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Three ISPs Agree To Block Child Porn

Posted by kdawson on Tue Jun 10, 2008 02:05 PM
from the camel's-head-and-neck dept.
Goobergunch and other readers sent in word that Sprint, Time Warner, and Verizon have agreed to block websites and newsgroups containing child pornography. The deal, brokered by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, occurred after Cuomo's office threatened the ISPs with fraud charges. It's of some concern that the blacklist of sites and newsgroups is to be maintained by the Center for Missing and Exploited Children, an NGO with no legal requirement for transparency. Here are two further cautions, the first from Lauren Weinstein: "Of broader interest perhaps is how much time will pass before 'other entities' demand that ISPs (attempt to) block access to other materials that one group or another feels subscribers should not be permitted to see or hear." And from Techdirt: "[T]he state of Pennsylvania tried to do pretty much the same thing, back in 2002, but focused on actually passing a law ... And, of course, a federal court tossed out the law as unconstitutional. The goal is certainly noble. Getting rid of child porn would be great — but having ISPs block access to an assigned list isn't going to do a damn thing towards that goal."
+ -
story

Related Stories

[+] Verizon Cutting Access To Entire Alt.* Usenet Hierarchy 579 comments
modemac writes "Verizon has declared it will no longer offer access to the entire alt.* hierarchy of Usenet newsgroups to its customers. This stems from last week's agreement for major ISPs to cut off access to 'newsgroups and Web sites' that make child pornography available. The story notes, 'No law requires Verizon to do this. Instead, the company (and, to varying extents, Time Warner Cable and Sprint) agreed to restrictions on Usenet in response to political strong-arming by New York State Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, a Democrat. Cuomo claimed that his office found child porn on 88 newsgroups — out of roughly 100,000 newsgroups that exist.' In response, Verizon will cut its customers off from a large portion of Usenet, as it will only carry newsgroups in the Big 8."
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  • Block for all? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gmuslera (3436) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:07PM (#23732279) Homepage Journal
    What about providing *optional* proxies that does that filtering to their users?
    • Re:Block for all? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Gavagai80 (1275204) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:11PM (#23732363)
      And then arresting everyone who chooses not to use the filter, on charges of seeking child pornography?
      • by PRMan (959735) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @04:17PM (#23735943) Homepage

        Actually, it's far worse than anyone thought. They aren't filtering a few minor websites, they are actually blocking major portions of USENET:

        http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-9964895-38.html?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-5

        Time Warner will now block all of USENET

        Sprint will now block all alt.* newsgroups

        Verizon will now block large, unnamed sections of USENET.

        So, whoever said "USENET will be shut down in the name of 'protect the children'" on the poll last week, you win!

    • Re:Block for all? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by spidrw (868429) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:14PM (#23732459)
      I think it's more about "How can we actively stop our sick bastard pedophile users from doing this?" rather than "Oh how can we keep Timmy from stumbling across some kiddie porn when all he wants is Go, Diego, Go?" The latter goal would just require an *optional* proxy as you put it, but it would be pointless towards the actual goal, which I belive is the first one.
      • I think it's more about "How can we get this Godless Hippie Crap off the InterTubes. Oh yeah, I know! Let's use a Wedge Strategy!". Then they look for the widest crack in libertarian's armour (which happens to be visible from space), namely their utter unwillingness to stand up for the legal rights of pedophiles.

        If people won't defend the rights of the most wretched and most wicked, then they deserve no rights themselves. And that's what they're getting; at civil protests, at TSA checkpoints and now online.
  • Child porn (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:10PM (#23732339)
    Right on the heals of a Boy scouts of America article.

