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EFF Sues to Block New Internet Sex-Offender Law

Bobfrankly1 writes "The EFF sued to block portions of the approved Prop 35 today. Prop 35 requires sex offenders (including indecent exposure and non-internet offenses) to provide all of their online aliases to law enforcement. This would include e-mail addresses, screen and user names, and other identifiers used on the internet. The heart of the matter as the EFF sees it, would be not only the chilling effect it would have on free speech, but also the propensity of these kind of laws to be applied to other (non-sex offending) people as well."

22 of 305 comments (clear)

  1. Yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Like they could ever enforce this...

    ---
    Sent from a registered sex offender

    1. Re:Yeah right... by jcr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, it's one of those things that they can pile on if they're busting someone with a charge that won't stick.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:Yeah right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Every charge sticks unless you can afford to go to trial. Unless you've been wronged by the police before it's pretty hard to have a grip on just how fucked the system is.

      Nowadays they can arrest you, make up some false charges... then your in the system and you have to defend yourself with whatever limited resources you have. It's total bullshit and they don't have to ever deal with it again unless you go to trial. Which most people can't and will not. Plea bargains look pretty tasty when your life is in unknown hands and your only form of communication is a telephone that is very restricted.

  2. Re:Sorry.. can't agree. by olsmeister · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think such an attitude makes you depraved, and possibly dangerous/psychotic.

  3. Re:Sorry.. can't agree. by Carnildo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In my state, "sex offenders" include people who have urinated in public, people who forgot to close the bathroom shades before getting out of the shower, and a great many teenagers who couldn't keep it in their pants. Are these the "depraved and psychotic people" whose lives you wish to destroy?

    --
    "They redundantly repeated themselves over and over again incessantly without end ad infinitum" -- ibid.
  4. EFF has it right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nowadays a lot of people are classified as sex offenders that shouldn't be, like teenagers that send each other naughty pictures, or somebody that texts a lewd message to the wrong recipient. These people barely meet the definition, yet are branded for life.

    If the sex offender status could be assigned with accuracy, I think this proposition would be okay. But it isn't, so the proposition means people are going to get hurt who shouldn't have even been declared as sex offenders in the first place. The proposition compounds the challenges these people face.

    And I agree with the EFF that it's a dangerous trend to set. If you want to take away the anonymity of some pervert, do it for a real criminal who posts a credible threat to the community. Many people with the sex offender status don't fit that definition at all.

  5. ACLU press release by kd6ttl · · Score: 5, Informative

    https://www.aclunc.org/cases/active_cases/doe_v._harris.shtml

    It's really not a good law - it won't accomplish its goal and it has lots of bad possible side effects.

  6. Re:Sorry.. can't agree. by AK+Marc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unconvicted people are potentially dangerous criminals and should have absolutely no rights to privacy. I don't care what the Constitution says, someone who peed in an alley once where nobody could see should have their lives destroyed. There could have been a school fieldtrip to that alley at 2 a.m. on a Saturday night and have accidentally seen a penis.

  7. Re:Sorry.. can't agree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Never underestimate the willingness of unthinking cowards to try to take away the rights of others, especially if the believe it will never affect them.

  8. Re:Sorry.. can't agree. by Firehed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    People caught peeing in a bush are treated the same as child molesters under this law. It also includes people that in any way benefit from solicited sex, including the family of people willingly involved in the sex trade.

    Violent offenders are already incarcerated, and those that have been released from prison after serving their time are still pretty closely monitored. This proposition sought to make a crime "more illegal" in order to increase the government's authority. The weasel-wording of the bill's description ("increase penalties for sex trafficking") allowed that to get through with an overwhelming majority; suffice to say, I'm not impressed.

