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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.

127 of 613 comments (clear)

  1. attorney generals? by Hes+Nikke · · Score: 5, Informative

    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.
    1. Re:attorney generals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      They could be generals with law degrees.

    2. Re:attorney generals? by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Funny

      Or just non-specific attorneys.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    3. Re:attorney generals? by brianf711 · · Score: 5, Funny

      I disagree. I think they need to increase their efforts to stop the online distribution of child pornography. There are many sites that have been claimed by some to contain at least some child pornography - rapidshare, myspace, facebook, photobucket, etc; and these should be blocked as well. But even that isn't doing enough if they were to look at the larger ways of distribution. Email, FTP and HTTP have all been used in to distribute child pornography, and if the ISPs were committed to blocking child pornography, they would block those as well. That would only leave a few other things that would need to be blocked to stop child pornography - instant messaging, telnet and a few others. You say they are taking away legitimate purposes of newsgroups, but they are still leaving so many ways of getting child pornography -- so clearly you are a glass is half full and not half empty type of person, and in cases like this, that makes it seem like you are in favor of an internet part full of child pornography.

    4. Re:attorney generals? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ...that makes it seem like you are in favor of an internet part full of child pornography.

      Speaking personally, I am so fed up with the censorship, fear and repression taking place in our society in the name of fighting child pornography; that I would personally prefer to see an internet half full of child pornography before I see any more rollbacks of freedom along the lines this "Agreement".

      The child porn excuse has long since lost its ability to outrage me into accepting even quite minor restrictions on liberties. Unfortunately, the general public seems so eager to become apoplectic that media outlets have essentially created an industry around giving people their daily outrage "fix". It's like Soma, except instead of making them happy all the time, they just get angry/outraged.

      The effect is the same however, as people allow their emotions to overcome their reason, and we lose all ability to object or hold any kind of reasoned debate. It's like a Mass Panic, but in slow motion. Best to run with the herd, lest you get trampled.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    5. Re:attorney generals? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Unfortunately, the general public seems so eager to become apoplectic that media outlets have essentially created an industry around giving people their daily outrage "fix".

      Two-minutes hate??

    6. Re:attorney generals? by corbettw · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You ain't kiddin', brother. In my Intro to Civil and Criminal Procedures class a few weeks ago, the professor started a discussion about the Supreme Court decision overturning the death penalty for child molesters. Almost every single one of those future lawyers (at least one of whom is a cop!) starting shouting about "protecting the children". I don't think I've seen anything like it. These are people training to someday work with the law (OK, not all of them will go on to law school, or pass the bar if they do, but still you'd think they're all thinking adults), and they immediately jumped to "for the children".

      I felt like a lone voice calling out for restraint in not wanting to give the state ever more reasons to execute its citizens. It's easy to forget that not everyone in our society is able to think calmly and dispassionately about things like this.

      And for the record, I have kids, and absolutely want them protected from the predations of child molesters. I also want them protected from the predations of the government; balancing those two isn't easy, but nothing worthwhile ever is.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    7. Re:attorney generals? by geminidomino · · Score: 2, Funny

      Better idea.

      Leave the internet alone. Nuke the children from orbit. That'll fuck up the government's collective head (already firmly jammed in it's collective colon)

    8. Re:attorney generals? by MightyMartian · · Score: 2, Insightful

      What are we really talking about here? The few ISPs left in the US that still have news servers? Blocking NNTP? What? All these guys predicting the end of Usenet don't seem to have the vaguest idea how it functions, and seem to assume that if some big-time ISPs shutdown their news servers that the whole edifice will come crashing down.

      Give your heads a collective shake. Usenet's not going anywhere. It may mean that those few people who still get a free ride from their ISPs will have to pay, but so the fuck what?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    9. Re:attorney generals? by Venik · · Score: 5, Funny

      And I say, enough pussyfooting around the problem. The ISPs should strike at the heart of the issue: TCP/IP. That's what needs to be blocked!

    10. Re:attorney generals? by KGIII · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Oh my... Sorry but you get this one. Now, according to the law as practiced and the spirit of the law... Are people given capital punishment because their crime was so grievous that it deserved it according to the "people" (or at least their representatives) or is the death penalty used in cases where the claim is they want to prevent the person from harming additional people in the future? (Please answer 'cause I have some VERY hated statistics for you though you may not hate them, some do, as they're rather *cough*....

      Actually I will just list them now. Irony? I think so... Considering that people who murder people actually sometimes get light sentences and in many rural areas a child sexual offense really only gets the offender a slap on the wrist the first time unless there's a history of it. (Yeah, when my daughter was molested I did some research.)

      Anyhow... Use the D.O.J.'s site and happily compile the statistics anyway you want. There are two groups lowest on the list for recidivism. They are murders and sex offenders. The media would have you believe that is some incurable evil brain malfunction for either case but then go holy batshit if someone actually tried to use insanity as a plea for either. Murderers and Sex Offenders are less likely to re-offend than any other criminals. A robber will go back to prison. A drug dealer will go back to prison. A fighter will go back to prison.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    11. Re:attorney generals? by negRo_slim · · Score: 2, Funny

      But what of the massive involvement of the United States Postal Service prior to the internet revolution?

      --
      On the Oregon Cost born and raised, On the beach is where I spent most of my days
    12. Re:attorney generals? by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's funny: if you replace the words 'child pornography' with 'Scientology documents', you can roll this line of reasoning right back to when Helena Kobrin tried to rmgroup alt.religion.scientology. (I really recommend look up the newsgroup on Wikipedia, it's fascinating Internet history.)

      Like filtering Bittorrent, a real reason for dropping the alt.* hierarchy is doubtless bandwidth. When I last looked some years ago, there were over 70,000 alt.* newsgroups, most of which had no traffic except spam, and some of which were meerely names to create ASCII art in the list of newsgroups. And the binary groups with the most traffic tended to be porn. So since people can download porn on their own fairly easily now, why should the ISP's take responsibility for such an expensive resource to maintain? Blocking child pornography hasn't been an excuse for over a decade, since 'NNTP-Posting-Host' became a de facto required field from all NNTP service providers.

      Most of the ISP's I've seen mentioned are only dumping alt.*, not all of Usenet, which still has a lot of useful discussion groups. The Google archives of such groups are wonderful for obscure technical help, and some of the groups remain quite useful for technical discussions or social networking. Dumping those freely created and awkward to flush newsgroups, as a matter of policy, seems to make good business sense and needn't be burdened with the excuse of child pornography.

    13. Re:attorney generals? by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2, Funny

      methinks you meant attorneys general.

      You're the sort of person who orders two Whoppers Junior at Burger King aren't you?