    Hmmm
  • Are you sure? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by HappySmileMan (1088123) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:10PM (#23732347)
    "Yes, truecrypt.org DOES contain child porn, so does wikileaks.org"
    "Do you have proof?"
    "We don't need it, it's on the list, now move along, nothing to see here."
    • by Captain Spam (66120) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:14PM (#23732461) Homepage

      "Yes, truecrypt.org DOES contain child porn, so does wikileaks.org"
      "Do you have proof?"
      "Why are you asking? You must be looking for child porn! STONE HIM!"
      There, fixed it for you.
      • Re:Are you sure? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by PontifexPrimus (576159) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:56PM (#23733689)

        "Yes, truecrypt.org DOES contain child porn, so does wikileaks.org"
        "Do you have proof?"
        "Why are you asking? You must be looking for child porn! STONE HIM!"
        There, fixed it for you.
        Even better:
        "Yes, truecrypt.org DOES contain child porn, so does wikileaks.org"
        "Do you have proof?"
        "Of course! Why don't you visit the sites and check yourself? Oh, sorry. Guess you can't. But for trying to access a blacklisted site you'll now be on permanent watch as a potential pedophile."
    • Re:Are you sure? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by elrous0 (869638) * on Tuesday June 10 2008, @03:39PM (#23734967)
      Oh, you're trying to use a proxy service--must be trying to access child porn. So we'll block those too.

      Oh, you're accessing adult porn sites. Well, some of them might contain child porn. So we'll block those too.

      Accessing a site that's anti-Center for Missing and Exploited Children? Must be trying to get around our system. Well, guess what buddy, we blocked that too.

      Oh, Mr. ISP, now you're claiming you can't block sites after you just proved you could? Well, guess who's getting sued for not blocking the Pirate Bay!

      • Re:Are you sure? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by jacem (665870) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:33PM (#23733049)
        Blocking either spam or phishing sites could be considered censorship by the way. You can talk about protected speech but as soon as you classify some speech as protected and other as not you start down a slippery slope.
        As far as ISP doing the blocking, it's a matter of practicality as much as we try we haven't really put a dent in phishing sites or spam. Someone who wants kiddi p()rn is going to find it. the danger is that other speech may get knocked out as collateral damage, intentionally or not.

        JACEM
          • by HappySmileMan (1088123) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:51PM (#23733515)
            I was gonna put 4chan in my post but decided not to upset the hackers on steroids, since if I've learned anything from Fox news it's that everyone choosing to be anonymous on an imageboard are invariably out to destroy me.
          • Re:Are you sure? (Score:5, Interesting)

            by Shikaku (1129753) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:57PM (#23733717)

            I would be willing to bet that Google already has a black list of sites that it doesn't cache just so they don't have to worry about having very illegal data sitting on their servers.
            Google 4chan. Read the bottom.
  • by Odder (1288958) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:12PM (#23732415)

    Let's see:

    If all of these things come about, the internet will be like cable TV and there will be no free press.

      • by Odder (1288958) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:37PM (#23733143)

        You already see it's start with metered internet. Once they have that, they can offer you "free" sites. Everyone loves free, aren't they nice? Then they hike the price of visiting other sites to something stupid like $5/GB so that it's cheaper to buy physical media and presto - no more internet. They are already blaming "pirates", kiddie porn and terrorists. That's essentially a smear for their competition and anyone who disagrees with them.

        If they get their way, things will really get ugly. All rights fall after free press does.

  • Mixed feelings (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Duncan Blackthorne (1095849) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:12PM (#23732429)
    While on the one hand I see no reason whatsoever for child porn-related sites to even exist let alone have anyone visit them, censorship by ISPs is a very obvious slippery slope. Unfair and damaging compromises without number have already been made "for the sake of the children"; it's as obvious a ploy as "..or the terrorists win", and I for one feel my intelligence is insulted whenever those cards are played. In the final analysis, I think this will be found to be a bad idea. Providers of bandwidth should not be allowed to decide what content will traverse their network any more than they should be allowed to interfere with P2P traffic. Determining the appropriateness should be the domain of hosting services, and the legality should be determined by the courts and by law enforcement; ISPs are neither -- which is as it should be.
  • Won't Work! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by neowolf (173735) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:14PM (#23732467)
    I have to agree with what has already been said- it won't work. Legit sites will get caught in the net and the lawsuits will ensue.

