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FBI "Took Over World's Biggest Child Porn Website" (telegraph.co.uk)

An anonymous reader writes with this excerpt from The Telegraph: The FBI took over the world biggest child pornography website in a sting operation intended to catch viewers of sexual images of children sometimes 'barely old enough for kindergarten', it has been revealed. The controversial operation ran for nearly two weeks last year, when the bureau took control of the Playpen website in an effort to weed out users who would normally be hidden because they accessed such sites through encrypted addresses. Agents have defended the dubious of ethics of a government agency running a child porn site by insisting there was no other way to catch offenders.

301 comments

  1. One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The ones who actually abuse the children. Are they doing anything about catching them?

    1. Re: One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh come on, you can't expect the FBI to make time for that, they have terrorists to lead into traps .

    2. Re:One obvious question. by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      of course, that is what they do. unlike terrorism units that are massively over funded and under worked, the CP units are under funded and in a target rich environment.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    3. Re:One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, without child abusers there's no child porn
      Without child porn there's no task forces and departments dedicated to fighting it
      Without task forces and departments dedicated to fighting child porn, there's less budget you can justify

      FBI needs terrorism and child pornography like the DEA needs drugs. And they like to stick their noses in it just as much.
      *Snort*

    4. Re:One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The difference is that drug taking *can* be a victimless crime, whereas terrorism and childporn always causes harm to an innocent victim.

      Except that a lot of Mangas are considered child porn.

    5. Re:One obvious question. by cbhacking · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, a high school couple (at least one of whom is 17) sexting each other is definitely causing harm to innocent victims! After all, they are manufacturing, possessing, and distributing sexually explicit images of minors. Won't somebody think of the children?!?

      The child porn laws are broken, very badly. There's no room in them for taking the actual situation into consideration. That's what happens when you laws that are written in absolutes, when the world is more complex than righteously angry legislators (and the fools who vote for them) can bother to take into consideration.

      People making claims like "always causes harm to an innocent victim" without actually paying any attention to what qualifies as "childporn" in this country are part of the problem. Yes, this means you.

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    6. Re:One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well then, you might be disturbed to learn that the later stages of Operation SunDevil were aborted because the 2/3 of the child porn links resolved to .gov & .mil addresses and the remaining 1/3 was almost all .org registered to tax exempt religious organizations.

      After signing up the local police of every state & the District of Columbia, the feds bailed at the last moment when they realized that the vast majority of registered users and providers of child porn were government and religious authorities.

      They even had the sign in books of hotels in DC frequented by underage prostitutes and various government employees.

    7. Re:One obvious question. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't be so sure about the child porn.

      Firstly, in many countries even artwork, photoshop fake images, crude comics and fiction are classified as child pornography.

      Secondly - if the images already exist, does distributing them hurt the 'victim' any more? Their part is done. They won't even know if another person looks, so how can it possibly harm them? You could argue that it creates demand for more images and so create a financial incentive to create more, but by that logic downloading music should increase demand and increase profits by the labels.

    8. Re:One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's creating no harm to an innocent victim WATCHING that porn AFTER THE FACT.

      I do not fuck a porn star when I watch a porn flick. I do not speed or crash into cars watching a chase scene in a movie. I do not murder scores of people when I watch a newscast report of a mass shooting.

    9. Re:One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Source?

    10. Re:One obvious question. by fazig · · Score: 1

      Creating demand is exactly what the prevalent theory is about this issue. And yes, by that logic downloading music/movies/series does also increase demand, there were even articles on Slashdot about that, containing studies. The record and film industry being oblivious of these findings, doesn't make the issue with CP any less true.
      Other than that, yeah, how some jurisdictions can see something like a highly stylized comic (manga for example) as CP, does seem weird and idiotic to me as well. In this case, a rational thinking mind has to assume that there are no victims until proven otherwise.

    11. Re:One obvious question. by neotokyo · · Score: 1

      This Operation Sundevil from the 1990s ?

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    12. Re:One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is this modded troll?
      What he says is true.
      In the US drawings, fake images, and fiction were (or maybe still are) classified as child porn for which you could be sent to prison.

    13. Re:One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, if the article and summary are correct.
      This FBI operation is only against the users of child pornography.
      Now, the FBI may catch child sexual abusers if some of the viewers are also abusers.

      This is, IMHO, a travesty to have the FBI run the web/system.
      Aren't there other, legitimate options that don't compromise the FVI?

    14. Re:One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know it's a free country when you can go to prison for decades, your crime being committed entirely with a pen.

    15. Re:One obvious question. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 2

      The state of Ohio did ban fiction, but it was overturned by a court on first amendment grounds. The case is State v. Dalton - it's a rather convoluted case, as the accused pleaded guilty initially under a plea bargain until the ACLU intervened and there were appeals, but the end result was the Ohio supreme court ruling the law unconstitutional. It is likely any other state would rule likewise. However, artwork and sculptures showing children or fictional children in an obscene manner are still illegal at the federal level, under the PROTECT act of 2003 - after an earlier act was struck down, PROTECT uses a more carefully crafted definition that should more easily be accepted by courts as constitutional. The UK likewise banned possession, distribution, production etc of artwork in the Coroners and Justice Act 2009, but has not banned fiction.

      Curiously, the UK one was specifically aimed at banning many hentai comics - it even has a clause making it clear that non-human characters who have characteristics of a human child are considered as if they were human children, and a few MPs specifically stated during the debate process that imported Japanese comics were the target.

    16. Re:One obvious question. by marka63 · · Score: 1

      Physical no, psychological yes.

      Just knowing that more people are seeing something that you don't want to be seen and you have no control of that causes ongoing psychological trauma.

      It doesn't even have to be you in the images for it to be causing trauma.

      Even porn stars sometime regret filming a scene and don't want the scenes to be ever shown again.

      Movie crash scenes which seriously injure / kill people are often cut to prevent psychological trauma to relatives.

      There are reasons "Viewer Discretion" is displayed before some news articles.

    17. Re:One obvious question. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 2

      Yes, a high school couple (at least one of whom is 17) sexting each other is definitely causing harm to innocent victims!

      Most legislations have provisions for these types of cases, or did you seriously think you were smarter than everyone else?

      The child porn laws are broken, very badly. There's no room in them for taking the actual situation into consideration.

      Yes there is. Instead of getting your legal advice from the back of a cornflake packet, maybe do some research so you won't sound so foolish...

    18. Re:One obvious question. by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      Ah, if *most* jurisdictions have provisions, that means it's not a problem? For example, feel free to peruse the relevant WA state legal code and point out the relevant provision (spoiler: the ACLU doesn't seem to think it exists). In any case, 18 US code 2251, a law against child porn is a federal law and - while I believe it only covers inter-state or foreign transmission - contains no such provisions. Fortunately, minors are definitely never in a different state from their SOs, and if they somehow were, would never request or send naughty pictures, right? Not that I know of any cases of the feds prosecuting such a case of private communications between consenting teens, but if they did the law would appear to be on their side.

      While states certainly have some de facto control over what cases they will prosecute, in many cases they have certainly attempted to convict sexting teens as child pornographers, and sometimes they have succeeded. The situation does seem less outrageous than I believed it to be, especially after the first few cases to make the news generated enough outrage at this travesty, but it's still far from perfect.

      http://www.cnet.com/news/polic... - 17 and 16 year old in Florida prosecuted, found guilty, conviction upheld on appeal.
      http://www.foxnews.com/story/2... - 15 year old arrested on felony charge (apparently got put on no-cell-phone-or-unsupervised-Internet probation, charges probably dropped afterward)
      http://www.foxnews.com/story/2... - 7 teens charged with felonies, at least 6 plea bargained to misdemeanors (better than it could have been, still very wrong)
      http://laist.com/2013/05/17/re... - Key quote: "... anyone who sends obscene images of persons under the age of 18, whether it’s of themselves or someone else, are violating child pornography laws,” San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Dept.
      https://www.washingtonpost.com... - Cops photographing a 17-year-old's junk to try and enter the pictures as evidence. They eventually backed down, after massive public ridicule, on the plan to have him given an injection to make him erect before photographing him *again*.
      http://pilotonline.com/news/go... - Provisions, you say? Nope, can't even downgrade it to a misdemeanor, gotta stay a felony!

      Sorry for doing the research...

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    19. Re:One obvious question. by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

      Sorry for doing the research...

      You've restored my faith in humanity :) I don't want to argue each individual case, I simply don't have the time for it. And if I did I'd want to see court transcripts rather than sensationalist media reports. I've heard of a couple of cases that I thought sounded terrible (ie teenage couple sharing pics among themselves and being charged), and when I dug deeper (ie outside the media version of events) the court result actually made sense. So this may or may not be the case here (can't say without lengthy research hours)
      And I was lucky enough to catch an interview with a Federal Minister on the subject where he made complete sense. So I trust the system.
      Maybe things are little more whacko where you live, but even then I will opt for reporting suspect crime than not. I can't see how not reporting can ever produce a net gain for society as a whole.

    20. Re:One obvious question. by Heart44 · · Score: 1

      The comments on this story sadden me.

      Lots of civil libertarians who don't care about children and lots of people who want to decriminalize the consumption of child pornography and their mod point upvoters.

      Child pornography is one of the most disgusting things done by human beings to each other, yet few on this site seem to care.

      --

    21. Re:One obvious question. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, one of the major problems is that this stuff mostly comes from overseas. This is why I.C.E (Immigrations and Customs Enforcement) gets involved. They have jurisdiction as a customs violation and it's actually a great deal of what they investigate/prosecute. ICE investigates it coming into the country (the hosting providers), and the FBI works the issues of the consumers. They have taskforces so they can work as a team to take on the issue. With friendly countries, they would participate too; however many of these countries it comes from are so corrupt there is no hope in stopping it there. You can only take their customer base away to remove the financial incentive.

  2. This is crazy... by Ecuador · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I could understand it when it was a crime to cause harm to underage kids, like assaulting them or taking pictures of them. I can also understand how it would be bad to sell pictures of kids even if you haven't produced them yourself, there should not be a market for that.
    It starts to go downhill when it is a crime to download or just view (which is pretty much the same thing) an underage pic on your computer (and let's not go into ludicrous things like underage cartoon characters who are also considered verbotten!). Then they tell you the same thing is not a crime if you do it in order to catch other people doing it. So, is it a crime or isn't it? I don't know of another crime that it is OK to "perform" if you're "the good guy"...

    --
    Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
    1. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like you love underage boys.

    2. Re:This is crazy... by darkain · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Cops violate civilian law all the time for the sake of enforcing the law. The main thing that comes to mind is speeding, running red lights, and blocking traffic. And of course, an entire debate can start from cops usage of firearms.

    3. Re:This is crazy... by neo8750 · · Score: 1

      Umm what about the undercover cop that sells drugs to victim drug users?? They don't just take their money and cuff them they usually make a true deal and the user is grabbed once the drugs are in their possession.

    4. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the thinking is that those that want to view it create a demand, which then gives an incentive for someone to offer a supply of it.

    5. Re:This is crazy... by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      It starts to go downhill when it is a crime to download or just view (which is pretty much the same thing) an underage pic on your computer (and let's not go into ludicrous things like underage cartoon characters who are also considered verbotten!).

      The problem here is... just viewing the picture is creating a 'demand' for such material, and therefore a supply must be created, which exploits minors. I'm not really on board with the drawings of such things being forbidden as well, that seems like overkill to me, and drawings may supply the consumers of such materials that aren't exploitative of minors. It's an ugly nasty situation for sure.

      Then they tell you the same thing is not a crime if you do it in order to catch other people doing it. So, is it a crime or isn't it? I don't know of another crime that it is OK to "perform" if you're "the good guy"...

      I definitely have a problem with a honeypot situation involving child porn. I've already said in other posts, committing a crime to catch criminals is really in my opinion 'bad policing', and promoting 'do as I say, not as I do.' I also doubt the ability of such a honeypot (assuming it was TOR network site) being capable of revealing anyone's true identity. Though I think the other article said they were infecting the users of the site with some kind of malware/virus to help reveal their identities, which by the way, is also against the law. So double whammie here, hosting child porn and distributing malware.

      Nasty can of worms. I definitely think kiddie porn is disgusting (though as I said, drawings of it are ok by me. Not interested, but at least there's no victims) but so is Law Enforcement breaking laws to catch criminals. Not sure which is worse, they're both pretty low in my view.

    6. Re: This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a difference between it popping up on a site where underage porn should never be, and actively seeking it out and viewing it. If you're the latter, you need to be arrested.

    7. Re:This is crazy... by SumDog · · Score: 0

      You sound like someone who makes logical fallacies

    8. Re:This is crazy... by duke_cheetah2003 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Cops violate civilian law all the time for the sake of enforcing the law. The main thing that comes to mind is speeding, running red lights, and blocking traffic. And of course, an entire debate can start from cops usage of firearms.

      Not even remotely close to comparable situations.

      But if you wanted some comparable situations, you could point at Law Enforcement using under-cover officers posing as prostitutes to catch 'Johns' for soliciting prostitutes. Kind of a similar situation. I guess since Law Enforcement is allowed to do that, this probably is being allowed for much the same reason. Could also compare it to Law Enforcement attempting to buy or sell drugs in order to catch dealers and users. All of it is pretty devious if you asked me.

      I know I've seen some Law Enforcement reality shows where Law Enforcement busts a drug dealer, then stays in their residence for a few hours to catch users coming over to buy drugs. So that does happen, very similar to honeypotting a seized kiddie porn site. But I personally don't like it, I think it's just low. Gets a bit too close to entrapment for my taste.

    9. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      you could point at Law Enforcement using under-cover officers posing as prostitutes to catch 'Johns' for soliciting prostitutes. Kind of a similar situation. I guess since Law Enforcement is allowed to do that, this probably is being allowed for much the same reason. Could also compare it to Law Enforcement attempting to buy or sell drugs in order to catch dealers and users. All of it is pretty devious if you asked me

      yeah the worst part is how they conduct the negotiations. I've seen plenty of cop shows where they officer is almost forceful in trying to talk people into buying drugs. I recall one where the guy changed his mind and he was hassled by the cop for 5 minutes as he tried to talk him back into buying it. There should be some sort of limit to what they can do such as if they say no they stop pushing the person into the crime. But instead that instance the man caved to the cop so he would stop hassling him and was arrested where had the cop just said "fine get the fuck out of here then" the guy wouldn't of committed a crime. Its all about the arrests not about actually upholding the laws

    10. Re:This is crazy... by rahvin112 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The officers that distributed child pornography committed felonies. The government is not allowed to commit felonies in the pursuit of criminals. In fact with this knowledge in hand any attempt to prosecute anyone involved is under threat of having the evidence suppressed because of the felony.

      This would be akin to officers selling drugs on the street and allowing everyone to drive off after purchasing in the hope that maybe they could catch a couple of them several weeks later. This would not be legal and the officers would be prosecuted for distribution of a controlled substance and sent to prison. All the FBI agents involved should be prosecuted for distribution of child pornography.

    11. Re:This is crazy... by LainTouko · · Score: 2

      The problem here is... just viewing the picture is creating a 'demand' for such material, and therefore a supply must be created, which exploits minors. I'm not really on board with the drawings of such things being forbidden as well, that seems like overkill to me, and drawings may supply the consumers of such materials that aren't exploitative of minors. It's an ugly nasty situation for sure.

      Not necessarily. Certainly if someone's paying for it, they're going to incentivise production. But at the other end, there's the situation where someone's downloading it off a server which isn't counting the number of downloads or isn't telling the provider, which is often going to be the case when, for example, it gets spammed onto third-party imageboards, in which case people viewing it aren't affecting the outside world in any way.