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    14. Re:attorney generals? by Phroggy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Most of our country's laws are based off Christianity. I honestly don't see why they don't just ratify the Bible and get it over with.

      As a Christian I can tell you that no, they're not really.

      People pick and choose which parts of the Bible they want to pay attention to (e.g. Leviticus 18:22) and which parts they want to ignore (e.g. Matthew 18:22).

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    15. Re:attorney generals? by h4rm0ny · · Score: 3, Insightful


      Prostitution isn't a victimless crime. It could be, and sometimes is, but the general case is that it's gross exploitation and if you're looking for a victim, the prostitute is it. Sometimes a student or someone will make a money by selling themselves for sex. That's their choice. But for most prostitutes, the circumstances are so bad that you can't really apply the word "choice" any more. The reality of prostitution is a grim one and more complicated than someone making a decision to trade sex for money - it's surrounded by and part of a whole mesh of other crimes and abuses. I don't know about the USA, but the plight of immigrant girls from Eastern Europe forced into prostitution not just in countries like Turkey (where the slang term for prostitute is "a Russian") but even here in the UK, is widespread and as nasty as it gets.

      We can debate the nature of the laws on prostitution, as well as how and when they are applied, but to consider prostitution to be a victimless crime and that the objection to it is founded in Christian puritanism, is except in a few cases, wrong. It may be that the puritanical attitudes that accompany Christianity and Islam make the situation worse for prostitutes in defining it as a shameful activity, but, although I think trading your body for money is usually damaging for reasons far more fundamental than any religion our species has evolved, it's a separate debate. If you want to see the victim in prostitution she (or he) is right there in front of you.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    16. Re:attorney generals? by HungryHobo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Solution, bring it above board, regulate it, unionise it.
      Bring it out of the back rooms and seedy motels and give the girls some decent protection.
      Take the fucking control away from pimps and organised crime and you fix most of the problem.

    17. Re:attorney generals? by FudgeRusket · · Score: 2, Informative

      This is most likely the study the GP was referring to. Here is a similar study focusing just on sex offenders.

    18. Re:attorney generals? by TheLink · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Looks like GP was right.

      Perhaps one of the many reasons the homicide figure is lower is because they can't kill their hated person twice ;).

      Based on the statistics it makes more sense to have a burglary/robbery offender list rather than a sex offender list.

      Anyway, putting people on such lists is wrong - once they've done their sentence, you have to let them out.

      If a country doesn't have confidence in criminals turning over a new leaf, they should do what China does and execute people for all sorts of crimes - e.g. theft, "hooliganism".

      --
    19. Re:attorney generals? by nospam007 · · Score: 2, Funny

      >..Well, first of all, Individual.NEt is in Germany, and second of all, it doesn't care binary newsgroups...

      You _do_ know that you can post child porn to newsgroups not having 'binaries' in their _name_?

    20. Re:attorney generals? by Walkingshark · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ah, you're quoting the oft-overlooked direct to video sequel, "Alien vs Child Predator." A great flick, that one.

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    21. Re:attorney generals? by DJProtoss · · Score: 3, Insightful

      a reasonable argument, except that if a user is downloading his porn from an isp's newsserver, its basically at no cost to the isp ( no upstream bandwidth is used ).
      If they remove the newsserver, and the user then switches to bt/http/whatever, that *will* cost the isp upstream bandwidth costs, so from that economic point of view, its cheaper to maintain the servers.
      A more likely reason is culpability and fear of lawsuits / criminal investigations for hosting illegal stuff- yes, I know safe harbour provisions, but there are arguements that could be made based on individual groups as seperate channels. I don't know if it would stand up, but I bet the ISP wouldn't want to pay their defence attourneys the cost of finding out...

      as an aside, I suppose an economic argument could be made based around the usage patterns of heavy downloaders, the typical retention of ISP newsservers ( and the subsequent need for upstream fill servers ), and the relative inefficiency of nntp as a binary distribution protocol ( even with yenc ), but that is really just an argument against having a *bad* isp news server - disc space is cheap.

      --
      "Success is based on knowing how far to go in going too far"
    22. Re:attorney generals? by Bob+of+Dole · · Score: 3, Funny

      What about all the child porn distributed by udp, sir?

    23. Re:attorney generals? by idlemachine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In Australia child pornography is legal, if you call it "art".

      Oh come on, that's total garbage.

      A picture of a naked child is not a sexualised image to anyone but a paedophile. All of this media beat up crap about it being "irresponsible" on the behalf of the artist(s) because "of what paedophiles do with such images" is further perpetrating the viewpoint that a naked child is a sexual entity. You can't hold someone as immoral when you're espousing their own position.

      Look at it this way: there are some people for whom stuffed toys are their fetish. Should we be calling for the banning of Sesame Street for its irresponsible pandering?

    24. Re:attorney generals? by sckeener · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I recommend that you read Ain't Nobody's Business if you do by Peter McWilliams.

      I bought the hardback book when it came out and I had not even heard of it. It is that cool.

      The next cool thing is...it is online and free! Here's a link:
      http://www.mcwilliams.com/books/aint/toc.htm

      And here's a link to the prostitution chapter:
      http://www.mcwilliams.com/books/aint/306.htm

      What the government did to the author was really pretty horrible. Here's a commentary about his death:

      THE MURDER OF PETER MCWILLIAMS

      An Indictment, Not an Obituary

      Peter McWiliams, 50, best selling author, poet, photographer, publisher, libertarian crusader, medical marijuana activist, AIDS patient and cancer survivor, was found dead on the floor of his bathroom, apparently having choked to death after vomiting, for want of medical marijuana.

      There will be an autopsy, but whatever the immediate cause of death may have been, he was murdered by the United States Government as surely as if they shot him. Indeed, it would have been much more humane if they had just put a bullet in his head. No one should have to go through what he suffered at the hands of his country.

      When I learned of his death yesterday, I was too angry to write about it. Even now, this is being written more in anger than in sorrow. Peter is where they can't hurt him anymore, but his murderers are still at large, and if there is anything that Peter would want, it would be for us to continue to speak the truth to power, to tyranny.

      Of course, if Peter did choke after vomiting it would be directly the result of his having been denied the right to use medical marijuana. Peter was a part of the roughly 40% of those patients for whom the anti-viral drugs being used to treat AIDS can cause violent nausea. The government knew this from direct observation. During at least one court appearance he vomited into a wastebasket during the hearing.

