learning till they day they die.
    So the adults in my opinion better learn this. It is a very simple lesson.

    When art that depicts negatives without positive outcome is valued or defended in such a way that it becomes more important than
    the true knowledge of right or wrong in "reality", then it most certainly is an abuse of freedom and knowledge.

    And yes I know most of media in our daily existance has this problem, I don't watch movies or TV at all. I know what is right and what is wrong. I am not a child and I am not an adult who want to be a child. I know better.

    Tim M

  100. Ain't nobody's business if I do by Chriscypher · · Score: 1

    I'm surprised no one has referenced this book yet: AIN'T NOBODY'S BUSINESS IF YOU DO The Absurdity of Consensual Crimes in a Free Country Peter McWilliams Prelude Press see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ain't_Nobody's_Busine ss_If_You_Do

    --
    "You have liberated me from thought."
    1. Re:Ain't nobody's business if I do by flyneye · · Score: 1

      I can claim that as one of my favorite books.
      Note that consensual crimes may bring harm to no-one but ones self.
      While it can't be proven that comp.generated pedophilia doesn't "directly" harm anyone.
      It's a given that feeding a peds passion harms children in general.
      I propose that we declare comp generated child porn legal and simultaneously declare the inhumanity of the pedophile.We can then post an open season and hunt pedophiles for sport and trophy.You can't really prove they're human by any attribute,so why not? We could actually lay digital traps for them on the internet.Taxidermy could once again be an art form. Petes book really doesn't apply here.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  101. So what happens when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I take an ordinary piece of paper, draw a bunch of dots on it and say it's my abstract interpretation of two twelve-year-olds getting it on in a blizzard. Do we arrest me now? Sorry, but I'd rather not live in a society where provided with nothing but a pen and a piece of paper I can get myself thrown in jail.

  102. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  103. wait a second... by foreverdisillusioned · · Score: 1

    shouldn't that be a naked nine year old girl?

    *ducks*

  104. Re: a Gruesome answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People age year by year, not in colossal segmented leaps.

    Nothing suddenly happens between day 364 of age 17 and Day 2 of JustTurnedEighteen (and eligible to make quick cash).

    The same people have also forgotten that if we use a thoroughly conservative argument that young people relieve certain biology a bit more than once per day from age 13-17, that's 2000 episodes of biology happening *with no valid outlet*. Some minority segment of these virile teens are sneaky as hell, and deliberately go online to bait others, reveling in the "can't touch me" legal status.

    Then someone turns 22 and ... thinks they're above it all.

    Then there's the lovely topic of "violent death is fine at seven but sex is a felony at thirteen".

    The allure comes from the "social contrast" between an imagined moment from the older person showing the younger person nature's biggest secret. The Magic Moment is supposed to be pegging this initation the same day the biology becomes active. Before all the lawsuits kick in, for one brief moment ... the 15 (conservative) year old *likes it*. All the mystique about virginity is that "once you know, you can never forget". The older person gets credit for "showing", and wants to partake in the moment of wonder.

    The social laws are built around the fact that many of these same individuals also try to work in manipulative agendas which lead to other forms of harm. Like the current anti-terror panic, the admininistration 'decided' that fewer rights for all is worth the abuse of individual rights because 'anything' is better than Sept 11. There was Pearl Harbor before this, and we FINALLY outgrew that one. It's time to do the same with Sept 11. Back to the above, "statistically" anyone interested in certain age maps of relations "is likely" to pursue additional agendas. We currently have no formalized ratings of tendencies, so we simply make the laws cut and dried.

    I am pretty sure people from farm culture "grow up" faster because they see it from animals sooner. Romeo & Juliet is arguably THE canon of 9th grade literature, and those participants were years under "legal age".

  105. Won't Somebody Think Of Snap, Crackle And Pop? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    Not only Kenny, one of my favourite Ghastly Comic Strips, where Crackle is ordered to shut his sissy mouth and take a big rubber cock, would now surely become illegal to possess. Up until now, I thought the only thing that might be violated other than Crackle's behind was trademark law.

    Whilst Crackle's age is unclear, he is certainly described as a child - "the good-hearted, fun middle child".

  106. Take away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the eyes can see porn, the body might do something bad to kids. Take away the eyes so they cannot see the images or read the texts.

