US ISPs Announce Anti-Child-Porn Agreement
An anonymous reader writes "It seems that ISPs have gathered together with 45 attorney generals and the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) to form an agreement to crush child pornography. What does that mean? Probably the same as it meant for RoadRunner, Sprint, AT&T and Verizon customers — the end of the newsgroups." Here's the back-patting press-release from the various parties who signed on (the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, and the National Association of Attorneys General), though the actual text of the agreement does not seem to have been made public.
methinks you meant attorneys general. what is the point of /. having editors if they don't edit?
you must be new here
first post
Don't call me back. Give me a call back. Bye. So yeah. But bye our, well, but alright we are on a shirt this chill.
Why do I have the feeling that all this will do is block many websites and services that have nothing to do with child pornography, inconveniencing thousands of innocent web users, while the paedophiles find new ways to trade child porn and are barely inconvenienced? I'm all for fighting child porn, but blocking individual websites or newsgroups is clearly not working, and blocking vast chunks of websites and newsgroups is going to result in blocking mostly legitimate content. Would it be too much to ask for these organisations to actually focus their resources on catching the paedophiles for once? I'm not even sure which is worse in society - a paedophile with child porn, or a paedophile who can't get hold of child porn but wants to see naked children...
Why are people hanging onto this myth? ISPs do not, and have never had, common carrier status.
Well that's that. Usenet is dead. I am glad that child predators won't have any other way to access the cesspool of child pornography that is Usenet.
... that have child porn?
Can we call this the "Yet Another Useless Stupid Deal For Nothing"
I hate child pornograpy as much as anyone SHOULD, but I know whats a PR stunt that wont solve a thing and will only reduce internet's freedom to share information in exchange for absolutly nothing at all whatsoever.
How can we convey to the public that the internet's value depends directly on ISP's not being able to discriminate traffic by content?
How can we put out there the idea that the internet has all this potential for individual freedom and that any kind of attempt to enforce any kind of legal stuff in it will only hinder the potential it has FOR THE COMMON JOE?
Fucking legislators, fucking ISPs and fucking, unreasonable and plain stupid bible-hugging assholes.
NO SIG
The ISPs can monitor all your traffic as deeply as they want to, and gather up whatever the local law enforcement needs for a warrant.
And you have no recourse, ever, thanks to the new FISA ammendments, brought to you with help from your pal and mine, Senator Barack Obama.
Hey, Mr Hope himself even supports the death penalty for child sex offenders. That'll be fun.
The good senator will spearhead this witchhunt with truth and hope and change and (bullshit), and all the expanded priveleges of the White House.
I've been reading usenet for 15 years, I've never seen any child porn. Do I just not frequent the right groups?
Well, there's your problem.
They'll have minimal impact on the perverts, but no doubt they'll get a chance to tighten the screws on the rest of us. Which is, of course, what it's all about.
And I certainly wouldn't be comfortable with anything the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children has its fingerprints on. It's been caught phonying up statistics and acting in a manner that could best be described as "self-serving" on more than one occasion.
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
I suspect the RIAA and the MPAA are behind this.
(and no, you cannot borrow my tinfoil hat.)
If this is going to shutdown the newsgroups, it is a semi-clever ploy to curb piracy... disguised as a "think of the children" scenario. I always enjoyed getting what warez I do grab from my ISPs hosted newsgroups, because unlike something like bittorrent, it is my ISP that is in fact "making available". Since there are actual legitimate (though very few nowadays) reasons for the existence of Usenet, they can't just turn it off. Instead, they give the world a bleeding heart story, while the RIAA and the likes line the pockets of these people.
"When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
Gotta love that ad for Giganews that is being put up on that article by Google AdSense.
I've watched a few episodes of cops where, after raiding a crack den or whatever, the cops then pose as the dealers and do a sting on everyone who buys the product. It seems like it should be similar here--raid the servers, and identify the clientÃle.
But the REALLY important thing, and I do mean the REALLY important thing, is to trackdown and rescue the exploited children. I'm okay with punishing people for participating in the distribution process; however, the reason we view it as so despicable is because of the value we place on the children involved, and our primary efforts should certainly be directed toward finding the source of child porn vs. find the recipients.