      See: How the Government Helps Medical Marijuana Patients: "McWilliams vomited repeatedly in court Friday, prompting guards to keep a trash can nearby." http://marijuananews.com/how_the_government_helps_medical.htm

      Dealing with this nausea is one of the best documented uses of medical marijuana, and he had also used it during cancer chemotherapy, when he actually gained weight.

      None of that mattered to the judge. None of that mattered to the prosecutor. After all, these are the same people who had held him in federal detention for months on a $250,000 bail, even though he posed no flight risk, the only justification for such a high bail.

      See: Peter McWilliams Still Held on $250,000 Bond; Denied AIDS Medication For Four Days!!! Two Stories http://marijuananews.com/peter_mcwilliams_still_held_on_.htm

      Had he wanted to flee, he had plenty of time to do so before he was charged, but he is a world famous writer, so he could not hide. His publishing company was there in Los Angeles, and he was taking expensive anti-virals for AIDS. He really could not flee, but that did not prevent the government from violating his Constitutional rights.

      Consider the lengths to which they went to keep him from raising the bail.

      When his elderly mother pledged her house as security for the bail, they threatened that the government would seize her house if her son simply failed a drug test, not just if he were to flee. She would not be intimidated, but now her son is dead as the result of the conditions of the bail. These are the "family values" of America's war on the sick and dying.

      See: "The federal prosecutor personally called my mother to tell her that if I was found with even a trace of medical marijuana, her house would be taken away." -- Peter McWilliams

      --
      "Only one thing, is impossible for god: to find any sense in any copyright law on the planet." Mark Twain
    25. Re:attorney generals? by computational+super · · Score: 4, Funny

      Sir, you're being sensible, rational and logical. On this topic that is not allowed. Please report to the nearest re-education camp at once.

      --
      Proud neuron in the Slashdot hivemind since 2002.
    26. Re:attorney generals? by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, you'd have to include any European countries whose national health care covers abortions. They're murdering their own citizens too.

      Isn't unnecessary spin great? See how we can so effectively snuff any rational discussion by tweaking words just a little bit? What a great technique you discovered!

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    27. Re:attorney generals? by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Your hair splitting of saying that "prostitution" is victimless, is contentious at best. The activity of prostitution has a victim 999 times out of a 1000. By all means tell me about the girl you know who cheerfully sells sex and is perfectly well adjusted and doesn't need to do so, but I don't know of such cases myself.

      To say that something is a victimless crime is to say that the criminal is harming, at most, him- or herself by committing it. It does not say anything one way or the other about whether the criminal is simultaneously a victim of some other crime. If A extorts B into committing the crime of prostitution then A is the ultimate criminal, and B is both a victim and a criminal. However, the crime that B commits has no victim, and thus shouldn't be considered a crime in the first place.

      If they're choosing to do it -- and it is a choice, whatever you may think of the alternatives

      I am really sorry to say that you are wrong. There are girls ... who are kept prisoner and sold against their will ... who have been told that their families will be punished if they try to escape. To call that a choice and to say that they should pursue an alternative is unfair.

      Every action is a choice. It's not always a free choice, but it is a choice nonetheless. I did not say that they should pursue an alternative; you are assuming that calling it a choice implies looking down on them for making that choice, where no such slight was intended. What I said was that what they chose to do was the best alternative they knew of given their circumstances, including the threats and force others have used against them, and that if you (or anyone else) wants to change their lives for the better you need to change those circumstances, in this case by protecting them from these threats, because just outlawing the behavior can only make their situation worse than it already is.

      I think we agree, really, except for the part where I consider prostitution, a victimless crime, to be separate from kidnapping and extortion, which both have clear victims. If someone is forced into prostitution due to someone else's crime of kidnapping and/or extortion then they are a victim of those crimes, not a victim of prostitution itself. If anything, prostitution performed under duress is even less eligible for the label "criminal" than the same action chosen freely.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  2. Here's betting it doesn't work by ChowRiit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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...

    1. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by cstdenis · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Pretending to do something is much easier than actually doing something.

      --
      1984 was not supposed to be an instruction manual.
    2. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by QuantumG · · Score: 5, Informative

      What's worse is redefining "child porn" to mean "naked children". Here's the definition, read it.

      "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, or appears to be, of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct;
              (C) such visual depiction has been created, adapted, or modified to appear that an identifiable minor is engaging in sexually explicit conduct; or
              (D) such visual depiction is advertised, promoted, presented, described, or distributed in such a manner that conveys the impression that the material is or contains a visual depiction of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct . . ."

      - 18 U.S.C. 2256

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
    3. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by cstdenis · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Also, if they solve the problem, they won't have a reason to exist anymore.

      They need something to justify their existence (and pay check).

      --
      1984 was not supposed to be an instruction manual.
    4. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
      "Pedophile" does not mean "child molestor." Here, let me rephrase your statement:

      I'm not even sure which is worse in society - a heterosexual with porn, or a heterosexual who can't get hold of porn but wants to see naked women...

      Do you see the flaw now?

      As a pedophile, I am sick and fucking tired of being stuck in a corner among the sickest imaginable because of urges I can't control. I didn't fucking ask to like little girls; I just do. It's just one of my idiosyncrasies. I don't kidnap, rape, or molest children, nor do I ever plan to, and I have an entirely constructive relationship with the children I do come in contact with. Surprise! The vast majority of pedophiles are rational human beings, just like you. The man in the white van who offers you candy is a psychotic; the exception, not the rule.

      Please, cooperate with me here. The only way to get this demonizing bullshit to stop is by changing the general mindset of pedophile = sick child raping motherfucker.

    5. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Jerrry · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "I hate to say it, but the web has outlived it's usefulness anyway. Any idiot can create a website, Any idiot can post anonymously and any idiot can freely distribute kiddie porn as a result. Let's face it, the web is an outdated system that is primarily abused. Anything accomplished on the web can be done elsewhere faster, cheaper and better. Sure, the pedo crowd can still find ways to trade, but the web makes it too easy to hook up. Killing the web won't kill kiddie porn, but it makes it more difficult. Does anyone really give a crap if the web disappears? Seriously?"

      Just replace "usenet", "the web", with just about any networking technology and your statement still has the same meaning. Where does it end?

    6. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by mikael · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Egg collectors in the UK (an illegal activity in this country) used to correspond to each other through the snail-mail system, referring to each other as No.2, No.7 etc.. Music fans would exchange bootleg tapes of concerts. Anyone trading digital files will probably end up exchanging memory cards/sticks under the guise of an mom'n'pop shop.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    7. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by againjj · · Score: 5, Informative

      To me, it sounds like the ISPs have agreed to turn off web sites that NCMEC complains about. They will "use NCMEC's list of active websites identified as containing child pornography, to ensure that no such site is hosted on servers owned or controlled by those companies." This is to "enforce their terms of service, all of which forbid the hosting of such illegal materials on their servers." In other words, sites are going to be turned off based on NCMEC's say so. Thus they look good for turning off sites that are illegal (think of the children!), and NCMEC gets the power they want.