      And consider. So downloading child porn off P2P services, which is a way of viewing such material, that increases the incentives to make it? Well, downloading copyrighted material off P2P services reduces the incentives to make it, as the copyright lobby loves telling us. These two things don't sound very consistent.

      As Slashdot loves noticing, the normal rules of supply and demand don't apply to information when you have this almost infinitely efficient machine for copying it called the internet.

    12. Re:This is crazy... by Damouze · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That is why entrapment is forbidden in a lot of countries in the world. It is tempting people who might otherwise never commit such a crime into commiting a crime. It is inventing/creating criminals and that is not a thing we as citizens should condone of our respective law enforcement agencies.

      --
      And on the Eighth Day, Man created God.
    13. Re: This is crazy... by Damouze · · Score: 1

      What would be the criteria upon which law enforcement would make the distinction between those two? What would be the threshold between 'this was accidental exposure' and 'this was deliberate' ? Should law enforcement go indicting everyone who has pictures of underage persons in suggestive poses in their browser cache (provided there is existing probable cause in any case)? Or should law enforcement also go deeper and look for the reasons the pictures were there before deciding someone is suspected of being a sex-offender?

      --
      And on the Eighth Day, Man created God.
    14. Re:This is crazy... by mikael · · Score: 1, Informative

      It wasn't a honeypot trap. The site existed before the Fed's took over. They got around the Tor encryption by getting some JavaScript/Java/PHP code to run on the host PC and extract the IP address that way. Stack Overflow and a hundred other blogs will all explain how to do this within a standard webpage. No illegal downloading of executables, DLL's, shared object files or modification of kernel permissions. Just plain web page design:

      http://javascript.about.com/li...

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    15. Re:This is crazy... by gweihir · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Cops are not allowed to rape people under any circumstances and with good reason. The whole argument against CP is that it victimizes those displayed again. Hence the FBI committed mass child-abuse in a very real sense.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    16. Re:This is crazy... by phorm · · Score: 3, Informative

      I'm fairly sure the people visiting the site were going there regardless of whether or not the FBI had control of it, so in this case it's not entrapment.

      Now if they were running targeted ads against a group group advertising the site, that would be entrapment. This is simply bait.

    17. Re:This is crazy... by fafalone · · Score: 1

      Umm what about the undercover cop that sells drugs to victim drug users?? They don't just take their money and cuff them they usually make a true deal and the user is grabbed once the drugs are in their possession.

      When an operation like that is conducted it's typically fake drugs. Pharma companies like Purdue and Actavis sell identical copies of their oxycodone pills without the oxycodone to law enforcement for example. Powders are obviously easy to fake. But in any case, they sure as hell don't sell to tens of thousands of buyers, let the buyers go home, enjoy the drugs, and pass some along to others, then sell some more to them a few days later, maybe bust them or not some months later, or if they're not US citizens just tell some other cops, for the tiny minority that they could follow to begin with (remember, this exploit only caught those people using older versions *with javascript enabled*.. who in their right mind does ANYTHING on the dark web with scripting enabled?).

    18. Re:This is crazy... by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Killing or injuring someone is usually a crime, but in certain circumstances it's not such as self defence or in the performance of law enforcement / military duties.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    19. Re:This is crazy... by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      I thought officers regularly did such things and would plant trackers in cash or drugs etc in order to try and catch offenders...
      Police also often commit felonies like murder in the performance of their duties. We don't jail any cop who shoots a suspect, we investigate to determine if they were justified in doing so.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    20. Re:This is crazy... by fafalone · · Score: 2

      The problem here is... just viewing the picture is creating a 'demand' for such material, and therefore a supply must be created, which exploits minors. I'm not really on board with the drawings of such things being forbidden as well, that seems like overkill to me, and drawings may supply the consumers of such materials that aren't exploitative of minors. It's an ugly nasty situation for sure.

      You're saying people have sex with children just to get some high fives online? It's illogical on its face. They might be more likely to record it if they're already doing it, but that's about it. Commercial transactions are an entirely different issue. Also, some people enjoy watching children beaten and brutally murdered. But that's legal (as long as the child isn't naked) to possess pictures/videos of. People get off on adults being raped too, but videos of that are legal. If viewing encourages the act, why aren't things like that illegal? Or maybe we should arrest anyone who has adult porn they can't find signed affidavits of affirmative consent for? The laws banning CP were created when most of it was purchased. When that was no longer the case they made up other rationales with little evidence and zero discussion of whether such a thin link was worth a massive infringement on freedom (destroying someones life because of data they possess) because why on earth would LE ever want to give up the massive power and carte blanche to ignore half the constitution that came with it. If it was really about protecting victims of crimes or that viewing encouraged crimes, a whole host of other things would be illegal.
      You mentioned cartoons filling demand, but that doesn't go far enough: some studies have even indicated legal possession of already-created freely acquired CP (i.e. no realistic contribution to market) can actually satisfy a pedo so they don't go out and actually molest a kid, at a better success rate than completely abstaining from viewing such images. However disgusting CP is, if it prevents pedos from becoming child molesters at a higher rate than it encourages them to, the net result is less children hurt-- and that should be the goal, and right now it's not: we're far more interested in the low-hanging fruit of viewers.

    21. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not illegal to pretend to be a prostitute and wait for men to proposition you for sex, though, so the cops aren't breaking the law.

    22. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Undercover officers trying to entrap men for solicitation is nothing like this. The undercover officer is an adult, and dressing like a prostitute is not a crime. This actions do not hurt anyone until they make an arrest. This is not comparable.

      The argument against child pornography is that it hurt the victim after the fact. Let assume this is true because debating this will get us no where.

      If the police possess and distribute child pornography then it hurt the victim. It is bad as if the police raped the child themselves, right? (disgusting paedophiles!). If it don't, then it also can't if it anyone else share the picture. Therefore there is no crime in possession of interwebs bits. Or, possession of picture is truly bad and it is a awful awful crime.

      But then If they are justified of doing so to stop a heinous crime, they committed that same heinous crime a thousand time over. And if you care for the victims, think of all the victims our taxes dollars tortured all these years.

      Crime committed by citizen is to be expected, this is why we got courthouse and prison to deal with them. Crime committed by the state is on us. Those crime are 100% our fault because we allowed them.

    23. Re:This is crazy... by physicsphairy · · Score: 1

      Law enforcement receives substantial additional vehicle training and have lights and sirens to make other drivers aware when they responding to an emergency or blocking an intersection. Law enforcement is allowed to carry restricted firearms and to do so in restricted areas (such as bars) while on duty, but again they have substantial additional training and are performing a specific function. The conditions for legally discharging their firearms are pretty much the same as for you or I.

      The privileges of a licensed police officer are comparable to those of other licensed professionals. E.g., a surgeon or a commercial airline pilot can do things that most others (including cops) could not do legally, but because they are specially equipped to do so in a beneficent manner.

      However, neither a surgeon, airline pilot, or police officer is entitled to use their special dispensations to do anything malignant. The issue here is that disseminating child pornography is understood to directly and/or indirectly harm children. The police should not have the option of using that or even of idly allowing that to occure in order to obtain their convictions, any more than it would be okay for them letting a murder go forward so they could bring up murder charges.

      I think taking over the website is a valid sting. But they should not have provided the actual images once it was in their capacity to prevent them from being distributed. If that results in less evidence collected, so be it. Protecting the innocent is of higher priority than maximizing justice.

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

      The site would not be there without the FBI. Your argument is stupid. You are stupid. You should feel bad.

      What the FBI did was bad as if anyone else did it. Anyone else did the same it would have been alike child rape. The FBI committed child rape, with your taxes! If you think that is far fetched then you must agree that possession of child pornography is not that bad after all. Are you a creepy child molester?

      I found that, like in the case of homophobia, the more virulently opposed peoples are, the more likely they are one themselves. If you are a closet paedophile, please ask for help before you rape a child. And please; stop thinking of the children.

    25. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Visitors of such sites first disable javascript.

    26. Re:This is crazy... by cbhacking · · Score: 1

      I thought the argument was that if you want it, you're creating a demand for it, which means it will be created, which means children will be abused (or, you know, will take pictures to give to their boyfriend, who then posts them on 4chan after they break up, whatever). I hadn't heard "victimizes those displayed" before. It's a better argument for banning such media if you take the premise (that viewing causes victimization) as true, but that seems a shakier premise than that demand creates a market...

      --
      There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    27. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You thought wrong. This may be why you don't see the problem here too: you think it ought to be allowed. But you refuse to realise that what you're saying is that it is sometimes OK to send child porn out, even if it's to thousands upon thousands of people.

      If it's OK to traffic in the porn, why is it illegal?

    28. Re:This is crazy... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      It is the an argument frequently used by the DoJ, so it should be what the FBI uses as well. I am not saying there are not other arguments as well, I am just saying that by the argumentation of the DoJ, the FBI did something akin to raping all these children again. And it is even worse than when some random Internet user uploads/downloads this stuff, because a) the FBI must have expected this to become public knowledge, i.e. the victims would _know_ they have been victimized again and b) this time it was the government doing it to them, which is far, far worse, as doing it to them is now somehow "legitimate".

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    29. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically, removing existing material from circulation creates demand for further production.
      By now, there is enough child porn to satisfy even the horniest of pedophiles for a lifetime and a half, if it wouldn't be so damn hard to get.

    30. Re:This is crazy... by Threni · · Score: 1

      "Then they tell you the same thing is not a crime if you do it in order to catch other people doing it. So, is it a crime or isn't it? I don't know of another crime that it is OK to "perform" if you're "the good guy"..."

      An odd argument. You can't speed on the roads but the police can, to catch criminals. You can't place people into rooms and not let them out, but the police can when they've "arrested" someone. You can't own a gun (in the uk, with very few exceptions) but the police can.

      In summary, your argument needs a little work.

    31. Re:This is crazy... by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      You do know there are specific exceptions in firearms discharge laws, and speed laws for law enforcement and emergency responders right?

      So no they are not breaking the law when they do those things at least not when they do them while performing an otherwise lawful enforcement or rescue action.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    32. Re:This is crazy... by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Not even close. It may be different in your country, but there are VERY strict definitions on when they may use those privileges in my country. Speeding and running red lights requires them to turn on their flashy gimmicks, pretty much telling everyone in a mile wide radius "Here comes law enforcement, get the fuck out of my way", and if they use it to get to the doughnut shop in time and you catch them, you can easily get them in enough trouble that they will not be allowed near a car with the flashy gimmicks for the next couple decades.

      With firearms it's even worse. Every single bullet they have in their guns is marked (and help them god for no court will if they are found with unmarked rounds), and every bullet missing has to be accounted for, reported and including a detailed explanation when, where and why it was fired.

      It does go a bit over board if you ask me, but these things are, at least in Europe, usually handled very strictly. You better have a GOOD reason to use your privileges as a cop.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    33. Re:This is crazy... by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They do not commit murder in the performance of their duties.

      When they commit murder the public gets upset, the city that hires them loses millions, they lose their jobs and sometimes (not often enough) they go to jail.

      The situation actually analogous to your situation is if the police murdered a person when told to while undercover. That would be murder.

      Police in large scale undercover operations are allowed to consume drugs (they have to report it as soon as possible and get treatment after the undercover operation is over). Vice police are allowed to solicit prostitution. Normal police are not allowed to consume drugs or solicit prostitution. No police are allowed to murder people.

      Police are allowed to shoot suspects if they fear for their safety or if the criminal poses a danger to the public.

      That's why you see the police saying that the 16 year old kid with a 4" blade who was walking away from them that they shot a full clip into the kid's back made them fear for their safety. Or how the guy tasered and spasming face down on the ground who they shot in the back multiple times (after a traffic stop) made them feel in fear for their life.

      Child porn is treated as very evil to ludicrous lengths (i.e. where a person is flagged as a sexual predator for life for having a picture of bart simpson with a fingerlike undetailed cartoon penis). I'm not sure if it is bad as murder.

      I'm not sure if they should have been allowed to operate the site for two weeks. It seems dubious to me. It probably depends on if people who were actively hurting children (as opposed to trading old pictures of people who are probably of age now). It's a terrible crime tho so I guess I'd cut them some slack in this case. Sort of a slippery slope tho.

      --
      She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.
    34. Re:This is crazy... by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Entrapment or not, these suspects are among the most loathed people in society. You could add war crimes and regicide to the charges and a jury would probably still convict.

    35. Re:This is crazy... by Ecuador · · Score: 1

      When I wrote the OP the under-cover prostitutes did come in mind, but the cops themselves don't actually perform the act. And note, performing the act in this case would mean the under-cover cops to do the sex part AND KEEP THE MONEY!

      --
      Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Polar Scope Align for iOS
    36. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They got around the Tor encryption by getting some JavaScript/Java/PHP code to run on the host PC and extract the IP address that way. Stack Overflow and a hundred other blogs will all explain how to do this within a standard webpage. No illegal downloading of executables, DLL's, shared object files or modification of kernel permissions. Just plain web page design:

      http://javascript.about.com/li...

      The whole Tor project would be a little bit pointless if deanonymizing the users was a simple matter of "plain web design".

      All the server side reliant methods of accessing the user's IP address with JavaScript listed in your link are irrelevant to the discussion here: If the user's IP address is known on the server side and you control the server, why on earth would you bother with client side JavaScript when you could just look at server logs? Of course, in a situation where the user does not connect to the server directly the server side methods only give you the IP address of the last proxy in the proxy chain. Onion sites can only be accessed through Tor, no direct connections are possible.

      This leaves the JavaScript and Java method. The problem here is that the Firefox based Tor Browser (used by almost every Tor user) does not, for obvious reasons, include the Java plugin.

      So how did the FBI do it then? I'm not aware of the specifics of this case but in the past they have used zero day vulnerabilities in Firefox JavaScript handling to run malicious "phone home" shell code on the client machines. Most anonymous web surfing guides since the 90's have advised strong anonymity seeking users to always keep their JavaScript disabled, though as the advisory for the 2013 exploit notes, many big attack vectors besides JavaScript remain, such as css, svg, xml, the renderer etc...

    37. Re:This is crazy... by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      In general I disagree with you. I'm alright with authorities having to set up more elaborate sting operations which require breaking laws to catch criminal. Maybe not your more contrived example of selling drugs indiscriminately and letting everyone run off, but I'd certainly support something like selling drugs in an effort to get further into a major drug organization in hopes of getting access to the top players in the organization. There are limits though. Selling drugs (to adults, not children/teens), fine. Committing murders, definitely not.

      However, when it comes to child porn, I agree with you. I can have no tolerance for it. At no time, for any duration or for any reason, should the authorities be distributing it. After all, we've been told that child porn is SO dangerous to children that even the act of sharing CGI generated pictures (in which no child was actually harmed) is harmful to children. If distributing CGI child porn harms children, then just imagine how many children were harmed by these agents distributing ACTUAL child porn photos, in which children were actually directly harmed.

    38. Re:This is crazy... by LordKronos · · Score: 1

      Police also often commit felonies like murder in the performance of their duties. We don't jail any cop who shoots a suspect, we investigate to determine if they were justified in doing so.

      That's not murder until the investigation determines they were not justified. If they were justified, then its considered something else (not sure which term the law would apply....self defense? justifiable homicide? another term that applies specifically for police officers?)

    39. Re: This is crazy... by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      What would be the criteria upon which law enforcement would make the distinction between those two?

      I suppose a good start would be a record of removing and reporting illegal child pornography posted.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    40. Re:This is crazy... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Cops violate civilian law all the time for the sake of enforcing the law. The main thing that comes to mind is speeding, running red lights, and blocking traffic.

      It's interesting you mention that, since the cops' own rules and regulations typically require them to use lights (and when in motion, sirens) whenever they do that, but they typically don't bother. You're lucky if they remember to turn on the Arrowstik when they park in the middle of the road. Rules are for the sheeple, not our fearless leaders.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    41. Re:This is crazy... by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      The whole argument against CP is that it victimizes those displayed again.