Tor (The Onion Router) is a free software implementation of second-generation onion routing - a system enabling its users to communicate anonymously on the Internet. Originally sponsored by the US Naval Research Laboratory, Tor became an Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) project in late 2004, and the EFF supported Tor financially until November 2005. The Tor software is now developed by the Tor Project, which since December 2006 is a 501(c)(3) research/education non-profit organization based in the United States of America that receives a diverse base of financial support.
http://www.torproject.org/
Freenet is a decentralized, censorship-resistant distributed data store originally designed by Ian Clarke. Freenet aims to provide freedom of speech through a peer-to-peer network with strong protection of anonymity. Freenet works by pooling the contributed bandwidth and storage space of member computers to allow users to anonymously publish or retrieve various kinds of information. It can be thought of as a large storage device which uses key based routing similar to a distributed hash table to locate peers' data. When a file is stored in Freenet, a key which can be used to retrieve the file is generated. The storage space is distributed among all connected nodes on Freenet.
http://freenetproject.org/
I can only assume that "MOU" means "molester of children", and I for one am glad that our media overlords finally live up to their responsibility and execute all suspected molesters! Finally somebody thinks of the children and are not afraid to say so! When Time Warner death squadrons rake hot lead into the last paedophile and burns his body with acid will be a great day not only for America but for all of Earth! (queue crying eagles)
Why are people hanging onto this myth? ISPs do not, and have never had, common carrier status.
humm...I'm gonna write it as sugestion to the mythbusters... .... =)
Do ISPS have common carrier status?
I hope there's explosions envolved
What is best in life? To crush your enemies, to see them driven before you and to hear the lamentations of their women.
When you announce censorship to stop piracy, everybody gets up in arms about net neutrality.
When you instead use child pornography as your scapegoat, the majority will turn a blind eye to your censorship efforts.
Note that the first thing to go was alt.* on usenet, a large source of piracy. If they had choked off alt.* because of piracy, there would have been much talk about net neutrality. Since they did it because of child pornography, nobody mentions net neutrality.
We had one of our ISPs cave to something similar. So I wrote this letter to the marketing director: (pardon the asterisks)
Dear Steve Jackson
I'm writing to express my concern over ******'s introduction of website filtering. I believe this sets a disturbing precedent for the continuing provision of internet services by *****.
An ISP's role is not to regulate what I can use my internet connection for. An ISP's role is to provide me with an internet connection, which **** has been excellent at doing.
The aim of 'stopping objectionable practices' is a noble one. However, problems soon become apparent when one considers that my interpretation of objectionable behaviour is undoubtedly different from *****'s interpretation. The logical conclusion to this line of reasoning, is that at some point in the future when I want to use my internet connection for something, **** will decide that it knows best, and stop me from so doing.
This quote from David Lane (Director of Society For Promotion Of Community Standards Inc.) is particularly disturbing: "... [The society] wants the filtering extended beyond child porn content to include the blocking of all hard core pornographty sites and those promoting "objectionable" content defined in secion 3(2)(a-f) of the Films, Videos and Publications Classification Act 1993 (sexual violence, bestiality, etc).".
It illustrates the problem rather well. I have used the internet for pornography, and I don't expect to be blocked from doing so in the future. If I look at pornography more hardcore than the limits imposed on free-to-air television, this doesn't make my behaviour 'wrong', and I certainly don't expect **** to impose its standards on my behaviour. If I do something illegal, then that's relevant for the Police, not a coporation.
Additionally, the concept that a list maintained by the Internal Affairs Office will be capable of cataloguing all objectionable sites on the internet is flawed if not outright hilarious.
There are various software packages available which attempt to keep the internet 'safe' for younger users. I am sure that, combined with actual parenting, these tools are far better suited to keeping children from accessing inappropriate content.
I should take this moment to clarify that my primary concern is not that I may soon be unable to access pornography with my **** account. Instead, I believe that once this form of filtering has been introduced for one honourable reason, it will only be a matter of time before the practice of filtering is extended to other aspects of the internet.
It is widely publicized (although not necessarily accurate) that 'peer to peer' (p2p) services consume a disproportionate amount of bandwidth accross the internet as a whole. I extend from this assumption that some time in the future **** may be in favour of blocking p2p services in order to extract more customers from the same amount of bandwidth. This would have a real and noticeable affect on my internet behaviour.
There are other scenarios in which **** might decide to filter my internet use. For example, I'm sure **** wants to retain their customers, and so logically it would be a sensible idea to block all competing ISP's websites. Or, if there is a damning report about ***** on a news website, it would be very easy to block any user from accessing that website.
I'm not suggesting that **** does or would do any of these measures, but the only way I can be certain of this is for **** not to regulate my internet behaviour in any way.
The knee-jerk reaction to this news would be for me to cancel my **** account. Instead I'm going to post this letter on a few popular **** forums, and raise general public awareness of ****'s actions. I will continue to closely monitor ****'s actions, and may switch ISPs if it continues with this course of action.