      From TFA:

      Specifically, the cable companies have agreed to use NCMEC's list of active websites identified as containing child pornography, to ensure that no such site is hosted on servers owned or controlled by those companies. The companies will also report these instances to NCMEC's CyberTipline and where appropriate revise their policies around other potential sources of child pornography, such as, for example, newsgroups.

      The agreement with NCMEC will provide cable broadband service providers with an invaluable source of information to help them enforce their terms of service, all of which forbid the hosting of such illegal materials on their servers. The information provided by NCMEC to cable service providers will also help them identify instances of child pornography, facilitating their reporting of such material to NCMEC as required by federal law. This in turn enables NCMEC to refer these cases to law enforcement for investigation and prosecution.

      Oh, and the newsgroups bit seems like sensationalism to me.

    8. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by davester666 · · Score: 2, Funny

      They just aren't banning enough things. They also should ban:

      -drapes, because they are used to prevent others from looking in windows and seeing the child being abused
                -also, rooms without windows must be banned, including washroom stalls and confessionals
      -camera's [both digital and analog, video and still] as they are used to capture the images
      -vehicles of all kinds and sizes, as they are typically used to transport the children. This has the side benefit of also helping to prevent child abductions as well as thousands of deaths/injuries due to collisions.
      -postal service for anything sealed, as it might contain pictures of child porn. Alternately, just open all letters/parcels and search them.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    9. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by PunkOfLinux · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wow, I really commend for having the balls to come out and say that. A bunch of my irc buddies are pedophiles/lolicons, and they would love to see this post.

      And, yes, you're right. while there is some intersection between pedophiles and child molesters, it is nowhere near a majority. If you want to see how ridiculous this seems, replace 'pedophile' with 'straight male' and child with 'woman'. You end up with "straight male = sick woman raping motherfucker". Sure, some straight males ARE sick woman raping motherfuckers, but that doesn't mean they all are. It's normal for someone to have strange urges and desires; there's nothing inherently wrong with liking little girls. It's not until you destructively act on those desires that it becomes a problem.

    10. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      not quite sure where child porn is defined as naked children in your quote? Each list item ends with "engaging in sexually explicit conduct"

    11. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You and about 12% of the male population in North America according to the only study I've ever read. I don't sympathize personally, but we've already spent the better part of human history demonizing men who like other men and women who like other women. Those obviously couldn't be consensual either. Even consensual anal intercourse between a man and a woman is or has recently been illegal in many states.

      How is that relevant? Knee-jerk reactions to issues based on a gut feeling are not always the best way to determine legal outcomes of peoples' thoughts or feelings.

      Good studies have shown time and again that there is no definite link between the viewing of underage pornography and the abuse of children by that viewer, but because they get turned on by something we lump them in as molestors.

      Here's one that really gets me -- technically a pedophile is only someone who gets aroused by pre-pubescent children, but viewing of 17 yr olds who are supermodels (yes, many professional adult looking models are under 18) engaged in sexually explicit conduct qualifies as viewing child pornography.

      So next time you all say 'think of the children' remember these laws are about you when you were 17 checking out that picture of your naked 17 yr old girlfriend. Yes, that's child pornography too.

      PS look up Genarlow Wilson.

    12. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Kiuas · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's worse is redefining "child porn" to mean "naked children".

      No what is even worse is the fact that they don't even have to be children and it can still be considered child porn:

      (B) such visual depiction is, or appears to be, of a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct;

      If I understand correctly it is enough if the person in the film happens to look too young and whilist I agree that intentionally trying to make a film look like child porn is a bit weird it still shouldn't be a crime if every person in the film is an adult.

      Besides in my oppinion it's still preferable for somebody to watch "fake" child porn than the real stuff and having this fake stuff available legally could even cut down the number of those who want to watch real child porn.

      --
      "It is the business of the future to be dangerous" -Alfred North Whitehead
    13. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by mcpkaaos · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Troll much? A pedophile is one who is sexually attracted to children. Where does it say "views movies of other people raping little children"? I'm a heterosexual man and I like to view naked women. Does that mean I want to watch one get raped?

      You are what you do, not what you think about. Please chill out with the prejudice.

      --
      It goes from God, to Jerry, to me.
    14. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Robocoastie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because that's all control measures ever accomplish. The sad thing is what this is actually a step toward: it's a measure against pornography in general. People already miscategorize "pedophilia" as it is and the anti-porn people know they do that and encourage the misuse of the term so that they can advantage their puritan agendas.

    15. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by xZgf6xHx2uhoAj9D · · Score: 3, Informative

      Didn't Larry Flynt win a case on this with his Barely Legal magazine? Barely Legal obviously chooses models who look much younger than they are (e.g., an 18 year old who looks 13). I believe he won.

    16. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by repvik · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sure, the pedo crowd can still find ways to trade, but the web makes it too easy to hook up. Killing the web won't kill kiddie porn, but it makes it more difficult

      Making it easy to hook up also makes it easier to catch them buggers. Forcing all the paedophiles onto Tor will just make 'em harder to stop...

    17. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by green1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I am no expert in this, but my take on it is this:

      if the magazine bills itself as showing girls who are of age ("legal") and shows girls who look too young, but ARE of age, than it "appears" legal.

      however if the magazine uses those same girls, who ARE of age, but CLAIMS them to be too young, then they "appear" illegal.

      basically, as long as you don't claim anywhere that the people portrayed are too young, and there is nothing in the picture to imply it, and you DO claim visibly that they ARE old enough (and they in fact are) then all appearances are satisfied.

      I think that is more what the law is addressing. it allows them to prosecute where there is no way to determine the age of the person in question, but where it is obvious that things are not intended to be legal.

      Back on the main topic though, my concern with such things isn't the blocking of child porn (personally I think that would be a very good thing), it's the possibility of "collateral damage" to innocent sites, and worse yet, "feature creep" where they decide that once they have child porn they'll block pirating, then normal porn, then anyone having a cigarette in a photo, then anyone who disagrees with them on any grounds, etc... (classic slippery slope) and once you get to that point you can't fight any of it without being labelled as a lover of child pornography.

    18. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Something like 10% or 25% of males are attracted to extremely young girls based on genetics. I forget the figure; it's something lowish but not negligible like 1%.