    Anyone who has had to deal with Internet filtering systems like Websense knows they are problematic at-best. I can't imagine using an ISP that runs something like that.

    It seems to me that if they know enough about the kiddie pr0n sites to block them- they should have enough information to provide authorities to get them shut down.
  • by davidwr (791652) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:16PM (#23732493) Homepage Journal
    What if they make a mistake? Is this the first step of many? Will other pressure groups make them block access to material that is legal in the source or destination jurisdiction but not in the other? Of course any ISPs that block material on their own who dared to claim common-carrier status can kiss that claim goodbye.

    I would much prefer them not to block it themselves but rather cooperate with law enforcement. If the cops want it shut down, they can get a warrant to shut it down. On the other hand, the cops may want to keep it up for an hour or two so they can see the logs in real-time and knock on the customers' doors as they are up- or down-loading it.

    As for newsgroups, if the KP-suppliers can't post in alt.kiddie-porn-group-de-jour, they may start invading alt.fractals.mandelbrot or some other group that has no tolerance for such material. That would be quite disruptive.

    Besides, unless they are just plain stupid, people won't upload or host illegal material without encryption, with the passwords traded through other channels. Good luck to the ISPs telling encrypted kiddie porn from encrypted photographs of CowboyNeal's mother.
  • by JMZero (449047) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:17PM (#23732537) Homepage
    I use newsgroups quite a bit. Once alt.underage.porn (or whatever) is shut down, that material is just going to be posted somewhere else - and probably end up being seen by more people. If they ban keywords, they'll move onto new euphemisms. No automatic filter will do this job - and the results of the attempt will be worse in every way than if no filter was used.

    All it is is scoring political points, and providing the illusion of action while really making the situation worse.
  • by Rinisari (521266) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:18PM (#23732577) Homepage Journal
    What happens when Mom sends via email or an online album pictures of Baby's first bath to Grandma, and Grandma's ISP's software classifies the email or album as child porn? Does Grandma get a visit from the FBI/CIA/DEA/NSA/IRS/TSA/DHS in the form of a raid looking for more child porn? News gets out that Grandma was investigated for child porn and her reputation is demolished, even if some people know that it was a case of mistaken intent/identity.

    Child porn is a terrible thing, but it's virtually impossible to classify something as child porn unless someone has manually classified an known image and corresponding hash as child porn.

    There's also the issue of determining ages of the children in the picture if they're not obviously too young. Who took the pictures? Was it taken by a 15-year-old girl's 17-year-old boyfriend, or did she herself take it for him? This is legal in some states/countries, but a felony in others.

    I don't want to get into an argument about these specific cases, but the possible cases are simply too wide and a single government authority cannot effectively press its morals onto its people. Romeo and Juliet will deviate from the norm.

    The Chris Hansen approach works much better because it shows provable evidence of intent/motive and catches them in the act, perhaps even literally with their pants down.
    • by Dan667 (564390) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:21PM (#23732655)
      Yea, that would be great and all, but Chris Hansen is doing it to make money. That seems a bit sick too.
    • The Chris Hansen approach rubs me the wrong way as well--too commercial, too manipulative, but a much better idea than what is proposed here.

      Also men are biologically inclined to find girls who have gone through puberty attractive.

      When I was 15 I wanted to have sex with older men...including as old as 21-22 (and even much older on on occasion). They wanted to have sex with me. So what? I hardly think they are pedophiles.

      Someone needs to stop lumping all "child porn" into one category. A 20 year old man having sex with a consenting 15 year old is not nearly the same as a 40 year old having sex with an 8 year old.

      This reminds me what they do with the war on drugs. Lump all drugs into one category, whether it be marijuana or crack cocaine.

