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Germany Searches Credit Cards For Child Porn Payments

narramissic writes "According to an ITworld article, police in the German state of Sachsen-Anhalt have teamed with credit card companies to sift through the transactions of over 22 million customers looking for those who may have purchased child pornography online. To date they have identified 322 suspects." From the article: "German data privacy laws allow police to ask financial institutions to provide data about individuals but only if the investigators meet certain conditions, including a concrete suspicion of illegal behavior and narrowly defined search criteria, according to Johann Bizer, deputy director of the Independent Center for Privacy Protection... In the case under investigation, police were aware of a child pornography Web site outside of Germany that was attracting users inside the country. And they asked the credit-card companies to conduct a database search narrowed to three criteria: a specific amount of money, a specific time period and a specific receiver account."

52 of 283 comments (clear)

  1. Now, by "sift through" ... by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 4, Funny

    Do they mean "grep"?

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
    1. Re:Now, by "sift through" ... by mingot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Uh, doubt it. Perhaps "query".

    2. Re:Now, by "sift through" ... by NineNine · · Score: 5, Funny

      Another person who thinks that databases are the same as flat files... Really, that just makes me want to stab you in the eyeball with a rusty spoon. "Grep" is to an RDBMS as orange juice is to an M-1 Abrahams tank. Completely and utterly unrelated.

    3. Re:Now, by "sift through" ... by neuro.slug · · Score: 4, Funny

      Of course they don't use flat text... they've moved on to using one big XML file.

    4. Re:Now, by "sift through" ... by AlexCV · · Score: 2, Informative

      Funnily enough, the AT&T Daytona RDBMS is basically implemented at gzipped (or similar) compressed text files searched with grep. Of course there's some differences with normal grep: queries are compiled to regexp and then compiled to an optimized C program representing the optimal grep-like tool for the specific query. It is then parallelized on an HP superdome.

      Also, most RDBMS implement linear search which is grep like. The use of the LIKE statement is even closer to grep and let's not forget that many RDBMS like PostgreSQL support using regexp in lieu of LIKE statements...

    5. Re:Now, by "sift through" ... by darkstar949 · · Score: 4, Funny

      To be fair, you can make orange juice with an M-1 Abrahams, although the technique is a bit of overkill.

    6. Re:Now, by "sift through" ... by serialdogma · · Score: 3, Funny

      Wow, is there a new W3C standard for flagging XML-logged credit card transactions as child porn related?

  2. WHY?! by Virak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why the hell do people pay for *any* porn, and especially why would you pay for porn that's *already illegal*?!

    People make my head hurt.

    1. Re:WHY?! by gstoddart · · Score: 2
      Why the hell do people pay for *any* porn, and especially why would you pay for porn that's *already illegal*?!

      The same reason people pay for anything: perceived value of having it. Free porn is getting tougher to find on the net. I have no idea how difficult it is to find kiddie porn, nor do I want to know, cause that's just nasty. But, if you're looking for it, you're probably willing to pay for it.

      And, I'm sure most of the places selling such things promise discrete billing, much like *any* adult themed place does. Instead of being billed as "Ass Stretchers Butt Plugs: $136.99", they bill something nicer like "Happy Valley Novelties and Gifts: $136.99".

      Unfortunately, the people in the market for such things aren't really stopping to think about the legality of it (or, maybe it's from a place where it's illegal, I'm sure there are such places). They're thinking more about how the hell to get some of it.

      Lots of people all over the world are looking to buy things that are otherwise illegal, and there's usually someone trying to make money selling it to you. The fact that someone is willing to spend money on something which is illegal shouldn't really be that big of a surprise.