      Walk down the street one time when school's getting out and just glance around. Notice there's lots of young girls? ... Notice they're young, curvy, smooth, and--best of all--bleeding youthful playfulness from every pore? Yeah, they're 13. They have tits, among other things. Oddly enough, the health and sexual energy of sexually matured youth attracts males-- come on, would you trust your 10th grade high school boy with the 8th grader next door, who you could swear is 16...?

      Sorry, the game's stacked against us. We got testicles, and they're not magically pretty the day they turn 18. Mind you, just a couple hundred years ago we were marrying 'em and making babies around... what, 14?

      I stay the hell away. The day you turn 18 you're on my radar.

    19. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by assassinator42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I do find it odd that in many places in the United States it's legal for an adult to have sex with a 16 year old but illegal to tape it.

    20. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Original+Replica · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Killing usenet won't kill kiddie porn, but it makes it more difficult.

      But it wouldn't protect any children, it would just make their plight less publicized. The children that are in child pornography pictures are being abused (obviously)The people abusing them are not the one viewing them on the web, but are the people taking the pictures. It is the children that we are trying to protect here isn't it? Ending the distribution of pictures does nothing to stop the real life abuse. It's just sweeping the problem under the rug. Attacking distribution instead of production shows that the protection of children comes second to the punishing of the pedophile. While protecting the actual children being abused would seem to be a higher moral priority, it isn't as media savvy/lucrative as simply chasing the pedophiles. Look at things like "To Catch a Predator" or the FBI's fake hyperlinks. Did they save a single child? No there was never any actual child danger. How often do you hear about an actual child being saved from sexual abuse vs hearing about the arrest of someone with downloaded kiddie porn? Yes the two crimes are related, but shouldn't we be focusing on the root problem (child abuse) instead of just treating the symptoms (online kiddie porn)

      --
      We are all just people.
    21. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by McDutchie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And, yes, you're right. while there is some intersection between pedophiles and child molesters, it is nowhere near a majority. If you want to see how ridiculous this seems, replace 'pedophile' with 'straight male' and child with 'woman'. You end up with "straight male = sick woman raping motherfucker".

      But in reality, "straight male" = "male who will probably have sex with one or more women during the course of his life". So, continuing your analogy, "pedophile" = "person who will probably have sex with one or more children during the course of his lifetime".

      The problem with that is that having sex with a children constitutes sexual abuse that will damage them for the rest of their lives, and is always rape. And that is why there is a very justified "prejudice" against pedophiles.

      This is not a wisecrack. Try actually reading the grandparent message by the AC you so admire. While denying any wrongdoing, he explicitly admits to having "urges" he "can't control". And in spite of that inability to control himself, he doesn't stay away from children: he claims to somehow have a "entirely constructive relationship" with the children he comes in contact with. Gotta wonder what that means... constructive to what exactly? His uncontrollable sexual urges maybe?

      And of course our brave AC "doesn't kidnap, rape or molest children". After all, children have sex with adults perfectly voluntarily. NAMBLA says so, so it must be true.

      God damnit, this makes me sick to my stomach. I know too many victims of scumbags like this personally.

    22. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by unfunnyguy · · Score: 2, Funny

      "I hate to say it, but the string-and-tin-can has outlived it's usefulness anyway. Any idiot can create a string-and-tin-can, Any idiot can post anonymously and any idiot can freely distribute kiddie porn as a result. Let's face it, the string-and-tin-can is an outdated system that is primarily abused. Anything accomplished with the string-and-tin-can can be done elsewhere faster, cheaper and better. Sure, the pedo crowd can still find ways to trade, but the string-and-tin-can makes it too easy to hook up. Killing the string-and-tin-can won't kill kiddie porn, but it makes it more difficult. Does anyone really give a crap if the string-and-tin-can disappears? Seriously?"

    23. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Alsee · · Score: 2

      Egg collectors in the UK (an illegal activity in this country)

      Huh???
      Someone please enlighten me. Is "egg collector" some odd euphemism I've never come across before, or does the UK actually have totally bizarre and pointless law against collecting eggs??

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    24. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by PunkOfLinux · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He was saying he doesn't have any desire to actually have sex with them, you fucking jackass. He's honest with people. The flaw in your statement that "straight male" = "male who will probably have sex with one or more women during the course of his life". So, continuing your analogy, "pedophile" = "person who will probably have sex with one or more children during the course of his lifetime" has one fatal flaw: most men only have sex with women able to give proper consent. There are such things as half-decent pedophiles; some of my best friends on the internet fall under this category. You know what the difference between a pedophile and a child molester is? Restraint. Sure, the pedophile might fantasize about that stuff, but the molester MAKES it happen, regardless of the law or the wants and needs of the child. Don't ever think that just because someone is attracted to children that that makes them a scumbag.

    25. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Faylone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Out of sight, out of mind.

    26. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by mikael · · Score: 2, Informative

      Egg Collecting Laws

      It has been illegal to take the eggs of most wild birds since the Wild Birds Protection Act 1954 and it is illegal to possess or control any wild birds' eggs taken since that time under the Wildlife and Countryside Act.

      It is illegal to sell any wild bird's egg, irrespective of its age.

      Possession of wild birds' eggs is an offence of strict liability so that anyone who chooses to be in possession of eggs is obliged to show, on a balance of probabilities, that their possession is lawful. The potential maximum fine for each wild bird's egg is £5,000 and/or six month's imprisonment.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    27. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by hellwig · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Don't forget that you'd also be supporting Al-Queda and be figuratively spitting in the faces of the America troops. Anything that sparks fear in the simple minded and shame into those who dare to think otherwise.

      Sadly, views like yours will be considered paranoid, until of course they come to fruition, but by then you've already been labelled a communist and no one will listen to you anyway.

      --
      Eggs
      Milk
      Bread
      Cat Litter
      Soda
      ...
    28. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by rtechie · · Score: 4, Informative

      Attacking distribution instead of production shows that the protection of children comes second to the punishing of the pedophile.

      The theory is called "demand reduction".

      The idea is that most child pornography is produced overseas where US authorities have no jurisdiction, and by locking up child pornography "patrons" the demand for CP will do down and therefore less children will be abused overseas.

      I am not defending this theory, I am merely presenting it. I will say that very little child pornography is produced in the USA.

    29. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No he didn't, you fucking pedophile apologist. He said he had no plans to kidnap, molest or rape them. He said he can't control the urge to have sex with them. To his pedophile mind, having sex with them is not kidnapping/molesting/raping them. After all, children want it. That's how pedophiles work.

      Come on, you are seriously misinterpreting what he said. All he said is he can't control having these urges, but that he can control his behavior.