      What? Who told you that? They're stupid, and you should feel bad for repeating their stupidity. The primary argument against CP is that someone has to make it, and the demand for new CP (there is always demand for new content in any kind of media) can only be fulfilled by abusing children.

      Hence the FBI committed mass child-abuse in a very real sense.

      They really, really didn't, because no additional children had to be abused for them to maintain the site. However, they did help fuel the demand for new CP, just like any other distributor of CP — which is the other argument in a nutshell. They did contribute to that, but they have no problem helping to prosecute others on the same basis, which is the specific reason they are hypocrites.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    42. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I could understand it when it was a crime to cause harm to underage kids, like assaulting them or taking pictures of them. I can also understand how it would be bad to sell pictures of kids even if you haven't produced them yourself, there should not be a market for that.
      It starts to go downhill when it is a crime to download or just view (which is pretty much the same thing) an underage pic on your computer (and let's not go into ludicrous things like underage cartoon characters who are also considered verbotten!). Then they tell you the same thing is not a crime if you do it in order to catch other people doing it. So, is it a crime or isn't it? I don't know of another crime that it is OK to "perform" if you're "the good guy"...

      They're catching sicko pedophiles so I'm fully behind the FBI for doing this. It's disgusting but unfortunately the damage has already been done to the kids...at least have some good come from it and catch those depraved bastards that get off on this shit.

    43. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The site would not be there without the FBI. Your argument is stupid. You are stupid. You should feel bad.

      You're stupid and you should feel bad. The site was already there. The FBI found it and used it to catch the already registered users that were accessing the site. The FBI did not create the site nor the child pornography contained within.

      Maybe you should have actually read the article.

    44. Re: This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Making viewing or downloading a pic is stupid on the face of it, just considering how insecure and impersonal computer systems are.

    45. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The people wouldn't visit the website if it was offline (i.e. if the FBI wasn't running the child porn website).
      Just like if you take all the drug dealers off the streets, people wouldn't buy drugs on the streets.

    46. Re:This is crazy... by penguinoid · · Score: 1

      But if you wanted some comparable situations, you could point at Law Enforcement using under-cover officers posing as prostitutes to catch 'Johns' for soliciting prostitutes.

      This would be comparable if said under-cover officers were actually having sex with their targets. Which, incidentally they have done in the other direction -- with cops having sex with a prostitute to "verify that she really is a prostitute" and then arresting her.

      --
      Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
    47. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's only similar if the undercover cops actually had sex with you for money before arresting you.

    48. Re:This is crazy... by kbg · · Score: 1

      There are specific laws that allows the police to speed, block traffic and use firearms. Is there a special law that allows cops to view child porn?

    49. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There could be a tricky middle ground here. When they took it over, did they actively update the service? Did they add content, or simply allow it to run a little longer, collecting information, before shutting it down.

      If all they did was allow access for two more weeks while recording details of access, then it can be argued that they did not in fact engage in distribution. If you are tapping a phone line, but not talking, are you part of the conversation?

    50. Re:This is crazy... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      The whole argument against CP is that it victimizes those displayed again.

      What? Who told you that? They're stupid, and you should feel bad for repeating their stupidity. The primary argument against CP is that someone has to make it, and the demand for new CP (there is always demand for new content in any kind of media) can only be fulfilled by abusing children.

      I did not say this was my argument. It is however the official position of the DoJ. And I do not believe this position is stupid, because if even one victim feels victimized again if pictures of their rape get distributed, then it is a valid position.

      Incidentally, there is apparently exceptionally little CP that is made to "fulfill demand" or for commercial reasons according to a law-enforcement source that should know. Sure, people that are abusing their children anyways may also take pictures if they can then swap them, but that is not why the abuse takes place. So that argument falls flat on its face. The real problem here is that most child abuse does not end up on video or in pictures and fighting illegal pixels takes resources away from finding and helping those victims.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    51. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The people wouldn't visit the website if it was offline (i.e. if the FBI wasn't running the child porn website).
      Just like if you take all the drug dealers off the streets, people wouldn't buy drugs on the streets.

      You don't need to take the entire damn site offline. Use a little fucking creativity and make it look like there's problems actually getting the illegal content, but leave the rest of the site intact.

      And just like with people who show up at a particular Park at night where they know dealers hang around, people will still show up if all the dealers are arrested and repalced with agents who act like dealers. You don't have to actually GIVE people the drugs, they're going to keep coming to the park. And more to the point, you don't just start selling drugs in the park, especially if you only actually end up arresting 1 out of 10,000 of the people you're selling them to.

    52. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They may be able to get evidence suppressed so far as it was served to them from the seized size, after it was seized. But the police would have the identity of the recipient, and reason to suspect other offences, and they could get them for those (they will have download logs, and can thus show what was not downloaded after the site was seized).

    53. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the reality is that any such attempt to have the evidence stricken from the record would be undermined by a "Think of the children!" mentality. I highly doubt they will be stopped because of unethical practices required to entrap these people.. who may have not actually done anything but go to a website.

      Don't get me wrong, i realize that the harm Child molestation does to a kid is deep and repulsive, and by viewing such a site you are supporting that harm to those kids.. but I'd much rather have someone watch CP than actually molest someone and I'm not so naive to think that removing one will prevent the other. This is morally murky territory to me.

    54. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can actually flip this around on you. The harm that is caused by viewing a CP site is that by supporting such content you endorse and encourage is creation. Once it is created it's not like harm continues to that individual, much less over a few weeks. Since it was then owned by the authorities no new content will be produced or even encouraged by such viewings... so keeping it open for a brief period did not cause any additional harm.

    55. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are the one that didn't read the article. They should have TAKE IT DOWN when they found about it so the abuse would stop. Instead they chose to continue the abuse of children to get funding or bonus or whatever.

      If by "being already there" you mean it do not hurt anyone, then why are we persecuting anyone that might possibly had one of these picture passing on their screen while browsing the internet? All these photography that are circulating are "being already there" before, so there is no harm having them. Right?

      Fucking retard. The FBI is evil, it hurt children. Deal with it.

    56. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And now all your trial fail and you have to release everyone that was just taking a walk in the park. Which will be 100% of them, you can be sure of that. Also you get sue over all this unlawful crap and smearing. The FBI is evil, it ran a child pornography ring. We can never trust these peoples any more. Deal with it.

    57. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, cops walking out with a trenchcoat full of drugs and soliciting sales is definitely unlawful. Taking over an illegal website and keeping it running for a while isn't the same; it's like running 1-800-BUY-DRUGS and waiting for someone to call and make an offer for cocaine, complete with credit card information and a shipping address.

    58. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true. Police cars are classified as "emergency vehicles" so they have exemptions to certain things. For instance, cops don't have to signal when turning, although I'm glad to say that when they are just driving around, I've seen a lot of cops use their turn signal.

    59. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's a witch hunt. It's that simple.

      Is it about "creating demand"? What if you showed that it didn't do that? What if it doesn't create demand in a specific case? Why does the government attack you for copying a song [you FILLED the demand that someone else would have profited from, thus "stealing" from them], but also for this fictional thing [you CREATED a demand by blah blah blah].

      Is it about "they are harmed by subsequent viewings"? What if the actresses are dead? Is it better to have child porn of an actress who was later murdered by her abuser, instead of one who was rescued, because the dead chick can't be hurt any further? What about vintage stuff? When did men become Sex Wizards who can harm others by masturbating in their house?

      It's morality bullshit, and you don't need to waste your time trying to figure out what their argument is- it's meaningless. They'll say whatever.

    60. Re: This is crazy... by ememisya · · Score: 1

      There is no consistent logic it would seem. It's a bit like a cop going undercover to become a pimp or a drug dealer and their handlers hoping they don't actually stay pimps or drug dealers. Which happens, but hey part of the job. I think it makes the world a better place.

    61. Re:This is crazy... by Fnord666 · · Score: 1

      So, is it a crime or isn't it? I don't know of another crime that it is OK to "perform" if you're "the good guy"...

      Doesn't law enforcement sell drugs as part of various sting operations? Don't they do the same with weapons?

      --
      'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
    62. Re: This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you fucking stupid or what? When they took control of the site, shutting it down immediately would have left the users go find another site and get off (pun not intended). By keeping it open for two weeks, they didn't financially support more abuse, they removed further potential abuse. Anyone they had further contact from suppliers to customers is a benefit to everyone but the sick fucks and profiteers.

      You are really, really dumb.

    63. Re:This is crazy... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Incidentally, there is apparently exceptionally little CP that is made to "fulfill demand"

      Sure, I'll agree with that. If people aren't paying money for it, then I suspect very few people are going to take the risk of making it just for the thrill, or recognition. On the other hand, the number is clearly nonzero, and the FBI contributed to it willfully, so they're just as bad as anyone else who ran the site, however bad that is.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    64. Re:This is crazy... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Indeed.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    65. Re:This is crazy... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      If that is true (and it might be, as economic theory rather strongly suggests it), the the FBI and others are actively encouraging and increasing child abuse, in particular for for the case of drawings and other material that falls under CP, but where no actual child was hurt in order to create it. This whole issue is really a lot murkier than they would have us believe.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    66. Re:This is crazy... by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, this has indeed all the tell-tales of a witch-hunt. Just like the "war on drugs" has, for example, and with the same people driving it and benefiting from it. With this latest step by the FBI, I have serious doubt anybody there actually cares much about the victims. They do quite obviously care very much about increasing their "business", and are willing to do whatever it takes. Pretty bad.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    67. Re: This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are arguing that distributing child pornography DO NOT harm the victim? You are actually saying that the FBI did not cause harm by hosting the picture?

      Then why it is a crime, for anyone to have them? Is it bad taste, sure. But does it hurt anyone, no, ... according to you.

      Face it, the FBI are dishonest, unlawful thugs. They will even hurt children victims to get funding, a raise or a bonus. We can't trust these peoples any more.

    68. Re:This is crazy... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      With this latest step by the FBI, I have serious doubt anybody there actually cares much about the victims.

      The FBI is a tool of the status quo, which includes child molestation. If all child molestation stopped, how could the establishment point at it to make people afraid? Besides, those in power like molesting children.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    69. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is capital punihsment just as ... ethical? Is it okay to kill a proven murderer? On the other hand, would a sex offender continue those damaging deeds if the punishment were severe? Like, perhaps genitalia mutilation, or death?!

    70. Re:This is crazy... by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      I found that, like in the case of homophobia, the more virulently opposed peoples are, the more likely they are one themselves.

      I might agree with most of what you said but the above was admitted to be a tactic to shut down open and vocal early opponents of societal acceptance of homosexuals. Anti-Gay people became seen as closet gays because of this PROPAGANDA so it shut them up as the majority of them considered homosexuality a shameful activity. Do you also believe caveman found their mates by knocking women unconscious and dragging them by their hair back to a cave? If so then you might be a victim of early feminist propaganda too.

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    71. Re:This is crazy... by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      The FBI is evil, it hurt children. Deal with it.

      They have burnt a few alive too

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    72. Re:This is crazy... by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Whatever term you use to describe it or the reasons it was done, police officers often make a conscious decision to kill someone.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    73. Re:This is crazy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      its not breaking civilian law, they have cruisers which have light bars which allow them to use a exemption in the law for just a case. now if they were doing those things with out the cherries on then they are breaking the law.. and they can get pulled over, i have seen such a thing.

      n0o one should ever break the law for the sake of enforcing the law. there is an argument to be made for exemptions. for example, we allow them to speed and run red lights but to ensure safety for the general public, they are required to run their lights when they do such a thing, it is also illegal for civilians to have those same lights and thus the law is not being broken. you really should pick your analogies well.

      cops breaking the law should be tried for breaking the law. period, full stop. anything otherwise incentivizes entrapment of innocent individuals. speeding, running reds, and blocking traffic are all things that may need to be done in order to complete their jobs. these are things that they have specific exemptions to and have specialty equipment to ensure adequate public safety.

      hosting the website after the raid was careless and allowed further harm to any individuals that have been victimized. that should be a crime and some of them should go to jail for it. the police should not be allowed to inflict more harm on the victims in order to get the criminals.

    74. Re:This is crazy... by beastofburdon · · Score: 1

      More than just a few. I'm counting 22 in a single day at Waco.

  3. Questions. by khasim · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... accessed such sites through encrypted addresses.

    Do they mean Tor and such? Because if so, then how did they get addresses even when they were running it?

    Also, why not just remove all the images so that the links show errors. You'd achieve the same end results but you wouldn't be hosting or DISTRIBUTING kiddie porn. Claim it was a drive failure or whatever.

    Not to mention possibly being able to track the people who complained about the images being broken. Get them to use another, non-Tor, way to check when the images would be fixed.

    1. Re:Questions. by hawguy · · Score: 2

      ... accessed such sites through encrypted addresses.

      Do they mean Tor and such? Because if so, then how did they get addresses even when they were running it?

      Also, why not just remove all the images so that the links show errors. You'd achieve the same end results but you wouldn't be hosting or DISTRIBUTING kiddie porn. Claim it was a drive failure or whatever.

      Not to mention possibly being able to track the people who complained about the images being broken. Get them to use another, non-Tor, way to check when the images would be fixed.

      Because they want the site visitors to click around enough that they can get infected by the malware that phones home and lets the FBI break through their anonymizing software. So when they cleverly cover their tracks by using an anonymous VPN to connect to another anonymous VPN to connect to an anonymous web proxy to connect to Tor, when they drop the anonymizers to buy more hand lotion from Amazon, the FBI can see their beacon and track them down.

    2. Re:Questions. by Etherwalk · · Score: 1

      Also, why not just remove all the images so that the links show errors. You'd achieve the same end results but you wouldn't be hosting or DISTRIBUTING kiddie porn. Claim it was a drive failure or whatever.

      Because then people visiting the site could not be charged with possession of child pornography.

    3. Re:Questions. by ArchieBunker · · Score: 1

      TOR is broken as far as I'm concerned. The fact that it was funded by the US government always did seem suspicious. In fact there was a recent story about the feds paying CMU to run thousands of fake nodes.

      --
      Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
    4. Re:Questions. by khasim · · Score: 1

      Anything they were going to upload they could upload while the users were reading the "explanation" about the "drive failure".

      The same with anything they might be able to download from the users' machines.

      Easier still would be to set up a junk Twitter account and ask those users to follow it for updates on the "repair" work. Then get a warrant and ask Twitter for the details of anyone following that account.

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

      It was a fucking joke even before that. If you actually live in some place where internet is restricted, like China, you can't even connect to the fucking thing. So, the only people that really use it are paranoid niggers and dark-web criminal krauts.

    6. Re:Questions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because then people visiting the site could not be charged with possession of child pornography.

      The Justice Department was in possession of child pornography for weeks and distributed it. According to their own standards, as noted in TFA, the victims are harmed every time the images are viewed. Whether or not it's criminal cannot change the fact that victims were harmed every time the images were viewed, either by FBI agents or anyone else. Of course, this is ridiculous but that's the problem with the current laws. They carve out a very specific exception to freedom of speech that's not accorded to photographic evidence of any other crime, including murder. Could it not be argued that the loved ones of a murder victim, especially children, suffer each time images of their murdered loved one are viewed? Is their suffering in that case less than it would be if somebody viewed images of their sexual abuse? Should the law make such distinctions? Is that not inconsistent? Why not make possession of all photographic evidence of any crime itself a crime?

    7. Re:Questions. by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      Many of these sites are paid-for sites: the operators run them in order to make money.

