Slashdot Mirror


Canada's Top Court Quashes Child Porn Warrant

m.ducharme writes "The CBC is reporting that the Supreme Court of Canada has handed down a decision quashing a search warrant used to obtain the computer of a man accused of possession of child porn. 'Urbain P. Morelli maintained his charter rights were violated when police searched his computer for child pornography after a technician who had visited his home to work on the machine expressed concerns to police.' What the Slashdot community may find notable about this decision is the distinction drawn between 'accessing' and 'possessing' digital images, most particularly the recognition that a user does not 'possess' cached data. From the decision: '[35] When accessing Web pages, most Internet browsers will store on the computer's own hard drive a temporary copy of all or most of the files that comprise the Web page. This is typically known as a "caching function" and the location of the temporary, automatic copies is known as the "cache." While the configuration of the caching function varies and can be modified by the user, cached files typically include images and are generally discarded automatically after a certain number of days, or after the cache grows to a certain size. [36] On my view of possession, the automatic caching of a file to the hard drive does not, without more, constitute possession. While the cached file might be in a "place" over which the computer user has control, in order to establish possession, it is necessary to satisfy mens rea or fault requirements as well. Thus, it must be shown that the file was knowingly stored and retained through the cache.'"

363 comments

  1. Okay... by Securityemo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Will he have his computer back now?

    --
    Emotions! In your brain!
    1. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Umm, no. The law is written the way it is to protect innocents from people like you, who would crucify someone at the first allegation of "child porn", without asking questions and allowing for a fair trial, proper investigations and collection of evidence, etc. How do you know he really is the criminal you say he is? Or we could model ourselves after somewhere like Central America... mere accusations will get you lynched and set on fire.

    2. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Riiiight. Because accidents never happen? You've never been redirected to a site with content that skirts the law? Hell, you've never browsed any of the chans?

      If he has kiddie porn stashed away then lock him up, but don't bust his ass because he clicked on a link looking for a deal on auto insurance.

      http://tinyurl.com/totallylegitandnotCP

      Is this a link for savings on your auto insurance, or is it something far more sinister? There's only one way to find out!

    3. Re:Okay... by Entropius · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The judge didn't say that he was innocent.

      The judge said that the existence of CP in the cache doesn't in itself make him guilty; that the prosecution must also show "mens rea" (which translates essentially to "guilty intent", as I understand it).

      If this guy is guilty, then show it, and you can chuck him in jail and take his computer. If he's innocent, give him his computer back.

    4. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was a trial, in which the evidence showed that he was indeed looking at CP. He got off on a technicality.

    5. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, the only way is to blatently click random urls.

    6. Re:Okay... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Actually, CP isn't that hard to just "stumble over". You've heard of the dark net, I presume. Go, install I2P, or some other dark net application. Browse around a bit. You'll be surprised to find that A: there is some interesting shitzls on the dark net, and B: about half the content on the dark net is CP. You don't have to look at CP - all you need do is browse around, looking for the rare gem of a political perspective, or some of the activist stuff, and you WILL stumble over CP. It's right there in front of you.

      While I don't actually *advise* that you browse through the CP - for educational purposes, there is nothing like seeing what has everyone in an uproar. It ranges from distasteful, to disgusting - not all of it is equal. Except, of course, in the eyes of the law. A video of two sixteen year olds is as likely to land you in prison, as a video of "Daddy doing his 11 year old daughter".

      As for Canada's ruling - I'm not quite sure how I feel about it. Caching is not pessession - but, if the guy was viewing CP and getting off on it, he's guilty, IMHO. Deviant bastid needs to be cut, then tied down over a fire ant hill. I just don't know what to think.

      I don't think the US Supreme court would have ruled in his favor - he's lucky to be in Canada!!

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    7. Re:Okay... by zill · · Score: 5, Informative

      In Canada it's perfectly legal to access CP. The Criminal Code of Canada only prohibits possession of CP, specifically it is an offense to:
      - possess any child pornography (section 163.1(4))
      - make, print, publish or possess for the purpose of publication any child pornography (section 163.1(2))
      - import, distribute, sell or possess for the purpose of distribution of sale any child pornography (section 163.1(3))

      Everything was clearly stated year before this case. I would hardly call that a technicality.

    8. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The judge didn't say that he was innocent.

      Judges don't say you're innocent (well, almost never). You are innocent BY DEFAULT.

      Normally judges say that you are guilty or not guilty.

    9. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fantastic work ignoring half of his point while completely missing the other half. You're a sharp one.

    10. Re:Okay... by mrsteveman1 · · Score: 1

      The "technicality" being the completely illegitimate way the warrant that started the case, was obtained?

    11. Re:Okay... by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      The judge didn't say that he was innocent.

      The judge said that the existence of CP in the cache doesn't in itself make him guilty; that the prosecution must also show "mens rea" (which translates essentially to "guilty intent", as I understand it).

      If this guy is guilty, then show it, and you can chuck him in jail and take his computer. If he's innocent, give him his computer back.

      Actually, the judge went further and actually quashed the search warrant. Without being able to use the images on the computer of evidence, it will be pretty hard to build any case at all.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    12. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Caching is not pessession - but, if the guy was viewing CP and getting off on it, he's guilty, IMHO. Deviant bastid needs to be cut, then tied down over a fire ant hill.

      So it is his involuntary physiological reaction to seeing a CP image that you want to torture and kill him for? So it's not really about the image, it's the simple fact of being a pedophile. It seems what you actually want to do is inflict suffering and death on people with this sexual orientation, even if they never cause any kind of a problem for any child in their life. If you believe that being heterosexual or homosexual is not simply a choice (and it isn't), then you should believe that pedophiles are also not pedophiles because of a choice. I think it's just a matter that you haven't thought this through before you posted, and you are certainly excused for that given the kind of environment we live in on this issue, but if you maintain that pedophiles who never seek interaction with actual children should be tortured and killed, then there is a monster in the room, and it isn't the pedophiles.

    13. Re:Okay... by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Riiiight. Because accidents never happen? You've never been redirected to a site with content that skirts the law? Hell, you've never browsed any of the chans?

      Even if I had, I wouldn't bookmark them as he apparently had.

    14. Re:Okay... by Jarjarthejedi · · Score: 1

      Or that someone using his computer had accessed a page that contained such data. Or would you be fine with being arrested for viewing such things if I put a virus on your machine that cached some pictures?

      --
      There are two kinds of fool One says 'This is old therefore good' Another says 'This is new therefore better'- Dean Ing
    15. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What no 'thinkofthechildren' tag? I must be new here, you insensitive clod!

    16. Re:Okay... by Jarjarthejedi · · Score: 1

      Riiight...because putting a bookmark in someone's browser without their approval is so absurdly hard to do that the existence of such a thing is evidence. Don't like this site? Press control-D* to navigate away, or press control-D to win a prize, or press control-D to scan your computer for bad files.

      * I'm pretty sure that's IE's shortcut, I don't use IE so I'm not sure, but if it's not replace it with the appropriate shortcut

      --
      There are two kinds of fool One says 'This is old therefore good' Another says 'This is new therefore better'- Dean Ing
    17. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And further to this, it's perfectly legal to access child pornography here in Canada. as a matter of fact, it's advertised.

      we currently are pushing the campaign: "Child pornography doesn't report itself!"

      it's frowned upon to have found some of this material and NOT to report it, but we Canadians understand that not everybody has the desire to tell the authorities that "oh yeah, while I was looking for porn the other day, I came across [insert material here]."

      There's nothing illegal about going to the united states and HEARING somebody say "I want to kill the president of the USA" is there? there may be a law forcing you to report such a statement, but I'd love to see the definition of that law.

    18. Re:Okay... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      If this guy is guilty, then show it, and you can chuck him in jail and take his computer. If he's innocent, give him his computer back.

      Wrong. You still have to give him his computer back after removal of CP. It’s still his posession. So everything else still means theft. Also even if he would be a cruel rapist and mass murderer, you’d still have to respect his privacy.

      Or else we are no better than a Nazi intelligence agency, and certainly no better than the criminals we put into jails.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    19. Re:Okay... by Magic5Ball · · Score: 1

      Why bother with a virus since drive-by downloading the entire Australia blacklist in an invisible div is cross-platform and more difficult for the user to detect, prevent, and disavow?

      --
      There are 1.1... kinds of people.
    20. Re:Okay... by Smauler · · Score: 1

      If you propose making the law so that it is illegal to view an image of child porn, then anyone who accidently stumbles over it, either through clicking to go somewhere not as described or via malware, is criminalised. However, even though you've been modded flamebait, I think you've got some kind of point. I do personally believe routine viewing of external photos and/or videos involving children is harmful to those children, and should probably be outlawed. I guess I should say potentially harmful, since only knowledge of the viewing and publication would be the issue. I was sexually abused as a child (though not photographed), and I know I'd have a massive issue with people legally viewing (but not possessing) images of it. The mere existance of images of me would severely piss me off, though I know there are none. Obviously the law should involve some kind of definition to exclude accidental viewing, or malware installation, which may be hard to do.

      IANAL, so correct me if I'm wrong. The problem as I see it is this : It is entirely legal for a person to pay to view images and/or videos on a website, as long as they download nothing. Obviously the owners of that site are in deep legal shit, and so they should be. However those funding the site by their payments are not. Again IANAL, so I may be wrong on this... there may be laws forbidding assisting publication of child porn which include this.

      The law's completely screwed anyway in that people can and have been prosecuted for sending pictures of themselves to their boyfriend/girlfriend, and both have been put on the sex offenders list, so cannot work with children for the rest of their life. In the uk, it's perfectly legal for two 16 year olds to have sex, but not send pictures of themselves to each other. Wikipedia is allowed to host images like this (NSFW), but if you have that image on your HD, you're breaking the law. Accidently downloading any porn involving seventeen year olds is automatically illegal, even if there is no reason to suspect those in the images/video are under 18. Cartoon porn involving minors is now illegal in the UK (how do you judge which cartoon character is over 18, and which under?). Speaking of which, if I think the 2012 Olympics logo looks like Lisa Simpson fellating someone, am I breaking the law? Meh, the law is currently proper FUBAR.

    21. Re:Okay... by dotgain · · Score: 1

      I don't have an IE handy to test, but I'm guessing it behaves like other browsers, and throws up a dialog at that point saying something to the effect of "Where would you like to save this bookmark?"

    22. Re:Okay... by Mashiki · · Score: 2, Informative

      Mens rea = Guilty mind. Meaning you intended to commit the act, thought it through and did it.
      Actus reus = Guilty act. The objective action, i.e. downloading something/driving through people/etc.

      In Canada, for most criminal offences you need both to be proven in order to have the proof that the crime was committed. There's some exceptions to this but without spending a few weeks explaining it there's no point. Having only one but not the other leads to other legal avenues. In this case(without reading the entire SCC judgment, mine is still in the mail unfortunately), it sounds like the crown couldn't prove by the existence of cached data that the individual had the mental intent(mens rae) to commit the crime. However, a crime was committed(the action).

      That's the extremely short version of it.

      The entire judgment can be read here: http://scc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/2010/2010scc8/2010scc8.html

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    23. Re:Okay... by Vanderhoth · · Score: 1

      My In-laws typically just hit ok when they see a popup, if they were told to press Ctr-D and something poped-up they would most likely just hit OK. You'll have to trust me on this one. Just about every other weekend I have to fix something because they don't read a warning or message.

    24. Re:Okay... by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      It's illegal in Canada to "access" child pornography as well. The Crown Attorney didn't charge him with "accessing", nor was that charge specified on the warrant.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    25. Re:Okay... by linzeal · · Score: 1

      You want to send people to the gas chambers for possessing child porn, while albeit a popular opinion it is a naive and dangerous one. Why, well it is a slippery slope from one sex crime to another sex crime and from sex crimes to anything else the populace chooses to label immoral. There is a reason why even African countries that make homosexuality illegal have expressed shock at Uganda attempting to make it a capital crime.

    26. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or just spend 10 minutes on /b/

    27. Re:Okay... by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Indeed, the cartoon porn law is mad - and it's particularly mad that it also uses 18 as an age limit (in fact, it even criminalises images of adults, if the predominant impression conveyed is of someone under-18). The definition even includes cases where the drawn 17 year old is fully clothed, but shown in the background of a scene where two adults are having sex. And there are plenty of cases in mainstream material that would come under the law - e.g., Southpark's Proper Condom Use shows Cartman masturbating a dog, an act which is explicitly covered by the law.

      The sad thing is that they can't even justify the 18 age limit by saying they were only copying the child porn law, as they weren't. As well as differing definitions, there's the point that child porn law has an exemption if you're married to the person, or live together in a relationship. So it's legal to have sex with a 17 year old, and if you're married it is legal to own a sexual photo of them. But draw a picture of that same act, and you're a criminal, three years in prison!

      Another example might be adults role-playing as children (the most obvious example being the cliche of schoolgirls) - I believe that photos of such acts are still legal, and the point is that adults role-playing as children still look like adults in a photograph. But make a drawing - and even if they aren't drawn as particularly young, there is the risk that the fictional "age" of the characters would instead be inferred from the behaviour, what they are wearing, and so on.

      There is also the point that this law would criminalise child abuse victims who make a drawing of their own experiences, which AIUI is sometimes used as a means of recovery.

      (N.B. - the law hasn't been enacted yet, but comes into force on April 6 - http://www.melonfarmers.co.uk/gca10a.htm#Dangerous_Cartoons_4308 - just a few days left to encrypt your hentai!)

    28. Re:Okay... by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      This idea that you let a culprit go because a search was performed without a warrant, or the warrant was issued when it shouldn't have been (essentially the same thing) is a ridiculous bit of mental masturbation. If you find evidence like a literal smoking gun in the person's possession, the person should be convicted. Granted his/her rights were violated, but that is a separate issue. The person still was in possession of something that indicates their guilt, punish them. As well, punish the people who violated his rights by performing the illegal search. But by no mean should the public be punished by allowing a villain to remain at large.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    29. Re:Okay... by gmack · · Score: 1

      Indeed... I once got a call into the sales office for a place I worked. It seemed that one of our clients in Russia thought it would be funny to prank our head of sales with a child porn page that opened ten sites and each of those opened up another ten. He tried to close the windows but eventually they just overran his computer and they called me in to fix it.

      Imagine going to jail because some sick bastard thought grossing you out would be a fantastic prank.

      I'm happy for some Canadian sanity.

    30. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the US, "receipt" of CP carries a stiffer penalty than possession. It's like an "Aha! We caught you doing it!" rather than just finding evidence of the crime after the fact.

    31. Re:Okay... by gmack · · Score: 1

      The difference is that gay porn involves consenting adults and not someone too young to be able to consent.. Imagine being raped and then having the pictures passed around for years. This isn't exactly a victimless crime were talking about here.

      Quite frankly if your getting off on pictures/videos of sex that doesn't involve the consent of everyone involved you deserve to be locked away for a very long time.

    32. Re:Okay... by sobriquet.net · · Score: 1

      In Australia, we have laws regarding both possession and accessing CP. At a state level (in Victoria, at least), we have similar laws to those in Canada. Specifically, (from the Crimes Act (Vic) 1956, we have laws against:

      • Producing: "A person who prints or otherwise makes or produces child pornography..." (S68)
      • Procuring: "invites a minor to be in any way concerned in the making or production of child pornography"... (S69), and
      • Posession: "A person who knowingly possesses child pornography..." (S70)

      At a commonwealth (country) level, we also have laws against accessing CP - specifically "Using a carriage service for child pornography material" (Commonwealth Criminal Code Act 1995 S474.19) - which includes accessing, making available, etc.

      Sure, there are practical issues with charging people with the accessing offences, but the laws are definitely there...

    33. Re:Okay... by RobertLTux · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I could think of several ways somebody could have "CP" in his cache and have not gone looking for actual under age Porn

      1 went shopping at a site that uses models to show clothes (got caught by "related items")
      2 was looking at other Porn and mis-clicked
      3 got a virus that does auto surfing
      4 bait and switch on a banner
      5 did a google picture search (or other graphic search) and got a few slipped in by mistake
      6 was not him actually surfing

      personally this is a subject where "Think of the Children" is the absolute last thing you need to do
      (unless you are talking about thinking of the Victims who btw have a lot of other problems)

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    34. Re:Okay... by Nutria · · Score: 1

      Why, well it is a slippery slope from one sex crime to another sex crime and from sex crimes to anything else the populace chooses to label immoral.

      Why keep it narrowed to sex crimes?

      We deem murder to be immoral, and even though it's a capital crime,

      1. we don't execute many criminals, and
      2. the list of capital crimes doesn't seem to be growing all that much.

      Besides, you're discounting the vigorous anti-capital punishment faction in the country.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    35. Re:Okay... by linzeal · · Score: 1

      We execute more people than 90% of the countries that practice capital punishment, I would hardly call that " not many ".

      It costs 2 million to 10 million dollars to execute someone in the US.

      The efficacy of capital punishment in any age especially the modern one is questionable at best and immoral at worst.

      Well we would not need such a vigorous anti-capital punishment faction if this country would get in line with the rest of the democratic world.

    36. Re:Okay... by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      FYI, the same is true of the U.S.

    37. Re:Okay... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      It ranges from distasteful, to disgusting - not all of it is equal. Except, of course, in the eyes of the law. A video of two sixteen year olds is as likely to land you in prison, as a video of "Daddy doing his 11 year old daughter".

      As for Canada's ruling - I'm not quite sure how I feel about it. Caching is not pessession - but, if the guy was viewing CP and getting off on it, he's guilty, IMHO. Deviant bastid needs to be cut, then tied down over a fire ant hill.

      So, wait... Not all of it is equal, or anyone looking at it should be "cut, then tied down over a fire ant hill" ?

      I just don't know what to think.

      Obviously.