      Do you know the difference between a straight male and a sexual harrasser? Restraint. Just because you're attracted to someone does not mean that you're eventually going to try to have sex with them, or molest them.

      Hell, I've successfully worked right next to women I would *love* to jump into bed with, but somehow despite not being able to control the feelings, I could control my behavior. Amazing, isn't it?

    30. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Caseyscrib · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is slightly off-topic, but Genarlow Wilson was a 17-year old high school football player who received consensual oral sex from a 15-year old girl and was sentenced to prison for 10 years for aggravated child molestation. He received several scholarship offers and was an excellent student. (Source)

      There are also many stories of 16/17 year olds exchanging nude photos of each other and being charged with child pornography. (Source)

      I think kiddie porn (pics of young children) is absolutely disgusting and people seeking it need serious psychiatric help, but our laws need to distinguish between those looking to exploit children and kids that are just sending pictures of themselves over the internet without realizing the consequences.

    31. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Firehed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The urge is uncontrollable. Acting on it is not.

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    32. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by KGIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wow. I usually don't think much. Really. I just sit, post, respond, etc... Seldom do I think deeply. Your post made me do so. The vast majority of people here on /. imply that they believe a law that doesn't suit the good of the masses is unjust (some just think that if they don't like it than it is unjust) and believe that those laws should be repealed or changed in the manner that suits their various agendas. So, well, I've seen my State's SOR web site. There are a GREAT many people on it - which is even more amazing given the fairly tolerant place where I live and the very low crime rates in the State of Maine. We can conjecture that there are those who enjoy child pornography (and I'd like to hope that this is a conversation we can have without accusing the parent of being pro-anything) and we can even debate the meaning of child pornography. (I've come across what would probably be termed pornographic material where they simply claim it is art, I do think it was closer to art but some judges would likely consider it to be pornographic simply because it contained under-aged people at nudist camps and the images contained age ranges from near birth to near death.) So, to the discussion that needs having by people more involved. There are only those people who get caught for numbers, I'd am pretty sure that the ratio would be a much higher percent than there are of, say, the 5% figure often used by the homosexual group. They are a group with little representation and yet we grant them additional rights and protections - they're a minority so to speak. It wasn't that long ago in our own American society where you could wed at the age of 12. Hell, in some states you still can. So, if this is a law and the people breaking it aren't stupid but are doing what they feel comes natural to them then do the actual regulations and laws need a revision or a repeal?

      If is my understanding from way too many bad movies, internet chats, television shows, and some thinking on my own that maybe we're defining an age as something meaningful. Is a 21 year old capable of drinking safely? Is he more safe to drink at that age than any other? When is a human ready to make the choice to engage in sexual activity with a person of their choosing. In Maine, my State, you can have sex with a 16 year old female. All day long. You can't take a picture of her nude, she can't live with you and send out a lewd picture of herself using your computer, if she sends you nude images you're committing a crime, and more... Who is the judge? The law that suddenly went out and said that 18 is the magic number?

      The worst part about this is the media instilled phobias now, "Oh he's looked at children nude online. Studies show he will be jumping out of trees and raping toddlers with a baseball bat, so we'd better ban him from being within however many feet of a place where a child live or plays or go to school so that we keep them safe." (While they're forcing them to live on the outskirts of town, has limited access to the services he needs to prevent becoming a recidivism statistic, or forcing him to not register at all and then become an unknown risk.)

      I have a daughter who was molested by an older cousin. Trust me when I say we have no love for child abuse in our family. (She was five, he was 17.) There are some obvious cases where a child is harmed. Can we successfully make a person wait until the magic age of 18 before having sex? No? Why not? How about because they are naturally curious. Can we stop a man from liking a well developed teen aged girl? Of course not and I don't care HOW much you want to lie to me (not you personally parent post) you too are going to appreciate beautiful females. When you see a fantastic looking woman while out shopping, when you get close enough so that you can see she is even more beautiful, when you get there and see by her face or mannerisms that she is probably underage you do not (I suspect) suddenly feel awful. I suspect you get a few more thoughts about innocence, beauty, and

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    33. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by synthespian · · Score: 2

      Wow, a little cultural bias here, huh? Just because a girl isn't fat or is "petite" (small frame) or does not have a size D cup (the mega-uberus Americans like so much) does not make her 10. That's fucking ridiculous! It just shows what a sorry sex life you had when you were 18 - or what fat girls you were fucking. Fucking fat girls is all right - if that's what you like, that's what you like. Just don't put your self up in the moral evolution ladder and dictate that all girls should look like what you fancy. Besides, some ethnic groups tend to have different body builds, so you almost stink of a racist to me...

      I mean, somebody else could do the opposite and say that the current American trend of having plastic surgery in order to display humongous tits can only be a symptom psychological illness (the body-dysmorphic patient).

      And what the fuck...If a girl's 18 she's 18. That's legal age in just about 99% of the countries around the world. Now, there's a reason we all consider 18 legal age, you know - but I'm not telling you, I'm gonna let you think about it.

      You don't get to pass a judgement on people's taste. I mean, it doesn't get more authoritarian than that: legislating on people's sexual preferences. Sex with children is illegal for a reason - it exposes children to a variety of dangers. Adults are free to do what they want.

      Granted, some adults just love to legislate on people's tastes: religious types, specially.

      You comments are way off mark, because pedophilia is a technical definition - and I hate to burst your (puritan/Christian/Republican/redneck) bubble - but 18 is not pedophilia, dude. No matter what you say.

      I just checked Emily 18 http://www.emily18.com/tour2.php and you know what? She looks 18. At least, she looks like the girls I was banging when I was 18.

      Get a sex life.

      --
      Main difference between the BSD license and the GPL license: one is from California and the other is from Massachusetts
    34. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by TehZorroness · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's disturbing here is that they include "computer generated images." For every computer generated image or drawing of child pornography that is taken away, actual child pornography will be made to replace it. Artistic expressions depicting child pornography should most certainly not be considered illegal. If you don't like it, don't look for it - but as long as no children are harmed in the making of it, WHAT THE FUCK IS THE PROBLEM? The very next step is to consider artistic depictions or negative views of our beloved corporations and/or government to be illegal.

      Another one of my pet peeves: I hate when people and groups (*cough* religious groups) try to enforce their ideals upon others. God forbid they would use words, instead they always try to twist the government's arm to enforce their ideals upon the world. This is taking place within this argument, but also can be clearly seen with video game/movie ratings, abortion, and drugs. I have my own ideals and my own concious. I can decide for myself what I think is right and wrong. If you disagree, that's fine. If you can convince me to change my mind on a matter (drug use, abortion. I invite you.), that's excellent. When you are an old fuck who has nothing better to do then enforce your uneducated oppinions on others through violence (that would be allowing the police to raid one's property and seize whatever they need), here's a big FUCK YOU to you. Have a nice day.