      The access logs (if they exist in the first place) won't give originating IP addresses - information of which could then be used to find home addresses through ISP records, and get search warrants and the like. The most reasonable way to find people accessing these sites, is through payment details. See who pays for it - and go after them. It also instantly negates the "I got there accidentally, saw those images, it's not what I want, left the site immediately" argument that offenders may use in there defence. Showing all images as broking isn't making anyone pay for it.

      Then there is of course the moral issue of the government taking part in the crime. I see it as a necessary evil in this case (assuming the money made from the site's continued operation doesn't go into the child porn production coffers, and that it actually can be proven to help cracking down on the whole issue), and quite similar to the police taking over an agreed-for drug sale to see who shows up to pay and pick up the goods. The main difference with the digital world is of course that you can't stop the offender from taking delivery that easily, you can't arrest them the moment they finish the transaction.

    8. Re:Questions. by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      When people are knowingly committing a crime they get spooked easily, a notice about a drive failure could cause someone to suspect the truth and start covering their tracks. The only evidence would be the fact they accessed the site very briefly, which a good lawyer could claim was accidental or otherwise performed without the intent of accessing child porn.

      It's not uncommon for users to briefly access site they didn't intend to, sites can get hacked and filled with bogus links, search engine results are often filled with spam results and spam links are often received via email or social media postings etc. Simply accessing a website does not prove that the user was intending to access the content that's on the site. Someone who accesses the site unintentionally is going to leave as soon as they learn of the true content, but someone who is looking for such content is going to behave in exactly the same way as soon as they learn that the content they want is unavailable.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    9. Re:Questions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...So, the only people that really use it are paranoid niggers and dark-web criminal krauts.

      Or people in countries like the UK, for various reasons.

      (Path of least resistance, in most cases, portable Tor setup on a USB stick)

    10. Re:Questions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's a minor oversight in an otherwise clever - and legal plan. find some of those 18yr holds that look like they're 12 and put them on the first page. as the sight experiences "run time errors" make the twitter link more prominent. some nice uncaught java stacks about jdbc errors or whatever shouldnt spook most internet users too much, even tech savvy ones. this would even work with their malware attack, it's still illegal, but I could imagine exceptions similar to the ones that make handcuffs legal to use in arrests, but not for kidnapping.

      its probably a rare case that this the first cp site that a suspect visited, so the argument that they have to dl from the FBI site to guarantee evidence to convict is absurd. they already have some, they just wanted more, and now you know who they are.

    11. Re:Questions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tor and encryption/obfuscation protocols are about end-to-end protection. It's to prevent third parties. If you can't trust the person on the other end of the line, you're screwed.

    12. Re:Questions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      accessed such sites through encrypted addresses.

      Yep propaganda. We have to get rid of encryption to save the children. Truth is an IP address can't be encrypted. Tor will hide your true address but the address isn't encrypted.

    13. Re:Questions. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FFS, your identity is not hidden from any server you access while on tor! tor just encrypts the traffic en-route. If i own a server and you connect via tor, you may not be leaking data externally, but you are sure as shit leaking data to me.. and im sending data back to you, which could include and attack vector or other malicious code.

      They could have just set up a blank website, this is the FBI after-all... one connection (even through tor) and you've already given up enough information. fuck i could have done it better with a new sign up page (with no images) and a paragraph at the top explaining that i had to change the login/sign up process due to LEO heat and when you click submit, you are served up with some nice malware. might not get all of them, but sure would get a few leads with out perpetuating the child porn. to be honest every time i hear stories like this i wonder how the TLA can leave their front door some days as most of the reporting on them makes them look like rank amateurs!

      and before any one says that all the reporting on them is bad.. well maybe before they go on their little escapades like this someone should take 5 and think "what could be the blow back from this" but then again that would require actual punishment for people who are wrong.. you know like the people who committed war crimes for torturing and those who are committing even more war crimes by not prosecuting the people who committed the war crimes in the first place.

  4. Slashdot quote error by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "1000 pains = 1 Megahertz"

    I have seen this one before. Pretty sure 1000 pains would be 1 kilohertz, not Megahertz." This is supposed to be a technically minded site.

    1. Re:Slashdot quote error by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm more annoyed by it not being Megahurtz.

      1 Pain could equal 1000 hurtz. I don't know the conversion.

      If you're going to go for a pun, you need to go all the way.

    2. Re:Slashdot quote error by JustOK · · Score: 1

      Using hurtz is a n00b mistake. On earth, the proper unit is the hurtz-dontit.

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
  5. there's nothing hilosophically wrong with this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a well known philosophical position called "the end justifies the means".

  6. Re:ew by SumDog · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...To the broken US justice system where they get labelled as sex offenders, are on a public registry and can never again get a decent job or live anywhere close to anyone.

    Many of these people were abused themselves as children. I met an Australian who volunteered with troubled youth. He met kids who were angry at their abusers, their families .. the world. And they had a right to be. They were sexually abused in horrible horrible ways. ... any person would see that kid as a victim who has a right to be angry ...and at some point, there is a possibility that kid turns into an abuser -- manipulating children into relationships that those kids have no ability to understand. They are monsters; horrible people with no hope of redemption.

    So when does the victim ... become the monster? At 15? 18?

    I'm not saying I agree with what they do, but we can't just keep locking them up. I don't know what the solution is, but the current system is broken.

  7. Hi by Lirodon · · Score: 1

    I'm Chris Hansen from Dateline NBC. Why don't you have a seat over there?

  8. Re: Was it worth it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I say any judge throwing it out ought to get investigated.

  9. I wonder how the abuse victims feel. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've been abused in my youth. I don't think any photos were taken, but if they were, the idea that the government I elected is distributing them is far more abhorrent to me than the idea that a bunch of creeps is gawping at them. The latter are people who need serious therapy but who pose no threat sweating behind a monitor, while the former are the very model of power imbalance against a helpless child.

    If I witness news footage showing someone dying (e.g. war, terrorist attack, police shoot-out, whatever) then I'm not re-murdering them. But there are ethical questions involved in distributing such videos: am I being respectful to the memory of the deceased or survivors? am I glorifying the murder? am I exploiting the murder? am I providing sufficient warning? and so on. Shitlords on the Internet will spam such videos insensitively as "gore", and they remain shitlords, but that's all. Governments, however, are acting on my behalf. They should not just do what is legal, but avoid doing what is not ethical.

    In particular, a government's duty is to publicise third parties only when the public interest in the content of the publication outweighs the harm to the third parties. If there is no benefit in the public consuming the content, but instead the content is being used for some further aim, the publication is not occurring in the public interest. Rather, the subjects of the content are being exploited non-consensually.

    So, the police might distribute CCTV of a hooligan attack which shows the parts of the victims (probably face blurred out), even if the victims cannot all be identified. This would help make the public aware of an attacker, and give them the opportunity to report sightings to the police: obvious public interest in the content of the publication. But to use the video not to find the perpetrator but, instead, to identify other people who want to watch it - telling the victims that they need to have their attack watched over and over to stop those who want to watch them being attacked - is patently absurd.

    1. Re:I wonder how the abuse victims feel. by Damouze · · Score: 1

      Amen to that.

      --
      And on the Eighth Day, Man created God.
    2. Re:I wonder how the abuse victims feel. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up

    3. Re:I wonder how the abuse victims feel. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same on all counts, and still paying the price 30 years later. The fact that the government is knowingly and intentionally contributing to the exploitation of abused children is abhorrent. Fuck the FBI and their nonexistent code of ethics.

    4. Re:I wonder how the abuse victims feel. by kesuki · · Score: 1

      the biggest problem with using computers to 'catch' paedophiles is that machines can fabricate evidence when 'ordered' to 'find concrete evidence'
      and for those who wonder why machines are creating evidence in the first place, well. It is simple, virtually every piece of childhood content has some subtle hint of paedophilia. from 'peter peter, pumpkin eater' (child bride) to 'three blind mice' (three judges who looked the other way) To classic entertainment like, the three stooges.(hint a creampie in the face, is oral blowjob) i could go on down the rabbit hole, how are robots going to enforce penalties they are told to make? also, not all life forms live to be 18. are you gonna arrest the bacteria in your lungs for reproduction? are you going to arrest the blades of grass for their reproduction every year, and never stop growing? are you going to mow all the grass so it never fertilizes until it is 18 years old?!?! plants are alive and reproduce, even in climates where it plants never freeze, not many of them wait 18 years to grow up and make seeds.

      anyway, i feel for you that you were victimized, a real child lover never takes one, for the love is too great, but a child rapist will take advantage with every opportunity.

    5. Re:I wonder how the abuse victims feel. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Governments, however, are acting on my behalf.

      Are you sure that's right?

    6. Re:I wonder how the abuse victims feel. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now how will we know if she was victimized there or if she is still alive? FBI calls 21 olders *children*, in fact, even most disgusting African homeless are called *boys*. I am till recognizing pictures from various sources, but they omitted acting IN ADVANCE before those pictures happen, so now I will not know what happened to several people.

  10. FBI by badramalik08 · · Score: 0

    Yeah well i know that FBI was first known to have operated a child porn site in 2012. Badra Malik | http://www.t20worldcup-2016.co...

  11. In the name of National Secuirty by Dorianny · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think the only real issue people have with this is that if the FBI can justify such tactics then whats to stop them from doing the same to WikiLeaks

    1. Re:In the name of National Secuirty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you kidding? This is how governments shut down all independent organisations and structures. Thought everyone knew that by now.

    2. Re:In the name of National Secuirty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, with WikiLeaks the moral reservations would be different. As stated in the comments above, this case is about 1) the government doing something highly illegal at a large scale, and 2) that they are distributing very objectionable images. The fact that they fake a website is not even being objected to

    3. Re:In the name of National Secuirty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Agents have defended the dubious of ethics of a government agency running a child porn site by insisting there was no other way to catch offenders."

      Taking the shortest unethical route is now the norm.

      By this logic, pretty soon alphabets government agencies will be running terrorist organizations by insisting there was no other way to catch terrorist.

    4. Re:In the name of National Secuirty by cold+fjord · · Score: 2

      I think the only real issue people have with this is that if the FBI can justify such tactics then whats to stop them from doing the same to WikiLeaks

      Wikileaks would probably have a meaningful First Amendment defense. Child pornography site, not so much.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    5. Re:In the name of National Secuirty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think this is ok, not because of the children, but because they had a court order and (seemingly) plenty of oversight.

      If WikiLeaks were ruled illegal by a US court AND it was demonstrated that all of its users were extremely likely to be committing felonies (ie, worthy of a court ordered search warrant) then I would be fine with that too. But if we ever reached the point where that happened, I think we as a country should be more worried that our country has been taken over rather than a web server.

  12. Re:Bravo! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    What about the pedo who doesnt molest cause he can get pictures? Take away his pictures he may go for the real thing. is 1 kid abused better then 2? I mean 1 is 1 to many but 2 is 2 to many. Not to mention we are only talking about 1 pedo vs a whole community of pedos who could go the same route. Yeah i get the fact that pictures may also be the gateway to them building up the courage to go after a real child but wouldnt they of done it eventually anyway?

  13. Fekin Botz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This comment section is full of bots pretending to be commenters. I hope they realize that manipulation of the public is a crime.

  14. Re:ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Better take down Clouldflare then because it's the worlds largest site complicit in child porn trafficing.

    (I've reported CP sites spammed to the *chan sites, and cloudflare never takes them down)

  15. The Abyss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Once again, Nietzsche knew what he was talking about:

    "Beware that, when fighting monsters, you yourself do not become a monster...
    for when you gaze long into the abyss. The abyss gazes also into you."

    1. Re:The Abyss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a tough world.

    2. Re:The Abyss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pedophiles, terrorists, drug sellers, Nazis, political rivals.. The list of applicability is disconcertingly long. But what to do with the biological desire to destroy any perceived threat to a community and the search for retribution? Religions have clearly failed with this job.

  16. Re:ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    In Australia, is it illegal to view obscene, cartoon images depicting child pornography? Not depicting any real life person. Here in the US, it might be. This is a problem because it seems like our politicians want to look like they're getting something done, when in reality they're doing nothing to solve the problem. Or so I think.

    The solution? We need psychiastrists or psychologists to help determine what to do so the cycle of abuse stops. The American justice system might be too focused on retribution than reform.

  17. Re:ew by penguinoid · · Score: 1

    Heh, I wonder if someone will gather all the government-distributed child porn and give people copies, with a nice "I got these from the government" notice? Because unlike with other illegal things the government might distribute in its quest to jail people, information can be copied indefinitely.

    --
    Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
  18. Re:ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is more complex than just being a victim of abuse and in the complexity you start to find solutions.

    http://www.webmd.com/mental-he...

  19. FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by TiggertheMad · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ew ew ew that is so freaking wrong. send them all to jail!

    Who are we talking about here, the FBI or the pedophiles?

    Isn't this just the Feds again telling us that the ends justifies the means? Apparently, it is ok to run a child pornography site, as long as it is being used to catch sex offenders.I have mixed feelings about this. It is clearly good that the FBI is working to put people who would hurt children in jail. It is less clear that people who might be consuming such illegal material are the people who produce it. It seems eerily similar to the failed drug wars where large numbers of people who consume drugs are the people that are being arrested, as opposed to the people who are making and distributing drugs.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
    1. Re: FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you, especially since any transmission and/or possession is a federal crime. As someone who does forensics, it's always the last thing you hope to find. A 'simple' investigation gets impossibly complicated because your forensic image is both copying and possession. I don't see how anyone would sanction the distribution, which by law means that each copy of an image is a separate felony act against the minor displayed, knowing that they are further violating the victim. Even undercover, when you start fulfilling your contracts by killing the intended victim, you are committing a crime.

    2. Re:FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by Bert64 · · Score: 2

      Well in this particular instance i'm assuming the FBI wasn't creating any new child porn, so there were no new victims... Rather they were watching pedophiles acquiring existing material from the site in order to catch them in the act and gain evidence against them.
      Had they simply shut down the site immediately, then word would soon have spread and their ability to gain any evidence for further prosecutions from the site would have been gone, and the pedophiles would quickly move to other sites and probably try to delete any evidence linking them to the previous one.

      It's unlikely that shutting down the site immediately would have prevented any crimes from being committed, as the pedophiles would go elsewhere therefore actually catching some is probably a positive result overall.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    3. Re:FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't this just the Feds again telling us that the ends justifies the means? Apparently, it is ok to run a child pornography site, as long as it is being used to catch sex offenders.

      No. They are clearly showing that they are above the law.
      If you or I were to run a child pornography site to catch sex offenders we would be in jail now.
      In a non-fascist nation you and law enforcement would mainly have the same rights. See a crime? Feel free to stop it. Anyone could break into someones house, as long as they got a warrant. (That only the police would get it is another matter.)

      When law enforcement is allowed to commit crimes then this balance is removed.

    4. Re:FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well in this particular instance i'm assuming the FBI wasn't creating any new child porn, so there were no new victims... Rather they were watching pedophiles acquiring existing material from the site in order to catch them in the act and gain evidence against them.

      If that was the case then they only caught people who only watches child porn without molesting children and filming it. That is, those who are offenders of a victimless crime.

      To catch the real bad guys FBI would need to accept and redistribute newly created content and watch children get molested without doing anything about it.

      The summary calls it dubious ethics. There is nothing dubious about it, a criminal isn't a good guy just because he shoots another criminal.

    5. Re:FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by Calydor · · Score: 1

      I can see one simple situation where that wouldn't be the case.

      If the site had a verification process that was already in place, so new files wouldn't show up immediately but would be vetted by moderators, that could stay up, allowing file after file of evidence to be submitted - and the submitters would only start to get worried when the usual turnaround time was exceeded.

      --
      -=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
    6. Re:FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

      Well in this particular instance i'm assuming the FBI wasn't creating any new child porn, so there were no new victims...