    38. Re:Okay... by Nutria · · Score: 1

      We execute more people than 90% of the countries that practice capital punishment, I would hardly call that " not many ".

      Logic and statistics FAIL!!!.

      For one thing, that's a totally vacuous statistic, and another, we don't execute that many people.

      Only 52 inmates were executed in 2009, but approximately 10,000 murder convictions per year. That's 1/2 of 1%.

      All this in a country of 300,000,000.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    39. Re:Okay... by Wolfier · · Score: 1

      > Having only one but not the other leads to other legal avenues

      So having only Mens Rea but without Actus Reus still "leads to other lebal avenues"? Is it equivalent to committing a thought crime?

    40. Re:Okay... by linzeal · · Score: 1

      What is " FAIL!!! " are you 15 ? This is Slashdot, not 4chan. A statistic cannot be vacuous, I don't think that word means what you think it means. Along with 3200 people on death row and an increase of 200-300 per year, just because they are not executing them now does not mean they are not part of the capital punishment system. My point was not just the moral aspect, but the financial one as well. Why spend 10 million dollars on incarcerating and executing a rapist/murder when the state will not give a dime to the victims of those crimes?

    41. Re:Okay... by Nutria · · Score: 1

      A statistic cannot be vacuous

      Of course it can.

      I don't think that word means what you think it means

      Yup...

      From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:

          vacuous
                  adj 1: devoid of intelligence [syn: {asinine}, {fatuous},
                                {inane}, {mindless}, {vacuous}]
                  2: devoid of significance or point; "empty promises"; "a hollow
                        victory"; "vacuous comments" [syn: {empty}, {hollow},
                        {vacuous}]
                  3: devoid of matter; "a vacuous space"
                  4: void of expression; "a blank stare" [syn: {blank}, {vacuous}]

      and an increase of 200-300 per year, just because they are not executing them now does not mean they are not part of the
      capital punishment system.

      Being in the "capital punishment system" does not, and never will, mean that they will be executed. How can you be so stupid?

      plonk.

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    42. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you find evidence like a literal smoking gun in the person's possession, the person should be convicted. Granted his/her rights were violated, but that is a separate issue. The person still was in possession of something that indicates their guilt, punish them.

      If the police are not willing to respect rights they are sworn to uphold, what makes you think they are unwilling to plant evidence? Even if it is real evidence, it still provides an incentive to police to violate the rights of every suspect. Why not torture people into confessions? Sure, their rights were violated, but they still confessed. Punish the torturer (if you can get evidence beyond reasonable doubt to convict them) but why let a confessed criminal go free?

      When the justice system fails to secure a conviction of a guilty person, they have been ineffective. When they violate their own law and principles of justice in order to punish, they have been evil. I'm prepared to put up with some ineffectiveness in government if it helps avoid having a government that actively persecutes me at whim.

    43. Re:Okay... by jesset77 · · Score: 1

      Wrong. You still have to give him his computer back after removal of CP. It’s still his posession. So everything else still means theft.

      LOL, know of many people who have been searched and their computer equipment seized, persuant to a variety of different kinds of investigations. None of these people were ever charged with anything, and none of them ever got their equipment back or a penny in restorations. None of them had bucketloads of cash, time or inclination at their disposal to throw away futilely trying to fight about it in court, either.

      So if they can seize, dissect and discard the possessions of people who never even view porn, and have no traces of illegality anywhere on their computer or premesis, you think they'll give back a box with that mess in the cache?!

      The best advice I can give you is, pray your home is never searched. You will lose every electronic device capable of storing data that you own (I haven't heard of seizing TV's or DVD players, thank heavens), many of your possessions will be missing or damaged, your place will be wrecked and they might even cut holes in your wall. It doesn't matter what they are looking for or how peripherally you are involved, you will need a fabulously expensive lawyer to put any reigns on how they ruin your property or scuttle your livelihood — and one must be retained in advance and placed on speed-dial. Once any damage is done it's already too late, because law enforcement can and will dodge any responsibility for pointlessly gutting your home.

      It's important to know your rights. For convenience, I have listed them for you at this page.

      --
      People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.
    44. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In California every time there is an "at fault" shooting by police, they claim "mens rea". FYI.

      When can arrestees in the entire CA penal system claim that before the plea bargain process starts?

    45. Re:Okay... by Mephistro · · Score: 1

      Being in the "capital punishment system" does not, and never will, mean that they will be executed. How can you be so stupid?

      In this context, being "in the capital punishment system" means they are in far harsher conditions than in any prison, almost totally devoid of human contact, with even less freedoms than normal inmates and with the huge Damocles's sword of a pending death penalty. 'Cruel and unusual punishment' indeed. And I almost forgot to say that solid evidence suggests that this 'Cruel and unusual punishment' is being applied quite often to persons innocent of the crimes they were condemned for. Something like a 20% of them if my memory doesn't fail me.

    46. Re:Okay... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Allow me to point out that rapists have been executed in the past, in various jurisdictions. You know, "normal" male rapists, who raped adult females, presumably because they couldn't get any nookie, and/or because they got off on the power trip from having a woman under their control.

      I view that as a pretty good thing. If the sumbitch can't attract women, then his genes should be taken out of the pool, permanently. If the power trip gets him off, remove his genes, as well.

      Applied to child porn - if the sumbitch likes little children instead of women, remove his genes from the gene pool.

      Think about it - it there really IS anything to the idea of evolution, which genes do we wish to select for?

      I have little problem with executing a lot of deviants.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    47. Re:Okay... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Again, I say, go browse the dark web, and get educated.

      Disclaimer: after a single day of research, you can never go back to your current state of innocence. There IS a lot of just plain sick shit to be seen, if you have the stomach for it. If you've ever researched the holocaust, then you have an idea what I mean.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    48. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. In Canada, ACCESSING child pornography is a separate offense from POSSESSING child pornography. There are separate offences precisely because of the difficulties in showing "possession" of electronic images. This is explained in the judgement.

    49. Re:Okay... by kyrio · · Score: 0

      He certainly wouldn't be able to use it after getting out of jail!

    50. Re:Okay... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Disclaimer: after a single day of research, you can never go back to your current state of innocence. There IS a lot of just plain sick shit to be seen, if you have the stomach for it. If you've ever researched the holocaust, then you have an idea what I mean.

      I don't need to be "educated", I've seen more than enough "sick shit".

      My point was you observe that there *is* a fundamental difference between "a video of two sixteen year olds" vs "Daddy doing his 11 year old daughter", then immediately recommend the guy is lynched purely because he may have been looking, without knowing anything about what he was looking at. What if it was the former ? Does watching a video of a couple of consenting, sexually mature individuals who just happen to be younger than some arbitrary age warrant being "cut, then tied down over a fire ant hill" ?

    51. Re:Okay... by drsmithy · · Score: 1

      Applied to child porn - if the sumbitch likes little children instead of women, remove his genes from the gene pool.
      Think about it - it there really IS anything to the idea of evolution, which genes do we wish to select for?

      I have little problem with executing a lot of deviants.

      From a biological perspective, there's nothing remotely "deviant" about finding sexually mature individuals attractive (eg: homosexuality would be far more "deviant" behaviour by that measure). Pretty much everyone is (biologically) sexually mature before they hit the legal age of consent.

    52. Re:Okay... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Of course watching two sixteen year olds doesn't warrant harsh punishment. At most, a token 50 dollar fine for a first offense. Hell, I can't even tell if two kids are 16 or 18 much of the time, unless someone tells me.

      But, if you've read all my posts on this story, you would already understand that. The harsh punishments are reserved for the lowlifes who look upon little children as sex objects. If looking at a six year old's bare bottom excites a guy, I see him as subhuman, and undeserving of the breath he pollutes.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    53. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference is that gay porn involves consenting adults and not someone too young to be able to consent.. Imagine being raped and then having the pictures passed around for years. This isn't exactly a victimless crime were talking about here.

      Quite frankly if your getting off on pictures/videos of sex that doesn't involve the consent of everyone involved you deserve to be locked away for a very long time.

      "Getting of on" them is not the same as contributing to, or encouraging, the production. (which I'm assuming is mostly done for money reasons) This is a thought crime vs real crime issue. You might have an opinion, and I may agree with your disgust, but it doesn't make thought crime laws okay.

    54. Re:Okay... by linzeal · · Score: 1

      I don't think executing people deemed "deviant" is a path I would want to go down. What is stopping them from executing people who have all sorts of weird fetishes?

    55. Re:Okay... by Mathinker · · Score: 1

      > that doesn't involve the consent of everyone involved

      So you would be OK with someone getting off on virtual CP?

    56. Re:Okay... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      In it's own perverse way, the law does distinguish between genuine pedos, and people who prey on underage but sexually mature women. Most states distinguish between having sex with a child younger than "x", or an older teen. Some states also take into consideration the age difference between the "predator" and the "victim". I mean, if a 17 year old minor seduces and 18 year old adult, that is HARDLY reason to convict the 18 year old.

      You will note that the sentence you quoted specifically says "little children", as opposed to "teens", or "minors". "Little children" isn't a legal term, but I thought it would be obvious that I was talking of pre-pubescents, most all of whom are younger than 13.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    57. Re:Okay... by Mathinker · · Score: 1

      > I have little problem with executing a lot of deviants.

      Like people who know how those computer thingies work? If you're here on /., you're already deviant, in someone's eyes.

    58. Re:Okay... by Mathinker · · Score: 1

      if the guy was viewing CP and getting off on it, he's guilty, IMHO. Deviant bastid needs to be cut, then tied down over a fire ant hill. I just don't know what to think.

      Just curious. Do you think you would think the same if all that CP were virtual? How about if it were merely text that the guy wrote for himself?

    59. Re:Okay... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Sorry - if a guy sees little children, prepubescents, as sex objects, I don't see him as "human". He is something less than a man. And, his genes are undesirable. I don't care how the child porn is presented, whether as anime, text, or disguised as involving Martians - it's the focus of his sexual desire that makes him less than a man.

      I know - you're going to ask how I prove the focus of his desire. I don't exactly know - but if his hard drive is chock full of pics and videos of naked children, it's a pretty good indicator.

      The guy in your link? What a moron. Whether it be CP or anything else, if you copy it to a demo machine which other people might use, it's SHARED!! Even on Linux, which is considered to be more "secure" than Windows, once I gain root access, I can view any files on the machine, no matter how "private" they thought their files were.

      What a douche.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    60. Re:Okay... by Mathinker · · Score: 1

      > And, his genes are undesirable.

      You are for active eugenics?

      > The guy in your link? What a moron. Whether it be CP or anything
      > else, if you copy it to a demo machine ... What a douche.

      And you think he should be killed to improve the gene pool?

    61. Re:Okay... by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      "You are for active eugenics?"

      I just KNOW that my answer will brand me as a Nazi - but, yes, I am in favor of eugenics.

      Go ahead, blast away. Enjoy yourself. Before you start, I am not a white supremacist, not German, not Aryan, have no affiliation with any supremacy groups, and in fact, the white supremacists would take one look at my family tree, and march me and my kids to the ovens. But, have fun anyway.

      If not for Hitler and the monsters who made up his inner party, I could safely ask anyone in the world if it would be a desirable goal to improve the human race, and almost certainly get an affirmative answer. From there, we could have discussion, debate, and argument over what would constitute "improvement".

      Thanks to Hitler, anyone who thinks that eugenics might be a good thing is automatically branded, right?

      We take better care of our breeding livestock, than we take care of ourselves.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    62. Re:Okay... by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      This idea that you let a culprit go because a search was performed without a warrant, or the warrant was issued when it shouldn't have been (essentially the same thing) is a ridiculous bit of mental masturbation. If you find evidence like a literal smoking gun in the person's possession, the person should be convicted.

      The problem is there's nothing to stop the police from engaging in fishing expeditions, where they search everyone's house hoping to turn up evidence of one crime or another. So every time a crime is committed in your neighborhood, you could expect a visit from the police to do a quick search of your house. Most people don't want to live that way, which is why we need warrants and probable cause.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    63. Re:Okay... by Mathinker · · Score: 1

      From there, we could have discussion, debate, and argument over what would constitute "improvement".

      Your post proposes the weirdest hybrid of dystopia and utopia I've ever seen.

      I do appreciate your courage, though.

    64. Re:Okay... by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

      I have little problem with executing a lot of deviants.

      What‘s a “deviant”?

      An adult who fucks little girls?

      An adult who likes to eat pussy?

      An adult who likes to fuck his wife in the Hershey Highway?

      An adult who likes to suck adult dick while wearing pink polka-dotted boxer briefs?

      An adult who likes to wear tutus and roller-skates?

      A woman who likes to put chocolate syrup over the dick she sucks?

    65. Re:Okay... by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      The problem is there's nothing to stop the police from engaging in fishing expeditions

      Way to take stuff out of context. Read the rest of my comment. If they fish, they are doing an illegal search. This includes if they have a bad or misused warrant or no warrant at all. If they do an illegal search, then they are guilty of a crime. Punish them for it. But if they find a gun that proves someone is a murderer, arrest them too. This idea that you need to let a murderer walk is bullshit. It is time people stop playing fucking games like this and use common sense instead of beancounter sense.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    66. Re:Okay... by Fred_A · · Score: 1

      Or we could model ourselves after somewhere like Central America... mere accusations will get you lynched and set on fire.

      Um, central america ? Did the US suddenly move down the map ?

      --

      May contain traces of nut.
      Made from the freshest electrons.
    67. Re:Okay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      anon due to modding. The cost of capital punishment, until just recently has always been pretty cheap. Up until the 30 or 40s, death sentences were usually carried out within months if not weeks. Prior to that, people convicted to die, died very quickly unless there was brutal and sadistic torture involved in the sentence. Just taking the person outside and hanging them as soon as the scaffolding could be built was the norm for a long time in America.

    68. Re:Okay... by Jarjarthejedi · · Score: 1

      Odd...firefox just autosaves it to the default folder (accidentally ended up bookmarking /. when I was testing looking for the bookmark shortcut and couldn't find it, which was terribly ironic when I later found the bookmark :P).

      --
      There are two kinds of fool One says 'This is old therefore good' Another says 'This is new therefore better'- Dean Ing
    69. Re:Okay... by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

      The person still was in possession of something that indicates their guilt, punish them. As well, punish the people who violated his rights by performing the illegal search.

      That's possible, but easier said than done, and would require fundamental changes to the way the justice system operates. Who would prosecute the case? The Crown (government), whose agents were the ones who violated the person's rights in the first place? The judge? Our rules of procedure aren't set up to handle prosecution from the bench---who would be the disinterested arbiter, then?

      But by no mean should the public be punished by allowing a villain to remain at large.

      The Canadian courts have overlooked rights violations in criminal cases before, under the grounds that to dismiss the case would bring the justice system into disrepute (i.e it would be really, really bad). In this case, if all the guy did was to access child porn online, then there's a good chance that whether he is punished or goes free, the number of abused children won't change. Child porn law is like tax law. If one guy doesn't pay his taxes, it doesn't really make a difference, but the country is in big trouble if lots of people don't pay their taxes, so we prosecute those who don't pay their taxes.

      Now, if he were directly producing the child porn, it might be a different story.

    70. Re:Okay... by Xeno+man · · Score: 1

      What type of punishment would you suggest? A financial fine? Any dollar amount you set would likely be covered by the police force. Fines would be payed to the government, who funds the police so regardless of how high you set the amount, police would be willing to pay a "fine" and walk all over your rights. Would you make the punishment jail time? Your going to put cops in jail for protecting the public? They already put their lives on the line to protect you, why would they risk livelihood too? Now you have cops that don't want to protect you.

      The idea is that if the police respect my rights as a person and a citizen, they would never have found the evidence being used to arrest or convict me. When evidence is thrown out, it's a reminder that the police have to follow the rules just like the rest of us.

    71. Re:Okay... by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      It's a reminder that retards think it is more important to let a murderer go than to make sure he or she doesn't murder again. Mental masturbation trying to rationalize some ideology into practice that only causes more harm than it anything it may solve. Yes, throw the cops in jail. If they are breaking the law, punish them. If they deal drugs or rob someone, you would have no issue throwing them in jail. If they rob someone of their civil rights, why is there an issue putting them in jail. You seem to think civil rights for the murderer is so precious that you would let him go and potentially, and in some cases almost certainly murder again; the ultimate violation of civil rights. If civil rights are so precious, then I think it behooves us to give the benefit of the doubt to society in general and protect them from a certain threat and use the evidence to convict a felon... protecting societies rights to the pursuit of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness... something that can't be done if one has just been murdered by someone released on a technicality. If police have a threat of being jailed, they will more likely respect someone's rights. In fact, you can make it slightly more fair for them: if they find a smoking gun, then they get a 'get out of jail, free' card. If they don't, they go directly to jail, do not pass go, for say six months. And then they get their job back after. They will be certain to ask for a warrant next time, and society isn't punished yet again by the loss of a trained police officer. But by no means should we continue to let lawyers debate how many angels fit on the head of a pin while society suffers.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
  2. Wow, Savvy Judge by Skarecrow77 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I didn't know that our legal system understood computers even that well, to distinguish browser cache "oh crap, what the hell did I just see?!" from deliberate "I done saved 3115 photos to my desktop that I probably shouldn't have".

    Of, wait, it's not my legal system, it's Canada's. nevermind. Grats Canadians on having sane judges?

    1. Re:Wow, Savvy Judge by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm proud of being Canadian when judgments like this come down. We've had a number of other salient ones in the last number of years too.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    2. Re:Wow, Savvy Judge by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Of, wait, it's not my legal system, it's Canada's. nevermind. Grats Canadians on having sane judges?

