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Google Brazil Pressured to Give Up Names

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Wed Aug 23, 2006 10:16 AM
from the parade-of-lawyers dept.
Kordau writes "Google Brazil is under pressure to release user info from Orkut, relating to a child porn investigation by the Brazilian government. Google Brazil maintains that the info officials want is held on US servers and if they want the info, they should talk to Google USA."

Related Stories

[+] Google to Give Data To Brazilian Court 182 comments
Edu writes to mention a Washington Post article about Google's olive branch to the Brazilian courts. Despite previously refusing to reveal search information to the U.S. government, the company has announced they'll be releasing information on hate groups to the Brazilian courts. The move is intended to allow the Brazilian government to identify users associated with homophobic and racist groups. From the article: "Orkut pulls objectionable words and pictures from user sites, but Google stores content it feels could be useful in a lawsuit. Orkut is especially popular in Brazil, which accounts for 75 percent of its 17 million users. Legal and privacy experts said that Google had no choice but to comply with the court order. 'From the law enforcement perspective, if the records are in the possession of the business, the business can be compelled to produce them,' said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Washington-based Electronic Privacy Information Center."
[+] Google Denies Data In Brazil Orkut Case 183 comments
mikesd81 writes, "The AP reports that Google filed a motion in response to a Brazilian judge's deadline to turn over information on users of the company's social networking service Orkut. An earlier AP story gives the background: 'On Aug. 22, Federal Judge Jose Marcos Lunardelli gave Google's Brazilian affiliate until Sept. 28 to release information needed to identify individuals accused of using Orkut to spread child pornography and engage in hate speech against blacks, Jews and homosexuals. Google claims that its Brazilian affiliate cannot provide the information because all the data about Orkut users is stored outside Brazil at the company's U.S.-based headquarters. Google maintains that it is open to requests for information from foreign governments as long as the requests comply with U.S. laws and that they are issued within the country where the information is stored.'" Eight million Brazilians, about a quarter of the country's Internet-using population, are members of Orkut.
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  • There is a much better reuters article here [smh.com.au] - I suggest you read that rather than the linked article.

    The first four paragraphs of the article contain the story (not too much there) - the rest is fluff - and inaccurate fluff at that - I'm going to go completely OT to look at some of the absurdities it contains:

    The Brazilian case highlights an issue that has been brewing for sometime over the information that search engine and other internet companies keep on their databases about their users.

    No, it doesn't highlight that - the cases are not similar in any form, other than both involving large internet companies

    The recent blunder made by AOL in which the internet company erroneously published 20 million search requests....

    Erroneously? AOL deliberately published the search requests.

    Early this year, Google successfully defended a subpoena from the US Department of Justice to hand over its data in another child porn investigation case.

    Calling that a "Child porn investigation case" is one of the most misleading statements I've ever heard. It was a "porn on the 'net fishing expedition."
  • fair play and leverage (Score:5, Interesting)

    by way2trivial (601132) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:20AM (#15962726)
    (http://www.ocean7motel.com/ | Last Journal: Monday May 07 2007, @07:50AM)
    I think they should have to cough it up, if they want to do business in brazil.

    in the US, a us branch of a large company gets slammed with multiple subpeonas and searches and requests for eveything the DA can arrange to harrass the US branch (and ultimately the parent company) of a multinational when they want data held outside the country.. and in some cases, it's justified and the only leverage for a necassary investigation.

  • Google won't prevail here (Score:3, Informative)

    by neonprimetime (528653) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:23AM (#15962744)
    (http://twoturtlelovers.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Friday May 25, @03:01PM)
    Early this year, Google successfully defended a subpoena from the US Department of Justice to hand over its data in another child porn investigation case.

    Brazil is by no means a totalitarian regime but its privacy laws differ from those of the US.

    If a Brazilian judge decides that Google must hand over data or pay a hefty fine and shut down its local operations then it sets a dangerous precedent for Google.


    I don't think Brazil's legal system is as porn friendly as the US legal system. I bet ya that Google will have to hand over something in this case, or risk being tossed out of Brazil.
  • ... they'll be hurting Brazil a lot more than they'll be hurting Google.
  • Archibald Buttle (Score:4, Funny)

    by Reverend528 (585549) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:27AM (#15962783)
    (http://reverend.healeys.net/)
    Google Brazil should be careful. Before they turn anyone over to the ministry of information, they should make sure it's the right man and not just some typo [google.com].
  • The solution is simple really (Score:4, Insightful)

    by NeuroAcid (806498) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:29AM (#15962811)
    Don't store the data in the first place.
  • by sheph (955019) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:30AM (#15962821)
    ...why they would have a problem releasing that information even from the US. I'd hate to be the American company protecting child pornography. Could be very bad for the image. Not to mention the stock price.
    • Re:I don't understand... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Rob T Firefly (844560) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:42AM (#15962918)
      (http://robvincent.net/ | Last Journal: Tuesday October 09, @01:55PM)
      What happens the next time they want the same info for some other reason? Start off playing the "think of the children" card, and things will be much easier when a foreign power wants the info for a person who is wanted for being suspected of a lesser crime, for criticising their government on the Internet, or for being someone who a corrupt official doesn't like.

      Please note I have no idea what the Brazilian government is like, and the above examples may be off base for them (at least presently,) so this isn't meant to be a dig at the Brazilian administration. My point is, there are now and will always be governments out there who would really enjoy the chance to extract info on certain people through nervous US-based Internet companies.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:I don't understand... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by BalanceOfJudgement (962905) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:46AM (#15963502)
      (http://balanceofjudgement.com/)
      ...why they would have a problem releasing that information even from the US. I'd hate to be the American company protecting child pornography. Could be very bad for the image. Not to mention the stock price.
      What you've just done is invoke the "think of the children" free pass to the US Constitution (and every other political system in the world based on individual freedom, of which there are several dozen).