      But that's not the logic the FBI uses in convicting those who possess or distribute child pornography. According to them, the existence and distribution of child pornography creates a market for more child pornography, which means more children are abused to create it. If you follow the standard FBI logic, then, their distribution of pornography necessarily contributed to the creation of a market which would cause more abuse and thus "new victims."

      (That is, of course, assuming that the FBI did not manage to arrest every single person who viewed this pornography, as well as any other person any of these persons may have sent the images to. It seems incredibly doubtful that the FBI could manage that.)

      It's unlikely that shutting down the site immediately would have prevented any crimes from being committed

      Huh? By definition, possession of child pornography is a crime. The FBI allowed numerous such crimes to be committed by freely allowing access. And if any of the images were redistributed, the FBI also contributed to further crimes of distribution and possession.

      as the pedophiles would go elsewhere therefore actually catching some is probably a positive result overall.

      Perhaps. It's difficult to say what constitutes "positive result." If you go by the standard FBI line that possession and distribution create demand and thus are morally equivalent to abuse, then the FBI most certainly contributed significantly to that.

      If you take a more nuanced perspective and ask how many of these "pedophiles" were likely to actually commit abusive acts with children, it's a little harder to gauge, since research is mixed. It seems clear that at least some people who view child pornography never act on their impulses (in the same way that some people who view all sorts of random hardcore sex acts in pornography may not ever actually attempt them or seek them out), but the percentage of those people is hard to pin down. Studies have put the number of people arrested for possession of child pornography that also committed an abusive act with a child at anywhere from 1% to 85%. That's a huge range, and it's clear that most studies so far are somewhat biased one way or another.

      The point is -- just because the FBI arrested another person for viewing child porn doesn't necessarily mean that fewer children will be molested by that person. Also, recidivism rates for child porn viewers are apparently significantly lower (for any crime) than recidivism rates for stereotypical "child molesters" actually arrested for having contact with a child.

      Lastly, there is the issue of the victims who were used to create this pornography in the first place. Did the FBI have permission from all of them to keep these images up? It seems very doubtful from TFA. Imagine if you were raped (or even just physically assaulted or had nude pictures taken of you without proper consent) and some website posted pictures of it for people's entertainment. Now imagine that the police actually host that material for people's entertainment without your consent. How would that make you feel?

      I agree that the FBI likely arrested some bad people here. But this isn't a clear case that the "ends justify the means" -- it's really quite messy from a moral perspective.

    7. Re:FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, if you tried to run a kiddie porn site in an attempt to catch sexual predators, you'd be arrested all the same. simply because you are not in power.

    8. Re:FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > And if any of the images were redistributed, the FBI also contributed to further crimes of distribution and possession.

      Isn't this also copyright infringement? Quick, sic the RIAA lawyers on 'em.

    9. Re:FBI: trust us, we would never abuse power by houghi · · Score: 1

      So it is illegal, unless it's a tv show where people get to ask to take a seat?

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  20. Big deal... by fustakrakich · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How many producers of child porn were caught in this "sting"?

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    1. Re:Big deal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      How many producers of child porn were caught in this "sting"?

      Zero probably. Its so much easier to catch the users here instead and claim a nice PR victory than actually try and solve a problem.

      It's exactly like the war on drugs, just with an even touchier subject. The problem is all imported. This shit is being made over seas, in places where the laws are different, people don't give a fuck, or are corrupt enough to be bought off, or all three. And as long as all we do is focus on the end user instead of the source, we will piss away lots and lots of money, and accomplish sweet fuck all.

      Except these criminals don't have to smuggle 100 tons of coke across the border. Five minutes and a high speed internet connection and they are set. We can't hope to try and keep it "out" because it not a physical product to be intercepted anymore. We can't possibly get anywhere in terms of restricting access, we either get the source, or fail.

  21. Evil Has No Bounds. by zenlessyank · · Score: 1

    Believe it.

  22. Re:ew by ArylAkamov · · Score: 5, Informative

    Don't forget that there are many young, underage kids that are now sex offenders in the glorious United States.

    "Throughout the United States, children as young as nine years old who are adjudicated delinquent may be subject to sex offender registration laws"

    http://bostonreview.net/blog/y...

    http://www.sacurrent.com/sanan...

    http://www.justicepolicy.org/n...

    I can recall several years ago a story about two young girls, not even in middle school becoming registered sex offenders for sending pictures of themselves to each other. Under current laws, they were "producing child pornography".

    Sure, there are a lot of sick fucks out there, but the current method is completely broken.

  23. IANAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But isn't this fruit of the poisonous tree?

  24. Specific Exemptions by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    Cops violate civilian law all the time for the sake of enforcing the law. The main thing that comes to mind is speeding, running red lights, and blocking traffic.

    Aren't those specific exceptions to the law granted to police officers? i.e. the law specifically allows emergency vehicles to go through red lights and for them to speed when responding to an emergency. I'm not a lawyer but I'm pretty certain there will not be an exemption to the laws about distribution of child pornography to let the police do it.

    In similar types of cases involving lures to catch criminals in the act the police stop short of actually committing the crime themselves: if posing as a hitman they don't actually kill people to see if they can get more criminal clients. What I don't understand is why this strategy would not have worked here. If you blurred out the pictures and videos or arrange for the links to just timeout then you would still get the IP addresses without actually distributing the material. You might catch fewer of the criminals before they knew something was wrong but, like the hitman example, surely that's better than actually committing the crime?

    1. Re:Specific Exemptions by gweihir · · Score: 1

      These are all very specific exceptions granted under very specific circumstances. A cop that fetches coffee with sirens blaring has a real problem when caught, for example. If they now get allowed to distribute, the next step is to allow them making it or at least not doing anything to stop others making it when they know it is going on and they could stop it. This is a very, very bad precedent.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
  25. Re:ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we can keep locking them up until we have locked them all up

  26. Re:ew by phantomfive · · Score: 0

    So when does the victim ... become the monster? At 15? 18?

    When they start abusing other people.

    I'm not saying I agree with what they do, but we can't just keep locking them up.

    It's not ideal, but it's better than letting them abuse other people.
    Maybe within a few generations the chain of abuse will be broken.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  27. There are no Paedophiles in Government by lloy0076 · · Score: 1

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/201...

    Yeah, right....what could possibly go wrong?

  28. the end ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... justifies the means.
    there is nothing to which this does not apply.

    and all ends are justified, because we’ re the good guys.
    if you want a text-book example of begging the question, this is it.

  29. Re:I am sure by davester666 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hey, we're only doing the media keeps telling us, to think of the children.

    --
    Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
  30. Fair enough. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is just fine, as long as all of the people involved in the FBI operation to run the site (including all the people who made the high-level decision to execute the operation) are now being prosecuted for distribution of child pornography. You know, on account of the fact that they willingly and intentionally distributed all of that child pornography.

    Seems to me like an odd length to go to, but hey, if they're comfortable sacrificing themselves upon the altar of justice then I guess they've earned it.

  31. Re:I am sure by ruir · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is not about pedophiles in slashdot, bloody idiot. It is about the erosions of our liberties. It is about CSI and TV series brainwashing us the police can do whatever it wants without respecting the constitution and upholding the law. It is about cunts like you not caring a single iota about the rights we gained in the last couple of centuries. It is about unlawful entrapment. It is about doing something morally wrong. It is about a morbid culture and society.

  32. Re:ew by trenien · · Score: 3, Interesting
    You apparently don't realize that there are differences between the actions of an adult and those of a minor. In a sane environment, you would try to teach the latter so they grow out of whatever problem.

    Looking at the news over recent years, it seems there is an explosion in the number of pedophiles - I'm not too sure about that, various historical traces show that it isn't anything new, but it has recently been fount as a very efficient tool to get quite unsavoury laws passed. However, if indeed there is a growth in those numbers, I can't help but think that your kind of attitude fuels it. After all, if you think that, whatever their age, children should be subject to criminal laws intended for adults, why couldn't they be perfectly valid sexual partners?

  33. Re:Was it worth it? by mikael · · Score: 1

    If someone is using Tor, VPN's or some other IP address obfuscation system, then then odds are that one person is going to be using multiple proxy servers which will themselves be randomized due to machines being switched on or off depending on the time of day. Those users might have multiple systems; (desktops, laptops, tablets, smartphones).

    So 20000 visits might be 1300 systems making 16 visits/week. Each of those systems is through a different proxy/Tor path which is reduced down to 100 users.

    --
    Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
  34. Re:ew by rtb61 · · Score: 0

    the real problem with the handling of it by the FBI is severity, degree of criminal action. Clearly the most severe, the highest degree of criminal activity is producing that kind of sexual abuse, by far and away the worst element of the crime and what should be the focus, using existing material to find the victims and then hunt down the abusers. Next up in severity is distribution of the content, distribution for reward worse than distribution for free, that would be the FBIs crime in this case, the reward being salary and promotions, very problematic as it is far worse crime than accessing what the FBI provided, technically they provided this as the legal authority and hence have the greater burden of guilt than those who downloaded and this done technically with FBI authority and approval, pretending to be someone else does not change who you are. Accessing the content by far the lesser of the criminal activities but in reality generally speaking it will likely not be the only criminal activity of the person who access that type of content, with a reasonable probability of them also producing additional content, distributing content and also accessing it from other sources (accessing similar content from other sources very important in the prosecution, as it reduces the FBI distribution to gaining sufficient legal evidence to obtain a search warrant rather than as the only source of prosecution, which the FBI enabled and by action approved, they being the greater legal authority than a run of the mill citizen. I wonder if the FBI are following through on the prosecution where their content was the only content in the possession of the perpetrator or just issuing a warning and only prosecution for other content, subsequent discovery of distribution and for producing more. Entrapment only really becomes as issue should they advertise the content, rather than perprators seeking it out, for an existing site of course, not that great a problem as long as they stop advertising it. Of course those perpetrators who accessed content from other sites could provide an excellent source of information to find other distributors in order to pursue those who create this kind of content, something which was likely the real focus of the exercise, pursue it back down the line in order to follow it back up line to other sources (something they logically will not talk about if they wish to repeat the same activity with other discovered sources, they could effectively keep it going for quite some time, big fish, minnows, lots of white bait, minnows, big fish, minnows, lots of white bait etc.). Also they can clean out people who do not belong in trusted positions, people who can be very dangerously compromised willing to do anything not to be exposed for who they really are. All in all, some very necessary policing activity.

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  35. Re:ew by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, or someone who has just turned 18 and their still 17 year old partner... Technically that's breaking the law, but since they're so close in age (likely in the same school year) there's nothing morally wrong about it.

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  36. Re:ew by phantomfive · · Score: 0

    You apparently don't realize that there are differences between the actions of an adult and those of a minor.

    I definitely do.

    In a sane environment, you would try to teach the latter so they grow out of whatever problem.

    How exactly do you teach them that? You don't know, no one knows. You are promoting a solution which would be good if it existed, but it doesn't exist.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  37. Rankings of such sites by bug1 · · Score: 1

    FBI Took Over World's Biggest Child Porn Website

    So they have them all indexed and ranked, but they just decided to go after the biggest one ?

    Seems like they are more interested in going after the viewers than the producers.

    1. Re:Rankings of such sites by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      You should add "they know about" to the end of that headline.

      Of what I heard about it, it seems that a lot of this child porn is made in places outside the US. That means the producers are outside of US jurisdiction (and somehow in this case it seems the FBI cares about that little detail), making it very hard to go after them. So instead they go after the offenders they can go after: Americans on US soil that actively seek out those images, thus helping in sustaining the market.

  38. Re:ew by AK+Marc · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Name a place in the US where two 17 year olds have sex, and once one of them turns 18, it suddenly becomes illegal.

    For one, the age of consent isn't uniformly 18, and most places have restrictions on the law that allow for close-age relationships.

    The screwed up thing is that some of the places that don't have the exceptions for close ages can have consensual 14 year olds both raping each other at the same time. And places where the age of consent is 16, you can legally have sex at 16 with a 45 year old if you want, but if anyone takes a photo of it, that's child porn. Is there any other case where taking a photo of something is illegal? Defense installations? Oh my God, she's got a nuclear reactor between her thighs.

  39. Because there was no other way? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I mean, I could commit bank robbery with that excuse: the state of my bank account is such that there is no other way the teller is going to hand me that much on a silver platter.

    "Because there was no other way" is the classic "the end justifies the means, any means". When will the three-letter agencies formally drop the pretense that they are something other than an organized crime syndicate? Well ok, it might interfere with their funding. But they could just dial up robbery at gun point ("civil forfeiture") and their blackmailing business a bit.

    1. Re:Because there was no other way? by v1 · · Score: 1

      "because there was no other way" is arguably the worst excuse for violating someone's rights.

      "You were doing something, we didn't like it, and this was the best response we could think up. And so that's our justification for doing what we did. We did it because it was the only way we could find that got results."

      --
      I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
  40. Re: I am sure by ruir · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You wont intimidate someone as an AC. If I was hiding something, or was interested in something as sick as pedophilia, I would hide my name. The creeps in this case were the FBI for not closing down, and upholding the law IMMEDIATELY. They did not do their job. I bet you are a teen by your line of thinking.

  41. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Which ones? The ones who actually do the molesting or the ones who casually view it? Both need Mental Counseling but only one needs to be in Prison. Regardless of how awful it is, it is a Mental Disorder.

    What's even more disturbing is Men and Women who Wax and Shave their parts to mimic prepubescent children. You are not kids anymore, grow up.

  42. Re:ew by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem, however, is deciding when it's actual abuse or not. If courts decided that on case by case instances, *without* automatic statutory rape principles which currently do not take a nuanced approach, I have no issue with it. However, many laws are currently written that *automatically* makes it an offence, the moment "minor" and "sex" comes together. This becomes very problematic, since minors are not sexual inactive until, at the very moment they turn 18, they suddenly and magically become sexually active. That's silly. That's not reality you're describing.

    It has long been established that minors, even young kids, engage in some sexual behaviour, and that is just part of a natural behaviour while growing up. Our society has demonised this, and made laws that are so draconian, one gets situations as described by other posters, where a 15 year old takes a nude picture of herself, and gets convicted as a sex-offender who has created child-porn, and has to be registered as such for the next 25 years. That is crazy, period. Idem with youths who voluntarily have sexual acts with eachother; when caught, they often get crushed by society - especially in prude USA - and got labelled sex-offenders for the rest of their life, with all the dire consequences for their future life. And for what? For engaging in behaviour which is NOT abnormal, but is just part of growing up. And which, btw, the vast majority is doing to some degree long before they turn 18. It's just antithetic to how people actually live and behave, thus. And in most of these cases, there is no victim, in the sense as we normally understand it (and not as statutory rape defines it).

    Luckily, at least in Europe, people begin to realise this, and the prudish USA-type of hysteria gets some counter. In many countries in the EU now, one starts to make exemptions in the law for minors that voluntarily engage in sexual acts with other minors (from around the same age). That's because one finally has realised that going the USA way is ridiculous, since the main goal is to protect kids against things they do not want (aka, actual abuse), not 'protect' kids by putting them in jail themselves for things that shouldn't have been criminalised in the first place.

    I'm all for a more nuanced approach to it, like in the EU, for the simple reason USA laws are getting to a point where they are defeating their own purpose, and create massive damage to children itself.

    --
    --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
  43. Re:ew by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Indeed, but that contradiction is the consequence of laws going awry. In some states, sexual 'offences' - even between minors, and even when voluntary - are deemed so grave, one can convict them as adults.

    Which, as other posters already pointed out, begs the question:

    If they are legally deemed to be able to be sentenced as an adult, why can't they be legally deemed to be allowed having sex as an adult in the first place?

    It makes no sense.

    --
    --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
  44. Re:ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ... when does the victim ... become the monster?