    35. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by compro01 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "engaging in sexually explicit conduct"

      And how is that defined/redefined?

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    36. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I agree with some of your logic. But not all 'child pornography' involves any abuse of children. Take this article about a grocery store refusing to make a birthday cake with a baby picture of a 21 year old man for his birthday, because the child was naked. (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1029375/Asda-refuse-print-baby-snap-son-21st-birthday-cake--hes-naked.html).

      And for someone fascinated by children, women, men, or exciting panoramas of cornfields, there are plenty of innocent pictures collected and published that might be exciting if organized and published together. So please do not assume that all 'child pornography' actually involves any mishandling of children.

    37. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by WarwickRyan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > "feature creep" where they decide that once
      > they have child porn they'll block pirating,

      I'm pretty sure that the reason for this offensive is exactly that.

      Otherwise, why not just drop the offending groups?

      Or why not use them to track the people posting / making the stuff (and thus get the kids away from them)?

      Probably because NNTP is a really effective method of distributing content, especially HD content. Plus it's one which is hard/impossible for the *AAs to track (without compromising the servers themselves).

    38. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by SMS_Design · · Score: 2, Insightful

      An interesting situation would be to see someone's system show up on these "honeypot" logs due to something like AVG prefetching the links on a page.

    39. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Brian+Ribbon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "So, continuing your analogy, "pedophile" = "person who will probably have sex with one or more children during the course of his lifetime"."

      Adult-attracted people should understand that the way in which they act upon their sexual orientation does not necessarily correlate with the way in which "minority sexualities" act. This is because the behaviours of sexual minorities are not governed simply by human sexual desire, they are governed by a myriad of deep-rooted ethical, social and legal issues which undeniably affect one's actions.

      Most paedophiles refrain from having sex with children for the same reasons that you refrain from raping women. That should not be difficult to comprehend.

      "And of course our brave AC "doesn't kidnap, rape or molest children". After all, children have sex with adults perfectly voluntarily. NAMBLA says so, so it must be true."

      NAMBLA is an extreme organisation. They do not represent the majority of paedophiles.

      "God damnit, this makes me sick to my stomach. I know too many victims of scumbags like this personally."

      What makes you think that most child molesters are paedophiles? A friend has collected a list of relevant studies, most of which suggest that non-paedophilic men comprise the vast majority of child molesters.

      Your stereotyping of the AC paedophile is disgraceful; you have no right to judge an individual based on the behaviour of others, and you have no right to judge a whole demographic based on the behaviour of its worst members.

      --
      "To the future or to the past, to a time when thought is free" ~ Nineteen Eighty-Four
    40. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Brian+Ribbon · · Score: 2, Informative

      "But what you -do- is a direct reflection of what you -think- about"

      Also known as the 'fundamental attribution error'

      --
      "To the future or to the past, to a time when thought is free" ~ Nineteen Eighty-Four
    41. Re:Here's betting it doesn't work by Palshife · · Score: 2, Informative

      2.B. of course:

      (B) 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;

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
  3. Re:Common carrier by p0tat03 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Why are people hanging onto this myth? ISPs do not, and have never had, common carrier status.

  4. Usenet is dead. by Hamster+Lover · · Score: 4, Funny

    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.

    1. Re:Usenet is dead. by Carnildo · · Score: 4, Informative

      I've been reading usenet for 15 years, I've never seen any child porn. Do I just not frequent the right groups?

      Check out the alt.binaries.pictures.erotica hierarchy sometime -- there are some groups with very suspicious-looking names.

      (alt.binaries.pictures.erotica.child? Gee, I wonder what that could contain?)

      --
      "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
    2. Re:Usenet is dead. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Check out the alt.binaries.pictures.erotica hierarchy sometime -- there are some groups with very suspicious-looking names.

      (alt.binaries.pictures.erotica.child? Gee, I wonder what that could contain?)

      Erotic pictures of Julia Child perhaps?

    3. Re:Usenet is dead. by SL+Baur · · Score: 5, Funny

      alt.binaries.pictures.erotica.child? Gee, I wonder what that could contain?

      That's an easy one. Thousands upon thousands of SPAM messages.

    4. Re:Usenet is dead. by Talkischeap · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Check out the alt.binaries.pictures.erotica hierarchy sometime -- there are some groups with very suspicious-looking names. (alt.binaries.pictures.erotica.child? Gee, I wonder what that could contain?)"

      I agree... it likely contains "thousands of SPAM messages".

      Do you honestly believe that pedophiles are that open about their openly illegal activities?

      YOU are off you rocker if you believe that child porn is a "problem" in our society.

      While certainly repugnant, I don't see how BANNING all the .alt.binaries newsgroups is going to help stop child porn.

      I've been on Usenet for well over a decade, and I also have never seen child porn.

      It's total knee jerk emotional hysteria, and you sir are are being used as a "tool" to censor the internet.

      --
      If it don't GO... chrome it. ~ Frank Banks
  5. Why don't they just stop the newsgroups... by joocemann · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ... that have child porn?

  6. YAUSDFN by alexborges · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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
    1. Re:YAUSDFN by ChowRiit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Maybe the first stage would be to convince the Common Joe that his privacy actually matters to him? People don't seem to CARE about privacy or liberty any more, and I worry that nobody will notice their freedoms being stolen until its too late, as has happened so many times before in history...

    2. Re:YAUSDFN by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Common Joe does not want privacy.

      The Common Joe wants to be able to pry, poke and be privy to the personal and intimate details of his neighbors, his employer/employees, his local representatives and clergy, friends, enemies, teenagers, celebrities, politicians, historical figures, and especially his spouse. He wants access to all this information so that he can can gleefully pour over it all in the confines of his basement.

      This is what people actually want. If you need any further proof beyond the distribution of tabloid and gossips rags, as well as the scandal hungry state of modern television; then you are in denial.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    3. Re:YAUSDFN by Wildclaw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh, they care as soon as it is THEIR "privacy" that is infringed. Just like they care if it is THEIR "free speech rights" or THEIR "liberty" that are infringed.

      You have the right to privacy as long as you don't have anything to hide. You have the right to free speech as long as you don't say anything that will offend me. You have the right to liberty as long as you don't do anything that offend me.

      And what always fascinates me the most is how so many people can't see what is wrong with the previous paragraph.

  7. Yeah, Get sneaky and clever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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.

  8. There's your problem.... by Hamster+Lover · · Score: 3, Funny

    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.