    --
    How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
  9. Re:Sorry.. can't agree. by devleopard · · Score: 5, Informative

    I would encourage you to view one of the many sites out there that let you search public registries of sex offenders. (for example, http://familywatchdog.us/ For fun, enter your address. You'll find:

    1) the number of sex offenders isn't a "few" (if you live in a metro area, there will be dozens in a 2 mile radius)
    2) if you view each one's offense, you'll find most (75%+) had "victims" 14 years old +. Some of those might have been "rapes", but were probably hooking up with someone they should have known better, but it was as consensual as any liaison (ignoring fact that a minor can't consent, but survey any high school and see how chaste your average teen is)

    Such sex offender laws apply to all of these (plus those who get caught urinating in public, having a romp with their spouse in public, etc); not a "few depraved and/or dangerous/psychotic people". But "think of the children!" How about a single DWI resulting in a lifetime ban on owning a motor vehicle, or a single drug conviction resulting in a lifetime 9pm curfew?

    If someone is truly so sick and perverted that they need a lifetime of monitoring, then give them an adequate prison sentence.

    --
    The best thing about a boolean is even if you are wrong, you are only off by a bit.
  10. Re:Californian Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Same deal with the human trafficking sex offender registry.

    You're trying to tell me a human trafficker who gets caught and was involved in sex offenses can't be tried for that seperately?

    Seriously I'll accept a sex offender registry for persons who prey on children (I will put the cap at 16, although if we were being honest about this, 13 is the better standard for paedophilia. And if you look at the historic reason for raising the age of consent from 13 to 18 (ignoring the original AoC) you'd note that it was TO STOP 'UNDERAGE' PROSTITUTION, not for any actual sensible reason regarding a persons age of maturity or sexual development.) But honestly, applying it indefinitely to 'streakers' 'teenagers sexting their likewise underage partners' and 'public urinators' makes me embarassed to be an american.

    If we can't try people based on the specific and necessary laws, then why don't be just repeal all laws and go back to 'at the judge's discretion'? I mean given the plethora of modern laws and the almost impossibility of not breaking one of them (nevermind in the case of sex offenses many people breaking ones that used to at most get you a night in jail or a few weeks community service: see fooling around in a park, car, your gf or bf's house, etc.) Hell, even just taking a picture of your kids running around in the buff (and how many of us didn't toss our diapers aside and streak naked across the house when guests were over? Y'know the sort of pictures your family take so they can embarass you when you bring your significant other over to meet the fams.)

    The number of travesties being committed by our 'elected' officials on a daily basis makes me wonder what the point of elected officials even is anymore. At the current level of insanity nearly any form of government would not be any worse from a legal standpoint. And when looking at miscarriages of justice, we're right in the middle of the pack with dictators, monarchs, and oligarchies.

    Any system can be corrupt or just given time and the right set of officials. But the problem with democracies (and republics!) is that it can take a much longer time to effect a shift, and perhaps even longer to find out if that shift is real or imagined.

  11. First they came... by NFN_NLN · · Score: 5, Funny

            First they came for the pedos,
            and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a pedo.

            Then they came for the socialists,
            and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a socialist.

            Then they came for the trade unionists,
            and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a trade unionist.

            Then they came for the guys into fisting and DP sites,
            and I was like... "at least it was fun while it lasted".

  12. Re:Hrm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ah, so you are the shill that keeps creating new accounts here?

  13. Re:Sorry.. can't agree. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...offenders are already incarcerated, and those that have been released from prison after serving their time are still pretty closely monitored

    In my opinion, once a person has served their sentence, their criminal record should be sealed and not available to anyone, unless the person commits another criminal act, throughout their parole period, and after the successful completion of the period of parole the record should be expunged after 2 years. The whole criminal justice system seems intent upon punishing people for eternity; rather the focus should be rehabilitation and re-integration into society. If a convict is likely to re-offend maybe the person should never have been released from prison. From the moment of release from prison only the police should have access to the person's record but no background check for employment should reveal the existence of the record for all but a select few jobs (financial services, working with the vulnerable, position of trust which includes public office holders). Otherwise, society might as well tattoo a red 'C' on the forehead of the convicted. If a person commits another criminal act during their two-year probation period, they are not eligible for release from prison after the second conviction.

  14. Re:Californian Here by Fastolfe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am all for increased punishments for those caught dealing with human trafficking

    Out of curiosity, why? Do you have some reason to believe the existing punishments are too lax? Were the changes enacted by the legislature recently insufficient?