      Cheers
      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    2. Re:WHY?! by computational+super · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're assuming they're using their own credit cards... remember, we're talking about people who are already commiting a crime to begin with. How'd you like to have your credit card # harvested and then find out about it by having the Gestapo kick in your door? Yikes.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    3. Re:WHY?! by trashbat · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Huh? Try 10$/mo at Easynews and alt.binaries.erotica.divx or cheggit.net (120k+ members) or any one of a ton of other places, any one of which will give you more porn than you could possibly have time to watch. They're so busy posting the constant stream of new dvds released there's hardly ever time for reposts.
      Yup, can vouch for Easynews after using it for the past 7-8 years. The (still-hidden for some reason) Easynews global search is pretty amazing - just enter your keywords, filter it on movies and select output style as 'Hybrid 1'. Bob's your mother's brother. Even supports regex! :-) Automatically assembles the contents of some RAR files too, try including 'autounrar' in your search term, or the PAR viewer for files that aren't automatically assembled. Also like the SSL option for downloading stuff from work (disclaimer: no, I don't work for them, just a very satisfied customer).

      It's also worth signing up to the Ijsklontje forums if you have a decent binary newsfeed, just to see what's on there at the moment.
  3. Darwin by NineNine · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, I gotta say that somebody using a credit card to buy kiddie porn is a fine example of natural selection. Honestly, I had no idea that there were people that stupid out there. I mean really, if you're going to do something that is universally both illegal and reviled, why in the hell would you use a credit card?!?! Hell, I don't even use a credit card to buy incense at my local head shop!

    1. Re:Darwin by Hrodvitnir · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Who says they use their own credit card?

      --
      "There are more important things than stopping terrorism. Upholding the Constitution is one of them." - Ars Forumer.
    2. Re:Darwin by arevos · · Score: 4, Informative

      You clearly have no idea what "natural selection" means.

      No, I think the OP is broadly correct in his use of the term. Being jailed and presumably being put on some German equivalent of the sex offenders list does not improve one's reproductive chances.

    3. Re:Darwin by fafalone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Child porn sites are typically hidden from the general public, so you need to be a little more experienced with the net to find them. So the people who do find them are smart enough to use stolen ccs to pay for it, I'd bet 90% of the time.

    4. Re:Darwin by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I mean really, if you're going to do something that is universally both illegal and reviled, why in the hell would you use a credit card?!?!
      An even better question is why if you were someone offerring something illegal and reviled would you accept payment from something as traceable as a credit card transaction?

      The conspiracy theorist in me suspects all may not be as it seems here, but the realist in me understands that both buyers and sellers are mercifully stupid.
      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
  4. Done correctly by MobyDisk · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I bet this is big news to Americans: a government that can responsibly deter crime without infringing on the rights of the citizens. How did those darn Germans do it? Some sort of miraculous new technology? Maybe they've invented a porno-detector? Let's take a look!

    only if the investigators meet certain conditions, including a concrete suspicion of illegal behavior and narrowly defined search criteria Sounds like a warrant.

    The database search was conducted by the credit-card companies, not the German police, which have no direct access to the financial records of people registered in Germany...They must have a concrete suspicion and provide very exact and limited search criteria. Sounds like responsible conduct.

    Bizer warned that credit-card data monitoring could lead to mistrust, especially if customers aren't properly informed. Sounds like an understanding of government, law, and proper oversight.

    Amazing!

    1. Re:Done correctly by camperdave · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How did those darn Germans do it?

      Hmm... The population of Germany is roughly 82 million, and they are going to "sift through the transactions of over 22 million customers". It seems to me that those darn Germans are going to do it by considering half the adult population as suspects.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    2. Re:Done correctly by dfenstrate · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Given the behavoir and expansion of the government since FDR's "New Deal" (some would say the civil war) and the War on Drugs, this is hardly an attitude uique to the current Administration.

      Our elected officials in all three of the branches of the government have been disregarding the original intent and meaning of the constitution for decades.

      Congress abuses the "interstate commerce" and "general welfare" parts of the constitution such that nothing is outside their power.