    A big part of our world-view is formed at age 6. How we deal with the world we believe exists, is learnt at age 15-16. When childhood trauma is allowed to fester; because the victim is a male, because there is no support, because the crime isn't detected, the damage becomes permanent. The victim becomes mentally unstable to some degree; frequently to a level of permanent violence, making the victim into a criminal in some form or other. This can't be reversed so incarceration is the only alternative.

    The break in the system comes from the unwillingness and inability to provide the high level of treatment these children need. Even that has its problems, with many therapies teaching the children they are the permanent victim of a crime they don't understand. Plus, the consequence of abuse is mental illness, so people disconnect the abuse from the symptoms, demanding the victim "stop being sick". That attitude re-inforces the notion the victim must be 'treated' for the abuse suffered.

  45. Re:ew by AK+Marc · · Score: 0

    Ah yes, personal responsibility for the victims, but not for those who refuse to help the victims. We cut funding to programs that help victims, then complain when victims become the abusers. "Personal responsibility for everyone but me" should be the party motto of the loonitarians.

  46. Re:ew by phantomfive · · Score: 0

    Ah yes, personal responsibility for the victims

    Who said anything about personal responsibility for the victims? The abusers should be prevented from abusing: that is what I said, and I don't think it's unreasonable.

    Most children who were sexually abused do not grow up to be abusers. It's still a choice they have to make.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  47. So they profited from kiddie porn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Or did they donate the profit plus extra to a charity for abused children?

    And how many actual children were saved by this? Because to save them, you can't stop the kiddie porn being watched to do that, you have to stop the kiddie porn BEING MADE.

    Much like violent games or even violent fantasies, an outlet for some problem you have means you don't have to find other ways to vent. And if one way is only virtual harm, the others actual harm, less harm is done by letting porn go and finding out where the porn came from. Eventually you'll find the source.

    However, that is hard work, harder than just catching someone fapping to a teenager, calling it paedophilia (which it isn't), then chalking the ruination of this person's life (it will usually be male, despite being nearly equally represented in either sex, because we can't understand "nurturing women" being bad, whereas we know men can be) to "the good guys". And as long as the source remains, this remains a perpetual motion machine that looks good, gets jobs secure, confirms biases and prejudices, and has no downside for anyone that you are socially allowed to feel sorry for.

    As long as you forget the child hasn't been protected, and never will, since you need a perpetual source of KP to find on people or you're out of a job.

  48. It's our children we think about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They play on our fears, and want back doors into our house. We must end encryption to.. protect our children. We have to give the government keys to the back door of our banking, bills paid, any and all purchases made, because it protects us. From terrorists and child molesters. Brothers and sisters this is not how we were meant to live. This is george orwellian. If a stranger came up to my door needing food or a place to crash, I would more then likely say yeah bail out to the shed. These guys, all they want is access to my shed at anytime. In the name of my families security.

  49. WERE they toddlers???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Because first of all, paedophilia doesn't cover just 2-4 year old children. Indeed, even pro-rata on age, it's far far less common, though more common for women to kidnap them (this is a misfiring of the maternal instinct caused by a mental problem and is purely female) and then abandon them when they're too old to be mothered (which is what the maternal instinct is driving them to do). Secondly, as with the so-called "paedophile hunter", who has NEVER CAUGHT A PAEDOPHILE (that's right, check it out, all of them were soliciting post pubescent adults under the age of consent), this site probably had no or very little paedophilia informatoin on it and most of the people caught weren't paedophiles.

    However, your post indicates precisely what is wrong with the law.

    The laws are made to assuage the "outrage" of idiots like you, who hear "sexual assault of a minor" and think "Fucked a toddler in the mouth" even if it was "grabbed the ass of a 17 year old". And you demand laws to punish people doing the former, but under conditions that include the latter.

    You are as sick as the paedo. Just in a different manner. You, like them, don't bother to think and merely insist on what you want to be true (toddler fucking/kid wants sex) rather than what IS true (late teen fondling/kid doesn't want sex). You, like they, want power over others.

    1. Re: WERE they toddlers???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. Such anger. Such fury. You're just mad and scared now, because the jaws of justice are about to close on your sorry face and crush it. Just as you deserve, pedocreep.

    2. Re: WERE they toddlers???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound like a child.

      Any takers?

  50. Proves the government is just as corrupt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So the government works as low as the worse criminals= our government is the worse criminals

  51. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What, a government worker not doing their job? Sadly, this pathetic state is so common that it's accepted as normal.

  52. Now her paints are dry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now her paints are dry and I looked outside at the corner. Where there was once life growth and prosperity, now lies brown grass. I traded blindness for sublime heavan without ever acting.. I watched my kids being imprisoned slowly, and did nothing. I helped imprison my kid by no reaction.

  53. Re:ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When you pass puberty, YOU ARE AN ADULT. Full stop.

    We don't want that. Some for very bad reasons (they're *MY* CHILD!!!!), some for very good reasons (we've indoctrinated them into thinking grown ups are wise and should be looked up to, so an adult may abuse that relationship if the indoctrinated adult takes advantage of the honour they have. See cult leaders having sex with their congregation: solely because the congregation thinks that they are somehow powerful/holy/transcendent/whatever). But for whatever reason, they are indoctrinated and cannot be said to have broken off the indoctrination to an extent sufficient to make their choice of who to have as a life partner a choice freely made without coercion.

    Hence we put them in a category of "adolescent", where we let them be adult in their peer group (because they don't have the indoctrination that their peers are somehow worthy of unearned respect) until they learn about themselves enough to make more adult-grade decisions.

    THIS DOES NOT MAKE THEM ANYTHING OTHER THAN ADULT THOUGH.

    Here's why insisting it does is bad.

    We tell adults that they're "too young" to have sex/drink/whatever, but they KNOW they are adult (they are), so they see sex or drink as verification and proof to adults that they ARE adult. Hence teen pregnancies or teenage alcoholism. By the phrasing of our admonition we have made the thing we don't want them doing (for good and bad reasons) even more liable to happen with even less thought of the consequences.

    The fastest way to get a teenager to do something is to forbid them to do it. This is "common knowledge", but we ignore it here. The reasons why is because of the bad reasons for not admitting they are adults (we don't want to see things change,they were children yesterday, they must be children today too).

    If we told them WHY it was bad, not as a function of being adult, but as a function of how we had to keep them compliant with adults *so we can teach them what is going on in the world* and that adults older than they would be abusing that recent status by sleeping with them, hence the law against it, they know that

    a) It's not something that they can't do because they're "not adults" or are still "children"
    b) That it requires consideration more than just how horny you feel at that time
    c) That adults are not protecting them but are policing themselves because of how we treated them as children and wish to make sure that they are not being coerced. IOW, the "you're too young" means that "We need to deprogramme you from respecting adults without reason"

    But as long as people like you insist that they are still children WHEN THEY ARE NOT, these adults will fuck anyone who looks like an adult TO PROVE YOU WRONG.

    YOU are half the reason for child sexual abuse. And dump it all on others so you can feel good about yourself.

  54. Re:I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah I know. Why would the perverts at the FBI run a child porn site? smh

  55. But did they "hurt the children"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the big issues is if the FBI hurt the children or not. If distributing child pornography does hurt the children, then the FBI did it, and there is no point in keeping law enforcement that hurts the most vulnerable. OTOH, if they argue that distributing child pornography doesn't actually hurt the children (after all, they didn't produce the pornography), then there is even less of a case against those who download it.

  56. Re:ew by trenien · · Score: 2
    Ooh, a well developed point.

    A slight problem, though: it completely ignores decades of studies that show and prove that, indeed, although they are not children anymore, adolescent are not yet adults. Are they able to reproduce or, more generally to take some decisions related to themselves? Sure they are. That doesn't mean they're adults. Among a bunch of other things, not being an adult means still having a very high plasticity allowing for quick personal development (in whichever direction). This, adolescent have.

    In essence, a child has high plasticity and limited personal assertion. An adolescent retains a great part of the plasticity but asserts their own wishes (but still need guidance in doing so. An adult loses such high degree of plasticity (it doesn't mean there is none), and keeps asserting their own personality and wishes (society allowing.

    Now, to answer the specific point you made about forbidden activities. The problem is that, in essence, those activities are seen as evil/dirty etc. Of course, it is impossible to forbid adults to practice them in modern Western societies but, to various degrees, the same society can't but want to protect from them those identified as vulnerable (the non-adults). It is a perfectly valid position, as long as you accept that those activities have negative consequences, which is true to an extent :

    - Alcohool, smoking and the like do have negative health consequences

    - With the possibility of pregnancy (especially when abortion is seen in an only negative light), sex can bring its own problems. However, this could easily be corrected with proper sexual education. But in most countries, having a scene in a movie with a couple having sex under blankets is considered much worse than some scene of violence such as a gory murder.

    So yes, there is a problem with what teens are prevented from doing, but that's not because they're adults but because society is, overall, insane on these things.

  57. Re: I am sure by Opportunist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I have to choose between siding with child molesters or siding with a police state, I'm on the side of child molesters. Simple self interest.

    Child molesters have no interest to bother me. The same cannot be said about a police state.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  58. New Strings for Old Puppets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back in the day of the first Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography, the largest producer of child porn was... The United States government.

    Turns out all the images they used for sting operations (the results of which you can read about in Project Looking Glass and Jacobson v. United States) had become the stock and trade for child porn. I'd be willing to wager several of those government produced pictures are floating through the internet today.

    Adding to that is Masha’s law, which allows for civil damages for the distribution of child porn.

    Well now, that's a sticky wicket.

    This is the problem with most sting operations (see Operation Fast and Furious) where that fine line between catching criminals and becoming criminals is rather dubious for government to navigate.

    But hey, it certainly is easier and any collateral damage is certainly worth it *snark*.

  59. Re: I am sure by mjm1231 · · Score: 1

    If I have to choose between siding with child molesters or siding with a police state, I'm on the side of child molesters. Simple self interest.

    Child molesters have no interest to bother me. The same cannot be said about a police state.

    I get where you're coming from, but this isn't true if you are a child. Or if you have children. Or actually, if you aren't selfish and don't have children.
    Sometimes, when trying to weigh the lesser of two evils, it comes up a tie.

    --
    Ideology: A tool used primarily to avoid the bother of thinking.
  60. Re:ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh my God, she's got a nuclear reactor between her thighs.

    I think I dated that girl. It was fun for a while.

  61. 100,000 vs 137 by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    It seems an awfully small number of arrests compared to the 100,000 accounts. Even assuming that most accounts are probably dead we're talking about roughly 0.1% efficiency.

    Was it the usual? You only catch the dumb ones?

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    1. Re:100,000 vs 137 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or the website was not dedicated to child porn, but didn't remove it.

  62. Re: I am sure by loufoque · · Score: 1

    Liking things you don't like is only a disorder if you're a Nazi.

  63. It's not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    > It starts to go downhill when it is a crime to download or just view

    You misunderstand the law. If you simply run across it and you either dispose of it or show it to the police (but NOT other random people), you're okay according to federal law. So the police are actually under the same law as the rest of us here, it's just that the average person has never bothered to look up the statutes.

  64. Re: I am sure by loufoque · · Score: 3, Informative

    People watching child porn are not a danger to my children.

  65. Re:I am sure by SuricouRaven · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I like CSI:Cyber for something the writers didn't intend: It shows a realistic example of police abuse of power. The protagonists of the show are not out to be an oppressive, invasive government agency - but they are driven to catch the bad guys. Little things like warrants and due process just get in the way - from the perspective of law enforcement, they are just weasel tricks that the horrible people use to escape justice. The Cyber Squad are constantly intimidating and threatening suspects and routinely carry out acts that are blatantly illegal, or legal only on very NSAish grounds - they outright state at one point that they have a law that grants them the right to hack any computer anywhere so long as they have reasonable suspicion that it contains data important to an investigation, which they use to hack the database from a dating app because it's the quickest way to identify which user is their suspect. The one time a person denies their request for information without a warrant they pull political strings and threaten to have their organisation barred from government contracts if the information isn't handed over 'voluntarily' rather than go to the delay of getting a warrant. But despite this, they maintain the conviction that they are the 'good guys.' The end justifies the means - and when the end is catching murderers, rapists and child molesters*, that enough to justify any means. To themselves, at least.

    It's an interesting approach to the program, but the problem is that is leads viewers to the same conclusion: Watch enough super-virtuous cops on TV who routinely break the law to catch a filthy perverted murderer, and the public's attitudes to such things relax in the real world. Where the police are not infallible, and it isn't always clear who the villain is, and sometimes innocent people are accused.

    I've noticed Cyber Squad also like to brutalise suspects a bit on arrest, making sure to 'accidentally' slam someone's head against a concrete floor even when they aren't resisting.

    *Cyber or not, it's still CSI: Practically every crime has a sex angle. Ratings!

  66. Re:ew by SuricouRaven · · Score: 2

    We have something of a similar situation in the UK: Our age of consent is sixteen*, but child pornography is anything below eighteen. I assume people between sixteen and eighteen are supposed to wear a blindfold.

    *With a close-in-age-exception, and it becomes eighteen if there exists a relationship that gives one party a position of power over the other.

  67. The Entire Dog Pile by JimSadler · · Score: 0

    The justice system in the US is a total mess. There can be no denial that cops are doing awful things all too frequently. Local lawmakers also do some of the most ignorant things one can imagine. And when one gets into the courts, there is a tendency to investigate nothing and get decisions that are based upon the convenience of the judge rather than any hint of justice. And it is not just sex crimes that are twisted either. We need to dump our laws and reform the entire justice system from the fender bender in traffic all the way up through murder and sex crimes. As far as sex crimes go we have a segment of our population that see themselves as some sort of morality wizards. They tend to see the world as a pathway of moral choices and they have decided that they will be the ones who decide exactly where on that path one may step. In my area, we end up with sex offenders living in our hedges. They can live nowhere in town at all. They tend to live under our bridges as the bridges are distant from school yards and play- grounds. So if a cop stops them and asks where they live they say under the bridge. But in reality, they tend to stop when they feel tired and try to sleep out of sight. It is very similar to what they did with prostitutes. The hookers had their phoney massage parlors and dating parlors shut down by the cops. That caused them to ply their wares on the streets, exposing more people to prostitutes and offering less control over diseases and endangering the Johns as well as without a fixed address the Johns were frequently beaten or robbed.

  68. Re: I am sure by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    If I have to choose between siding with child molesters or siding with a police state, I'm on the side of child molesters. Simple self interest.

    Child molesters have no interest to bother me. The same cannot be said about a police state.

    That's a false choice*. There is nothing about law enforcement action against child molesters that either implies or requires a police state.

    Now let's just make it child molesters or the police (not police state). Where are you siding now? Does your answer change? I'm betting not.

    *Did any of the moderators notice that? Really?

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  69. Broken System by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

    Why does it seem like the system spends all of the effort going after the small problem. I would argue that people viewing the pictures are causing less harm than the people making the pictures in the first place. Yes they should have shut down the site but found out where the pictures were uploaded from and gone after the content creators. And not the people who write fictional stories and the cartoons. Those aren't the high priority. While disgusting children weren't harmed in it's creation. Go after the sick f*cks that are hurting kids to create pictures to distribute. They should be the top priority. Stop them and you stop more kids from being hurt by them in the future.

    It's the same thing with drugs. Law enforcement seems to be targeting users and the lowest level dealers. But they rarely cause trouble for the higher levels. You may never stop the flow of drugs but you can make it a lot more difficult for them. Start taking out their middle-men and a few higher-ups along with the distribution system and while not eliminating the problem you make drugs more expensive on the street.

  70. Re:I am sure by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    That phrase implies "think of their welfare," not "fantasize about their destruction for self-gratification."