      Let's hope that even though many of us don't live in Canada and the case doesn't directly set precedent in our legal systems the case is widely reported among legal professionals and they get a better understanding of the technical side of the argument. At the very least this should give lawyers in other countries ideas for a better defense for their clients.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    3. Re:Wow, Savvy Judge by Xocet_00 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the sanity of our judges is canceled out by our ridiculous Human Rights Commissions. For example, it's a human right to not have to wash your hands while working at a restaurant, or get a better parking spot if you're morbidly obese.

    4. Re:Wow, Savvy Judge by m.ducharme · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think that this particular decision was even more sophisticated than that -- the judge made a point of saying that if you took advantage of the existence of the cache to store material, you would be in possession. So surfing to a page isn't possession, but knowingly surfing to a page, so that your cache would contain cp that you could go browze to later, might be.

      I was quite surprised at just how well-done that decision was, but if you want to see an example of a Canadian judge getting it wrong, just read the dissent.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    5. Re:Wow, Savvy Judge by wrecked · · Score: 1

      If you ever get a chance to visit the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa, Ontario, you will see just how tech-savvy it really is. All documents must be filed electronically. Every station in the court (judges, clerks, lawyers and reporting media) has an embedded computer to manage the digital case materials. There are large-screen monitors for the public gallery to follow along.

      The SCC broadcasts select hearings over the web. The court's decisions are all published and searchable on the internet.

      Slashdot readers would also be interested in the 2004 case CCH v Law Society of Upper Canada, which considered the concept of "fair dealing" under Canada's Copyright Act.

    6. Re:Wow, Savvy Judge by wrecked · · Score: 1

      Forgot to put this in my original post: link to R. v. Morelli webcast, so you don't have to RTFA, you can watch it!

  3. court intelligence by Onymous+Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Surprisingly sophisticated and reasonable thinking on behalf of the court. I'm impressed.

    1. Re:court intelligence by MikeFM · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Intelligent law that doesn't give in to "but it's for the children" bullshit. I'm moving to Canada.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    2. Re:court intelligence by Jailbrekr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Surprisingly intelligent, yes, but it completely ignores the fact that a technician found evidence that he was producing child porn, only to find that he disassembled his setup and formatted his hard drive the next day. The ruling really is a mixed blessing. Ruling that cached data does not constitute possession is a good thing, but quashing the search warrant based solely on that point was a horrible thing to do due to the rest of the evidence.

      --
      Feed the need: Digitaladdiction.net
    3. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      There are other problems in Canada. The immigration/refugee system, for instance, is very broken. Being apparently intelligent, well-educated, and knowing English, you'd probably have no chance of getting in. You'd be forced to jump through hoop after hoop over the course of many years, and likely would get rejected in the end.

      Now, if you were an uneducated Somalian with gang ties, a long criminal record, and no knowledge of English or French, you'd be bumped to the front of the line. You'd get significant amounts of social assistance, you'd never have to work, and you'd get a passport within a few years. You'd be able to travel the world, committing a variety of serious crimes, and then you could cry to the Canadian government to bail you out when you get caught. Rather than letting your sorry ass rot in a third-world prison, they'd waste millions of dollars to get you back to Canada, although you never paid a cent in Canadian taxes.

      Third-worlders have ruined huge parts of most major Canadian cities. Yet the government, regardless of which party is in charge, keeps bringing more and more of them in. This is just beginning to become a problem, and it will only be getting worse and worse.

    4. Re:court intelligence by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Surprisingly intelligent, yes, but it completely ignores the fact that a technician found evidence that he was producing child porn, only to find that he disassembled his setup and formatted his hard drive the next day. The ruling really is a mixed blessing. Ruling that cached data does not constitute possession is a good thing, but quashing the search warrant based solely on that point was a horrible thing to do due to the rest of the evidence.

      If he formatted his drives then there was no evidence, a technicians testimony is hearsay not evidence. "No evidence = No prosecution" is a good thing even if it allows some criminals off the hook (as it inevitably will.)

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    5. Re:court intelligence by Hojima · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Um, what was that "evidence" again? Oh yea a camera pointed to his fully clothed three year old daughter with her toys. The technician said he found 2 suspicious links (amongst the plethora of porn he had in his bookmarks). What I'm thinking is that the defendant liked petite LEGAL girls(i.e. he probably had a link that said "tiny teens" in his long list of fetishes). It's not untypical for someone to stumble on illegal porn when searching for legal porn. Sorry but this case was bullshit, and I commemorate the judge and jury on their competent choice.

    6. Re:court intelligence by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      it is most unfortunate that the police signally failed in their duty to secure a conviction for one of the most heinous and despicable offences

      Looking at pictures of naked children is 'one of the most heinous and despicable offences'? Wow. Where do you put things like theft, rape, assault, or murder then? Personally, I'd prefer a thousand people who looked at pictures of naked children on their computers to one person who went around killing people.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    7. Re:court intelligence by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But that's not what the article even says. The judge ruled that the technician's testimony about the nature of the camera setup and the links observed on the computer where ambiguous. As the technician didn't even follow any of the links, it seems strange to me that he should be able to tell at-a-glance what they lead to (unless they were patently advertising what they linked to, which strikes me as unlikely).

      The search warrant was quashed because it was issued under faulty information. "My god, judge - the guy had a camera setup and was filming his kid, and there were links on his computer to pornographic websites!" Well... was he filming his kid playing for Kodak memories in years to come, and were those links to pornography perfectly legitimate adult websites? Even in the article, you get the idea that simply having links to pornography somehow constitutes reasonable suspicion that you might be a kiddy-fiddler, regardless of whether that pornography is perfectly legal and unassociated with it.

      I, for one, am tired of people tacitly assuming that pornography is corrupt and corrupting, regardless of what it contains. It's ignorant moral panic at its finest.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    8. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Je suis un americain qui parle un peu de francais. QC baby, here I come!

    9. Re:court intelligence by gnasher719 · · Score: 3, Informative

      If he formatted his drives then there was no evidence, a technicians testimony is hearsay not evidence.

      A technician can always testify in court to what he saw on the hard drive as a witness, and that would not be hearsay. Hearsay would be a policeman testifying in court "the technician told me..." or the technician testifying "the customer told me..."

    10. Re:court intelligence by Ralph+Yarro · · Score: 1

      Looking at pictures of naked children is 'one of the most heinous and despicable offences'?

      Doing so deliberately for purposes of arousal, yes it is.

      Where do you put things like theft, rape, assault, or murder then?

      Rape and murder are also some of the most heinous and despicable offences. Assault can be, depends on the details. Theft, absent aggravating cirumstances, isn't.

      Do you really need people to tell you that?

      --

      The real Ralph Yarro posts as Anonymous Coward. Anyone else is an impostor.
    11. Re:court intelligence by mysidia · · Score: 1

      A Technician's testimony is probable cause to obtain a search warrant to find physical evidence of a crime the technician indicates exists.

      And it would not be hearsay, it would be 1st party testimony about what they saw

      Hearsay would only occur if the Technician testified someone else saw evidence of a crime, or someone else observed something suspicious.

      What a witness themselves observed and testifies to the court is NOT hearsay, period.

    12. Re:court intelligence by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Very often those children are kidnapped, raped, assaulted or even murdered.

      But none of these crimes is committed by the viewer of the photos, who - in the age of Photoshop, CGI etc. - does not necessarily have to be aware of how the photos were created in the first place. It's like buying apples at a marketplace. How is one supposed to tell that they were stolen/grown by exploited fruit growers living in desperate coditions/whatever, solely from the looks of the apples?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    13. Re:court intelligence by Xeno+man · · Score: 1

      What evidence? The tech saw nothing. Unless the bookmark was labeled "Totally illegal child porn" the tech never saw anything because he never followed any of the links. Even if it was child porn links, it's not like a lot of adult websites automatically add bookmarks for you with Javascript. Oh wait, that's what those hundreds of pop ups do. Plus there were only 2 suspect links among the dozen or so adult bookmarks so who knows if he even knew what was bookmarked. Also on top of that, bookmarks are not child porn.

      As for the camera, it was pointed at the kid and connected to a vcr. Holy shit, remind me not to take a camera to my nephews birthday party as I was going to point it at a lot of kids. To think I almost could have gone to jail over that. You don't know what he was doing and to assume the worst is irresponsible. Maybe he was trying to record home movies, maybe he was setting up a nanny cam. Maybe he was arranging the kids toys into a pentagram and calling for the spirit of Satan. The web cam is completely innocent but was painted in a dark image by a tech that was either offended by porn links or was pregistist about a guy that view porn.

    14. Re:court intelligence by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      Show off. So, you paid attention in language classes, while I fell asleep. I hate you . . . .

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    15. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      see ya

    16. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but you should also remember that "child porn" includes any drawing representing a child... so theorically, if you draw a stick figure and say it's a 9 years old without any clothes, it becomes child porn...

    17. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Doing so deliberately for purposes of arousal, yes it is."

      I can't wait to jail the FUCK out of you for thoughtcrimes committed.

    18. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People who feign "outrage" at child porn are almost always pedophiles themselves.

    19. Re:court intelligence by mysidia · · Score: 4, Funny

      Very often those children are kidnapped, raped, assaulted or even murdered.

      Have some people completely lost the ability to distinguish crimes from each other?

      Some people possess money.

      Very often those dollars had been stolen, involved in a bank robbery where innocent people are murdered, involved in drug trafficing where people are murdered..

      Therefore anyone found possessing dollar bills should be tossed in jail for life. They were responsible for murder after all, right?

    20. Re:court intelligence by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      "secure a conviction for one of the most heinous and despicable offences."

      I might argue that CP is what you say it is - but I won't bother.

      I will point out, that plenty of people have been busted for CP, when pornography was the furthest thing from their minds. Time was, when a naked infant, toddler, or even young child in a photograph raised no eyebrows anywhere. Grandma sent many a photo off to be developed in the '50's and 60's. Somewhere in my young adulthood - late '70's, we'll call it - I started reading about grandmothers being busted for those photos.

      So - I claim that your depiction of child porn is part of the over reaction that threatens the most innocent of people. Mothers, grandmothers, aunts, and cousins who just LOVE to compare little details, like the dimples on the cheeks of Baby Rose's ass, to those of her Aunt Betty.

      I can't claim that the defendant in this case was entirely innocent, but you can't claim that he was guilty, either - because we just don't KNOW!! A few images do not a child molester make.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    21. Re:court intelligence by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      You cite the worst case scenarios.

      But, you offer no citations. Do you have numbers to back that up? It is my belief that the vast majority of abducted children are brutalized for the predator's own pleasure, rather than for CP. No, I have no citations, hence, my statement that "it is my belief".

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    22. Re:court intelligence by jmanners · · Score: 0

      Have some people completely lost the ability to distinguish crimes from each other?

      Yes it appears they have. This is not a debate about child porn. The matter is already settled in law - child porn is a serious crime in virtually every jurisdiction. And the reasons are well-documented. People who are not happy with that, are entitled to lobby for their point of view. But I would caution anyone against doing so. There is a very fine line between hypothetical discussion and outright advocacy. The US 1st Amendment is not a charter for a free-for-all, and it most certainly does not apply in Canada. The principle of Consent is not applicable to children, in any case.

    23. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Surprisingly intelligent, yes, but it completely ignores the fact that a technician found evidence that he was producing child porn, only to find that he disassembled his setup and formatted his hard drive the next day.

      Actually, the technician found no evidence he was producing child porn. The guy had a child, camera, webcam, and VCR. None of these items are evidence of the production of child porn.

      In case you didn't know, just about every parent takes pictures & video of their kids. This is a normal, everyday occurrence.

      The technician says they saw links to child porn sites in the browser "favorites". Unless the technician actually accessed these links, the technician can't definitively say that they are child porn sites (which would also make the technician guilty of possessing child porn).

      Is this odd? Maybe. Illegal? No.

      Was he producing child porn? I don't know, but there is no evidence that he was.

    24. Re:court intelligence by CharlyFoxtrot · · Score: 1

      A technician can always testify in court to what he saw on the hard drive as a witness, and that would not be hearsay. Hearsay would be a policeman testifying in court "the technician told me..." or the technician testifying "the customer told me..."

      You are right of course. I stand corrected, hearsay is the wrong word.

      Still there wasn't any hard evidence of child porn production if I read TFA correctly, just some circumstantial evidence witnessed by the technician from which he developed a suspicion that that was what was going on.

      --
      If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
    25. Re:court intelligence by TikiTDO · · Score: 1

      The problems in Canada all stem from just one key area. The sprawling bureaucracy second to none in the world. Somewhere, at some point, some sub-committee to a sub-committee in charge of helping the team tasked with creating the process that is used to determine the eligibility criteria for immigration decided that the poor need more help becoming Canadian citizens.

    26. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very often those children are kidnapped, raped, assaulted or even murdered. Child porn is not a victimless crime, and the very suggestion that it is, makes me shudder at the vile ignorance and stupidity of some of the comments here.

      Depends on the contents of pictures.

      If they're simply of kids at nudist colonies or running around in their birthday suits, it's one thing. If they're "action" pictures, it's quite another.

      Context matters.

    27. Re:court intelligence by future+assassin · · Score: 1

      >it seems strange to me that he should be able to tell at-a-glance what they lead to Well maybe the technician actually knew what they were from the names as he himself accessed those sites before. So he's a closet pedo too.

      --
      by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
    28. Re:court intelligence by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      Why is it illegal to look at child porn and not Jeffery Dahmer's disgusting crime scene photos?

    29. Re:court intelligence by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      If the technician is cross-examined in court as a witness, that is evidence. It is up to the judge to decide how credible he is as a witness.

    30. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha.

    31. Re:court intelligence by __aaaehb3101 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Part of this that was not explained very well in the article is that the tech felt so bad he waited 3 months before he mentioned "the pornography" (2 links in the accused's favorites) to his mother (who is the social worker in question). The tech's mother then reported it to the police, who then waited another month before the search. So everyone was so worried about the child's health that it took 4 months before anything was done. Then the Crown found so much evidence that they decided to give the accused 18 months house arrest before they tried to prosecute. Third hand reports that someone who owns a camera and looks at porn, should not be enough evidence to have someone arrested and seize their property. If the reason for the arrest was concern for the child why was no investigation of the child's welfare made? And why was the accused given house arrest at "the scene of the crime"?

    32. Re:court intelligence by sjames · · Score: 1

      The technician saw evidence that the man was video taping his fully clothed daughter at play and he saw a few bookmarks that he believes are child porn.

      How those links got there, he cannot say. Perhaps the owner put them there, perhaps some rogue javascript or a virus did it. Perhaps the owner reinstalled because CP links and images appeared unwanted on his computer. Who knows?

      If an ad can animate a complete XP desktop going through a simulated virus scan, even on a Linux machine running Firefox, then it's not at all inconceivable that a malicious site could cause some CP to appear in the cache and add a few unwanted bookmarks.

      It seems that the man went through an awful lot of hell for no good reason if that's all they had to go on. Meanwhile, the judge doesn't want a lot of people to go through a lot of hell over vague suspicions. That's quite wise in these days when vague suspicion is rampant.

    33. Re:court intelligence by __aaaehb3101 · · Score: 1

      A technician can always testify in court to what he saw on the hard drive as a witness, and that would not be hearsay. Hearsay would be a policeman testifying in court "the technician told me..." or the technician testifying "the customer told me..."

      Yes the technician can say that he saw 2 links in the accused favorites labeled "Lolita porn" and some pictures of naked women saved to the accused's desktop. But the evidence used to get the search warrant was "my son the technician told me..."

    34. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about looking at pictures of naked for the deliberated purpose of encouraging the rape of little children?

    35. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, exactly.

      I'm so sick and tired of the "but it's for the children!" argument everybody tries to blast constantly.

      Wasn't there a statistic not that long ago clearly displaying that the violent crime rate in Japan went down following the decriminalization of violent cartoon pornography?

      Give people a vent, and they'll blow off steam. block it, and watch them try to cut a hole in three walls at once.

    36. Re:court intelligence by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      Actually, if memory serves, material drawn or created for one's own use is not illegal in Canada. That decision came down a few years ago.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    37. Re:court intelligence by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      The technician found no such thing. What he found was a camera in a room, where there happened to be a lot of toys. In other words, the technician found reason to believe that the accused was making videos of his kid while the kid was playing. My impression from the rest of the decision is that they never did find any evidence at all that he was making porn of his kid, even though they did ultimately find child porn of other kids after they seized his computer.

      Essentially, the technician found two bookmarks to "lolita porn" sites mixed in with a lot of other legal porn site bookmarks. He reported to the cops several months later, and on the strength of that the cops got a warrant. It was a really bad warrant, and deserved to be quashed.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    38. Re:court intelligence by MartinSchou · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Even in the article, you get the idea that simply having links to pornography somehow constitutes reasonable suspicion that you might be a kiddy-fiddler, regardless of whether that pornography is perfectly legal and unassociated with it.

      It's actually a fairly easy test:

      1. Do you have a penis?
      2. Do you have even the remotest access to children?

      If you can answer yes to both of those questions, you are automatically suspected of being a kiddie-fiddler.

    39. Re:court intelligence by clarkcox3 · · Score: 1

      Note, he said "looking" at the pictures, not "making" the pictures. There is a difference. Possessing CP is the only crime I can think of where witnessing a crime is itself a crime.

      Yes, producing CP is a horrible crime, and it needs to be punished; I would rate it as at least as heinous as rape or assault. I would rate looking at CP well below rape or assualt, and probably below theft as well.

      --
      There are no tiger attacks in my area and it's all because this rock I'm holding keeps the tigers away.
    40. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What evidence of child porn? A webcam pointed at his daughter and a few links? Maybe he was showing his daughter to a relative, who knows. The point is that child porn does not trump all existing rights and laws.

      Im glad Canada has some intelligence.