      The executive does whatever the hell it can get away with, and it's alot considering how the lazy legislature unconstitionally delegates lawmaking to various departments (EPA, FCC, etc). Further, Congress hasn't officially declared war since WW2 (Gulf War 1 might be an exception)- which is their duty- but has been happy to authorize the President to do what he likes and pay for things that look like Wars countless times.

      Finally, the Judicial Branch was cowed by FDR and has countless times written tomes of rationalization justifying how the constitution doesn't mean what it says.

      The federal government has been out of line at all levels for generations.

      And you know what?

      We let it.

      Don't cry how the current Administration is so evil because it's been doing what government officials have done for eons. With a little bit of reflection and some serious study of the constitution and it's original meanings you could find several programs you probably support of dubious constitionality.

      But I doubt you'll do that because you have already rationalized the abuses you support and re-examing them would hurt.

      A professor at the University of Edinborough (circa 1787) named Alexander Tyler figured it out. Here's the eight stages of democracy he observed:

      1. From bondage to spiritual faith;

      2. From spiritual faith to great courage;

      3. From courage to liberty;

      4. From liberty to abundance;

      5. From abundance to complacency;

      6. From complacency to apathy;

      7. From apathy to dependence;

      8. From dependence back into bondage.


      He figured this cycle would take 200 years or so. You can argue where along the line we (USA) are but you can see the man has a point. It's pretty clear that a few European countries are solidly at step 7.

      --
      Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
    3. Re:Done correctly by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh, for the love of...., would you get off it. They're searching for a specific amount, to a specific account in a specific time.

      SELECT * FROM transactions WHERE account_to = '4234534543254' AND amount = '19.95$' AND transaction_date BETWEEN '2005-12-31' AND '2006-06-31'

      It's not slam-dunk evidence, because they might have operated legal sites which also got paid to the same account, cards get stolen and so on. But if your card has been paying the same fee to the same account as a kiddie porn site during the same time, that's plenty grounds for reasonable suspicion. This isn't a fishing expedition any more than if they asked the DMV who owns a blue Audi A4 1995-model, and they ran the query against the whole DB. If they don't hit, they get squat. Sometimes the anti-law enforcement brigade on slashdot really get their panties in a bunch over nothing.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  5. Scheisse! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    POLIZE) Sir, ve haff found zis gepayment vot is obviously for die kidipornen. Ve vill haff to ask you to commen mit us to die polizestation.

    MANN) Nein, nein, das ist nicht ein kidipornen! Dis ist die regular wholesome scheisse videos mit conzenting aldulten gefichen mit die turdenpoopen.

    POLIZE) Ach! Ve are mischtaken. Zo zorry for gewasten du timen, proud zitizen. Gutenhaben, unt enjoy die turdenpoopen!

  6. Fine by me. by NNKK · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If the site were in-country with in-country bank accounts, the authorities would just search those records directly. This gets them the exact same information. No more, no less. The parameters are narrowly-defined, reasonable, and the activity in question clearly illegal. The risk to innocents is at least as low as going at it from the other direction (looking at the records on the receiving end).

  7. I have paid for porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I cant comment on why people pay for child porn as that is not my cup of tea but as for paying for porn in general, I have done so.

    Why, well first is convenience. I am busy and would rather be able to go to one website, enter in my search (usually redhead, teen and anal) and get the movies they have right there without having to sift through the results to see what is good. I feel my time is worth more then the money it costs to pay for the porn.

    The second is guaranteed quality. I never wonder if I am getting garbage resolution, a misnamed video, or some other piece of crap. That is why I pay, the company takes care of all that.

    The final reason is guaranteed download speed. I want my porn fast, regardless of how many other people are willing to share it.

    Also it is not illegal, I am supporting the "artists" by paying for it, and lets face it, these people are getting fucked all the time (pun intended).

    So there you do, those are the reason I have paid for porn.

    1. Re:I have paid for porn by fmobus · · Score: 3, Informative

      Y'know, there are already free (as in free beer) pr0n search engines.