    I'm usually deeply disgusted by every CA proposition that seeks to increase punishments for some group, using an appeal to emotion to justify it. Are the existing punishments really not enough? Why hasn't the legislature done anything about it? Is this actually a rational approach to solve a real problem, or is it just a political move that's expected to be a slam dunk, because hey, who wants to come out in favor of sex traffickers?

    I get the value of referenda and sometimes I'm proud that it works to accomplish something that the legislature can't or won't, but the tyranny of the majority is a very real threat, as is constitutional amendment via popularity contest, and sometimes I wonder if it shouldn't be harder for people to get their pet issues on the ballot like this.

  15. Re:Sorry.. can't agree. by AK+Marc · · Score: 5, Funny
    I'm a parent of a young boy. I put a giant dog neck cone on him so he can't see his own penis. He's much better adjusted, though we had to take him out of school since he got the crap kicked out of him every day for being a freak. that and he kept peeing on the floor because he couldn't aim in the toilet.

    And WILL SOMEONE THINK OF THE CHILDREN!

    But the court order said I'm not supposed to think of the children any more.

  16. Re:This is fals issue by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Our society places pedophiles in a special category because they compulsively attempt to lure children to them for purposes of illicit intergenerational sex.

    Not all pedophiles are child molesters. I'm not even sure if the majority of them are.

    It's not unreasonable for us to limit their access

    I think it is to people who actually care about freedom of speech.

    Instead of pretending that their rights are somehow linked to our own, let's accept that every society has an ultimate taboo and for us it's the child-rapists.

    I don't want to accept what I believe is illogical nonsense.

    --
    Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
  17. Re:The real problem by Stormwatch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sorry, but an individual under 18 is a CHILD.

    Stopped reading right there. If you think so, you are completely out of touch with reality.

  18. Re:This will fail.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sex offenders can come from all walks of life. Some, just as with other criminals, are otherwise fine people and fair candidates for rehabilitation but that is a distinction many people are incapable of making because: (a) they can only view criminals in terms of stereotypes; (b) any attempt to not view criminals in terms of stereotypes leads to cries of "going soft on crime", despite the fact that the prison itself is an abject failure; (c) sex offenders, especially child sex offenders, are the paranoia du jour and we jump at shadows as if on cue; (d) we have sadistic urges and enjoy seeing people punished - the Christian right especially likes to see sinners cast out from society it seems; (e) "sex offender" is a ridiculously broad term, so sweeping as to do great damage. It lumps someone who urinated in a public place in with murdering rapists - what a spectrum! - an injustice if ever there was one.

  19. Re:the ironic part is... by Seumas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That's the point and that is the long-game being played, here.

    Ultimately, "for the children", they will enforce use of real identities for all individuals on the internet. At the very least, there will have to be a registered real identity that is easily referenced for anyone in "authority" without need for a warrant. Ideally (in their mind), your real identity will simply be all you have to act under while online, presented to everyone.

    If "bullies durp durp durp" doesn't do it, then "sex offenders durp durp durp!".

    Not to mention, if we're so afraid of these people that we have to put scarlet A's on their doors and mailboxes, have then register every activity and location and method of contact on earth, etc, etc... then why the fuck are we even letting them out of prison, in the first place? Either someone has served the time for their crime and has been determined safe to re-enter society or they aren't. (Probation, yadda yadda).

  20. Re:Californian Here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously I'll accept a sex offender registry for persons who prey on children (I will put the cap at 16, although if we were being honest about this, 13 is the better standard for paedophilia. And if you look at the historic reason for raising the age of consent from 13 to 18 (ignoring the original AoC) you'd note that it was TO STOP 'UNDERAGE' PROSTITUTION, not for any actual sensible reason regarding a persons age of maturity or sexual development.) But honestly, applying it indefinitely to 'streakers' 'teenagers sexting their likewise underage partners' and 'public urinators' makes me embarassed to be an american..

    But talking sense, which you are, doesn't seem to do anything with this issue. Sense is blocked out. If you talk like this at a party, otherwise intelligent people will look at you like you're a pedophile. Seriously, give it a try if you don't believe me. In this way dissent is silenced: "any critic of the definition of witch/communist/pedophile must be an apologist and probably is witch/communist/pedophile themselves".