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  71. Re:I am sure by hyades1 · · Score: 1

    Starting with you, no doubt. ;-)

    --
    I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
  72. Re:ew by Guppy · · Score: 1

    So when does the victim ... become the monster? At 15? 18?

    When they're no longer small and cute enough to trigger parental instincts.

  73. Re:ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The average pedophile discovers he is a pedophile around puberty, depending on the age he is attracted to. Pedophiles don't chose who they are attracted to anymore as other people do. They discover this attraction at an age that is not known for making the best choices in life. So to claim that they are monsters, horrible people with no hope of redemption, is neither accurate nor constructive. Estimates are that about 1-3% of the population is a pedophile. Many of those will not offend and would never risk harming a child by having sex with them.

    The current laws seem to miss the original purpose, laws that criminalize children for taking pictures of themselves can hardly claim to protect the children. Seriously who are you protecting by labeling children as a sex offender. At the same time essential liberties such as freedom of speech are trampled in the name of children. When you convict a man for writing fictional stories, when judges flat out say "even though the law if meant for children of flesh and blood I am giving fictional characters the same protection" who are you protecting? Why should fictional children be protected against sex but not against murder? At what point did we as a society decide violence is better for children than sex? The more you ostracize pedophiles, the more isolated they become. While this may seem comfortable to many it should not be comfortable. When someone is ostracized and isolated they are much more likely to offend. Someone that is part of the community and accepted by the community is far less likely to offend against that community. One solution is to keep in mind if a law is actually protecting children or harming them. Why do we consider depicting murder a industrie we need to protect (Hollywood) and writing stories about sex with children (Frank McCoy) a crime worthy destroying someones life over.

  74. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, shaving your privates is totally ok.

    But I hear you brother, I love a nice bush like any adult-loving American.

  75. Methods by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Committing crimes to catch criminals is not a sting or entrapment. It is criminality. They should be prosecuted and those hapless should caught up in the program should be exonerated on the basis that criminals (liars) cannot bring witness or charges against anyone. Further any case any of the individuals or the department itself worked on should reviewed for expungement on the basis of unclean hands and untruthful prosecution. Bad witnesses and prosecutors are bad witnesses and prosecutors period in our system of justice.

    Remember, justice is blind. This is a test case for that claim.

  76. Re:ew by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

    Name a place in the US where two 17 year olds have sex, and once one of them turns 18, it suddenly becomes illegal.

    Well, if Wikipedia's summary of age of consent laws is accurate, your scenario would likely apply in North Dakota, Virginia, and Wisconsin. It seems in all cases that these would be misdemeanors, not felonies.

    For one, the age of consent isn't uniformly 18, and most places have restrictions on the law that allow for close-age relationships.

    Yes, but not all do. And by perusing Wikipedia's summary list, you can see how convoluted the laws are in various places. The "close in age" exceptions can vary from a couple years difference to decades.

  77. Re:I am sure by cHiphead · · Score: 2

    In fairness, CSI:Miami had Horatio going his ass down to Brazil to shoot some motherfuckers to death extrajudicially. NCIS has Jethro Gibbs that sniped the cartel leader that had his wife and child killed, extrajudicially. Every show like that does the take the law into your own hands sooner or later. Its entertainment, but its also unusually accurate b/c all these agencies do in fact skirt the law, all the time. We only accept it because we don't actually know about it.

    --

    This is my sig. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
  78. Re:I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We just buried a pedophile in Quebec this week, with a state sponsored funeral. We're an odd bunch, ordinary pedophiles we condemn, but rich pedophiles like Rene Angelil we celebrate. I guess Guy Cloutier wasn't smart enough to practice his sexuality in peace.

  79. Re:ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You could say the same thing about the entire American justice system, not just with child victims. It's been proven time and again in other countries (eg, most of northern Europe) that mere punishment, despite making us non-criminals feel good about ourselves, just serves to create more crime. As much as you want to hurt people who do bad things, the best thing for society is usually to treat them far better than they deserve and help to "fix" them. Most people don't really want to do bad things. That means free psychiatry for as long as needed, free university and health care, job placement, various forms of financial aid, ideally for everyone in society, to prevent the crimes before they even happen, and then (in many cases) shorter sentences and keeping people connected to society instead of completely cut off.

    When you lock someone away and treat them subhuman for 10 years, and then kick them out onto the street, what do you expect is going to happen?

  80. Re: ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And then meanwhile, we try 14-year-olds as adults.

  81. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Haha, I had already started to write a reply to the first half of your comment, then read the second half and realized you're probably just a weird fascist religious nutjob that is completely disconnected from reality and it wasn't worth the effort.

  82. using their logic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    so under presisent BayRack's fbi logic the fbi can run a human trafficking sex slave brothel for two weeks just to catch the scum that rape women. the brave new world of marxism.

  83. Not a direct danger, but.., by davidwr · · Score: 2

    People watching child porn are not a danger to my children.

    They may not be a direct danger, but to the extent that their viewing the stuff makes your "friendly neighborhood wanna-be child porn producer" think there is a demand for it, he may decide to start producing.

    There is also the issue of "porn isn't enough any more" - your local child-porn viewer may decide just watching kids on-screen isn't enough and he may start acting out what he sees.

    While your children are probably safe just because of the extremely low percentage of kids who are victimized in this way, the odds are > zero.

    On the flip side, your neighborhood would-be child molester may be one of those who, if child porn were legal outright or at least available in a rherapeutic setting, would satisfy himself with those images while he and his therapist work out his issues and/or work on teaching him that lusting after people (besides your spouse or someone you have a realistic chance of dating) is at a minimum just plain disrespectful.

    Bottom line: On balance, the wide availablility of child porn raises the risk that your kids will be sexually abused, but the increase in risk is probably so close to zero that it's probably statistical noise to you. BUT, worldwide, the harm done to children through sexual abuse would go down significantly if child porn were extremely difficult to obtain and if those who wanted to make or view it were identified and force-marched into some kind of therapy and/or convinced that if they ever tried to abuse a child or seek or such images, they would almost certainly be caught and punished.

    The tricky or impossible task is doing that without creating a police state. If I had to choose between the current state of the world and a Nineteen Eighty-Four-esque world free of child sexual abuse, I would take the world as it is today.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:Not a direct danger, but.., by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Should we also be locking up people for playing "murder simulator" video games? After all, games might not be enough to satisfy their base urges after a while.

      Likewise, should we outlaw adults being around children entirely, since they're essentially the "gateway" that tempts people into making child porn in the first place?

      And if we're going to let the slippery slope dictate things, then we're going to slide down the slope eventually. What sounds like a trite counter-example now will actually become the norm down the line.

      The real question is: why are these criminals worthy of the honeypot approach when they only end up indirectly harming a few children every year, while greedy rich bastards get to harm hundreds or millions of them indirectly (and often through very subtly illegal means)?

    2. Re:Not a direct danger, but.., by lgw · · Score: 1

      , but to the extent that their viewing the stuff makes your "friendly neighborhood wanna-be child porn producer" think there is a demand for it, he may decide to start producing.

      That is a solid argument for outlawing commercial child porn. As a fan of free speech I don't like to see anything banned based on content, no matter how objectionable, but that's a good example of a reason to restrict commercial activity that isn't about freedom of speech.

      If you're going to argue that this happens non-commercially, that someone who doesn't already molest his or her kids would start just to film it for ... step 3 profit? I'm not sure I buy that. If someone already molesting his or her kids wants to document the crime and send pictures towards the cops, I find it difficult to object to that. Surely the important problem is the kids' welfare, not the pictures?

      There is also the issue of "porn isn't enough any more" - your local child-porn viewer may decide just watching kids on-screen isn't enough and he may start acting out what he sees.

      Studies with normal porn go the other way. There were many attempts last century to show that porn causes rape, but no, really, it doesn't. Maybe this mental disorder is different? I don't know, but it sounds like something not to just assume.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    3. Re: Not a direct danger, but.., by Goonie · · Score: 1

      From what I've read, a significant fraction of kiddie porn is produced on a commercial basis. Some Russian spammers back in the golden age of pharma spam, for instance, had other businesses in kiddie porn production. So your premise is, as far as I can tell, wrong - kiddie porn viewers directly fund kiddie porn production.

      --

      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
      --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
    4. Re:Not a direct danger, but.., by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is also the issue of "porn isn't enough any more" - your local child-porn viewer may decide just watching kids on-screen isn't enough and he may start acting out what he sees.

      Science and society proves you incorrect. You're making the same argument people use to claim video games turn everyone who plays them into mass murderers. That has never happened, even the cause for Columbine wasn't about video games. In terms of sex, more and more people (more males than females) are turning to porn INSTEAD of actual sex. The increase in porn is reducing sex and that is likely the same for child porn as well. If you need child porn and can't get it, you're going to want to produce it for yourself. If you can satisfy your hunger virtually, then you won't bother trying to do it in the real world where the risks are higher and the results worse. Fantasies are better than reality.

      Where's the crackdown on penetrable sex toys? There are lots of cheap, female body mimicking toys for men. They are smaller than real women (to save costs), so one could argue all those are toys mimicking children. Should everyone buying a pocket pussy be arrested for possession of a pornographic child device or are those things reducing the amount of people looking for one night stands?

    5. Re: Not a direct danger, but.., by lgw · · Score: 1

      Sure - like I said, outlawing selling/buying/advertising it seems perfectly OK to me, even as a big fan of free speech. Surely it's easier to police when money can be tracked! You can outlaw the commercial activity without harming free speech, IMO, at least in non-political-speech cases like this, so I don't see any reason not to.

      But that's distinct from an anonymous "dark web" image forum. Of course, having said that, I have no clue which case the server in TFA is in. If the site was selling porn, I'd hope the police could bust the customers without needing to sell it themselves.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  84. Re:I am sure by vel-ex-tech · · Score: 1

    Gah, where's mikeeusa when you need him?

  85. Re:I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So how many children do you diddle? Must be a lot. You sick fuck.

  86. Re: I am sure by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now that the battle to normalize homosexuality is largely won there are a growing number of voices in society (including academicians) working to normalize pedophilia.

    No there aren't.

    There was a time (which had its heyday in the late 1970s and early 1980s) when there was a push to abolish ages of consent and recognize the possible validity of sexual relationships between all ages, and it had some significant academic support (particularly in Europe).

    But that was 30-40 years ago. Support for that sort of thing has been declining ever since.

    There is some growing interest (though only in a small minority of researchers) in trying to sort out more details concerning the behavior of pedophiles -- for example, how many viewers of child pornography actually also commit offenses with children? How often does the "escalation" you refer to actually occur? Are there differences in the recidivism rates and possibilities for rehabilitation in those who merely view child pornography vs. those who actually sexually assault children?

    The research on a lot of these questions is in its infancy, partly because it's a very icky topic, and we all want to believe the worst about anyone who would ever view a naked picture of a child. But such research is trying to sort out whether our criminal penalties make sense, whether they are actually effective in reducing further abuse, etc.

    That's not "normalizing pedophilia" -- it's trying to focus effort on places where it can prevent the most harm, and trying to help people who may actually be able to be helped vs. just demonizing everyone who we can corral into the category of "dangerous pedophile."

  87. Re: I am sure by killkillkill · · Score: 1

    their fueled passions and arousal may overcome their restraint to seek out your kids,

    There is not much to support this. Many also argue that pornography give a alleviates the desire. Who knows, probably both depending the individual. Would the Columbine shooters come up with the fantasy that became reality without playing Doom (or whatever game it was) obsessively, probably not. Would many here go into a nerdrage and kill people at work because of extreme dissatisfaction with their mediocre jobs without the outlet gaming provides them, probably.

    I'm not for passing laws because we did a sociology 'study' and 'calculated' the net benefit to be on one side.

    Are child porn producers harming children? Yes. That should be illegal.

    Does purchasing child porn directly support the production of more porn and harm more children? Yes. That should be illegal.

    Does a creepy guy possessing images on his hard drive because he is likely a product of abuse himself, harm anyone else? No. Or at best, we don't know and suspect that it might lead to eventually harm children. It should not be illegal.

  88. Re: "child porn" laws are somewhat absurd by xiando · · Score: 1

    The "age of consent" is different in various countries so some of you will not understand how absurd this is .. but here is the situation:

    - You can legally have sex with anyone who is 15 years or older (this varies by country).
    - You can legally take a picture or record a video of anyone who is nude/doing something even remotely sexual if they are 18 years or older. It is a serious crime to take such a picture of anyone who is not 18 years old.

    So.. you can get a girlfriend when you're 15 and have sex with her for years and when she's a month from her 18th birthday she sends you a naughty picture and someone finds out and now you're in jail and a sexual offender.

    Is this very logical?

  89. The Pope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Pope must be really pissed off right now... LOL... BTW, I'm more concerned on freeing the slaves they trade in those websites rather than erasing pictures from a server. Like arrested drug smugglers, we have the idea there's substitutes that will replace them to unfortunately keep the wheel of their business rolling. I'm sure the real culprids are still there, running governments and sailing expensive boats paid with the blood of the children they sell for those canibalistic sadic rapists.

    One day ladies and gentleman, we'll witness an altar boy going inside a church at Vatican with a machine gun and murder hundreds, hopefully thousands of child molesters, and we gonna be glad to know that's justify acts of terrorism for a good cause.

  90. Re: ew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stay away from my adolescent kids.

  91. Ends never justify the means by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    EVER. But especially here. Ew.

  92. Re: I am sure by mjm1231 · · Score: 1

    Except, the porn has to be produced somewhere, and actors have to be acquired or abducted to perform in it.

    --
    Ideology: A tool used primarily to avoid the bother of thinking.
  93. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? How detached from humanity are you? Is everything just a thought experiment? You are saying that someone possessing pictures of children being raped acquired either from trade/direct interaction/purchase is not harming anyone? The very nature of the source of the material creates lifelong harm for the subjects of the pictures. Don't make the asshole with the pictures the victim, the children in the pictures are the victims. The existence of the pictures victimizes the children.

  94. Sweet by HalAtWork · · Score: 1

    So if there's no other way for me to do something than to break federal laws, it's OK to break them?! Neat!

  95. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is only true for commercial child porn.
    Most cases is just a parent or other family member posting pics for free.

  96. Re:ew by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

    we should put them all on a special island then use it for target practice.

  97. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Crimes against the family members of law enforcement are often handled extrajudicially

  98. Goals are not enough by joe_frisch · · Score: 1

    The argument against distributing, as opposed to producing, child porn is that people seeing the images harm the victims. That harm is believed to be very great, resulting in long jail sentences for people who distribute or view child porn.

    If that is true, then the FBI did great harm to those innocent victims by distributing the pictures.

    If that is not true, then we need to re-evaluate why viewing child porn is such a serious felony.

    It is NOT OK for the the FBI to do a few contract murders to try to catch criminals in the mob. I don't see this as any different.

  99. Re:I am sure by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

    Are you actually quoting a fictional TV show in support of some real-life viewpoint? You know those shows are made up from whole cloth, right? Your anecdote doesn't prove anything because it didn't happen. Damn, people quoting TV is getting really scary, people can't tell the difference from reality any more. :(

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  100. Re:I am sure by Kryptonian+Jor-El · · Score: 1

    Whoosh

    --
    All your 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 are belong to us
  101. Re:Was it worth it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Both are wrong. It was 11,000 unique accounts per week. Which means at least 22,000 unique account during the sting.

    So it's 1300 IPs out of 22,000 accounts, and 134 cases.

  102. The FBI committed a crime by K.+S.+Van+Horn · · Score: 1

    "Dubious ethics?" Let's be clear here: the FBI committed a crime, the same crime that the owners of the website committed.

    It's time we started insisting that law enforcement obey the law.

  103. Re: I am sure by ememisya · · Score: 1

    So uhm, that's a weird job.
    -How was work honey?
    -Oh we were hosting child porn today.
    -... Why?
    -So that we catch anyone looking at it.
    -That makes sense.