    2. Re:I have paid for porn by __aajfby9338 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Why, well first is convenience. I am busy and would rather be able to go to one website, enter in my search (usually redhead, teen and anal) and get the movies they have right there without having to sift through the results to see what is good.

      I really wish there was a "-1 Too Informative" mod. :-)

    3. Re:I have paid for porn by Cervantes · · Score: 2, Funny

      As a fellow redhead/teen/anal enthusiast, I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for subsidizing the redhead/teen/anal porn market with your hard-earned money, so cheap bastards like me can continue to choose our time over our money, and download it for free.

      --
      If I knew the wedgies I gave you back in 6th grade would have resulted in this . . . I might have taken a moments pause.
  8. Re:Moo by zappepcs · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have to agree with your sentiment... to a point. The government IMO has no business telling anyone what to think or fantasize about. On the other hand, it is likely that children are being exploited in one way or another. The existence of the childporn website, and the fact that German citizens are paying for this only helps promote its existence.

    I also feel that spending the money working with the appropriate foreign government to arrest the purveyors of the child porn for sale is the better course of action.
    Without buyers, it would not be up for sale. Without sellers it would not be purchased. Neither options stops child exploitation and pornography, so I think it is more effective to stop those who are selling it.

    They may have the buyers on an 'importing child pornography' type charge, but I still don't think that is wrong... at least not the act of buying. Yes, I know there are those that will disagree. I'm more or less all for the police just posting a list of those who bought the child porn and let society takes its normal course of false morality and prejudice against them. Lets spend the money stopping the source of the child porn rather than try to choke off a small portion of their income and punish people that more than likely represent no harm to society at large.

    Perhaps, in a lenient society, the list of buyers might be used to offer them counseling? That's probably a bit optimistic though.

    With all the medical discoveries regarding genetic contribution to other human circumstances, perhaps they will one day find a cure for pedophiles? Oh, wait, we should probably cure other non-normal traits too... homosexuality, people who like country and western music, and things like that. Yes, sarcasm, but this whole thought police thing is moronic.

  9. Thanks, you did society a service. by flaming+error · · Score: 3, Funny

    Let's do it again. Now please grep for donations to the ACLU...

  10. My card was stolen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I wonder how many cards will now be reported stolen

  11. Define "Broad" by 15Bit · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The article clearly states that "The police are not allowed to ask credit-card companies or banks to run a very broad database search". However, the search criteria "a specific amount of money, a specific time period and a specific receiver account" reads to me as "we know the subscription fee, bank account number and the date the website went up. Could you tell us about all the germans who paid that subscription amount to that bank account please". That sounds like a pretty broad search criteria to me.

    A specific search would be "We have sound suspicions that a bloke called Wolfgang has been accessing this list of kiddie porn websites. Could you provide us with a list of transactions Wolfgang has made to them please."

    1. Re:Define "Broad" by bcattwoo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      A specific search would be "We have sound suspicions that a bloke called Wolfgang has been accessing this list of kiddie porn websites. Could you provide us with a list of transactions Wolfgang has made to them please."

      That's not a search at all though. That is just asking for Wolfgang's credit card statement, which could presumably just be done with a regular warrant given the sound suspicions. I don't understand how searching for records of people paying the subscription amount to a known kiddie porn purveyor during the time he was known to be in business could be construed as overly broad.

  12. Why would someone use a credit card? by Kaz+Kylheku · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One reason might be that it's stolen?

    Someone steals your number, buys kiddie porn, and now you're the suspect.

    1. Re:Why would someone use a credit card? by Incadenza · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Someone steals your number, buys kiddie porn, and now you're the suspect.
      A friend of mine had his computer confiscated for three months because somebody tried to sign up to a Yahoo! mailing list (where kiddie porn had been discussed) using his stolen or guessed or just randomly typed e-mail address. They are not the brightest of the block, these German cybercrimefighters.
  13. Re:Law of diminishing returns? by geoffspear · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Right, those non-suspects records were "ploughed through" in the same sense that if the police requested one record with a specific transaction ID from the creit card company's database, all of the records were "ploughed through" when the query to retrieve that record was run. You're either a troll, have no idea how a database works, or don't know how to read.