    41. Re:court intelligence by Draek · · Score: 4, Informative

      Which is particularly sad as many actual pedophiles fail at the first one.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    42. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not as much the looking at the child porn is the problem, it's the torture people often put those children through that's the problem and when you look at it it promotes more torture, kidnapping, rape, and murder of Children. Know things.

    43. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's actually a fairly easy test:

            1. Do you have a penis?
            2. Do you have even the remotest access to children?

      If you can answer yes to both of those questions, you are automatically suspected of being a kiddie-fiddler.

      Sad, but true. British Airways actually has an explicit policy stating that:

      http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1243625/Businessman-Mirko-Fischer-sues-British-Airwars-treating-men-like-perverts.html

      British Airways is getting sued over it, and the guy they did it to is a deep-pocketed hedge fund manager, so things might change.

      I like the part where he points out the obvious truth:

      'Furthermore statistically children are far more likely to be abused by a member of their family. Does that mean that BA are going to ban children sitting next to their own parents?'

    44. Re:court intelligence by kz45 · · Score: 1

      "Why is it illegal to look at child porn and not Jeffery Dahmer's disgusting crime scene photos?"

      Because more often than not, the people interested in CP also enjoy having sex or are attracted to kids.

    45. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, an adult gets violated murdered you're like oh it happens every day. What do you say when a child gets violated and murdered? What do you say when your daughter gets violated and murdered?
      Children are held up more on a pedestal, after all they are our future.

    46. Re:court intelligence by SnEptUne · · Score: 1

      It depends on how one define offense. One can done no immediate harm to some arbitrarily person, but is still an offense to him/herself because he/she objectified people. It is not the viewing of pornography, but the motive and idea behind it that matters. Idea have consequences.

      However, human are not perfect, and there is a different between reality and fantasy. Nevertheless, exactly because we are not perfect do we continue to strive for a better society, where people are not judged based on their look nor any physical asset. A mile journey starts with a single step.

      Without darkness, we cannot see the light either. But without law, people may not even know about their sin either. One cannot exist without the other. So how do we know if someone committed a crime; we can only guess based on what they do and what we believe their intentions are.

    47. Re:court intelligence by Max+Threshold · · Score: 1
      it seems strange to me that he should be able to tell at-a-glance what they lead to (unless they were patently advertising what they linked to, which strikes me as unlikely).

      It doesn't seem all that unlikely. I've seen countless links that blatantly advertise that they're kiddie porn, especially on P2P networks. (Of course, who knows if they're actually kiddie porn, or some kind of honeypot.) Conversely, in fifteen years of downloading vast amounts of porn, I've only accidentally downloaded kiddie porn maybe three or four times. Purveyors of kiddie porn are either completely up front about what they're dealing in, or they have some really sophisticated and secretive networks... and I'm inclined to doubt the latter.

    48. Re:court intelligence by McDutchie · · Score: 1

      But none of these crimes is committed by the viewer of the photos

      This tired old argument really needs to die. These crimes are committed because there is an audience for the photos. This is a very lucrative business. The consumption of child porn condones and sustains the market for horrific torture of small children. Ergo, deliberately accessing child porn is committing child rape by proxy. That is why possession needs to be prosecuted.

      who - in the age of Photoshop, CGI etc. - does not necessarily have to be aware of how the photos were created in the first place.

      Yeah, cause child pornographers have a budget the size of Avatar's to make photorealistic CGI. Give me a break.

    49. Re:court intelligence by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      This tired old argument really needs to die. These crimes are committed because there is an audience for the photos. This is a very lucrative business.

      Isn't that like saying that cars should be banned because a non-zero percent of them is obtained from car thieves? You know, after all, it's the demand that is the cause for these crimes committed by someone else.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    50. Re:court intelligence by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      Mostly correct, this case was actually brought up in our Law class (sorry, I don't have a solid reference for it). A guy was taken to court for posession of child pornography. However once in court, it was established that not a single one of the images involved an actual human being, but that they were all cartoons. The courts ruled that unless a child is involved, there was no crime.

      I do not believe however that "one's own use" is at all a requirement, just that there are no real children involved.

    51. Re:court intelligence by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, cause child pornographers have a budget the size of Avatar's to make photorealistic CGI.

      If the idea is ludicrous, why have Governments (such as the UK) changed the law to criminalise such images also? Shouldn't they keep them legal?

    52. Re:court intelligence by DarwinSurvivor · · Score: 1

      Are you seriously suggesting that people are spending enough money on fake child pornography (CG, etc) that you can't tell the difference between it and the real thing?!?

    53. Re:court intelligence by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      Thanks. I knew it applied to stuff he'd created for himself, but wasn't sure if it applied to all cartoons, so didn't want to say.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    54. Re:court intelligence by Dr+Damage+I · · Score: 1

      So now you're telling us not only are the Canadian courts smarter than the US courts, but they're smarter than the Australian courts too? fucking show offs!

      --
      "Cursed is he who rises early in the morning..." Isiah 5:11
    55. Re:court intelligence by antdude · · Score: 1

      Um, there are ways to unformat the drives especially with disk recovery companies. Same for damaged hardwares unless one throw it hot molt, blew it up, etc. :P

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    56. Re:court intelligence by QCompson · · Score: 1

      This tired old argument really needs to die. These crimes are committed because there is an audience for the photos. This is a very lucrative business.

      People still believe CP is a lucrative business? Really? Let me guess... it's a $800 trillion a year business ZOMG!

    57. Re:court intelligence by McDutchie · · Score: 1

      People still believe CP is a lucrative business? Really? Let me guess... it's a $800 trillion a year business ZOMG!

      Wikipedia: "Child pornography is a multi-billion dollar industry and among the fastest growing criminal segments on the internet.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23]". Why don't you check out the six references at the article and explain to me why they're full of shit?

    58. Re:court intelligence by Leolo · · Score: 1

      Very often those children are kidnapped, raped, assaulted or even murdered.

      [[citation needed]]

      Not to be too flippant, but "very often" is a weasle phrase. And that I find this entire sentence hysterical. Not as in "funny" but as in "perpetuating in a mass hysteria." You might be old enough to remember the "satanic ritual abuse" hysteria, or the "recovered memories" hysteria. If not, wikipedia might help you.

      I must however point out that I do not think that child porn is victimless. The children are abused, yes. You do not need to add "kidnapped, raped, assaulted or even murdered" to the discussion.

    59. Re:court intelligence by QCompson · · Score: 1

      Because every source in the article uses quotes from law enforcement and groups like NCMEC, who have an incentive to exaggerate the numbers to keep their funding (and to keep people like you scared and angry). Just like when the police arrest someone for possessing 3 ounces of weed, and it is listed in the paper as having a street value of $50,000.

      I would be interested in seeing what percentage of child pornography arrests in the last five years had a financial component.

      It seems that most of the time the "but it's funding rape!" argument is used as a convenient mask for the less defensible "it should be illegal because they're having creepy thoughts" argument. Maybe I'm wrong. Would you support there being different penalties based on whether someone paid for the stuff or not? Or if someone possessed photo-realistic CGI child porn?

    60. Re:court intelligence by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The immigration/refugee system, for instance, is very broken. Being apparently intelligent, well-educated, and knowing English, you'd probably have no chance of getting in. You'd be forced to jump through hoop after hoop over the course of many years, and likely would get rejected in the end.

      Uh, what?

      I'm a resident (non-permanent - skilled worker) presently living in BC, originally not from an English-speaking country. Yes, I do have decent English. I have quite a few friends here coming from the same place, and most of them have already got either permanent residence status or citizenship, via the skilled immigration process. A few more are applying. Not one had theirs application denied so far.

      Looking at the relevant immigration laws, I would say that, if anything, immigrating here is very easy specifically for a skilled professional, at least compared to most other countries out there, especially First World ones. It definitely beats U.S. immigration by a very large margin (you're practically guaranteed to get Canadian full citizenship faster than you'd get U.S. permanent residence, if you were to apply at the same time).

      There are many options, too. You don't have to apply for PR right away - come here to work first, then after working for 1 year (skilled work, of course, with degree or experience to back it - not picking fruits on plantations...) you become eligible for a provincial nomination, if your employer is willing to sponsor you (which basically amounts to them saying they'd like to keep employing you). That disposes with a lot of hoops one has to jump through in the federal skilled immigration program, and it goes much faster as well.

      Then also, it's not like people have to apply for Ontario, Quebec, BC or Alberta. Sure, they are all nice places to live in, but there are other places in this country which desperately need people, and provincial immigration programs in which are consequently more open - Newfoundland, for example.

      Oh, and here's one more funny thing. In my wife's workplace, there are a lot of immigrants. But there is only one "third-worlder" - a charming Indian guy with perfect English and just as perfect attire and manners. The rest? Well, they have quite a few Brits, a white South African, and some Americans.

      One other thing of note. My current place of residence is Richmond, BC - you know, that place chock full of "third-worlders", specifically Chinese and other Asians - 59% of the local population. I find it interesting how it also happens to 1) be one of the safest cities in BC in terms of crime rate, 2) have the greatest life expectancy in entire Canada, 3) have best health figures, and specifically lowest smoking and obesity rates, in Canada, and 4) consistently vote for BC Liberals (lower taxes, less welfare) over NDP (higher taxes, more welfare) by a large margin. So much for dirt-poor immigrants leeching off social welfare...

    61. Re:court intelligence by dbcad7 · · Score: 1

      Here's a quote from one of the articles referanced..
      Child pornography alone generates $3 billion annually and the average age of first Internet exposure to pornography 11 years old. Figures revealed nearly 90 per cent of children aged 8 - 16 who have access to the Internet have viewed pornographic sites while doing their homework.

      So... child pornography is children looking at porn ?.. and these kids must have good allowances to purchase 3 billion in porn a year

      --
      waiting for ad.doubleclick.net
    62. Re:court intelligence by Philip_the_physicist · · Score: 1

      People who are not happy with that, are entitled to lobby for their point of view.

      But I would caution anyone against doing so. There is a very fine line between hypothetical discussion and outright advocacy.

      If one cannot advocate any law they desire, then democracy is dead if not dying in that country. You citizens should have the right to ask for any law, from the reasonable, to the patently absurd (everyone must wear red trousers or go to jail for 20 years), to the blatantly self-interested (everyone should be taxed $10 per year, the money all goes to me (that sort of thing works for the record companies)), to the morally repugnant ([re]introducing slavery, for example). Of course, that doesn't mean they should get it, just that they should be allowed to seek public support for their proposal.

      In a recent election, there were many minor parties I found offensive and dangerous (or rather, that they would be dangerous if anyone voted for them), and even one of the second-rate parties has policies I find repulsive, but that doesn't mean I (or anyone else) get to prevent them standing and advocating those policies. If we go down the path you are suggesting, where would we draw the line? How many people must support the idea for it to be allowed, and how can we decide if enough people support the idea to allow the idea to be mentioned? That way lies a one-party dictatorship.

    63. Re:court intelligence by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      Some male criminals abduct, rape and murder adult women. So should straight sex among adults be criminalized too?

    64. Re:court intelligence by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      Same applies even moreso to diamonds. So where are all the brave "Anonymous Cowards" clamoring to throw all diamond wearers into jail?

    65. Re:court intelligence by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1
      Maybe you would be taken more seriously, if you applied your argument in all areas:
      • Jail anybody who wears diamonds. You do know about how the poor African diamon miners are exploited, do you?
      • Anybody who eats foie gras should be jailed, just look at how they torture the poor geese.
      • Anybody who uses a computer should be put to death, just look at what recycling our electronics does to China's environment and worker's health...
      • ...
    66. Re:court intelligence by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      The matter is already settled in law - child porn is a serious crime in virtually every jurisdiction.

      I wonder why that is...

      People who are not happy with that, are entitled to lobby for their point of view. But I would caution anyone against doing so.

      ... that's the reason. Easy to get laws passed if you stifle rational debate.

      At this point, if you want to get some sanity put back into these laws, but still care about your safety and reputation, I'd propose a different approach: if you have the skills, plant such pictures on computers of famous and powerful people (politicians, business men, Rotary Club, ...), and have them make their case. Resist the temptation to plant them on obvious personal enemy's computers, that'll be to easy to trace back to you.

    67. Re:court intelligence by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      You mean the tech's mother?

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    68. Re:court intelligence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, female pedophiles are very sad indeed.

  4. The legal system understands anything... by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The legal system understands anything that someone explains to it. So if you explain something to a judge or a lawyer, he or she is supposed to think about what you've explained and figure out how the law applies to it. A cache isn't something it's hard to explain, so--particularly when it's really important to a case--a judge will understand it.

    --
    -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    1. Re:The legal system understands anything... by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      You've never tutored have you? There are people who either refuse or are incapable of understanding certain concepts. Some judges fall into this category in certain areas, and one would hope it wasn't the case, but it happens, especially when judges are elected based on popularity and not appointed on merit.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    2. Re:The legal system understands anything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While it is true that some people may have a gut feeling that a "cache of cp" can't be much different than a "cache of weapons" (even though one was automatically popped into your file system regardless of intent and the other was physically collected with full intent), I doubt that explaining a caching function to a judge would be all that difficult.

    3. Re:The legal system understands anything... by perlchild · · Score: 1

      Just a note, there's nothing wrong with your post, you just assume the rules in the US happen everywhere else.

      Judges are not elected in Canada, but appointed.

      Popularity does play a role, since a politician does the appointing, but it's not an election.

    4. Re:The legal system understands anything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In what benighted backwater are judges elected?
      Judges? Seriously?

    5. Re:The legal system understands anything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ignorance of courts regard to law is infamous. The problem as I see it is that a career in law is a very slow thing - to rise to the top of the lawyerly profession, or to take a seat as a judge, requires decades. Thus those making the decisions in the legal system are those who have not grown up with modern technology, the types who havn't even gotten the hang of sending email yet.

    6. Re:The legal system understands anything... by TimSSG · · Score: 1

      Most of the USA low level Judges are elected;
      but, most of those judges just do low level things
      like Marriages and civil cases (Small claims, etc.).

      Tim S.
      Indiana, USA

    7. Re:The legal system understands anything... by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Appointment can be worse than election since politicians need to look for ideologues since an impartial judge is of no use to them.

    8. Re:The legal system understands anything... by Tassach · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's the way it's SUPPOSED to work. Sometimes it does actually work that way, as long as your explanation agrees with the judge's prejudices. If you try and tell at judge something conflicts with his ideology, he'll ignore the facts and rule based on his ignorant superstitions. IF you can afford to, you can appeal, but that is a long expensive fight and sometimes you have to go through multiple appeals to get a panel of judges that can see past their Bibles.

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    9. Re:The legal system understands anything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you severely overestimate the US legal system. Explaining something to a judge or lawyer when they don't already know it and it pertains to technology is generally met with blank stairs and hems and haws. Why do you think so many child porn convictions come from crap like browser cache or deleted items recovered from the hard drive?

    10. Re:The legal system understands anything... by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      And even though a politician does the appointing, she chooses from a short list of candidates that are vetted by a committee of judges, lawyers, and lay-people. The system works surprisingly well.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    11. Re:The legal system understands anything... by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Ok, then try to explain quantum physics (especially QED) to them. Something that the very people who came up with it do not fully understand, according to themselves. ^^

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    12. Re:The legal system understands anything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've never tutored have you? There are people who either refuse or are incapable of understanding certain concepts.

      Maybe those being tutored had a common problem: the tutor. Perhaps, the when the tutor finds it difficult to get a concept across, the tutor needs to try a different method. People store information in different ways, based on how well they understand it, how important it is, what they associate it with, etc. When trying to get a point across to someone...

      You know what, nevermind. This is too difficult to get across. Some people you just can't reach.

    13. Re:The legal system understands anything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't understand it, yet they do....

    14. Re:The legal system understands anything... by jesset77 · · Score: 1

      The legal system understands anything that someone explains to it.

      I think that depends strongly on who is doing the explaining.

      If you were on trial for anything like this, and the evidence presented was that your computer had certain material on it, and you try to tell the judge "that is a folder that everyone gets stuff in, it's not just me and it's not my fault, I pinky swear" do you think the judge will calmly weigh your important analysis of the situation, or scoff and assume you are terrible at making up excuses for material that is obviously on your computer? Desperate perps say some pretty messed up things, and you can't take it all seriously

      Alternately, whoever isn't on the stand isn't going to say jack about material like this or try to throw any doubt on the matter by describing what a cache folder is, or the prosecutor will just throw mud at their reputation next. I mean, who wants their name cited anywhere in one of these headlines?

      The long and short of it is, porn in general and CP in particular is just one of the many red herrings that powerful people like to use to trick the people into giving up their autonomy. Once any communication *might* contain copyrighted, pornographic, or otherwise contraband content then it becomes *impossible* to tell without having to wiretap everybody, erect a national firewall and make it conspiracy when you do not report on your neighbors voluntarily.

      I'm actually surprised that the US is not jumping on this bandwagon, but I guess they are simply watching the UK, Australia, NZ and China to see how badly they fail so that when the US firewall goes up it will be especially difficult to route around. :P

      --
      People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.
    15. Re:The legal system understands anything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True in many cases, but...

      For some, the only way you could get them to successfully store the information would be to directly write to their neurons.

    16. Re:The legal system understands anything... by vuffi_raa · · Score: 1

      The legal system understands anything that someone explains to it. So if you explain something to a judge or a lawyer, he or she is supposed to think about what you've explained and figure out how the law applies to it.

      not downing your comment but I have been working in the legal system for nearly 10 years now and can say without a doubt that most lawyers are some of the least technically minded people you will ever meet, seriously their attitude usually is "If I wanted to learn about it why am I paying you to do it?" and "Just make it work". They usually don't even understand discovery laws and lifecycles, metadata preservation, hash validations, etc. etc. - and that all concerns standard things that they should be on top of for day to day defensibility standards,
      so are there some lawyers that are interested in learning and hearing your explanation?
      yes.
      Will the vast majority want to hear your explanation?
      no.