Yours Sincerely
Insanity: voting in the same two parties over and over again and expecting different results
"I commend the nation's cable operators for utilizing the National Cable and Telecommunications Association (NCTA) to negotiate and collectively enter into a unprecedented industry-wide agreement with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) to limit the availability of child pornography on the internet."
No agreement is, or ever was, necessary for any ISP to proceed forth to fight child pornography. The fact that some kind of mutual agreement is in place suggests something else is going on behind the scenes. Would NCMEC have prohibited ISPs from fighting against child pornography without an agreement? I doubt that. Maybe these ISPs knew all along they were part of the problem with child pornography? Or is NCMEC trying some more extensive shake-down tactics?
The big question will be just to how far will these ISPs go in the name of protecting children? Just how many will use it as a false excuse to shut off internet resources that have nothing to do with child pornography and were not even the victim of spammers of such content?
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
It won't protect me from my uncle... Or any other child - this stuff isn't new. As if no child was ever molested before the internet. These are nothing but keywords - to elicit emotional response and push through their agenda. That way if you oppose them, they can say "You support kiddie porn!"
The FCC admonishes Comcast for their P2P traffic management techniques.
Never fear. Now major ISPs can start blocking P2P altogether in the name of a cooperative effort with government (45 attorney generals), to crush child porn.
The FCC can't oppose a measure "to crush child porn".
It's a very crafty political technique.
There are a lot of people who want to see child pornography crushed. It's a popular political position to take.
ISP entirely blocking access to an IP, just because some of web pages served from it may include 'undesirable' content (for ISP's definition of the day for 'undesirable'), is definitely non-neutral.
There aren't that many of the general public who understand what "network neutrality" means, or the harm it will cause when ISPs start blocking sites for arbitrary reasons.
I'm sad to say, that Network Neutrality will probably be the first casualty of this cooperative.
It will start with "child porn" illegal stuff, but it won't stop there.
Yes, all of Usenet, or all of alt.* may die, even with all its perfectly legitimate and legal content and discussion areas.
Will the general (uneducated) public hear about it, or lose any sleep over it? Probably not.
First Usenet, then P2P, then IRC, then Youtube, then most of the web (other than major content providers' and business' sites).
USENET services have been protected by common carrier status since they started; if you start censoring newsgroups, you become responsible for their content. this has been the way it is forever, and is commonly understood and supported in case law.
Why, yes, I AM a Pagan Libertarian.
Why are people hanging onto this myth? ISPs do not, and have never had, common carrier status.
Source, please.
I spent about 30 seconds and I couldn't find a source, but rest assured they aren't.
The confusion comes from the fact that AT&T the phone company is a common carrier but AT&T the ISP isn't.
Apparently, there are 88. 88 out of 107,000+ last time I checked. Roughly .008% of usenet is affected in this manner, and I'm not even going to get into group volume to find a more accurate estimate, because it would just drive that number down. So if I'm getting this right, 99.992% of usenet does not contain such things. This is one of a few things:
1) ISPs getting rid of a service that a small minority of their users use and saving themselves money on bandwidth, which is somewhat shaky, most of the people that use Usenet would find a 3rd party solution anyway, so the bandwidth savings would probably not be as large as expected.
2) ISPs are actually concerned with this content moving to other areas of Usenet if they block only the groups known to contain it, so they are essentially throwing the baby out with the bathwater. Cliched, I know, but accurate. Or:
3) ISPs are doing this to appease corporate interests by getting rid of the offensive material along with everything else that could possibly constitute copyright infringement. It's already been said here a few times, but from what I can see, it's the most likely scenario. The public thinks they're great for fighting the perverts, while corporate interests think they're great by closing off an area of mass piracy. Again, see point 1, because the people that use it will go to external providers, and I have a feeling they may be next on this hit list.
Today is red jello day - all workers must eat all of their red jello. Failure to comply will result in five demerits.
Owner of www.example.com: "Uh, yeah, I want to see the child porn blacklist. I think you might have blocked my site by mistake."
ISP: "Hey! This guy is trying to view the child porn blacklist!"
Police: "Oh hey, website owner. We're arresting you under suspicion of possessing child pornography."
Owner of www.example.com: "Wait, what?"
Police: "You asked for the list of sites, and on top of that, you tried to visit www.example.com, which was on the list. Clearly you wanted to see child porn."
"From what I gather, this is only the ISPs that have their own servers that are affected, and not independent usenet providers themselves (like Giganews)."