    --
    Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
  14. "Likely that children are being exploited" by flaming+error · · Score: 5, Interesting

    > it is likely that children are being exploited in one way or another
    Really? You mean kids don't like being kidnapped, enslaved, and raped?

    Get a clue, dude. Child Pornography is the most vile and evil industry hell has concocted. Maybe there's a cure for pedophiles; if so, please cure them. But until then, the children's needs trump the pedophiles', and most certainly trump their exploiters. Those who'd rape a child for profit deserve the most severe justice.

    Every civil society feels this very strongly, and rightly so. Unfortunately, that's why societies tolerate their government eroding civil rights - in the name of fighting child porn.

    1. Re:"Likely that children are being exploited" by computational+super · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But you're just guessing as to what the contents of the site(s) in question were - all you know is that some LEA said it was illegal. The actual content may have been much tamer than you're thinking (or even completely fictional) - we'll never know. And (regardless of the country in which you live, apparently) it's against the law for you or I even to look and find out if we agree that it is illegal (or should be). I beleive I read somewhere that Canada even made it against the law to find out how to find out (that is, just to find out what the name of the website was). One would presume that, if these folks go to trial (if they even get trials for these cases any more), then at least the jury will have a chance to take a look at what the accused was looking at and say, "yep, that's illegal alright"... but I'm afraid I wouldn't be terribly surprised if they didn't even let the jury look.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
  15. honesty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I am not quite sure I appreciate your honesty.

    Please, this is Slashdot.

  16. Re:Law of diminishing returns? by jizziknight · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Agreed. Now, If they were manually sorting through the records rather than running a db query, that'd be a different story. The fact of the matter is they're getting only what they searched for and nothing else. The only people having their records "ploughed through" are those who are suspects. So assuming no false positives (which shouldn't happen with a well written query), and no records are missed (which also shouldn't happen with a well written query), they're getting a 100% success rate. The hit rate of .00146% as put forth by the GP would only be correct assuming all 22 million of those people were guilty and they were only finding .00146%. Or at least that's the way I see it.

    --
    Everything I say is a lie. Except that... and that... and that, and that, and that, and that... and that.
  17. Let's hear it for exploitation by poptones · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I exploit my knowledge and skill every day. If you have anything, so do you. People exploit the natural resources around them - cut trees for firewood, fish in their ponds, etc. It seems you've been confused by the mass delusion spread by the politically correct.

    We live in a world now where parents have scant real freedom to raise their kids as they deem fit. How I raise my kids - how I let them dress, what beliefs I teach them, how they are educated - is not your business, not george bush's business, and not the business of the school board... well, at least it wasn't before the feds decided to bend over for the feminist left in the 1980s and make a whole new set of crimes for this shit... never mind those existing laws pretty much covered any REAL sex crimes against americans regardless of age.

    I'm more or less all for the police just posting a list of those who bought the child porn and let society takes its normal course of false morality and prejudice against them.

    Oh yes indeed, that would work perfectly.. it certainly worked well in the south for folks like Emmet Till. While we're at it, how about posting the names of all those folks breaking the other laws, too? Like the whites who married blacks, the ones who buy marital aids, the ones who practice the vile arts like sodomy and cunnilingus and felatio...

    And what about the guy who beats his wife? No chance someone like that might be fucking his daughter or even his son, huh? Or beating them? Where are the calls to castrate these folks?

    The "civilized west" has gone abso-fucking-lutely batshit. How apt you should be deemed a "troll" by another of those "critical thinkers" spawned from this completely perverted society.

  18. I don't think they'll buy that. by User+956 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I wonder how many cards will now be reported stolen

    That excuse only works on your wife, or your girlfriend.

    I know it works on my wife, and my girlfriend.