    17. Re:The legal system understands anything... by vuffi_raa · · Score: 1

      For some, the only way you could get them to successfully store the information would be to directly write to their neurons.

      you can put an engine in a box but it won't make it go anywhere....... I think it would be a waste of written neurons

    18. Re:The legal system understands anything... by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      There are people who either refuse or are incapable of understanding certain concepts. Some judges fall into this category in certain areas, and one would hope it wasn't the case, but it happens, especially when judges are elected based on popularity and not appointed on merit.

      Shoot the judge (using a proxy in the case that this is illegal instead of compulsory in your area). If the current judge can't handle cases like this, continue to kill them until they die off. "Just think of it as evolution in action.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
    19. Re:The legal system understands anything... by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      I'm Canadian. I wasn't referring to Canada. I'm sorry you misunderstood what I was trying to get across -- namely that appointment by merit leads to better judgments, like this one.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  5. I wonder, by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 0, Troll

    What is in the caches on the supreme court judges' computers?

    --

    I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

  6. This makes sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It never struck me as sensible that an individual is legally responsible for the contents of their cache file(s). If you inadvertently stumble upon obviously illegal child porn on the internet and report it to the appropriate authorities, you could be prosecuted just like a child molesting sex offender because those files were stored in your cache when you discovered them.

    Thanks Canada, for making sense.

    1. Re:This makes sense. by rjstanford · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've had objectionable stuff pop up through ad-blockers before when randomly surfing as well that I'd like to report (not even sure if it was legit or not, closed windows fast) ... but haven't, for that very fear. Sad, but what can you do? I'm certainly not going to incur thousands of dollars of legal fees to try to figure out the "right" way to report something that would probably either be ignored, on a jurisdiction that the police are unable to do anything about, or might get me accused of a felony. If it turns out its even illegal.

      --
      You're special forces then? That's great! I just love your olympics!
    2. Re:This makes sense. by Bragador · · Score: 1

      I searched around just for fun and I guess you could use this: http://www.iwf.org.uk/reporting.htm There are other websites too like https://secure.missingkids.com/missingkids/servlet/CybertipServlet?LanguageCountry=en_US And of course, if you really are paranoid, you could fill these forms through a proxy.

    3. Re:This makes sense. by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      I've had objectionable stuff pop up through ad-blockers before when randomly surfing as well that I'd like to report (not even sure if it was legit or not, closed windows fast) ... but haven't, for that very fear. Sad, but what can you do?

      Just save those URLs for planting on politicians' computers.

  7. Curious to how this relates to the US. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Curious to how this relates to the US. If drugs or weapons are in your car--without your knowledge--you are arrested for their possesion. "Sorry Mr. Officer that bag of weed must have been cached. It's just temporary."

    1. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by Xeno+man · · Score: 1

      It doesn't relate at all. US doesn't give a shit what Canada does when enforcing their own laws. The US will shout, complain and threaten Canada and other countries to be more like them but Canadian and American laws have nothing to do with each other. In fact there are several areas where laws differ greatly such as copyright, medical marijuana, banking laws and gay rights.

    2. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by mmmmbeer · · Score: 1

      It's much more likely and far more reasonable that you could have cached images on your computer without your consent than contraband in your car without your consent. The prosecution could still argue that you are responsible, but they would have a difficult time overcoming the "reasonable doubt" of innocence. On the other hand, if you had contraband in your car, you would have to give a reason why it could be there without your knowledge. After all, your car didn't pick them up itself. Still, if you did so, and it was sufficient to provide a reasonable doubt (ie. just saying so isn't enough), then charges would probably be dropped.

    3. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by Yold · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It doesn't, it is Canada.

      Constructive possession is a concept where if the drugs are accessible to you, e.g. you are the passenger of a car and drugs are found in the center console, you can be charged with possession without even knowing you are there. This sort of charge routinely fucks people out of gainful employment for decades; imagine this. Your buddy picks you up, and you are pulled over, drugs are found in the center console. Although you had no idea the drugs were there, you can be charged with possession if the driver doesn't admit to owning the drugs, or perhaps even if he does. If you are moderately wealthy, you get a lawyer, he plays buddy-buddy with the judge and prosecutor, and the charge will get dropped or downgraded to a non-drug offense, but if you are poor which is overwhelmingly the case, you wind up with probation and no hopes of finding a job in the next decade.

    4. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by Ian+Alexander · · Score: 1

      Very correct, although of course now that the argument that a web cache doesn't constitute possession has been made in one court system it might be possible to adapt the argument for another, and hopefully it will happen. It's utterly insane that somebody should be held legally liable for the contents of their cache.

    5. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In sane countries, your criminal record is only consulted for jobs in which it is relevant. And can only be consulted if the relevant job is listed in the law, in any other case you cannot get a printout to show the employer. Say, banking jobs, police-related jobs, three-letter agencies etc.

    6. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Can you explain any legitimate accidental reason whatsoever that there would be drugs or illegal weapons in the premises of your vehicle?

      The differences between this and having an object in cache in your vehicle are obvious. Everything you place in your vehicle is your responsibility, if it poses a safety hazard on the road, you are in direct control over everything that gets placed in there, you can inspect any item at any time, and you have a legal responsibility to do so, in order to ascertain the safe operation of your vehicle on public property.

      With a browser cache it is obvious -- any URL object that the browser ever sees reference too may be eligible to be cached (depending on its size, and how long ago it was accessed): it is automatic, and being in the cache does not necessarily indicate that a human has ever seen it.

      Web sites may cache objects in the background, antivirus software may load objects in the background to pre-scan. Another person may have touched the computer and visited something on accident they didn't to, and immediately closed the window, with no knowledge about any copy being retained.

    7. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by blackest_k · · Score: 1

      with ubuntu there is a directory called .thumbnails and in there another one called normal. currently on my netbook there are just under 3000 thumbnails some of which are images i recognise as having viewed them some are images of well known people, some from slashdot , facebook and there are photo's of people i know but have never seen before.

      I think theres nothing there to worry about but would hate to think anything in that directory could be used as evidence against me of anything.

    8. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Part of me want's to say something like:

      Maybe you should get to know your friends better then.

      BUT the rest of me screams that drug laws in Canada are still ridiculous. honestly. there are much worse things in the world than a person choosing to do something to themselves.

      The reasons that most drugs are illegal in Canada still perplexes me to this day. Most of it was established to prevent the workforce from "damaging" itself without knowing it was doing so. Overall, the long term effect of some drugs CAN affect some peoples ability to perform at a function.

      Even strange seemingly unrelated laws like possessing child pornography follow this same rule. It damages the "reputation" of an individual, preventing them from maintaining employment, lowering the value of our dollar in the eyes of the world.

      Oh the joy of global economics.

    9. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by sjames · · Score: 1

      Actually, there's way too many reasons something could be in your car without your knowledge. This would include having given someone a ride, having the car detailed, serviced, etc, ever having the door unlocked while you're not there (such as in your driveway), etc. It could even extend to not personally detailing the car. It could have been there since the car was MADE depending on where it was.

      It's even questionable if your fingerprints are found ON THE BAG. For example, perhaps you picked it up and threw it at a friend telling him to never bring that shit into your car again (but obviously he ignored you).

      Naturally, prosecutors don't want possession to have to be willful, but it's the only way to avoid convicting innocents.

      Of course, we COULD make possession laws absolute, but that would technically mean anyone connected with an arrest should also be tried since whatever the contraband was, it was at some time in their possession and in their haste to be more zero tolerant than the next guy, our legislators frequently forget to enumerate any exceptions.

    10. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by pdabbadabba · · Score: 1

      This is not actually true. Canada and the U.S. (like most/all other British common law countries) actually do have the same common law mens rea requirements for conviction of most crimes. State laws, of course, can vary in a multitude of ways but take, for example, the Model Penal Code's treatment of possession (adopted in many states):

      Possession is an act, within the meaning of this Section, if the possessor knowingly procured or received the thing possessed or was aware of his control thereof for a sufficient period to have been able to terminate his possession.

      In an MPC state, therefore, there would have to be evidence presented that you knew that the drugs were there in order to be convicted in the scenario you lay out. Of course, that doesn't always stop an overzealous cop from arresting you under those circumstances, but that is not so much a commentary on the content of our laws as on the training of our police force.

    11. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      Can you explain any legitimate accidental reason whatsoever that there would be drugs or illegal weapons in the premises of your vehicle?

      • A policeman planted them
      • A former passenger forgot them in the glove compartment
      • Another driver in front of you (or on a bridge) threw a baggie out of his window, and as good luck would have it, it landed in your car via the sunroof
      • Alternatively, the baggy landed on the street, burst, and some of the powder stuck to your tyres.
      • You had bought the car off a police auction of seized property, and some well hidden ware has been left from previous owner
      • That water bottle you keep with you has last been refilled in a city with poor water treatment, and where traces from the piss of drug users are still left
      • Those bills in your wallet have at some point in time been handled by cocain dealers, who left trace amounts on them
    12. Re:Curious to how this relates to the US. by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Sorry.. let me revise my statement:

      Can you explain any plausible legitimate accidental reason whatsoever that there would be drugs or illegal weapons in the premises of your vehicle?

      All of those bullet points of yours are extremely unlikely situations, and it makes sense that you would be expected to provide extraordinary evidence for your extraordinary explanations.

      • Policemen can plant anything, including porn, or murder evidence. You will have to prove they did that, in that case.
      • What you allow passengers to bring into your car is your responsibility. If they left something in the glove box, that's your responsibility, and you possess it.
      • Don't leave your sunroof open. The chance of that happening is less than 1%.
      • You are probably not going to be charged with possession over some small amount of drug residue detected on your tire, again the chance of that happening to the average person is much less than 1%, more like winning lottery ticket odds.
      • No comment.
      • Those bills in your wallet have at some point in time been handled by cocain dealers -- A large portion of the bills in circulation have been handled by illicit dealers. I've yet to hear of anyone charged with a crime because they were in possession of a dollar bill with some miniscule trace evidence of the bill being exposed to drug material in the past
  8. Solution for CP lovers by Dr_Banzai · · Score: 1, Funny

    1. Set cache size to 100 GB.
    2. "accidentally" browse CP
    3. ??
    4. Profit!!

    1. Re:Solution for CP lovers by ddxexex · · Score: 2, Insightful

      FTFS: . While the cached file might be in a "place" over which the computer user has control, in order to establish possession, it is necessary to satisfy mens rea or fault requirements as well. Thus, it must be shown that the file was knowingly stored and retained through the cache.'"

      No jury/judge will see it as accidently having muliple CP images. So that's 4. Jail Time!

    2. Re:Solution for CP lovers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Child Pr0n viewers prefer Windows 7 to Vista. (No UAC to interrupt... things)

      I think IE9 defaults to about 100GB for caching anyhow, so you're in luck.

      "Goddamit, GO AWAY clippy I'm BUSY!"

    3. Re:Solution for CP lovers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, *accessing* child porn is also illegal in Canada. It seems like if the warrant in this case had been to look for evidence of accessing porn, the accused could have been sentenced for something. But I Am Not A Lawyer.

    4. Re:Solution for CP lovers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It is better to risk saving a guilty person than to condemn an innocent one" - Voltaire.

      A sentiment I wholly agree with. What if you're an innocent ole' 4chan troll, and some nerd-squad or whatever life failure for whatever reason is browsing your cache. ? You're not a pedobear, you're just a troll who happens upon CP from tiem to tiem.

      Not that any of the fine upstanding purveyors of this website would be caught dead placing their computer in the hands of incompetence to begin with.... But I think you see my point.

    5. Re:Solution for CP lovers by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      "Hi, you look like you're trying to download illegal pornography. Would you like to use a template?"

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    6. Re:Solution for CP lovers by Iyonesco · · Score: 1

      "it is necessary to satisfy mens rea"

      The discussion is about child porn not gay porn.

    7. Re:Solution for CP lovers by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      You made a good point.

      I’ve though about this quite some time. And the core problem of all of this, is the intent.
      Or rather that we can’t find out your intent.

      If we knew the intent, we could put someone who is trying your scheme, into jail. But not someone who really accidentally landed on such a site. (E.g. a Goatse-like CP link going trough a URL shortener.)
      This is a giant problem. Which results in the self-contradiction of:
      1. Innocent until proven guilty. (= In case of unknown intention, you are not guilty.)
      2. Ignorance is no protection against punishment. (= In case of unknown intention, you are guilty.)

      I think (2) is morally wrong, because in the cane that the intention really is not known, one should never assume evil intentions. Ever.
      That’s what proof is for! Proof of intention.
      For example:
      A) Someone downloads CP. He jacks off to it, and gets caught in mid-action. -> Guilty!
      B) Someone downloads CP. He tries to analyze the images to see if he can find clues on how to catch the guy. Later, someone finds the images on his computer. -> NOT guilty! Even if the intention was not known. Even if his intention was bad, but not known.

      A fair society demands the rules to be like this. Or else everybody can just shove CP on your computer when you don’t look, and then throw you in jail for it.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  9. Your Honor by future+assassin · · Score: 0, Troll

    that oz of weed in my hand was just a cache copy which I used to smell and preview the item. It wasn't actually planning on buying it until I knew how good the quality was. Since the quality of the cannabis was sub par I was about to dump my cache on the ground and move on.

    --
    by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
    1. Re:Your Honor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In Canada, having marijuana in your possession is not necessarily illegal. Dumping it on the ground however could be littering...

  10. Would you like to store your web page so it may... by JDmetro · · Score: 0

    be accessed faster in the future?
    I may not have it worded exactly...but I if recall doesn't Explorer ask that first time you start it? (been years since I used Windows)

  11. Re:This is total horseshit by wshs · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What makes you so sure he wasn't a victim of spam or the like? In the US, you have to show that the person knowingly and willingly sought out to download the images. If there's just 3, that's gonna be impossible to prove. If there's half a billion, then intent is easy to show. This was recently changed because people were spamming the hell out of other people with sick porn to try and get them in trouble. Distribution, on the other hand, ignores intent completely.

  12. Child porn laws are out of control. by MikeFM · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think they should stop wasting resources hunting pervs that look at the stuff and spend time hunting the predators that actually produce the stuff. It gets especially silly when they want to arrest someone for looking at cartoon porn - who is the victim? Or my biggest gripes is that they are harassing kids for taking pictures of themselves and sharing them. So they are self-victimizing and we need to give them a felony and register them as a sex offender instead of just telling their parents? I had a girlfriend when I was a teenager and we did more than hold hands and *gasp* there were provocative photos sometimes. Guess I'd better turn myself in.

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    1. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by ScottCooperDotNet · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Child porn is the root password to the Constitution.

    2. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      "stop wasting resources hunting pervs that look at the stuff and spend time hunting the predators that actually produce the stuff."

      I fully agree. I mean, even if the perv has thousands of images and hundreds of videos, he's not actually touched one single child while collecting them.

      In my post above, I mentioned the dark net. The predators are proud of their "work". You get full facial views of the predators enjoying their sport. How hard can it be for the police forces to combine their intelligence, and match the face to somoene? Often enough, tatoos and other marks make the job easier.

      So, yeah, go after the predators FIRST, at least.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    3. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by sam0737 · · Score: 1

      It gets especially silly when they want to arrest someone for looking at cartoon porn - who is the victim?

      MAFIAA of course. They would surely claims the rights of the usage of Bart Simpson, with clothes or without.

    4. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by SpeedyDX · · Score: 1

      In this particular case, if you RTFA (yeah, yeah, you must be new here, etc.), you will notice that the Morelli, the accused, was also suspected of creating child porn with his 3 yo daughter.

    5. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Golddess · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Nah, "think of the children" is.

      You can do anything as long as you're doing it "for the children". Going after child porn is simply one specific example.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    6. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Golddess · · Score: 1

      And when it is a character of my own creation?

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    7. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by MikeFM · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Then they should bust him on that. Being guilty of one thing and busted for another is a bad practice too I think.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    8. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      Child porn is the root password to the Constitution.

      Nah, "think of the children" is.

      I thought child pornography viewers were already thinking of the children?

    9. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by krazytekn0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Problem is that most issues of this nature just beg to escalate. Today's "oops" is tomorrow's "well I'll just look at it one more time" and in 20 years or so it's "Why not take pictures of my kids masturbating?" Some people are just not wired right and deviant behaviors escalate over time. Based on firsthand knowledge I can say that it is very likely that someone stumbling across a few CP photos on a computer could easily lead to that computer being found to contain evidence of the owner producing CP.

      --
      Not all life is cyber. Extra Income
    10. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by davidwr · · Score: 2, Funny

      You get full facial views of the predators enjoying their sport.

      I won't ask how you know this. For the sake of argument, I'll assume you heard it at an police training seminar or something.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    11. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by mikael · · Score: 1

      The people purchasing the child porn with their credit cards or online services are the ones encouraging the predators to produce the stuff.

      The moral issue over kids send photographs to each other is that they are doing because they believe it is the only way to make friends and start relationships.

      Do you send such pictures to potential employers or customers when you are looking for a new job?

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    12. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lots of Law & Order: SVU. It's a documentary, really. All children under the USA age-of-consent threshold are sad and always frown whenever those dirty, dirty men photograph them.

    13. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Problem is that most issues of this nature just beg to escalate. ... Based on firsthand knowledge I can say that it is very likely that someone stumbling across a few CP photos on a computer could easily lead to that computer being found to contain evidence of the owner producing CP.

      You have evidence for these claims, right? Please feel free to post/link it.

    14. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Do you send such pictures to potential employers or customers when you are looking for a new job?

      How is this relevant? Can you point me to where teenagers are doing this?

      As for what they're actually doing - yes, I have exchanged sexual photos with people I've been involved with. Doesn't surprise me to see teenagers doing this too.