How long do you really think it's going to take for this to trickle over to premium USENET servers, if in no other way than to have their traffic as closely monitored, and potentially throttled, as that of P2P users?
*Any* time it's "for the children", you can be damn well sure that they'll be last on the list of those being served.
I smell herring, red, and believe this is far from a "flash in the pan feel good law". It will in time be seen as odious as the DMCA and others of like ilk.
Some days it's just not worth
chewing through my restraints.
Yes, it was an election year.
This space available.
They will probably coat a fibreglass bundle with dynamite and then blow it up. Is it educational or informative in any kind?
No, but it's a big explosion ;)
Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power lost.
Google: "isp common carriers" returns...
The Uncommon Carrier
A Quick Wiki returns...
Network neutrality in the United States
A Quick Slashy returns...
Cable Internet Service Not Common Carrier
Find your own sources from there and agree or disagree.
I was on Usenet two nights ago looking for a song in my vinyl collection that's in deep storage, and all the .alt.binaries groups I'm subscribed to were there (yes... even those, so stop with the jokes).
And yesterday AM when I logged on, they were gone, and and "Alt- 411 no such group" error appears instead.
All the other groups I'm subscribed to are still functioning.
I spent four hours on the phone attempting to "complain", and got the "standard" troubleshooting script more than a few times, before I politely interrupted one woman, and asked firmly to speak to her supervisor.
The bitch (oh, did I say that? Why YES, I did, in retrospect) put me on looooooong hold, then came back on the line and said with dripping sarcasm: "I'm so sorry for the loooong wait, here's your extension." ... click...
After calling back I was again transferred several times by clueless people, dropped a couple more, and finally vented (nicely) on a poor 611 tech guy, the only human I could speak to who actually had technical knowledge.
And yes, dear friends, he was also completely clueless about the attacks on Usenet.
I'm now more angry that they have "insulated" themselves from humans with the endless phone tree.
If it don't GO... chrome it. ~ Frank Banks
They aren't old school common carriers, but the safe harbor provision of the DMCA is very similar in scope and spirit with the old common carrier regulations. So long as they are only transporting the content and not deciding what is and is not shown then they are afforded broad immunity. Of course the same law requires them to censor content when they receive a request, so I don't think that this type of blocking would strip them of their protection. If it becomes an issue then this is one area where I think it would be very legitimate for the ISP's to lobby Congress for some legislative immunity.
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
if you disagree with me, make a proposal to filter out child porn submissions on all of the alt.binaries. not volunteering, huh? no idea how to do it, huh? don't deny it doesn't exist. don't deny there is a lot of child porn posted there. don't deny it is wrong and must be fought. don't deny shutting down the distribution channels is a valid means of fighting it.
I say we take off and nuke the entire 'Net from orbit. It's the only way to be sure.
Yeah, but then you have the fucking fuckers fucking every-fucking-body and nobody fucking likes it.
No one should figuratively be fucking anyone, only literally fucking them.
Of course, then you get fuckers trying to replace figuratively fucking with literally fucking, and the fucking gets REALLY fucking wierd.
Enemy of the Sun
Maybe I've naive, but how much "Child Pornography" is actually publicly available on the internet? (No links please, thanks)
I mean, I see PLENTY of "regular" or even crazy-weird porn online all the time, but I've NEVER accidentally or intentionally come across child porn. Are the distributors sophisticated enough to use private/encrypted systems, or do I just not crawl usenet enough? Seems like a fictional problem that sounds REALLY good to elected officials and families ("Yes, let's change to that ISP who blocks child porn, that will solve all of our problems, honey!")
I'm all for recovering exploited children and keeping them away from child molesters, but why do I not see a photo taken ten years ago and posted on the internet as a particularly heinous crime in this day and age?
Note... my ex GF was a cop and they (cops) ALL took particular pleasure in busting active child molesters/"public weenie-whackers". I liked to hear about them getting caught as well, and my GF said that 99 times out of 100, the suspect would be the biggest sissy on earth and start "crying for momma" as soon as they were even arrested (not CONVICTED...yet).
Grandpa: My Homer is not a communist. He may be a liar, a pig, an idiot, a communist, but he is not a porn star.