    But the fingers can still read Braille, so take away the fingers so they cannot read. And take the arms so they cannot reach for porn.

    But the ears can still hear porn, so make them deaf as well.

    But the brain can still think about porn, so take away the brain too.

    And then the children are protected.

  107. "Think of the children" or NOT! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When we move from "ban images of abused children" to "ban images in which no child ever was involved", we are no longer talking about "think of the children" (what children? There aren't any involved), to deliberately inciting hate against those who fantasize about children.

    Just like there are many more people fantasizing about sex or even about rape (heck, even a lot of women fantasize about rape, without the slightest wish for it to become reality), than actual rapists, I am absolutely certain that there are many more people fantasizing about children, than there are child molesters.

    As long as these people get to have their fantasies, they are never going to harm a child, just like those fantasizing about rape are never going to rape anyone. Outlawing their fantasy is only going to make them feel hated, that they are not a part of society, and thus not care what everyone else thinks. If you're going to jail for something, why not do it? People are going to think that you did it, and you can't ever convince them that you didn't.

    This is what this kind of law will do: Convince those that have not ever harmed a child, that they might as well do it. That way they will at least get something out of it.

    It is not about "think of the children". It will increase the number of people arrested for posession of kiddie porn (any law that expands the definition of kiddie porn will do that), but it will ALSO INCREASE the number of abused children.

  108. So? by lpq · · Score: 1

    At what point do you draw the line between what looks real and what is real?

    It's sorta "stupid" to ban "real" images if "manufactured" or "computer generated" images can look real.

    Besides, it's not the "realism" that's the problem, it's the idea. Do we allow banning an idea? It certainly seems ok in the case of "real" porn.

    What's the difference between sex porn and violence porn? Why is one "bannable", but the other not? Is sex somehow more obscene than killing?

    Stupidity runs amok in governments. Hysteria and mass panic. Logic and reason don't enter into it -- it's about manipulating the masses. So are bans against "real" images effective in banning the ideas?

  109. virtual porn hurts child molesters by 2901 · · Score: 1

    Evil monster molests child and takes photographs. Then he sells the photographs to wannabe-evil sicko's who don't molest children themselves but jerk off to kiddy porn.

    Why do we punish the users of kiddy porn? The users are not molesting children. It is only the creators who are doing that. The reason for punishing the users of kiddy porn is that we want to protect children and they are undermining our efforts by giving money to child molesters. Paying money for kiddy porn gives the creators cash to move on, cover their tracks, and find new victims.

    The punishment of users of kiddy porn is intended to turn up the heat on the creators/molesters by cutting off their source of funding, much like using "money laundering" laws to obstruct funding of terrorists. If the law prohibits real child porn and permits computer generated child porn, and if the consequence is that wannabe-evil sicko's spend their cash on photo-shopped adult porn and CGI instead of the real thing, then we have won that won that particular battle and made life harder for child molesters.

    Banning Computer-Generated Child Porn is an actively evil policy that defends the child molesters source of candy money from competition that doesn't involve harming children.

    There is another perspective, from the theory of bureaucratic infighting. If you want to undermine your organisations performance of function X, you can widen the remit of the department responsible for X. This undermines it four ways.

    1. Distracts management with a wider range of responsibilities
    2. Spreads the budget over more activities
    3. Makes the budget harder to justify because the remit has been diluted with less worthwhile activities
    4. Creates a 'downhill' dynamic in which effort shifts to easier or less umpleasant areas
    The current focus is on the protection of children. Widening that to include computer generated porn widens it to include the investigation and prosecution of creators of pornography who have no access to children and are unable to harm them. Such a loss of focus could almost have been designed to undermine child protection.

    John Reid's idea of banning computer generated child porn has a Belgium spell to it, as though child molesters have friends in high places who are deliberately doing a poor job of protecting children.

    1. Re:virtual porn hurts child molesters by Shados · · Score: 1

      I doubt people are willingly helping the child molesters with this law... they are just...mislead.

      The "think of the children" movement is becoming so widespread, that I think people are losing track of WHY it "started" (for lack of better word) in the first place. They kind of forgot WHY child porn is illegal -> because kids are unable to make an informed decision about sex, and thus they virtually always get hurt in the process...