    15. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      I don't think they found any evidence that he'd created illegal images of his daughter, even after they seized his computer.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    16. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by mikael · · Score: 1

      Teenagers have probably been sending pictures for the past ten years. Maybe about a decade ago, there was a late-night documentary about magazine photographers. One photographer said "Hey, anyone can be a photographer, just get an old camera, you don't need any film in it, and just pretend to take pictures. Have some fun.". Next thing, there is a news report about a pair of teenagers who had done just that. But they had failed to check to see if there was any film in the camera, and when they sent the film reel to be developed, they were both in deep trouble. After that, sales of digital camera rocketed, and sales of traditional film cameras tanked.

      I've read about the more recent news stories about teenagers sending pictures to each other, and it does seem incredible that we put the technology into small mobile phones without ever thinking of the consequences - that users are going to taking pictures of everything and anything, and sending them to each other, not understanding that it breaks some law (or a whole bunch of laws that normally would only apply to expensive photography equipment).

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    17. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by skine · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Holy "Slippery Slope" Batman!

      Just like how stepping on a grape in a grocery store turns into stealing bunches of grapes at a time, which turns into robbing the store a gunpoint.

      Honestly, I'm just glad you restrained from claiming that raping babies was the next logical step.

    18. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like child porn for the children. I'm 15 and I'd love some 15-on-15 porn, or even just pictures. And for some reason (cultural) it disturbs me to know that older men will look at that porn too :(

    19. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by davidwr · · Score: 1

      But they had failed to check to see if there was any film in the camera, and when they sent the film reel to be developed, they were both in deep trouble. After that, sales of digital camera rocketed, and sales of traditional film cameras tanked.

      Are you implying what it looks like you are implying?

      On an unrelated (?) note, back in the '60s I bet high school students fortunate enough to have computer access over teletype found some way to have ASCII-porn. I also bet they got into trouble for it when they were caught. I very much doubt they were criminally prosecuted.

      --
      Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    20. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by mikael · · Score: 1

      Are you implying what it looks like you are implying?

      The story made it to evening news (CNN, NBC, ABC). It was the film processing technician who reported the pictures to the authorities. Once customers realized that their family photographs weren't just being processed automatically from reel to picture envelope, but that a third party would be making moral judgements on what they considered wrong, then I'd imagine they might want to cut that person out of the loop. There were other stories about parents getting into trouble for taking bath-time pictures. At the same time, digital cameras were coming down in price ($200 - $500), which also happened to eliminate the cost of film processing.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    21. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by jesset77 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, just to clarify, you are saying that — based on firsthand knowledge — any firsthand knowledge you have guarantees you will become a predator?

      Excuse me just a moment, I have to look up the number for "America's Dumbest Criminals" xD

      --
      People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.
    22. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, of course not; raping babies is an implicit step between viewing it and taking photos of your kids masturbating.

      Two reasons:
      Cameras cost money, rape is free!
      Babies are too young to masturbate, duh! They'll learn that when they're a little older.

    23. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

      I stated quite bluntly in the multiple posts I've made in this thread: The CP was there, in front of me, and I looked to see what people were up in arms about. Try to keep up, huh? An educated voter is a desirable thing, no?

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    24. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      and it does seem incredible that we put the technology into small mobile phones without ever thinking of the consequences

      I'd look at it the other way - I don't think there is anything unethical in terms of consequences of people taking photos of themselves. What's incredible is that people support laws, without realising of the consequences in a world where cameras are so commonly available and used these days, including among teenagers. The problem is the laws, not the technology.

      I suspect there is a digital divide. For older people, the whole idea of filming or photographic yourself sexually just seems bizarre. Digital cameras are relatively recent, and many people would have been sexually active during a time when video cameras weren't available (or affordable). When criticising the UK's "extreme" porn law, which criminalises images of consenting adults, one of the attitudes I came across from supporters of the law, when I raised the issue of people taking private photos of their own acts, was "Why would you want to do that?"

      Yet now we don't just have digital cameras, we have mobile phones which make cameras ubiquitous - it's one thing to say let's get the camera, but a phone camera is just there. Of course teenagers are going to be using them sexually, and that's going to stay as they become older - who knows, perhaps in a few decades' time, we might at least get more sensible views of censorship and laws that criminalise possession?

    25. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by shentino · · Score: 1

      Indeed, since getting busted for the wrong offense, though it may be good karma, doesn't stop them from double dipping by turning right around and re-busting you on the right offense anyway.

    26. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

      Police like to go against the low-hanging fruit. (Puns intended)

    27. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      And it creates a lot of dubious laws that impact the rest of us. Because some perv rapes little girls they make it a crime to look at pictures of naked children. Next thing we know we're worried about if seeing an anime show is considered child porn. Or what if I take a photo of my child in the bath? Is that child porn? What if I'm 18 and marry my 16 yo sweetheart, with her parents permission, and we take a photo on our wedding night?

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    28. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      There is a right to create spoofs. So it probably doesn't count despite that being one of the lies constantly used to keep Steamboat Willie from ever coming out of copyright.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    29. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      I don't know if I buy that. I always hear that looking at porn of any kind makes men cheat on their wives, rape every girl they meet, and masturbate six times a day. I'd guess that the majority of men have looked at porn at some point and very few of them have became sex maniacs. If anything I'd say that limited access to porn keeps them from becoming sex maniacs. If I'm into bondage porn it doesn't mean that in twenty years I'll have women chained in my basement.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    30. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suspect you could frequent most any "barely legal teens" site and be unable to tell the difference at least half the time. From what little I've seen, if it weren't for the 2257 notice, one could easily believe some of the models are < 18.

      - T

    31. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it's not so much digital divide as "prudish divide". Kids I knew were circulating underage nude pics taken on Polaroid cameras back when I was a kid. Sure the tech wasn't as prevalent (or as cheap) as today's digital cameras and camera cell phones, but kids now are not much different than when I was that young.

      Back then, we'd have been beaten to within an inch of our lives by our parents if we had been caught. Today, we would be prosecuted and put on "the list".

      - T

    32. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by krazytekn0 · · Score: 1

      The problem is that the evidence for these claims is part of an investigation that I became involved in (on the police side to clarify) and as such is not releasable by myself. Though some hardcore research and public records requests in your own area will probably yield the same information. The way the particular case I'm talking about started was a wife coming in with a CD saying "there are pictures on here that are of children doing explicit things, this belongs to my husband and I'm concerned about my own children." or something to that effect. Which led to the seizure of his equipment and discovery of very very distasteful information.

      --
      Not all life is cyber. Extra Income
    33. Re:Child porn laws are out of control. by krazytekn0 · · Score: 1

      I happen to work in law enforcement. That's what I mean by firsthand knowledge.

      --
      Not all life is cyber. Extra Income
  13. "Making" in the UK, not cache-ing by GuyFawkes · · Score: 1

    Sounds a lot worse as a charge...

    "Yes M'lud, Mr Taco is charged with making these images"

    sounds a lot worse than

    "Yes M'lud, Mr Taco is charged with owning a computer running Microsoft Windows 98 and Internet Explorer 5, which, when Mr Taco visited the website in question, caused cached copies of the images in question to be stored temporarily on the hard disk, in an area of files not used or accessed directly by Mr Taco, but by the Microsoft products aforementioned"

    The latter is also sounding a lot weaker if you're trying to sell yourself as tough of peedos, anything for the childruuun, vote for meeeee!

    --
    http://slashdot.org/~GuyFawkes/journal
    1. Re:"Making" in the UK, not cache-ing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "files not used or accessed directly by Mr Taco, but by the Microsoft products aforementioned"

      A-ha! There! I knew Microsoft was somehow to blame!

    2. Re:"Making" in the UK, not cache-ing by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Mr Taco is charged with owning a computer running Microsoft Windows 98 and Internet Explorer 5

      This is a serious crime but, thankfully, it is its own punishment.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  14. Re:This is total horseshit by GuyFawkes · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, you are basically stating for the public record that YOU PERSONALLY ACCEPT TOTAL RESPONSIBILITY for every last byte of data stored on your computers...

    I hope your computer are stocked in a vault to which only you have physical access, and which is blocked from the net, and which doesn't have any mains power.

    After all, you just stated you believe it is an absolute offence with no possible or acceptable defence.

    Good of you to volunteer me for the same bullshit without first asking me though.

    --
    http://slashdot.org/~GuyFawkes/journal
  15. Is this kind of browsing routine? by HangingChad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I was wondering if the service personnel browsing dude's computer was routine? I've fixed a lot of PC's without rifling through the users cache and image files, other than if they were infected with a virus. Even backing up user profiles and data, I could tell you which files were infected but not what they were doing with their computer.

    Just wondering why the technician was going through all that stuff? Seems like service people are being a lot more thorough than is required to get the computer working again.

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
    1. Re:Is this kind of browsing routine? by JDmetro · · Score: 0

      I had to fix a friends computer the other day and all of his problems were directly related to the cache.
      Like the random gay fetish porn that would pop up on his desktop.
      The point is if he never went to the gay fetish site he never would have downloaded their movie player and got a virus.
      Then I would have never known (or his family wife and kids were kind of shocked) he liked gay fetish porn.
      I nailed down the virus by him telling me when the problem first occured (8:45 pm sunday) and then looking for files modified at that time. Which lead me to the cache.
      Now can you honestly say he didn't possess gay fetish porn? He went to the site and downloaded to player and by browsing to site collected many images in his cache.
      He's probably innocent of browsing gay porn right?

    2. Re:Is this kind of browsing routine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was wondering if the service personnel browsing dude's computer was routine? Seems like service people are being a lot more thorough than is required to get the computer working again.

      Read some old news about it: sky news

    3. Re:Is this kind of browsing routine? by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      Maybe it was actually his wife and she just likes to see twice as many dicks in her porn.

    4. Re:Is this kind of browsing routine? by MMInterface · · Score: 2, Informative

      I can't say he did or he didn't. The stuff you mentioned doesn't say much. You can go to a straight porn website and get malware that serves gay porn popups etc. In fact plenty of straight porn sites have ads, links or redirects that will send plently of gay porn your way if you aren't protected and have bad browsing habits. Also bombarding someones computer with gay porn popups and viruses is one of the oldest gags in the book. Even the movie player can be installed without his knowledge or from an entirely different category of porn. Point being the type of content that his computer was infected with isn't necessarily going to match the content he was browsing. Anyways, I'm sure you had some better evidence to come to this conclusion but you haven't presented it.

    5. Re:Is this kind of browsing routine? by FlyMysticalDJ · · Score: 1

      Or maybe he was browsing straight porn and accidentally opened one site for gay porn, which popped up a box asking you to install their movie player, and happened to press space or enter right as the window popped open and stole focus. Even if he had to do more to complete the process, I know plenty of people that use computers that when they see a random window will just agree to anything it says to get it to go away. Not a smart choice, but it's just a thought.

    6. Re:Is this kind of browsing routine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I always rifle through peoples computers and always keep the pics of their girlfriends here at BestBuy :) the younger the better. I love the underage nudes best. 3 child porn

    7. Re:Is this kind of browsing routine? by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      Sky News did an undercover investigation of computer repairers in England, and found that all but one of them browsed through the photo collection, and some of them even tried to log in with the fake Natwest Bank login details left on a word file on the disk.

    8. Re:Is this kind of browsing routine? by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Just wondering why the technician was going through all that stuff? Seems like service people are being a lot more thorough than is required to get the computer working again.

      Well, actually it’s an illegal privacy violation. Like your cleaner going trough your drawers, looking for private stuff.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    9. Re:Is this kind of browsing routine? by seeker_1us · · Score: 1

      I read the articles. The technician saw a porn image, not kiddie porn, open on the computer. The technician saw a couple of bookmarks with the word "lolita" in them. I don't know why he was looking through the guy's bookmarks.

  16. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I was with you until

    prepare to be on the receiving end of one of the prison's Rectal Olympics games.

    What is it with Americans being so gleeful about prison rape? It's barbaric.

  17. progress by TheSHAD0W · · Score: 1

    The only problem with this ruling is that, after a few incidents like this one occur, there will be a hew and outcry, and harsher and more encompassing laws passed, which will inevitably result in more arrests and convictions of people who oughtn't be bothered.

    1. Re:progress by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Gasp! Are you saying we shouldn't imprison anyone even for a moment passes a thought we disagree with? Heavens! We must punish swiftly and severely for even the most trifling victimless offense so no one anywhere will be tempted to transgress, regardless of whether they hurt anyone or not. Summary punishment is too important to reserve only for the people who actually hurt people.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
  18. You hit the nail on the head by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Too often we use the term "he got off" when we should really be saying "the police are incompetent".

    --

    I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    1. Re:You hit the nail on the head by dissy · · Score: 1

      Too often we use the term "he got off" when we should really be saying "the police are incompetent".

      Especially so in child porn related cases...

    2. Re:You hit the nail on the head by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm confused. Regarding The Police, I'm no fan of New Wave in general and creepy-stalker songs in particular, but I wouldn't go as far as incompetence.

      And in my understanding, it's pretty clear that he did indeed get off, regardless of whether any of the porn involved was actually illegal and/or "possessed" vs. accessed by him.

  19. Re:This is total horseshit by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This kind of crap would not fly in the United States. The computer user might not have knowingly possessed the images through his computer's browser cache, but I am sure he knowingly viewed the images through his browser.

    But the law specifically says you cannot possess such material. It does not state that you cannot *view* the images. Which means that while the cache constitutes likely proof to show that he did view it -- that is not a criminal act. The distinction you're trying to erase is exactly the one that prevented him from being convicted.

  20. Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unless the guy is accused of making the pictures, distributing the pictures, or paying for the pictures, who exactly is the US helping by putting this person in jail?

    1. Re:Really? by Vhyrrimyr · · Score: 1

      who exactly is Canada helping by putting this person in jail?

      FTFY.

  21. child porn seizure by krapski · · Score: 1

    that's a good decision, possession of child porn is not a good enough reason to seize a computer, because we all know the true motives of laws enabling arbitrary seizures

    1. Re:child porn seizure by Montezumaa · · Score: 0

      It is an excellent reason to seize a computer. If someone is dealing/purchasing drugs in their vehicle or house, those items can and will be seized. Deal in child pornography(regardless of whether or not you are obtaining it for yourself or peddling the disgusting smut) will net the same effect.

      If you do not like that fact, then do not commit the crime. It cannot be any simpler.

    2. Re:child porn seizure by krapski · · Score: 1

      laws are meant to be broken, and crimes are a means to do so. luckily there exists something called encryption, which makes it practically impossible to execute the kinds of actions you speak of

    3. Re:child porn seizure by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      So they should seize the images then. What's that got to do with the computer? Dealing in and purchasing computers isn't illegal.

  22. Re:This is total horseshit by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let's see.... based on the description, it is possible that the guy was into child-porn. However, what bugs me is that the evidence that was described to get the search warrant was this:
    - a web cam pointed at an area where a three-year old plays, and plugged into a vcr
    - a list of links in the taskbar, where it is unclear whether the technician actually followed them to identify them as adult and child porn. Or where they labeled "adult porn" and "child porn"? The article is unclear here.

    And... that's about it. At no time did the technician actually see child porn on the computer. At no time did he see any abuse, or even signs that abuse has happened. So really, the warrant was based on the idea that pointing a web cam at your kid can only happen for the reason of producing child porn, and that the names of certain websites indicate the content of their images. That's bullshit. The first one is more likely due to parents wanting to have memories of their kids, and the second.... well, the odds that every girl on a pornsite that just happened to turn 18 is actually 18 are damn near zero. I'd say naming conventions for porn sites don't exactly hold up to scrutiny.

    I'm assuming here that the conviction happened because the warrant actually turned up child pornography. What pisses me off though is that the warrant itself was bogus, and and now Mr kiddyporn is going free on a technicality.

    However, I'd like to remind everyone that technicalities are there to protect everyone of us from idiots in power. What happened was exactly what was supposed to have happened. I just hope that the police now do it right and get him again... because he is likely to slip up again.

    --
    Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  23. Re:This is total horseshit by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 4, Informative

    Maybe he didn't. A number of browsers nowadays have a prefetch feature: they'll follow any links on a page and fetch the pages those links point to, to help speed things up when (or if) the user clicks on those links. That results in data in the cache for pages the user never visited.

  24. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    I have no sympathy for disgusting piece of shit that get off on child pornography.

    I have no sympathy for disgusting "i have no sympathy".

    Hey, dumbass: you forgot that in order to put someone to jail you have to prove someone's guilt. Not to prove that he might be guilty.

  25. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    It's a Republican thing. Most Republicans are closet gays, and basically spend their days dreaming of getting reamed up the ass by fat hairy men. Rather than admit their true queer feelings, they end up feeling very guilty for some reason. It's probably because their closet-gay priests (who like to diddle children) scream repeatedly about how "horrid" homosexuality supposedly is.

    Anyway, being socially unable to be openly homosexual, these Republicans push hard for lengthy jail terms for minor "crimes", ensuring years and years of sodomy. Then they secretly hope that some day they'll be caught, and get to live their lifelong fantasy of near-constant bumsex and anal rape.

  26. Re:This is total horseshit by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

    Now CP peddlers know to store their collections on your computer because you'll take the blame.

  27. I'd Go Further by jmanners · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Yes, absolutely. The disgraceful tenor of some of the comments here is repulsive. Everyone who advocates child porn here is SICK. And their IP addresses should be forwarded to approriate Law Enforcement.

    1. Re:I'd Go Further by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd go further yet again. Anyone who even mentions child pornography should be locked up immediately for an indeterminate amount of time before having their wang cut off and beaten to de

    2. Re:I'd Go Further by mrsteveman1 · · Score: 4, Funny

      We ought to just lock up anyone who looks at a child anywhere at any time, who knows what they're thinking when they see that child?