        • Sounds like legal semantics to me. I wasn't forcibly coerced. In fact, I daresay it's easy easier for a 15 year old girl to lure in a 20 year old man for sex than the other way around. The straight guys wouldn't stand much of a chance against a precocious girl. Who raped who?

          Besides, my point kinda was that the laws ARE messed up to begin with. For thousands of generations marrying off daughters under age 15 was the norm--did the men wait until their new brides were 18 to have sex? Hardly.

          So basically men HAVE the urge to look at child pornography. All men must--it's hardwired in to find a 16 year old nubile girl attractive. Are all you guys crying "Child porn is so awful!" really saying that if a hot young, busty and curvaceous 15 year old was standing naked in front of you, you wouldn't be aroused? So what makes it awful is searching for it on the internet? Or are we just talking about prepubescent child pornography? No body seems to want to make this clear, which bolsters my argument that all this is just another witch hunt used to control the masses.

  • Seriously, what happens if a group of people (generally young men found living electronically on one of those lovely chan boards) decide to stage a cp raid? Is the attacked site blocked forever or only as long as the cp stays on the servers? Who decides if it is intentional or accidental? Who even gets to decide what constitutes cp? Is there a job where someone has to sort through all the porn on the internet to see what is legal? Are they accepting resumes? Not that I'm applying.
  • by llamalad (12917) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:25PM (#23732797)
    If they can create a list of sites that contain this vile shit, wouldn't it make sense to, oh, I don't know, maybe shut them down, prosecute the scumbags that are running the sites, and then use their client records to find and prosecute the people who were paying for it?
  • by y86 (111726) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:27PM (#23732851)
    Great Idea in theory, "lets block all this bad stuff", OK now please define the rules...

    Government: It has to block child porn.
    Me: OK, how do we define child porn?
    Government: An adult and a child in sexual acts.
    Me: Right, how do we flag that to block it?
    Government: *frusterated* You block it!
    Me: We need to define a process or this won't work.
    Government: We'll make a list then.
    Me: So your going to scour the internets for child Porn and add it to this list. Nothing automatic?
    Government: Yes
    Me: So what venues will you block, HTTP, SSH, FTP, Torrent, MQ, Skype?
    Government: All of those things.
    Me: You can't decrypt HTTPS or SSH traffic, how do you know it's child porn?
    Government: Because we know those servers have porn since some guy flagged it.
    Me: You've heard of dynamic IP's right?
    Government: *MAD* DO WHAT WE SAY OR WE KILL THE BUNNY.
    Me: Um.... do it.

  • by damburger (981828) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:48PM (#23733439)

    The idea is that we prevent the trading of child porn images over the Internet in order to protect children from abuse.

    But this doesn't make sense. The laws making it illegal to produce child porn are completely disconnected from the laws that make it illegal to distribute child porn over the internet. If someone publishes indecent images of children over the Internet they are incriminating themselves for the former crime, making the latter one superfluous.

    The real purpose is clearly not the stated one. It probably isn't just a naked power grab, rather a callous bit of populism ("Won't someone PLEASE think of the children!?")

    When such laws fail, as the nature of the Internet makes them bound to, the same motives that caused them to be created causes the laws to be 'toughened'. If you had stuff like the DMCA that would make it illegal to provide any service that might conceivable allow a person to trade child porn over the internet, then you would have a law usable against any proxy server, encryption, and a host of other technologies that can protect your privacy.

    I am not saying that this is a deliberate attempt to crush peoples freedom - more like a hamfisted populist attempt to crush peoples freedom.

  • Standard Form.... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by maz2331 (1104901) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:51PM (#23733531)
    Your post advocates a

    (X) technical ( ) legislative (X) market-based (X) vigilante

    approach to fighting illegal porn. Your idea will not work. Here is why it won't work. (One or more of the following may apply to your particular idea, and it may have other flaws which used to vary from state to state before a bad federal law was passed.)