  104. No other way to catch offenders? Really? by walterbyrd · · Score: 1

    Dateline NBC had no trouble catching offenders, without creating a child porn website.

    From my understanding, online sex offenders are very easy to catch. Just use standard "honeypot" methods: pretend to be child online, place phony ads, etc.

    You do not have to actually provide child porn, or subject children to prostitution, just make that promise, and the child molesters will jump all over it.

  105. Re: I am sure by dgatwood · · Score: 1

    Which ones? The ones who actually do the molesting or the ones who casually view it? Both need Mental Counseling but only one needs to be in Prison. Regardless of how awful it is, it is a Mental Disorder.

    Of course, people who appear to be in the latter group are probably much more likely than average to actually be in the first group. It is certainly useful, therefore, for legal authorities to find out who the people in the latter group are, so that they can be subject to increased scrutiny (in a non-public way). And to the extent that some of them upload new content that hasn't been previously catalogued (and thus was probably produced by the uploader), taking over a site like this could be very effective at bringing to justice people who are actually harming children.

    But you're right that locking up people for mere possession (as opposed to creation) is rather pointless unless those people can somehow identify the original source of some of that porn (which seems very unlikely unless the porn was exchanged in person). Basically, it's the war on drugs, if drug sales had moved entirely into the realm of the Silk Road....

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  106. Re: I am sure by Montezumaa · · Score: 1

    I've had a lot of sex with "teens", one while I was in high school(she "rocked" my "world", and by "world", I mean "cock"), and a few more after I graduated high school and went off to college. After graduating college, there were even a few more "teens" I had sex with. It was nice, and I thoroughly enjoyed it.

    Of course, you being an idiot, I don't expect that you understand that 18 and 19 year old individuals are also "teens", nor that in many states, the age of consent isn't 18, it is either 14, 15, and 16 years old(depending on each state's law, though there are more that have the age of consent at 16). I bet you also believe that, because so many people have called others under the age of 18 "children", that you also believe they are children; the real issue is, they aren't. Children start becoming adults around 14, 15, and 16 years old, hence the reason 16 year old individuals are given driver's licenses. Before the creation of the idea of "adolescence", men as young as 14 were allowed into military and militia service(the group of "states"/territories that became the United States used men 14 years old and up to staff military positions, and all other men, 14 to 45, were a part of the area's perspective militias). Now, the "goal posts" have been shifted, so whatever.

    Now, before anyone goes calling me a "pedophile", "child molester", etc., understand that: Firstly, fuck you, I don't care. You are some faceless, nobody on "the Internet". Even if you were, I couldn't possibly care less what your opinion of me is, and I never have. Secondly and, really, lastly, I am married to a women six and one half years my senior(in other words, she is six and one half years older than me, for the less intelligent), and we have no children. I say that so others, who don't devolve to "childish" acts, such as "name calling", or other, related acts, know that I'm not some mouth-breathing pederast or pedophile(well, my statements don't actually "prove" anything, but I added them regardless).

  107. Re:I am sure by lgw · · Score: 1

    The show exists in and reflects mainstream culture.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  108. Re: I am sure by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    So we're back to "People watching child porn are not a danger to my children."

    Despite what some crazy movie terror plot may have taught you people don't go around kidnapping school children to make porn videos to sell online. Well they may but not in civilised western countries.

  109. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dustlover!

    Does the smell of BenGay give you wood?

    Gumjobs?

    Childish name calling knows no bounds.

  110. Re:ew by SumDog · · Score: 1

    It comes down to people caring. If no one calls the cops or the DA, then it usually goes by fine. If one parent suddenly hates the boy and/or girl enough that they get the cops invovled, and if the DA is a dick head and the judge is an idiot (or "follows the strict letter of the law"), then a consenting 17 and 18 year old in states that don't have the 4-year gap or existing relationship built into their laws, could end up in prison and on a sex offender list.

    It takes a whole system of people who either don't care, can't think or don't know anybody to fuck up kids lives.

  111. Re:ew by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Is 'Fast Times At Ridgemont High' still legal in Australia? It, and just about every other teen comedy, is virtual child porn.

    Phoebe Cates and Jennifer Jason Leigh were both of legal age when they made the movie. But their characters where HS kids. One was a 'freshman'.

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  112. Re:I am sure by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    Nice fly-by Jor-El. Good thing we've got a yellow sun.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  113. Re:I am sure by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

    No. I'm using the characters of a fictional TV show as an example of a real-life viewpoint because, surprisingly enough, writers like to have their characters act in a plausible manner most of the time. Also because these shows may be fictional, but their presence does still affect public perception. Do you propose instead that the management of the NSA one say say down in their darkened secret room and discussed how best to spy on the entire country just for the fun of it, or because they really love the idea of a police state? No, it is more reasonable to compare them to the CSI fictional parallel: People who happily circumvent the law because they believe their mission is of vital importance, and petty things like due process could allow a dangerous person to walk free.

  114. Re:I am sure by HiThere · · Score: 1

    That may be so, but just consider:
    The FBI was not only holding one of the largest collections of child porn in the world, they were selling copies to people. (I assume they were selling rather than just giving away.)

    If anyone who wasn't a "law enforcement" person did that, they could expect a long term in prison. These "FBI agents" not only did it "under the cover of law", they expect you to believe that they didn't take home a profit.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  115. Re:ew by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 1

    Ermm...

    Yes...well... thank you for your thoughtful contribution.

    If that really was in response to my post, that would mean you would put up kids on an island and use it for target practise...

    --
    --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
  116. Re:ew by Noah+Haders · · Score: 1

    It depends... Which nation are wa in?

  117. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly. People are prosecuted for aiding and abetting criminals (for murder, theft, money laundering, etc) , and this is exactly the same. By knowing of such illegal acts upon children and not reporting it and even financially supporting it, it's worse than many other aiding crimes.

    So "just viewing" is not the only crime and should be prosecuted accordingly. The victims are the children abused and fucked up for the rest of their lives.

  118. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Citation needed.

    (I'm not Googling it)

  119. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That sounds like acquiring evidence for prosecution, with a receipt of payment to boot.

    Having slam dunk cases against these fuckers sounds good to me.

  120. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It doesn't matter if it's commercial, what matters is that demand is driving abuse.

  121. They make it themselves these days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most of it isn't posted by molesters, it's the girls doing it themselves

  122. Re: I am sure by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Now that the battle to normalize homosexuality is largely won there are a growing number of voices in society (including academicians) working to normalize pedophilia.

    I'm not seeing this, at least not among respected mainstream academics.

    I am seeing some movement in the legal community to restore sanity for "young offenders" through things like close-in-age exceptions for consensual sex, youthful-offender-diversion programs for teenagers (including very young adults), and the like, but (IMHO) we still have along way to go here. In a perfect world, ex-offenders who were no longer dangerous thanks to intervention/therapy/whatever or simply because they "grew up" wouldn't be treated as if they were still dangerous upon release (i.e. non-dangerous ex-sex-offenders shouldn't be cluttering up a public sex offender registry - leave the public registry for those who are demonstrably still "dangerous enough" that the public needs to be notified but the person is not "so dangerous" that a dangerously-mentally-ill detention-hearing is warranted).

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  123. Re:ew by Ambient+Sheep · · Score: 1

    We have something of a similar situation in the UK: Our age of consent is sixteen*...

    *With a close-in-age-exception, and it becomes eighteen if there exists a relationship that gives one party a position of power over the other.

    I'm not aware of any close-in-age exception under UK law. Just the hard limit of 16 with, as you say, that going up to 18 if there's a power relationship (e.g. teacher, carer, etc.) We all know that the police & CPS may choose to turn a blind-eye in the case of under-16 shenanigans if they're close in age, but I'm not aware of anything in writing. Care to elucidate?

  124. NAW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They took over their own shit.

  125. Re: I am sure by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

    Now that the battle to normalize homosexuality is largely won there are a growing number of voices in society (including academicians) working to normalize pedophilia.

    No there aren't.

    Yes, there are. And I'll note that there are social scientists, psychologists, psychiatrists among them. Some of them aren't simply trying to "better understand" something "icky" but are trying to move policy and social acceptance. There are others working for it to gain acceptance.

    And this isn't something that was just going on 30-40 years ago, it is sill going on.

    One other thing, if the research is truly in its "infancy" as you claim, then why the advocacy for normalization and decriminalization? Wouldn't a prudent, ethical researcher adopt the principle of "do no harm"? I would think they would adopt that outlook until far more is known, but that doesn't seem to be the universal stand.

    'Paedophilia is natural and normal for males' - How some university academics make the case for paedophiles at summer conferences

    "Paedophilic interest is natural and normal for human males,” said the presentation. “At least a sizeable minority of normal males would like to have sex with children Normal males are aroused by children.”

    Some yellowing tract from the Seventies or early Eighties, era of abusive celebrities and the infamous PIE, the Paedophile Information Exchange? No. Anonymous commenters on some underground website? No again.

    The statement that paedophilia is “natural and normal” was made not three decades ago but last July. It was made not in private but as one of the central claims of an academic presentation delivered, at the invitation of the organisers, to many of the key experts in the field at a conference held by the University of Cambridge.

    Other presentations included “Liberating the paedophile: a discursive analysis,” and “Danger and difference: the stakes of hebephilia.”

    Hebephilia is the sexual preference for children in early puberty, typically 11 to 14-year-olds.

    Another attendee, and enthusiastic participant from the floor, was one Tom O’Carroll, a multiple child sex offender, long-time campaigner for the legalisation of sex with children and former head of the Paedophile Information Exchange. “Wonderful!” he wrote on his blog afterwards. “It was a rare few days when I could feel relatively popular!”

    "Pedophilia Chic" Reconsidered - The taboo against sex with children continues to erode

    UNTIL VERY, VERY RECENTLY, public questioning of the social prohibition against pedophilia--to say nothing of positive celebration of child molestation--was practically non-existent in American life. The reasons why are not opaque. To most people, the very word "pedophilia" summons forth a preternatural degree of horror and revulsion; and the criminal law that reflects those reactions has consistently treated the sexual molestation of minors as a serious and eminently punishable offense. So it is small wonder that, historically speaking, the taboo against using legal minors for sex was no more publicly controversial in the United States than the prohibitions against, say, cannibalism or bestiality. Those few partisans of the idea who did sometimes sally forth customarily found themselves regarded as the lowest of the social low, even by the criminal class.

    This social consensus against the sexual exploitation of children and adolescents, however--unlike those against, say, animal sex or incest--is apparently eroding, and this regardless of the fact that the vast majority of citizens do overwhelmingly abominate the thing. For elsewhere in the public square, the defense of adult-child sex

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    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  126. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The joke is on you. It turns out that you did write and post a reply, but it is stupid.

  127. Re: I am sure by cold+fjord · · Score: 1
    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  128. Re: I am sure by KGIII · · Score: 1

    I am quite happily dating a young lady who's nearly 40 years my junior. She's damned cute, too. A few Slashdotters got to meet her at my NYE bash. I'm 58, however. It's perfectly legal but the looks the ladies give me, it's awesome. I don't really give two shits if they don't like it. If they saw the looks their husbands gave me, they'd be even more pissed.

    --
    "So long and thanks for all the fish."
  129. Re:ew by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

    I looked it up. You're right - there is no close-in-age exemption in law, but there is a statement from the Home Office - they have issued open but non-binding guidance not to prosecute in those circumstances. That's what I was thinking of - I just wasn't aware it was only guidance, not law.

    Citeation: http://www.fpa.org.uk/factshee...

  130. Re: "child porn" laws are somewhat absurd by Jack+Griffin · · Score: 1

    and when she's a month from her 18th birthday she sends you a naughty picture and someone finds out and now you're in jail and a sexual offender. Is this very logical?

    No, which is why it doesn't happen outside your imagination..

  131. Re: "child porn" laws are somewhat absurd by cbhacking · · Score: 1

    Don't know of any case in the US where the only minor involved was 17 and 11 months, but in a broader sense it appears that it does happen.

    @xiando's explanation of the laws is essentially correct; although age of consent varies by state (not nation) in the USA, sexual pictures of anybody under 18, even if voluntarily generated and only shared privately with other minors who are already in a (legal!) relationship with the minor pictured, are legally child porn and have led to child porn prosecutions and even convictions.

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    There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
  132. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry dude but you are child into your 20s as far as brain development is concerned so being a college grad banging 18 year olds stinks of desperation because you can't hook up with someone at your own maturity level. You effectively take advantage of more pliable people who are in an age group for more risky behavior.

    Don't defend it

  133. So... by AES84 · · Score: 0

    Is this a suggestion that the government is running all of these websites? How are they determining the size of these sites?

  134. I hope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They aren't using it for 'research purposes'.

  135. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I manscape because sex feels better and I get more oral that way. Not because our looks like a little boy.

  136. shitty police work by sixsixtysix · · Score: 1

    if you have to facilitate ANY part of a crime, then you suck at police work.

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    ...
  137. Re: I am sure by dryeo · · Score: 1

    Of course, people who appear to be in the latter group are probably much more likely than average to actually be in the first group. It is certainly useful, therefore, for legal authorities to find out who the people in the latter group are, so that they can be subject to increased scrutiny (in a non-public way).

    I guess we should scrutinize all the men who look at porn as they're more likely to rape a woman or in some cases, a man. They're also much more likely to be abusers as most rapists have looked at porn.

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    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
  138. Re: I am sure by HiThere · · Score: 1

    To me it sounds like committing crimes in order to potentially secure a conviction. I.e., they are definitely committing the crimes, and any conviction is only potential.

    You don't rob a store to convict someone else of purchasing stolen merchandise.

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    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  139. Re: I am sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, the big thing isn't child porn, no one wants that, but when the methods used to"stop" it become ridiculous and harmful to those that are not involved then it is an issue everyone should look at.

  140. They don't care about the children by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CP is the ultimate blackmail tool and far too many prominent people - politicians, law enforcement, judges, businessmen, clergymen, etc. -are involved. The world is going to hell in a handbasket because our so-called "leaders" have been compromised. The cops aren't as interested in catching pedos as they are protecting the establishment.

  141. Re: I am sure by dgatwood · · Score: 1

    I guess we should scrutinize all the men who look at porn as they're more likely to rape a woman or in some cases, a man.

    No, people who look at adult porn are more likely than average to have sex with adults, not more likely to rape adults. In much the same way, people who look at child porn are more likely than average to have sex with children, which is statutory rape, but not necessarily forcible rape. Terminology is important here.

    They're also much more likely to be abusers as most rapists have looked at porn.

    Most people have looked at porn. It is only a relevant predictor if the odds are significantly different from the norm.

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    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  142. Re:I am sure by slashdotwannabe · · Score: 1

    It is about CSI and TV series brainwashing us the police can do whatever it wants without respecting the constitution and upholding the law.

    This is where a citation that supports your assertion that the Constitution has been violated by this investigation would come in handy! Pray tell, sir, how has this operation violated the Fourth Amendment? First Amendment? Any section or Amendment?

    It is about unlawful entrapment.

    That word does not mean what you think it means. To whit:

    In criminal law, entrapment is a practice whereby a law enforcement agent induces a person to commit a criminal offense that the person would have otherwise been unlikely to commit. It is a conduct that is generally discouraged and thus, in many jurisdictions, is a possible defense against criminal liability.

    Now then, if you have evidence to support the assertion that those arrested in this sting would have otherwise never viewed child pr0n, by all means, I'm sure their defense attorneys would love to hear it.

    It is about doing something morally wrong.

    Arresting pedophiles is morally wrong? You appear to have a strange sense of morality.

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    This comment is my opinion and does not represent an official position of Donald Trump or others I do not work for