      And apparently some people even MAKE THEIR OWN children, we need to put a stop to this immediately.

    3. Re:I'd Go Further by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd take it to the next level. Anyone who THINKS the words child and pornography in the same sentence should be killed along with everyone in their family and everyone they have ever known.

    4. Re:I'd Go Further by easyTree · · Score: 1

      I'd go further yet again. Anyone who even mentions child pornography should be locked up immediately for an indeterminate amount of time before having their wang cut off and beaten to de

      Agreed. Please log-in and reply with your name and postal address so that I may notify the appropriate authorities...

    5. Re:I'd Go Further by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He has already be killed, notice the incomplete final word "de" it should be "death."

    6. Re:I'd Go Further by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And to take that even further, every mother is guilty of incest, as they had their child inside their vagina!

  28. Say What? by bmo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    mens rea

    What? What the fuck kind of barbarian country is Canada where mens rea is still alive and kicking? Here, in the Civilized United States of America Incorporated, mens rea was abolished in the Nixonian War On Drugs.

    That's it. We're invading next Thursday to stop this Godlessness.

    --
    BMO

    1. Re:Say What? by Smauler · · Score: 1

      Just to let you know, in the US mens rea is the difference between voluntary manslaughter and murder. Just because they don't actively call is such does not mean it does not exist.

    2. Re:Say What? by bmo · · Score: 1

      My point was with many current US laws and zero tolerance bullshit, mens rea doesn't matter. Simply having x or doing x means you are guilty whether you intended to break the law or not.

      In the meantime, we've filled up the prisons and have 1 in 31 adults either in jail or on probation.

      --
      BMO

    3. Re:Say What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're invading next Thursday to stop this Godlessness.

      The last dust-up between Canada (a British colony at the time and probably called British North America) and United States of America ended with BNA burning down the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S.A. Are you itching for a repeat performance?

    4. Re:Say What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The last dust-up between Canada (a British colony at the time and probably called British North America) and United States of America ended with BNA burning down the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S.A. Are you itching for a repeat performance?

      Would you mind terribly? Perhaps we could get you to burn down the Capitol while you're at it? That's a good chap. Can I get you some tea?

    5. Re:Say What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mens rea

      What? What the fuck kind of barbarian country is Canada where mens rea is still alive and kicking? Here, in the Civilized United States of America Incorporated, mens rea was abolished in the Nixonian War On Drugs.

      That's it. We're invading next Thursday to stop this Godlessness.

      --
      BMO

      ermm...you tried that once before, it didnt work out so well, and in fact we got pissed enough to burn down your White House.

      Seriously though, thanks for the Kudos.

    6. Re:Say What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well as you point out that was between the british and the us, and it was many years ago. We have forsaken our education, judicial system, hell entire political system to funneling more money into private corporations and into the military. Our military could without a doubt whup canadas military. While im not suggesting we do so, im just saying we could

  29. offtopic - sig by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    Why does your sig go to one of the low-end placeholder websites?

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  30. Re:This is total horseshit by aoeuid · · Score: 1

    But the law specifically says you cannot possess such material. It does not state that you cannot *view* the images. Which means that while the cache constitutes likely proof to show that he did view it -- that is not a criminal act. The distinction you're trying to erase is exactly the one that prevented him from being convicted.

    In the link to the decision you can see in the second paragraph that the Criminal Code of Canada apparently does make this distinction. There are two charges: Possession of Child Pornography, and Accessing Child Pornography. This guy was charged with possession, not accessing. If the charge had been made under s. 163.1(4.1) (accessing) rather than s. 163.1(4) (possessing), the outcome likely would have been different. The cops screwed up, it's as simple as that.

  31. Ridiculous decision by d_jedi · · Score: 1

    Did anyone commenting here actually read TFA (specifically, the court ruling)?
    The reasoning for why the conviction was quashed had absolutely nothing to do with cached images. It was quashed because the police were ruled to have conducted an illegal (as per the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms) search, despite having a search warrant to search for possession of child pornography.

    Essentially, this is what happened:
    1) Technician shows up to install an Internet connection on accused computer.
    2) Technician notices probable child porn links in IE favourites (along with other legal porn links), and sees (legal) porn image, either on browser homepage or desktop. Technician also notices webcam hooked up to VCR (turned off at the time) directed at accused's 3 year old child.
    3) Technician returns next day to finish work, and finds computer had been formatted.
    4) Technician reports to social worker about possible child abuse. Social worker in turn informs RCMP.
    5) Police obtain search warrant based on technician's observations.
    6) (Four months after technician's initial visit) Police search accused's home, and find child pornography.

    The court essentially ruled that the technician's observations did not legally justify a search. And I find this patently ridiculous.

    --
    I am the maverick of Slashdot
    1. Re:Ridiculous decision by BitterOak · · Score: 1

      The court essentially ruled that the technician's observations did not legally justify a search. And I find this patently ridiculous.

      Why?

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    2. Re:Ridiculous decision by jmanners · · Score: 0

      I totally agree with you there. It appears that many people here have not bothered to acquaint themselves with the basics of the case and its appellate stages. The Supreme Court case was adjudicated on a technicality over the original search warrant. The original trial had real physical child porn evidence. The idea that the poor chap might have been the victim of spam, or over-zealous police, or browser pre-caching policies is total garbage. The guy is a TOTAL sicko, and so are those people here who think he should be allowed to continue his sick hobby. I am not getting into any debates about victimless crime or purchasing apples at a market or using dollars that may have once been stolen in a bank robbery. These ridiculous notions have been firmly rejected in every civilised country.

    3. Re:Ridiculous decision by SpeedyDX · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You're right and wrong. The question of whether or not he possessed child porn really had little to do with the decision. HOWEVER, the Court did write exactly what the summary quoted. So it will serve as legal precedent.

      The reason why he was acquitted is because the search warrant itself was quashed. An invalid search warrant means that the subsequent search is illegal. So while you're right that the police had a search warrant, it was improperly obtained and thus rendered invalid. You made it sound like they had a valid search warrant, which is false. To issue a search warrant, police need to provide reasonable grounds to a judge as to why the search warrant is necessary or, you might be able to see this coming, warranted. This is to protect Charter rights.

      The Court found that the police did NOT have reasonable grounds, and that an objective reasonable person would only have a mere suspicion that he might be creating/consuming child porn. Suspicion is NOT enough to issue a search warrant. Furthermore, it wasn't the fault of the issuing judge that the search warrant was issued. The police used misleading language and omitted important exculpatory information in their Information To Obtain (ITO, basically a warrant application). If the police had not been misleading in their ITO, the judge probably would not have issued a search warrant.

      You've conveniently included some of the deceptive claims made by the police. The Court found that the following information was pertinent and exculpatory, and, taken with the situation as a whole, would serve to more than mitigate any reasons to suspect the man:
      1) The technician did not find probable child porn links. He found links that were entitled "lolita". If you've ever seen porn, you know that the term "lolita" is used in PLENTY of legal porn productions. These are POSSIBLE child porn links, at best.
      2) The child showed NO signs of abuse, trauma, or anything other such signs of harm. The child was fully clothed and playing with her toys.
      3) The mother was also in the house.
      4) From the fact that the webcam was pointed at his daughter, you CANNOT then conclude that he might be making child porn. That would make it so that every person who has a video camera and likes to take home videos of their children child porn suspects. This is ludicrous.
      5) The technician saw legal porn. But legal porn is legal, and from Morelli's consumption of legal porn, you can't suddenly conclude that he likes illegal porn. Logically questionable, at best.

      The Court found that all of the above created a situation where you may, kind of, sort of, suspect child porn production. But that would involve an AWFUL LOT of speculation. Search warrants, again, cannot be issued on the basis of suspicion or speculation, but rather reasonable grounds. Since there are no reasonable grounds to issue a search warrant and the issuing judge was misled by the police, the original search warrant was invalidated. This means that the subsequent search and all the evidence obtained cannot be introduced in the Court. Without any evidence from the search, the charges do not hold. Morelli acquitted.

    4. Re:Ridiculous decision by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      The shitty warrant wasn't just a "technicality". That warrant wasn't worth wiping your ass with, let alone justifying a search and seizure. Go back and read the decision, it's pretty clear. Letting police into your home with worthless warrants makes your country essentially a police state. We haven't quite sunk that low here in Canada, and I'm thankful for that.

      Besides, even though the guy "got off", his life is ruined anyway. Nobody is going to forget him, and the cops will be all over him like white on rice.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    5. Re:Ridiculous decision by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the original search warrant was invalidated. This means that the subsequent search and all the evidence obtained cannot be introduced in the Court.

      But ALL evidence is valid on slashdot, so did they actually find anything? From what I've read, the answer is no - they didn't even have to throw anything out, but I'm just curious.

    6. Re:Ridiculous decision by Kjella · · Score: 1

      What's creepy to me is the number of people that think "hey, it turned out he's actually guilty so that's great". The court could not possibly know this when issuing the warrant, which means that you really want to remove the right altogether.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    7. Re:Ridiculous decision by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      The guy is a TOTAL sicko, and so are those people here who think he should be allowed to continue his sick hobby.

      What exactly are you trying to do here?

    8. Re:Ridiculous decision by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      We haven't quite sunk that low here in Canada, and I'm thankful for that.

      I know a case of a German tourist who was imprisoned for almost three months. His crime?

      Accusing a Rotary Club operated shelter house of throwing away bread...

      Fortunately, his tourist visa eventually expired, so they had to set him free in order to send him back to Germany.

      Yes, your charter may protect you if you are a Canadian national, with people around you who care and know your planned whereabouts, and who will call lawyers and the press if anything is amiss.

      But if you are a backpacking tourist, better not cross the all-mighty Rotary Club, even over ridiculously trivial matters.

    9. Re:Ridiculous decision by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      1) The technician did not find probable child porn links. He found links that were entitled "lolita". If you've ever seen porn, you know that the term "lolita" is used in PLENTY of legal porn productions. These are POSSIBLE child porn links, at best.

      True enough. The word "Lolita" is not enough on its own to make a link a child porn link. But maybe the Technician knew what this particular link pointed to, because he already visited it on another occasion. You know, like because he is in the same kind of hobby himself, and so he just recognized that link.

      The court should order on a raid on the technician's house as well, just to be sure.

  32. Justice by gmuslera · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Something is not very right when someone that goes drunk in a highway (and be able to cause the death of a lot of people, in fact, it keeps happening frequently) get a far less punishment (few months of jail and a fine at best?) that someone browsing random internet pages and hitting one with images that could be qualified as child porn (years in jail). In fact, maybe someone that physically attacks and do permanent injuries to someone could get less punishment, maybe just kill is the only crime that gets a worse punishment that anything that could be attached remotely the label of child porn, even if there was no minor involved at all.

  33. What were the links? by phorm · · Score: 1

    I wonder what the "suspicious" links were. If they were in a bunch of other porn, was it something like "Hot teen action" (could still be legal if 18/19), "barely legals", "schoolgirl" porn (which could mean uniforms/dressup, possibly college), small-tit porn, etc..

    If it was saying "underage girlz 11yr old" then it's pretty obvious, but "suspicious" doesn't seem to mean definitely KP.

    Long long ago when I still used windows+IE, I seem to remember various sites which somehow managed to add things to my favs as well, even though I hadn't chosen to do so. So who knows.

    1. Re:What were the links? by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      If it was saying "underage girlz 11yr old" then it's pretty obvious, but "suspicious" doesn't seem to mean definitely KP.

      I remember back when Gnutella was still considered new and cool, a few of us had access to an E1 (2 Mbps) connection and we'd frequently leave a gnutella client running overnight downloading every media file it could find just to see what we'd get, there were plenty of pictures and videos that had names like "daddy rapes 10 year old daughter hot hot hot.gif.bmp.jpg" that were just bog-standard "just 18"/"barely legal" porn. I've also had popup windows on the web (years ago when there weren't all that many competent popup blockers) send me to sites that openly claimed to host illegal stuff yet even a cursory glance showed the same array of 25 to 30-year old women that feature in all "barely legal" porn...

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    2. Re:What were the links? by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      The bookmarks were "Lolita Porn" and "Lolita XXX". It's in the decision.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
    3. Re:What were the links? by phorm · · Score: 1

      Hmm. I believe the book was about a relationship with an underage girl, but the general term refers to a girl who has reached aged of consent very recently, and still appears young. This seems to jive with the definition in wikipedia, so it would seem to be that the term doesn't actually refer to anything illegal.

  34. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you sure? You're basically saying it's legal in the US to surf child porn as long as you don't store it? I'm not really buying that, but hey, you might be right.

  35. This is progress by mysidia · · Score: 1

    Next, can we get courts to consider deleted files, snippets, or unexpected objects in an archive, or on a FTP server, downloaded (but never reviewed) not to be possessed next?

    In particular, if some unknown user uploads an illegal file to a public FTP server's public-writable uploads directory (for whatever reason), and the FTP server operator deletes the file, when another FTP server reports it to them, or when reviewing to move from new uploads dir to a suitable place. The FTP server operator, and the person who reported the incident ought to be indemnified, assuming they either didn't know about, or fully destroyed the object.

    I'd say and they 'reported the incident to authorities', but that is difficult to do, because authorities don't provide a standard online form for uploading suspicious objects and reporting circumstances behind them -----

    also reporting to authorities in itself would seem to be so dangerous to the reporting person legally, since the reporter and possibly other entities did come to handle the illegal file accidentally in that case -- (risk of causing themselves to be severely inconvenienced by being subject to investigation themselves), that they should be held blameless even if they do not report to authorities out of fear.

  36. You guys are idiots. by chaboud · · Score: 1

    I can't believe that this is the kind of activity you advocate. Clearly the legal line on this stuff has been moving the wrong way for a long time, and laws regarding child porn are *way* off the mark.

    Have you even thought about blind people? We should lock up anyone who hears, touches, smells, tastes, or sees children. Don't forget people who say child-like things or try to attract children (ice cream men, for instance). Don't even get me started on five-year-old girls who kiss five-year-old boys. They've clearly demonstrated an affinity for minors.

    Kidding aside, perhaps "taste" is a bit far.

  37. Four Horsemen of the Infocalypse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Child porn is the root password to the Constitution.

    See also:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Horsemen_of_the_Infocalypse

  38. Not a mixed blessing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No the courts acted perfectly in this case and did exactly what they should have.

    I don't care what the crime was, So what what if hes a dirtbag and really is guilty, without the evidence, there is, and should not be a case.

    Using the perceived vileness of a crime to justify legal abuses is unacceptable. Even criminals have rights. Especially criminals. They must apply universally to have any meaning.

    Its an idiotic cycle we've seen played out over the years, politicians target the least popular groups in the society for infringing of rights because nobody will want to defend them, and once we infringe one groups rights its that much easier to spread it to the rest of us.

    So this guy gets to walk, somehow I doubt he'll suddenly pack up his stuff and get an office job, he'll go right back to doing business as soon as the coast is clear, there will be other chances to catch him.

    Call me crazy but I want Justice out of my legal system, not witch hunts. A technician, who told child services, who told the RCMP, he saw suspiciously labeled links on someone favorites is not probable cause for a search warrant. Its just damn pathetic.

  39. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you know why so many black men are in jail? Those Republicans want the cock to be nice and big, so pass laws ensuring a high proportion of black men in jail to spread their flabby republican asscheeks..

  40. Doug Stanhope on MySpace pedophiles by GNUALMAFUERTE · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8APlx9btTn8

    "Child Pornography is the only crime that is illegal to look at"

    "If you are a parent, you probably don't want to hear this but [...] statistically, no one wants to fuck your kid. Now or ever! [...]. You want to think your kid is the reason all those pedophiles are there waiting in position [...] if you wanted your kid to get fucked just to prove how ultrafuckable that kid is you probably couldn't make it happen. If you put him up as bait dressed in a catholic school skirt jumping on a pogo stick with no underwear [...] he would still probably graduate a virgin, and you would look like an asshole."

    Best. Comedy. Ever (The great 4: Lenny Bruce, George Carlin, Bill Hicks, Doug Stanhope)

    --
    WTF am I doing replying to an AC at 5 A.M on a Friday night?
  41. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too many Americans think it's part of being tough, and giving folks what they deserve.

    Too bad too few Americans think of exactly how that makes them look.

  42. But We DO Know by jmanners · · Score: 0, Interesting

    The defendant was found guilty in the original trial because a police raid found child porn. Read that last sentence again, carefully and repeatedly until it makes sense to you. Do you imagine that trials are convened and conducted under Rules of Hearsay ? Perhaps this whole case is actually a Freedom of Expression test case ? Child porn is illegal in Canada, and virtually everyone is aware of that. The only possible way to avoid conviction would be a technical matter over evidence or procedure. And that is PRECISELY what happened here.

    1. Re:But We DO Know by m.ducharme · · Score: 1

      Entering someone's home and seizing their computer, their spouse's computer, video tapes and other gear with a crappy warrant isn't a "technicality", it's a grave breach of a citizen's right to privacy and the security of his person. So grave, in fact, that it's more important to let guilty people go (even people guilty of murder, treason, and possessing CP) if the State enters your home without "reasonable probable grounds".

      Freedom is not a technicality.

      --
      Rule of Slashdot #0: You and people like you are not representative of the larger population. - A.C.
  43. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's the stupid.

  44. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I”m a friend (well, was) of him and have just put CP on his system when he wasn’t looking. And I called the cops.
    Let’s see if he stands by his point now. ^^

    By the way: What happens if you got raped as a child, have the pictures of your own abuse on your computer, and the cops raid you for CP? That’s gotta be like: W.T.F.? ;)

  45. Read ahead one sentence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And what about:
    -"Every person who accesses any child pornography is guilty of" an indictable offense or an offense punishable on summary conviction. (section 163.1(4.1))
    -"a person *accesses* child pornography who knowingly causes child pornography to be viewed by, or transmitted to, himself or herself" (section 163.1(4.2), emphasis mine)

    I'm not sure why you omitted that. You might not have kept up on the criminal code. See Bill C-2, 2004.