    ( ) Perverts can easily use it to harvest email addresses
    (X) Other legitimate Internet uses would be affected
    ( ) No one will be able to find the guy or collect the money
    (X) It is defenseless against brute force attacks
    (X) It will stop porn for two weeks and then we'll be stuck with it
    ( ) Users of email will not put up with it
    ( ) Microsoft will not put up with it
    ( ) The police will not put up with it
    (X) Requires too much cooperation from pornographers
    ( ) Requires immediate total cooperation from everybody at once
    ( ) Many email users cannot afford to lose business or alienate potential employers
    ( ) Spammers don't care about invalid addresses in their lists
    (X) Anyone could anonymously destroy anyone else's career or business

    Specifically, your plan fails to account for

    ( ) Laws expressly prohibiting it
    ( ) Lack of centrally controlling authority for the web
    (X) Open proxies in foreign countries
    ( ) Ease of searching tiny alphanumeric address space of all email addresses
    (X) Asshats
    ( ) Jurisdictional problems
    ( ) Unpopularity of weird new taxes
    ( ) Public reluctance to accept weird new forms of money
    ( ) Huge existing software investment in HTTP
    (X) Use of protocols other than HTTP to distribute
    (X) P2P Applications
    ( ) Willingness of users to install OS patches received by email
    (X) Armies of worm riddled broadband-connected Windows boxes
    (X) Eternal arms race involved in all filtering approaches
    ( ) Extreme profitability of spam
    ( ) Joe jobs and/or identity theft
    ( ) Technically illiterate politicians
    ( ) Extreme stupidity on the part of people who do business with spammers
    (X) Dishonesty on the part of pornographers themselves
    ( ) Bandwidth costs that are unaffected by client filtering
    ( ) Outlook
    (X) Getting sued for damages due to false positives
    (X) Getting sued for damages due to false negatives

    and the following philosophical objections may also apply:

    (X) Ideas similar to yours are easy to come up with, yet none have ever
    been shown practical
    ( ) Any scheme based on opt-out is unacceptable
    ( ) SMTP headers should not be the subject of legislation
    (X) Blacklists suck
    (X) Whitelists suck
    (X) We should be able to talk about Viagra without being censored
    ( ) Countermeasures should not involve wire fraud or credit card fraud
    (X) Countermeasures should not involve sabotage of public networks
    ( ) Countermeasures must work if phased in gradually
    ( ) Sending email should be free
    (X) Why should we have to trust you and your servers?
    ( ) Incompatiblity with open source or open source licenses
    (X) Feel-good measures do nothing to solve the problem
    ( ) Temporary/one-time email addresses are cumbersome
    ( ) I don't want the government reading my email
    (X) I don't want ISPs reading my traffic
    (X) Killing them that way is not slow and painful enough

    Furthermore, this is what I think about you:

    ( ) Sorry dude, but I don't think it would work.
    (X) This is a stupid idea, and you're a stupid person for suggesting it.
    ( ) Nice try, assh0le! I'm going to find out where you live and burn your
    house down!
    • Re:slippery slope (Score:5, Interesting)

      by skrolle2 (844387) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:17PM (#23732523)
      There is such a list in Sweden, and some of the big ISPs use it. There was quite an uproar when someone tried to put The Pirate Bay on it, claiming they had torrents of child porn, and it never got on the list. Almost everyone agrees that the list is useless, but it's still there. :-/

      So it's not a question of whether or not someone will try to use such a list for their own goals, but how soon that will happen.
      • Re:slippery slope (Score:5, Informative)

        by Wavebreak (1256876) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:56PM (#23733681)
        Also in Finland. Caused somewhat of a stir when a site listing banned addresses got banned itself, for linking to kiddie porn. Exactly how can a list like that be held to any standard of accountability rather than sliding into full-blown censorship if you can't even keep a list of *what* gets banned?
    • Re:slippery slope (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Ephemeriis (315124) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:51PM (#23733533) Homepage

      While I can't stand the kiddie pr0n,this simply won't work. it has been tried in the past in other countries and it always ends up getting legit websites along with the bad ones.But that is my 02c,YMMV
      You've got probably three major problems with any kind of list like this...