    1. Re:There's your problem.... by Odin's+Raven · · Score: 2, Funny

      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.

      <Cypher>...there's way too much information to decode the Usenet. You get used to it, though. Your brain does the translating. I don't even see the code. All I see is blonde, brunette, double-penetration MILF, redhead ...</Cypher>

      --
      A marriage is always made up of two people who are prepared to swear that only the other one snores.
  9. Here we go again by hyades1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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.
    1. Re:Here we go again by QuantumG · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I bet you're a pervert.

      I bet everyone on Slashdot is a pervert.

      Being that a "pervert" is someone who practices "perversion" which is "those types of human behavior that are perceived to be a serious deviation from what is considered to be orthodox or normal." That is, not just sexual.

      But hey, there's plenty of sexual behavior that is "perverted" which makes most Americans blush (like that's hard), and there's lots of people that would love to "tighten the screws" on those practitioners also.

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
  10. Child porn = smokescreen by russotto · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I suspect the RIAA and the MPAA are behind this.

    (and no, you cannot borrow my tinfoil hat.)

    1. Re:Child porn = smokescreen by Epu · · Score: 3, Informative

      There's an interesting thread at dsl reports where some bell south customers point out: 1. many news groups still exist for the purpose of porn, they just aren't named alt.bin* 2. many news groups still exist with porn, erotica, sex, etc in their names. Yesterday, I fired up Pan on att yahoo to survey the damage. The posters were right, and there were many groups left. There were also posts in them from the last few days.

  11. Don't be so nieve by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 4, Informative

    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
  12. You gotta love the ad placement on that page by MikeRT · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Gotta love that ad for Giganews that is being put up on that article by Google AdSense.

  13. Compare to Drug Houses by explodingspleen · · Score: 5, Informative

    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.

    1. Re:Compare to Drug Houses by azgard · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, rampant child pornography in Czech Republic was a myth invented by some German non-profits that fight child pornography, to get more funding. In reality, there is no more child pornography produced here than in e.g. Germany or Belgium, or any other European Country (exact numbers are of course hard to measure).

      Part of this myth may also be due to the fact that lot of porn actors/actresses come from Czech Republic, because we are very atheist and liberal country. But this has nothing to do with child pornography.

  14. Tor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    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/

  15. Finally somebody is thinking of the children! by MaulerOfEmotards · · Score: 2, Funny
    I think that somebody must think of the children. No, not the pedophiles, though I guess they do think of the children. Some OTHER body must think of the children. And luckily we have the corporate body! From TFA:

    CableNCTA's agreement with NCMEC is the latest milestone in cable's efforts to ensure online safety and promote Internet literacy for all families and Internet users.

    There is no more precious resource in this country than our children. They depend on us, their parents, to protect and guide them. A childâ(TM)s cry for help must not be ignored and at the same time, an adult that preys upon children on the Internet MUST be caught and contained.

    The cable operators that have agreed to execute the MOU within 30 days include Time Warner

    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)

  16. Re:Common carrier by brunokummel · · Score: 4, Funny

    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.
  17. Net neutrality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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.

  18. Something similar happened here next week by shermo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    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
    1. Re:Something similar happened here next week by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's funny, the name of your ISP is the same as my password...

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  19. Stupid and pointless by Skapare · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "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
  20. Make all the internet child porn laws in the world by Jewfro_Macabbi · · Score: 2, Insightful

    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!"

  21. A sneaky way of blowing away "net neutrality" by mysidia · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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).

    1. Re:A sneaky way of blowing away "net neutrality" by jonathansdt · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The actual motivation is control of media content.

      This is all about the free TERABYTES of video and audio available directly from your own ISP who now offers competing media services.

      Surprised that it came in the guise of a 'think of the children' argument?

      I sure wasn't...

  22. Re:Common carrier by paganizer · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.
  23. Re:Common carrier by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why are people hanging onto this myth? ISPs do not, and have never had, common carrier status.

    Source, please.

  24. Re:Common carrier by stinerman · · Score: 3, Informative

    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.

  25. Re:Going too far by Inner_Child · · Score: 2, Insightful

    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.
  26. Don't Bother Asking for the Blacklist... by PipianJ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    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."

  27. Re:This doesn't affect much..... by oDDmON+oUT · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "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.
  28. Re:Common carrier by Jafafa+Hots · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Several years ago the ISP Buffnet was successfully prosecuted for child pornography because the local prosecutor found child porn on the usenet, and Buffnet had usenet servers. Common carrier status didn't save them.

    Yes, it was an election year.

    --
    This space available.
  29. Re:Common carrier by Daimanta · · Score: 2, Funny

    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.
  30. Re:Common carrier by Vectronic · · Score: 3, Informative

    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.

  31. It started with SBC Tuesday night. My RANT by Talkischeap · · Score: 3, Interesting

    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
  32. Re:Common carrier by afidel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.
  33. Re:to be honest, child porn really is on there by zapakh · · Score: 2, Funny

    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.

  34. Re:Possible solution... by DJNephilim · · Score: 2, Funny

    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
  35. How much is there? by notdotcom.com · · Score: 3, Interesting

    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.
  36. The face of P2P's real executioner by Duncan+Blackthorne · · Score: 2, Insightful

    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..

  37. Might as well end communications as we know it. by Jackie_Chan_Fan · · Score: 3, Informative

    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.

  38. Re:Common carrier by exi1ed0ne · · Score: 2, Funny

    I spent about 30 seconds and I couldn't find a source, but rest assured they aren't.

    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.
  39. Does anyone else feel this is.. by Pandishar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    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.

  40. Re:attornies vs an attorney-general. by hostyle · · Score: 2, Funny

    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.
  41. time to lie down our own cables by hany · · Score: 3, Interesting

    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
  42. Ineffective at best, slippery slope at worst. by John+Pfeiffer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    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*
  43. The good side of this by Arcturax · · Score: 3, Insightful

    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
  44. Re:Security Theater II - Re:attorney generals? by Muad'Dave · · Score: 2, Insightful

    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.
  45. wow that was a bad omission.... by Shakrai · · Score: 2, Funny

    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.
  46. Re:Common carrier by m000 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Buffnet wasn't prosecuted for having USENET servers, they were prosecuted for not blocking the content after having been informed of its existence.

    BuffNet was charged with a misdemeanor for facilitating child pornography because its servers allowed access to a bulletin board containing illegal pornographic images. A two-year investigation found that the ISP failed to take action after they were notified of the illegal activity. In February, 2001, the company pleaded guilty and a judge ordered BuffNet to pay a $5,000 fine, according to a published report.

    source