I think what we're really looking at here is the instrument by which P2P for the masses will be destroyed -- all in the name of "we must protect our precious little snowflakes!" -- and before anybody gets started on me, I am NOT a pedophile, child molestor, or sex offender of any type, and I am against all such activities and the people who perpetrate them. Still I assert that this, or something like it, is going to be the hammer that gets dropped on P2P. Think about it: If you're a pedophile, then you're insane to have your wares hosted on a web server somewhere that can be raided, and you arrested. You're better off using the Gnutella network and it's like, and BitTorrent, right? At least, it's plausible, and that's all they really need, is plausibility, because everybody knows that only dirty filthy criminals use P2P, right? Of course what will really happen is that like with anything else, their efforts will just drive the pedos deeper underground, and meanwhile P2P will likely have to evolve in a direction that likewise takes it out of the daylight and fairly deep underground, too -- because no matter what, you can't stop the signal, Mal..
If i'm not mistaken... this is the same as closing highways because criminals may use them for bank robbery escape routes. this isnt about ending child porn, this has more to do with ending distribution routes used by people to destribute content themselves. In other words, the major corporations behind these ISPs have an interest in dictating usage so that they are the single delivery system for content to their end users. Child Porn is an excuse used to distract us from the real situation. The newsgroups is not full of child porn... child porn is perhaps .005% of the porn on newsgroups.
The truth is... all of the good porn, tv shows, movies, music, etc etc are on the newsgroups... that means MASSIVE bandwidth usage.
The bandwidth used by child porn sick fucks, doesnt even compare to the bandwidth being used by jackers looking at "of legal age" material, or the file traders who are sending massive amounts of data through the newsgroups.
Kiddie porn is a fucking political power move. Dont fall victom of it. Its not a widespread issue.
Well that solves that then! Back to P0r. . . er, PBS!
Seriously, when did we turn into a society that paces in front of the microwave?
Pessimists.net - as if life wasn't depressing enough.
A easy way for government to get rid of P2P sharing as well. I mean, if they can put the lock down on usenet and newsgroups what is to stop them from saying "P2P is a way to share child porn".
I feel this has bigger implications than most think.
Don't join the dots, use an ellipsis.
Brought to you by the Better Typography and Grammar Society - it's better than sects!
Caesar si viveret, ad remum dareris.
I think it's time to lie down our own cables.
From neighbour to neighbour. And to bridge longer distances, organize properly and ask a commercial telco (or whoever has cable in place) to simply lease a cable to us. I repeat, lease the cable. Not "provide connectivity".
That way I think we can get back the control of what's going through the cables. Thus "feeing the Internets".
hany
This would probably matter more if most ISP-provided usenet feeds didn't have retention that can barely be measured in HOURS to begin with. I imagine the pedocons, like anyone else who has any serious interest in newsgroups in general, and binaries newsgroups in particular, probably pay for premium usenet service. What worries me is what happens when this (As obviously will be the case) does nothing. Will they eventually try to wipe out usenet altogether?
Giganews is up to 240 days retention on all binary newsgroups. If it's out there, anyone who wants it can have at it for $25 a month. But then, so it goes. That's always going to be the case...so where does it end? We start taking pointers from China? From Web 2.0 to Web Good-fuckin-Luck.
Friend: "The NIC is misconfigured..." Me: "No prob, I'll just telnet in and fix it." *Silence*
Could this be the end of Eternal September? People serious about wanting usenet access can get a pay account to access it and all the spammers and riffraff that have plagued it since the mid 90's will be for the most part gone. Still there are a lot of downsides of this, but I don't think losing a piracy outlet is one of them. Have you seen the retention of most ISP's these days? They don't retain enough of anything to be worth much anymore. Their binary section usually has a size limit which means that unless you are collecting each piece as it comes in, if you log in, you only see about 1/4 of the last uploaded chunks of the file. And don't get me started on how much they throttle the usenet speed (I'm talking sub dialup speeds). Anyone who uses it for binary access is almost certainly using a pay site that has decent retention and good speed. That isn't going to go away from what I understand.
--Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
Please explain to me how a PRIVATE company NOT providing a service free of charge ... constitutes an "observable erosion of civil liberties".
This agreement paints all such newgroups, whether or not they contain any illegal content, as probable cause for you to get arrested. I'd say that's a _huge_ erosion of civil liberties. It's illegal to possess CP, not happen to browse newsgroups with 'binaries' in their title. It is absolutely not my ISPs duty or business to record my browsing habits. They're opening themselves up to charges themselves by editing the material they provide access to (they could lose their common carrier status). Much like Slashdot disavows ownership of comments, ISPs should do the same and stay out of law enforcement.
Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
you can't blow someone for spray painting
Obviously the word "away" was supposed to be in there somewhere ;)
I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
Buffnet wasn't prosecuted for having USENET servers, they were prosecuted for not blocking the content after having been informed of its existence.
source