      The people pushing this law literally think that child porn is wrong in itself. But it is only wrong because of the way it is created: from unwilling, unable to concent, victims. Thats the only reason. A reason that does not apply to "artificial" porn.

      That is a bit how some PITA want to ban artificial fur and leather on top of the real thing, seeing it as a symbol. But no animal gets hurt when making artificial fur...

  110. What's really going on here. by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 1

    I think you've touched on the real reason for these laws. As CG technology becomes more advanced and accessible to the masses, you probably will start seeing very realistic CG pornography (and possibly porn involving CG "minors").

    Laws like this aren't an attempt to protect 1's and 0's that are less than 18 years of age. Rather, these types of laws are for prosecutional prudence. Imagine you are a prosecutor. You've got a guy who was found in possession of a child porn video. Currently, that ought to be a pretty easy case to convict on.

    But what happens in the future when the defense says, "The child in this video isn't a person. He's a computer animation." Now, all of a sudden, the prosecution has to track down the child to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that there was, indeed, a child in the video who was under 18 years of age. Laws like this are an end-run around such a defense. It takes away the prosecution's obligation to produce a victim or lose the case.

    Personally, I rather like the idea that a prosecutor has to produce a victim in order to prosecute someone. But I don't write the laws.

    --
    They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
  111. Re: It has not risen, you are dead wrong by msobkow · · Score: 1

    Oh, really? Are you saying all the media reports and convictions are fantasy?

    The idea of increased reporting is plausible, but when you incorporate the charges of people arrested for picking up child prostitutes, the arrests for major child porn collections, the people charged and locked up for direct physical molestation (with or without cameras to share their "experience" with their "friends"), ...

    Well, lets just say that the numbers are ugly and getting worse.

    Have you ever known a rape victim? Even adults have difficulty dealing with the trauma. Now imagine the impact on a trusting child. We're not talking about something that they "get over", but a lifelong infliction of pain.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
  112. Thanks for making my point for me by The+Monster · · Score: 1
    Correlation is not causation.
    I've said as much myself. The fact that there is a correlation between looking at certain pictures and performing certain acts was introduced as evidence of the pictures causing the acts. I don't agree with it myself.
    (I'm not sure why that report is so popular with the pro-porn crowd. If you think about it - do you really want to claim that it's more likely you would be out there raping women if you didn't have your porn?)
    Nice try at the ad hominem there, but no cigar. The idea is that some would-be rapists have their desires satisfied by the porn, and are then able to control themselves better. And there's no more reason to disbelieve that idea than the one the pro-censorship crowd pushes, which is that the porn stimulates the desires further, or lowers inhibitions against progressively more perverse behavior.

    I am happy to draw the line at physically touching those who have not (or due to their youth or mental incapacity are unable to have) given consent. That is a nice bright line of distinction that avoids the need to worry about what correlates there may be to the physical act.

    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

    1. Re:Thanks for making my point for me by skinfaxi · · Score: 1
      Kendall's study's conclusion is that 15-19 year old boys with access to the internet were less likely to be convicted of rape. Then it makes the leap that those previously-raping boys are using the internet solely for porn, and rape porn at that.

      I don't think porn use causes or prevents rape. I do think it's desensitizing, dehumanizing, etc. I don't think adult porn should be banned but I think the reasons behind its use and the changes it causes in people need to be talked about.

      If internet porn causes or reduces rape, we'd see a sharp increase or decline in the rape rate of every internet-connected country beginning in the late 90s. The US and Britain don't exhibit that trend: Britain's rape rate has gone up, and the USA's has gone down.

      There are lots of other reasons that could explain Kendall's conclusions. Maybe 15-19 year old girls with access to the 'net are less likely to be raped.

      Maybe increased access to feminist and anti-violence resources on the internet led to a decrease in rape. Maybe an increase in access to Slashdot led to a decrease in rape.

      There's a good look at the flaws in the methodology used in the report here: http://2x3x7.blogspot.com/2006/10/dont-buy-compute r-but-if-you-do.html

      I am happy to draw the line at physically touching those who have not (or due to their youth or mental incapacity are unable to have) given consent.

      Well, good, that will probably keep you from going to jail for rape.