    1. Re:Read ahead one sentence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think judges get to automagically change charges on the fly, he looks specifically at what the prosecutor (or crown as we call them up here) charged him with and decides if it's fair to convict based on that charge.

    2. Re:Read ahead one sentence by candude43 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure why you omitted that. You might not have kept up on the criminal code. See Bill C-2, 2004.

      Laws don't apply retroactively. In the article it states the charges were laid in 2003.

  46. Re:This is total horseshit by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Probably for the same reason crusaders against adulterers and homosexuals are often caught doing those very acts. The more vocal someone is against something, it's because they're trying to prove they're against it.

    In this case, I think someone has a deep, dark secret fantasy of being someone's bitch.

  47. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    America has the Best Barbarians Money Can Buy

  48. Re:This is total horseshit by Jeian · · Score: 1

    > and that the names of certain websites indicate the content of their images.

    Contrary to what one might expect, there were no goats at goatse.cx.

  49. The REAL problem with disseminating child porn by davidwr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The issue isn't just one of "gateway habit" escalation. Nor is it just one of "abuse by proxy."

    A child is hurt when child abuse happens. Most child porn, not counting teen self- or boyfriend-cell-phone stuff, are photos of child abuse in progress.

    While passing those pictures around may or may not cause that particular child any further harm ("abuse by proxy"),* it generally does create a market for child pornography. In the aggregate, spread over all the people who view child pornography, this increases the chances that a child who would have otherwise been un-photographed or perhaps even un-molested will be victimized and that a child who is already a victim of being turned into a child porn "star" will have more photographs taken of her.

    To put it another way, if by magic people stopped viewing child pornography for a year, you would see a decrease in the number of photos taken and a decrease in child molestation, even ignoring any possible "escalation" effect that other Slashdot contributors are suggesting.

    By the way, I'm not speaking just of a dollars-and-sense marketplace, although there is no doubt some of that also based on the number of people stupid enough to use credit cards to buy k1dd13 pr0n. There is no doubt some "in kind" "your kid's picture for my kid's picture" trading and also some people who just do it for their own ego boost. Take away the ego boost, and the person may find some other way to boost his ego, hopefully a way that doesn't involve showing the world how he abused a kid.

    *Sometimes when a child or grown-child-abuse realizes or is told her photos are "out there" it causes additional trauma, and sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes a child or grown-child-abuse victim finds out about a particular person viewing pictures of old photos, it causes additional trauma, sometimes it doesn't.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:The REAL problem with disseminating child porn by tirefire · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My blood boils whenever I see this argument.

      Please reply if this is an inaccurate summary of your post: You think that people who view child porn might be "pushed over the edge" by it and abuse children where they previously would not, therefore imposing some responsibility on the CP peddler for subsequent acts of child abuse.

      This is akin to saying that a woman wearing a sexy outfit is responsible for prompting an act of rape unto herself (yes, some people in modern enlightened countries actually believe this). If she is raped and her rapist goes to trial, it may be demonstrated that she increased her likelihood of rape by her provocative dress, but that doesn't mean that her rapist couldn't choose not to rape her. Making it 100% NOT HER FAULT if she gets raped.

      Stop shifting blame. People who abuse children should go to prison. People whose closest tie to child abuse is watching a video of it after the fact should not. It's not that hard.

      In response to your starred item about "additional trauma": Just like everyone else, I've had loads of embarrassing moments in my life (my arrest a few months ago being the latest example). If a given incident is recorded on video and distributed online, I shouldn't have some crybaby trump card to suppress the distributors' human right of free speech just so that I can pretend it didn't happen. We shouldn't prohibit free speech because it might hurt someone's feelings, and CP should be no exception. There are less heavy-handed methods of discouraging the creation and distribution of CP. For further reading, see: Star Wars Kid; Barbra Streisand.

    2. Re:The REAL problem with disseminating child porn by gknoy · · Score: 1

      Please reply if this is an inaccurate summary of your post: You think that people who view child porn might be "pushed over the edge" by it and abuse children where they previously would not, therefore imposing some responsibility on the CP peddler for subsequent acts of child abuse.

      I don't think that's his argument at all.

      He said that the existence of a market (or a larger market) drives some people (NOT VIEWERS) to make it, due to it (somehow) being a lucrative endeavour. IF there were no one to sell it to, people would only make it to share amongst themselves. His argument is not about viewers, but about producers.

    3. Re:The REAL problem with disseminating child porn by rrohbeck · · Score: 1

      Free availability of CP on the Net should actually reduce child abuse by reducing the commercial incentive.

      It's only *buying* CP that creates a market - not looking at it.

      The more you try to suppress dissemination, the higher the profits and the higher the incentive to make new material - just like the war on drugs.

    4. Re:The REAL problem with disseminating child porn by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      Only an idiot would pay for porn because EVERYTHING is available on the Internet for free. If anything decriminalizing procession would kill the market for it. Brought into the open it'd be easier for cops to find and get rid of the bastards producing this crap.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    5. Re:The REAL problem with disseminating child porn by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't say that dressing like a slut makes a man rape a woman but there is something to be said about the wisdom of dressing like bait. At some level men are wired in hardware to respond. With enough pushing and not enough outlet most men would eventually lose control.

      I think porn is an outlet though. I'd rather some sicko wack off than go molest a kid. I think that is part of the reason there are so many problems among Catholic priests. With no outlet for years eventually people lose their ability to reason clearly. Better to let them marry and have a healthy outlet for those needs.

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    6. Re:The REAL problem with disseminating child porn by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      What outlet would you recommend for a teenager with anorgasmia? Serious question. This seemed like a good place to ask, and I'm going nuts.

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    7. Re:The REAL problem with disseminating child porn by AgentMagneta · · Score: 1

      There is another thing. In whatever situation with a woman dressed like a slut... Will you totally loose control... It is an excuse... Like I was drunk... People should be held accountable for their actions. Unintentional seems more like an gray area. And it should be.

  50. Re:This is total horseshit by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

    "see 18 U.S.C. 2251, 2252, 2252A)." ... except this case is in Canada which actually makes a distinction between viewing and possessing. The charge here was "possessing", and the criteria for "possessing" were not met.

  51. Re:This is total horseshit by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1
    I agree- but the charge as raised is "possession". The judge made a common-sense ruling; it's not reasonable to rule that because a browser cache contains something that it's a case of "possession". Had the charge been for "accessing" it seems as if there's a pretty darned strong case for it. (So in other words - yes , the cops and DA missed the boat on this one.)

    I do have to wonder whether or not it's possible for them to raise exactly that charge, no matter the result of this one?

  52. Re:This is total horseshit by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

    Are you sure? You're basically saying it's legal in the US to surf child porn as long as you don't store it? I'm not really buying that, but hey, you might be right.

    I'm saying that in Canada, where this case occurred, there seems to be a distinction made between "accessing" and "possessing" - and the charge here is "possessing". Were the charge 'accessing' perhaps the result would have been different - though IANAL in either country, so this is just based on a layman's reading of the relevant code.

  53. Wrong. by tmo72 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Accessing CP is a crime in Canada. It's even in the next subsection Criminal Code (163.1(4.1))!

    Accessing child pornography

    (4.1) Every person who accesses any child pornography is guilty of
    (a) an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years and to a minimum punishment of imprisonment for a term of forty-five days; or
    (b) an offence punishable on summary conviction and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding eighteen months and to a minimum punishment of imprisonment for a term of fourteen days.

    http://laws.justice.gc.ca/eng/C-46/page-4.html#codese:163_1-ss:_4_1_

    1. Re:Wrong. by Sabriel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hmm. Does the same "mens rea" apply to that law, or can someone arrange to flash a CP photo on a projector at the next session of parliament and throw the lot of them in jail for a fortnight?

    2. Re:Wrong. by Doggabone · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hmm. Does the same "mens rea" apply to that law, or can someone arrange to flash a CP photo on a projector at the next session of parliament and throw the lot of them in jail for a fortnight?

      Oh great, another proroguing.

    3. Re:Wrong. by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 1

      Please, let's......, let's all send them CP images to their cell phones, and then bring them in for booking on possesion of CP, then we can start fresh with a new government, of which all politicians will fear the people, and perform as if their lives depended on it! Imagine, no more non accountable politicians!!!

      That would be like....like.....heaven on earth!

  54. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    There's no need to get all butthurt over prison rape. Oh wait, there is!

  55. In the UK, accessing is "making" by mdwh2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Indeed - it's nice to see a country using a more sensible definition of access versus possession, rather than one based on computer technicality.

    The UK goes in completely the opposite direction however - the courts ruled that downloading not only counts as possession, but it counts as making child porn. And copy constitutes "making" it. So now we have the media talking about people being arrested for making child porn, with most people assuming that means the actual production, but in many cases that may be the same as downloading. (I'm not bothered if downloading is illegal, but it's nonsense to try to twist the terms - and anyhow, if downloading child porn is so obviously wrong, why do they have to pretend that they were making instead?)

    1. Re:In the UK, accessing is "making" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah because it's also nice to see someone get off because they "only" accessed child pornography and didn't bother to save the images. What kinds of a dumb fuck thinks it's nice to see a Pedophile get off? Are you some kind of fucking retard? Who gives a fuck whether they are downloading or making. Cut their fucking heads off with a dull spoon and shove it up their fucking arse.

      I for one am sick of fucktards defending pedophiles on ANY level.

    2. Re:In the UK, accessing is "making" by mdwh2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm sick of fucktards.

      Well, if I wipe away the spit from my face that's foaming from your mouth, I may take a chance to answer. In the UK, downloading was already illegal. Why the need to call it something it's not? And for Canada, if you want accessing to be illegal, why not pass a law against it?

      Cut their fucking heads off with a dull spoon and shove it up their fucking arse.

      Who's the pervert here? You sound like a danger to society with thoughts like those.

    3. Re:In the UK, accessing is "making" by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

      You sound like a danger to society with thoughts like those.

      Uh...

  56. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A lot of people NEED someone to hate.

    In the US, pedophiles are the only people left that you can hate without offending someone. We don't allow antisemitism, racism, hatred of ethnic minorities, homophobia etc. etc. etc.

    It's gonna be interesting in Europe. Since Mohammad was a pedophile I suppose they may have to give up hating pedophiles, but don't worry, they're already going back to hating Jews as a backup.

  57. Re:This is total horseshit by mdmkolbe · · Score: 2, Funny

    Every time someone says "Every time someone crusades against X, I think they must secretly like X", I think they must one of those people who likes to crusades against some Y yet secretly likes Y. (Y may or may not be the same as X.)

    In fact, maybe I should start a crusade over this.

  58. oh ok by malp · · Score: 1

    Quite frankly if your getting off on pictures/videos of sex that doesn't involve the consent of everyone involved you deserve to be locked away for a very long time.

    oh ok, just so long as you foot the 5-figure annual cost to keep someone imprisoned, I'm cool with it. Do you want to make monthly payments of $1800 or pay $11 000 every 6 months? Or do you want to rethink your stance on thought crimes?

  59. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's not true. Accessing child porn is illegal in Canada. But the information on which the warrant was based only indicated that the technician thought the accused possessed child porn.

  60. Because of Legislatures? by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 1

    Because laws can be written too narrowly. Realize that several number of people can stop a bad conviction--a police officer, a prosecutor, and sometimes a judge. But sometimes the law is written narrowly, and a judge may think the law shouldn't be what it is, but he still has to follow it as written, in most cases. (Occasionally he gets to write it.) Sometimes he finds a way out of it, and sometimes he gets it wrong. But if he feels his hands are tied by the law, and a jury feels their hands are tied by the law, then you bad convictions until the legislature gets the law changed.

    You don't explain the whole tech. You figure out the part that matters and explain it very simply, possibly by analogy. Half the job of a lawyer is writing complex things simply. (The other half is writing simple things complexly.)

    --
    -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    1. Re:Because of Legislatures? by nahdude812 · · Score: 1

      and a jury feels their hands are tied by the law,

      A jury's hands are not tied by the law. Though in the US it's not looked upon favorably, and many judges will declare a mistrial if they think the defense is attempting to encourage it out of the jury. They will also sometimes remove jurors whom they think will act on the right to nullification.

  61. that actually produce the stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  62. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was with you until

    prepare to be on the receiving end of one of the prison's Rectal Olympics games.

    What is it with Americans being so gleeful about prison rape? It's barbaric.

    Well, after 8 years of Bush and his boys, the American population got used to it on a near daily basis....

  63. Still by Snaller · · Score: 1

    A judge who knows about computers - that's impressive.

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  64. CYA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do not let these f#1q& techs - strangers - look at your info. They have to swap out the hard drive before fixing your computer.

    Web pages and other software can do things to your machine that you don't know anything about.

    CYA - either learn how to hide your important stuff and leave a blank boot partition for inspectors or encrypt, or else fix your own computer, or be prepared to buy cheap disposable computers.

    In the age of automation, you cannot trust the justice system to be just when you are in its clutches. So far, we can count ourselves lucky, but unfavorable odds may be accumulating. It is possible that any one of us might suck in a virus that sends a command to another computer, which in turn starts a machine and causes death and destruction - in the investigation how would one defend? Is there a way to divest oneself fully of identification on the Internet while maintaining a high speed account? A fake identity perhaps.

    That which works for us can be used against us - Sep. 11 and the ensuing airport security could be a harbinger of the hoops that we have to dive through just to keep our asses out of a sling.

  65. See gknoy's reply by davidwr · · Score: 1

    gknoy is correct but is incomplete.

    The "market" is not just driven by money, it is also driven by "I'll give you mine if you'll give me yours" and "I'll give everyone mine because knowing thousands of people appreciate my kid the same way I do makes me feel good" ego reasons.

    Cut out all 3 of these reasons and the market dries up, and less is produced. Yes, you will still have some produced for self-use and you will still have some produced and published by people who don't realize nobody is out there looking at it.

    Regarding "gateway habit" - there are some who argue that using child porn is a gateway habit. There are also those who argue the opposite, that if someone did not have pictures to look at, he might go after a real child. Both arguments are probably true to some extent, but I have no clue what the "net" effect is. My strong hunch is that for every thousand men who view child porn regularly, the number who go on to hurt kids is higher than the number who would have hurt a kid but for the ability to satisfy their desires through pictures. However, I haven't seen any research one way or the other.

    Regarding blame-shifting: If I knowingly walk down a seedy part of town known for street-robberies when it is not necessary to do so, and I'm wearing a Rolex and I'm a scrawny guy who looks like he doesn't belong, and I get robbed, here's how the blame goes: The assailant is 100% responsible. He gets the same punishment as if he robbed me in a "safe" part of town. I am also partially responsible for being stupid, and my friends and family will rightly chastise me for being an idiot. Note that my stupidity, carelessness, or other conscious choice to put myself at unnecessarily increased risk, does not in any manner reduce the culpability of the perpetrator, and it should in now way reduce his sentence.

    Think of it another way: If I am a sober adult without a driver's license and I knowingly get into a car with an intoxicated driver and get hurt in a wreck that's his fault, it's all his fault but partially mine. He's 100% guilty but my friends have the right to ask me "what were you thinking???" and call me an idiot for it.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  66. Re:See gknoy's reply by Frenchman113 · · Score: 1

    The "market" is not just driven by money, it is also driven by "I'll give you mine if you'll give me yours" and "I'll give everyone mine because knowing thousands of people appreciate my kid the same way I do makes me feel good" ego reasons.

    Cut out all 3 of these reasons and the market dries up, and less is produced. Yes, you will still have some produced for self-use and you will still have some produced and published by people who don't realize nobody is out there looking at it.

    The problem with this statement is that there would still be just as much child abuse . Unless you're saying that it's all fine as long as we don't know about it, which does seem to be the prevailing attitude.

  67. Clues = congratulations by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1

    I'm proud to say that I am a personal friend of one of the non-dissenting judges, and you can be sure that I will congratulate him for his cluefulness in what constitutes a cache.

  68. it will cut down on the actual sex a little by davidwr · · Score: 1

    If the demand for child porn goes down, SOME of the would-be porn stars will still be abused, just not photographed.

    However, some, notably the commercial-grade "stars" that are being abused for the purposes of filming and making money off of said filming may escape unharmed. Sadly, many of those same girls are probably being pimped out, and eliminating the porn market won't help them. But it may help a few.

    It will also help those girls and boys who would otherwise grow up with their childhood forced-acting scattered all over the world. NOT having your picture scattered all over the world is one less thing to worry about as an adult, and Lord knows these child-abuse victims have enough stress in their lives.

    Oh, and whether we know about it or not, child abuse is not fine.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  69. Re:This is total horseshit by randyleepublic · · Score: 0

    We are all sick with jealousy of the guys who are already in prison getting good hard ass poundings. Against their "will".

    Thus the glee when we hear about another guy getting ready to enter wonderland - "I might be next! *swoon*

    --
    Social Credit would solve everything...
  70. Re:This is total horseshit by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

    Correct, as I've (more or less) said in follow-up replies to my own. I say "the law" -- meaning "the law as applies to this case". (ANd no IANAL, just doing some reading...)

  71. Good for Canada by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    I am always glad when people make the right decisions. Makes be happy I live in Canada.

    Now we just have to kill that Copyright bill again.Lets go!

  72. Re:This is total horseshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, you can still hate us atheists. Really, it's all fine and dandy. Just ask Lizzy Dole and Bush Sr.

    - T

  73. Potayto, potahto by jesset77 · · Score: 1

    Tomayto, Tomahto

    --
    People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.