      1) Accidentally listed innocent sites. Some place like Whore Presents [whorepresents.com] getting listed as pornography when it isn't.

      2) Intentionally mis-listed sites. Somebody will claim that The Pirate Bay [thepiratebay.com] has child pornography on it (which it may) just to keep people from downloading cracked copies of Spore.

      3) They're easy enough to bypass. There are plenty of free proxies out there that'll happily slap some advertising on your screen and then serve up whatever page your ISP doesn't want you to see. Or you could tunnel your traffic elsewhere to avoid the filter lists

      These blocklists will be enough to stop some people from accidentally stumbling upon child porn... Maybe stop some very casual attempts to intentionally view child porn... But nothing more. They won't actually put a dent in folks who are genuinely trafficking in real, illegal child pornography. They're already well aware of what they're doing, and that it's illegal, and they're already going to some effort to find the material. Making them use an additional proxy or VPN isn't going to accomplish a whole lot.

    • The problem is the production of child porn which of course involves abuse of children.

      The demand comes from perverts who like to watch the abuse of children. So what happens if you simply block their access to child porn produced by other people?

      They go off and produce their own. Which means more children abused.

      Far better to use the ISPs to track those who produce or regularly seek out child porn and then prosecute them or treat their mental issues as is necessary. Several jurisdictions in Europe have broken up "Child porn rings", arresting as many as 50 people at once.

      finally: There is a new category of child porn that has started to pop up lately. Child produced pornography. This means 3 or 4 children, all the same age who take turns operating a cameraphone and performing for it. Then they send out the video to other children via MMS, Bluetooth and Email. The 1st such "work" that came to public attention locally was on the cellphones or computers of thousands of children before the 1st adult saw it.

      How do we deal with that? Who do we prosecute? I honestly don't know, suggestions from the Slashdot crowd would be welcome.
      • by Ngarrang (1023425) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:49PM (#23733457) Journal
        If you can cut off the buyer from the seller, you can make a dent in the problem. It is something, at least, to try. Though, I do worry to what extent other things will be added that are not illegal, but might be argued as 'inappropriate' for our eyes and ears. I don't need big brother to filter my internet for me
      • by digitrev (989335) <digitrev@hotmail.com> on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:56PM (#23733675) Homepage
        The answers is you don't prosecute, unless there was abuse. Here's a suggestion of mine: look at the age of consent in the area being considered. For example, in Canada, 16. If you're 14/15, you can consent to sex with someone no more than 5 years older than you, and if you're 12/13, the rule is 3 years. So work the child pornography laws around that.

        For example, if the person in possession of the photos is legally allowed to have sex with a person of the age of the person in the photo (i.e. you're 19 and have a photo of a 15 year old girl), then the data should be destroyed, but no one should be prosecuted. Otherwise, go right ahead with prosecution. The problem being there's no way to tell how old they were at the time, so obviously someone will eventually have to make a judgment on the photo in question.

        So my suggestion would lead to the following.
        • A (pornographic) photo of an 18 year old would be legal.
        • A photo of a 16/17 year old would be taken from you, but not result in prosecution.
        • A photo of a 15 year old would result in a prosecution for anyone over the age of 20. Otherwise the photo is taken from you.
        • A photo of a 14 year old would result in a prosecution for anyone over the age of 19. Otherwise the photo is taken from you.
        • A photo of a 13 year old would result in a prosecution for anyone over the age of 16. Otherwise the photo is taken from you.
        • A photo of a 12 year old would result in a prosecution for anyone over the age of 13. Otherwise the photo is taken from you.
        Granted, this is not a perfect situation, but it does reduce the risk of an idiot 15 year old having his life ruined for a photo of his naked girlfriend.
      • by Applekid (993327) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @02:57PM (#23733705)

        How do we deal with [child produced pornography]?
        At the risk of being called a pedophile myself:
        We don't.