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
  19. Re:Your rights online? by nasor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's not about the rights of the pedophiles, it's about the rights of normal people to not have the police scrutinize their personal financial records simply because some pedophile uses the same credit card company. The police knew that a few people had used credit cards to buy the porn, so they examined the records of all 22 million people.

  20. To the contrary by BenEnglishAtHome · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I have problems with this. I'll give the German police some slack and assume they are reasonable enough to only look for people who purchased materials that any reasonable person would look at and say "That's obviously vile child abuse." We cannot, however, trust the police everywhere to be as reasonable.

    In the U.S., people are being prosecuted right now for making and selling child porn even though the prosecution agrees that no nudity or sexual activity is depicted. In the U.S., at least one 16 year old girl has been charged with child abuse and child porn production for taking a cell phone picture of herself nude and sending it to a boyfriend. (Yes, the child she was charged with abusing was herself. Think on that a while, but don't blame me if your head explodes.) In the U.S., we have people sitting in jail convicted of possessing child porn for, among other things, having cartoons of young-looking characters having sex. (I'm at work, so filtering prevents me from searching for links; you can google them as easily as I can, though. For the first case, look for "Pierson" who's being prosecuted in Alabama.)

    Yes, everyone is probably right that in the instant case this is a reasonable way to proceed. But I'm still not comfortable with it. I don't trust LEOs to not be idiots, to not be grinding political axes. Dangerous stuff, this. If it's backed up with searches that find people in possession, great. But be warned - due to identity theft or whatever reason, there will be some false positives. The people who are the victims of those false positives are just a short distance away from having their lives utterly ruined without adequate justification.

    There must be better ways of investigating this sort of thing.

  21. They will not end in prison. by TransEurope · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Or better 90% of them. The Spiegel says that 90% of the
    322 suspects are not punished before, so they'll receive
    fines instead of prison. It's unusual in germany to go
    to prison for your first misdeed. Except really hard crimes
    like homicide, second degree murder, forays, raping of course.

  22. Wrong, german law allows it. by Josef+Meixner · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The children are likely not German, so they're not protecting the german children. The servers are not in Germany, so they are not policing they're own internet. They are telling people what they cannot do.

    German law on child pornography is universial, as long as a German is involved, it is the business of the attorney. So a German tourist fucking a little girl somewhere on holiday can be prosecuted in Germany. The law was changed like this after it showed that especially Thailand would not do anything to protect its own children. So the law was changed to be able to do something about it here (yes, I am German).

    Therefore it is completely irrelevant, if the child was German or if the server was located in Germany. All what is relevant was that Germans were buying child porn, something which is very clearly forbidden here. Also what the headline doesn't tell, there are 20 teachers under the suspects and quite a lot of repeat offenders.

    I am not happy about this either, as my credit cards were probably among those that were checked. But it really seems as if everything was done to the letter of the law. The law enforcment officers never saw the CC records, the CC companies were doing the searches for an exact sum, to a fishy Phillipene billing company in a two month time frame. Sadly the trail stopps at the billing company for now, because much better than going after the buyers would have been to get the sellers.

    But to repeat, according to German law it is completely irrelevant where the child was, where the pictures were made and where the servers are located. And I think it was a good idea to change the law like this, because honestly I don't see why child porn from a German child should be prosecuted differently.

  23. Re:Moo by dgm3574 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Decrease the demand for illicit content and hopefully less supply is created to meet the diminished demand.

  24. Re:WHY?! - DOH! by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 3, Funny

    I meant that I "hear" that about free porn on the net, not kiddie porn...

    ::headdesk::
  25. Re:Doesn't even prove that... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
    No, it proves that someone paid this company something using a credit card with the suspect's name on it. Could be a stolen credit card, or possibly just a stolen number. Could even be a stolen identity used to obtain a credit card.


    Indeed. About two years ago, I had two transactions on my credit card which I could not identify, and called VISA to find out what they were about. They told me that one was to a company somewhere in Europe named littlegirls.com or something similar, and the other for the registration of a web site with Yahoo. I had been the victim of identity theft.

    As it was impossible to get in touch with the pr0n site, I contested the charge and told the credit card company to revert it, which they did.
    For the Yahoo charge, Yahoo grumbling reversed it after spending hours on the phone with them, and them finally verifying that the request came from an IP address in Yugoslavia from a fake Hotmail accout, and not in the US where the card was held (shouldn't they have checked at least one of the two before accepting the order?). Yahoo still was unable (too stupid) to take my name and address off the web site registration, where it still resides two years later, despite my contacting them no less than half a dozen times over this, so I still get spam snail mail for a domain I never registered.
    Needless to say, as soon as Yahoo had reversed the charges, I closed that CC account.

    However, a search like the OP posts about will still show me as having paid money to a child porn site, as the reversal of charges doesn't null out the original transaction. I do not think this constitutes enough evidence for a search and seizure order. I'm a victim, not a criminal, and victimising me again in the name of "think of the children!" does nobody any good.
  26. Re:Doesn't even prove that... by El+Torico · · Score: 3, Funny
    if you were trying to get your kink on with tranny-love...

    Is this a good site for that?

    --
    In the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is usually crucified.
  27. Re:Moo by Lehk228 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    S&W already invented a cure for p[a]edophilia

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  28. Re:Moo by Ozan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We're in a sad state of affairs. Germany here is no longer protecting its own citizens, it's preventing it's citizens from viewing things online elsewhere. Who are they protecting?

    They are protecting the basic principle of Article 1 of the German constitution AKA Basic Law AKA Grundgesetz.

    The children are likely not German, so they're not protecting the german children.

    What is your point? That foreign children are less to be protected from abuse? The first sentence of Article 1 of the Grundgesetz reads "Human dignity shall be inviolable.", not "German dignity shall be inviolable."

    The servers are not in Germany, so they are not policing they're own internet.

    Again, what is your point? That Germans shall be able to behave in illegal activities as long as these are taking place on foreign servers?

    They are telling people what they cannot do.

    Which is basicly encouraging child abuse by exerting demand for child pornography.

    What is the reason for banning viewing these things? The usual reason is protecting children from being exploited, but one, these are not German children, and two, there is no proof they were even exploited.

    Regarding the children not being German read what I wrote above. Regarding point two: It is common sense that children can not give informed consent to pornography, so child pornography is in its nature exploiting children, wether they are being forced or by other pressure.

    They are literally telling people what they cannot do in their own homes even when it doesn't hurt anyone.

    If you think that children are not hurt by degrading appearances of themselves in pictures or films, or even worse, by being photographed or filmed while being subjected to degrading or painful or injuring acts by others you seriously need to take a reality check.

    I know, i know, thinkofthechildren.

    Yeah, little people with extra need of protection. Think about it.

    It's only a matter of time before children are carted away and a young age to be protected from the evils of the world.

    There is no need to that. Instead, there are laws and law enforcement doing that job.

    And crap like this is getting modded "interesting", now even the mods are trolling.

  29. Needle in haystack? by B5_geek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So that would mean that the investigation has a success rate of 0.001463636%

    Disclaimer: IMO anybody who hurts a child should be exterminated.

    What % of children die from disease or other 'preventable' causes in Germany?
    Would efforts be better spent helping them?

    --
    "The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men." ~Plato (427-347 BC)
  30. 100 x 1000s of kids killed each year, moron by gd23ka · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A couple hundred kids are stripped naked and photographed by
    child pornographers every year. Some are traumatized
    by rape and other degrading sexual acts. For the most part
    however they are fed and live to see adulthood.

    On the other hand _thousands_(!) of children are maimed or die
    from such mundane causes such as traffic and wars each year.
    'Guess how many Iraqi children died in the last years at the hands
    of US and our "allies", how many died from the arial bombing, land
    mines, scarcity of food and medical supplies?

    Get a clue, moron