        To me at least, the fact that the tools to produce pornography are falling into the hands of children and it's being used as such is evidence that we need to completely rethink childhood, adolesence, sexuality, and age of consent. I know parents will be horrified at the thought of their precious little fuzzy-lumpkins actually being as curious as they were when they were that age, but it's true.
          • by Schadrach (1042952) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @05:04PM (#23736889)
            Rethink the "that isn't themselves" part of that.

            There was a case (in Florida, I think? Heard about it second hand) where a 15 yo girl takes an indecent photo of herself and sends it to her boyfriend. Numb-nuts shows it off to his friends, and the next result is that he gets busted for possessing the image, she gets busted for both possessing it and for production.

            Let's also consider that in some areas, any unclothed photo of a child is automatically child pornography, including the sort that many normal parents might have of their children and never consider them in that fashion (kids in bath, that kind of thing).

            Actually, according to his bio, Marilyn Manson tried to use such a photo from his parents photo album in the liner notes for his first album, and the label refused because they might get into legal troubles over the possibility of child pornography (which was precisely his point -- this was a fairly common, normal sort of photo with no pornographic intent, so what does it say about a VIEWER who declres it to be CP?)
            • by DancesWithBlowTorch (809750) on Tuesday June 10 2008, @05:53PM (#23737743)
              Let's face it, if the law is laid out in such a ridiculous manner, we are all pedophiles.

              I, for example, am the proud owner of Nirvana's "nevermind" album. And so are 26 million other people [wikipedia.org]. (Don't click that link, it contains child pornography!)

              I also own pictures of myself in the nude, when I was about one and a half years old. Some of those pictures have other nude babies in them, alongside myself.

              I don't understand what has happened to this society. At which point did we all just stop thinking and handed in our brains to the mainstream media? It's not hard to avoid this whole bullshit. Just don't call it "child pornography" if no child was harmed in its creation! Oh, yes, there will be some people who get off on pictures of naked babies at the beach. You know what, I don't care! Just as I don't care if people get off on watching a 25 year-old woman walk down main street in a short skirt from 50 yards away. Do what you want, as long as you don't infringe on other people's rights. If someone is so keen on watching a picture of my naked self from a time I can't remember any more, maybe, just maybe, he's not actually causing any harm to me, or anyone else.
    • But come on, anyone arguing that blocking child porn is a slippery slope is like saying we shouldnt have a court system because some people may be found innocent.

      ITYM because some guilty people may be found innocent. HTH, HAND.

      Regardless, here's why you're wrong: Blocking child porn will be ineffective, and Blocking child porn is treating the symptom, not the disease. Thus this is handwaving bullshit designed to convince people that something is being done about child porn when in fact it is not.

      The base problem is that the way to stop child pornography, and rape, and all the other sex crime in the world (or at least, the percentage which can be prevented) is to create a healthy society, and that is not in the interests of the powers that be - it's an incompatible goal to that of milking every man, woman, and child for every available dollar. It's not just indifferent to the idea of a healthy society, but actually hostile to it; well-balanced people do not buy massive volumes of possessions which they don't need and will never use again, they don't willingly buy food which is non-nutritious, unhealthy or even downright toxic; they don't intentionally decide to purchase and burn fuels which pollute the environment in which they live. They do these things because they feel nervous, trapped, and helpless in spite of the fact that there clearly are alternatives to being a rat in the maze.

      Call me a hippie if you like (I was born and raised, if you can call it that, in Santa Cruz) but happiness isn't derived from getting what you want, but from knowing what you want - especially when you already have it (often the case) or when it's available without buying into the crapfest that we take for granted and refer to as "daily life".