      This is exactly the tactic used by so many in power to get their foot in the door of eliminating privacy: Choose an issue that causes anyone who disagrees to look like a criminal, and get people to voluntarily give up their freedoms and privacy. Now that you have a precedent set for getting access to that information, you can do it for basically any reason - and abuse of power is just a step away.

      I don't trust anyone enough to give them that kind of power in the first place.

      There's a saying, and I will paraphrase because I don't remember the exact words..

      "I would rather one guilty man remain free than compromise the freedoms of a thousand."

      See, that's what so few people understand - the price of freedom is eternal vigilance (Thomas Jefferson). What this means is that freedom is actually an incredibly difficult social system to maintain, and still retain justice and order. But it is that struggle, that effort, that makes the ends so worthwhile - it is the very definition of honor and integrity.

      And that is why so many people find freedom so frustrating [read: people we elect to leadership]... they know they don't deserve it.
      [ Parent ]
  • A precedent about to be set? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by RagingFuryBlack (956453) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:31AM (#15962828)
    (http://www.infinitystyles.com/)
    From the Reuters Article:
    In its request, Google said its Orkut pages are housed on its server in the United States and that Brazilian authorities should request that information from its headquarters, not its Brazilian unit.
    Could the Brasillian government start knocking at the US DoJ's door asking for a subpeona for the data on the servers inside the USA, or will this lead to another fishing expedition from the US DoJ in MySpace, Orkut, Facebook, Ect instead of google searches?
  • The devil is not as ugly as it seems (Score:5, Informative)

    by knightmad (931578) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:33AM (#15962842)
    Orkut is the most used and popular social networking site in my home country (Brazil), and its popularity can't be explained with words or analogies. (But I will try anyway ;) )
    Not having an Orkut account there (among teenagers and young adults from the middle/upper class) is something like not having an IM account or a cellphone, there are more than 5 Million users only from Brasil there, popular enough to force Google to provide a Brazilian Portuguese translation of the site, and to make Google to open a subsidiary there, to take advantage of this unexpected success.

    The downside of the site is that brazilian people are very open and trusting, and the "invite-only" aspect of the site incentived from the very beggining the users to put their real data there, like friends, habits, pictures, etc (something similar to MySpace in the U.S.), and that attracted all kind of problems concerning to racism, gang rivaltry and child harassment. Not that it wouldn't happen in the real world anyway (Brasil has a lot of problems), it only moved to a different scenario, the internet.

    As it is based on the concept "Communities" (similar to groups on yahoo groups), a lot of groups with dubious/illegal subjects popped up, groups endorsing racism, neo-nazi propaganda, child abuse and other illegal activities, crimes were planned and the results posted and commented in some of thoses threads. When the perpetrator was stupid enough to use his real information (and believe me, it happens every once in a while, stupid punks, althought it would be a violation of their TOS not provide real information heh), the police had no problem to find the criminal and prosecute. But when they hide behind fake profiles, the police has no other option other than subpoena the information to try to find the culprit.

    Don't let the hype make you think this is another case of a country trying to "think of the children", Orkut has became a place where crime (or apology to crime, as it is also illegal in Brasil) has became a major problem and police and the justice system are having to deal with it adequatedly. (For the ones who didn't got it, I'm brazilian and English is not my first language, so sorry for any eventual mistake)
    • by QCompson (675963) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:00AM (#15963077)
      or apology to crime, as it is also illegal in Brasil
      Seems like you're going to generate a lot more crime when you make it a crime to justify or defend a crime. Words shouldn't be illegal.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:The devil is not as ugly as it seems by IamTheRealMike (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:14AM
    • Re:The devil is not as ugly as it seems by aralin (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:22AM
    • PLEASE MOD PARENT UP, UP AND UP! by hummassa (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:45AM
    • As it is based on the concept "Communities" (similar to groups on yahoo groups), a lot of groups with dubious/illegal subjects popped up, groups endorsing racism, neo-nazi propaganda, child abuse and other illegal activities, crimes were planned and the results posted and commented in some of thoses threads ......
      Orkut has became a place where crime (or apology to crime, as it is also illegal in Brasil) has became a major problem and police and the justice system are having to deal with it adequatedly.


      Pedophiles and racists are chatting online. Read my lips. Big Fucking Deal. In a free society, people should be entitled both to their views, and to discuss those views with like minded individuals. The majority of society happens to find these views highly offensive. Tough Shit. Liberty isn't as selective as most mobs. I refuse to sacrafice society on the altar of public outrage because a few sickos are typing objectionable content. "Apology to crime". What kind of a fucking country is Brazil anyway!?

      To those who would cry; "Oh but these groups are inherantly evil and morally wrong!", let me tell you something about "inherant" evil and morality. There are countries in the world where clitorectomies are not only considered legal, but morally correct. In fact, a grown woman with a clitoris is considered inherantly immoral. You might scoff at the notions of "primitive" societies, but let it first be noted that the US has highest circumcision rate in the developed world. You'll find plenty of people with "inherantly's" on both sides of that debate.

      Morals change. Oh boy do they change. Racism, pedophilia, facism were once not only legal, but moral as well. They were regarded as virtues in many societies at one point in time or another. You want the sad truth. Morals change with the tides. I'll trust in what's legal long before I trust in what's "moral".

      Left to the media and the mob, our society would embrace old status quos just as quickly as it would condenm them. Right now the media is making money from outrage against child porn. Give it a few decades and they'll be calling for "tweenage" weddings to be legalised, or for segregation to be reestablished. Will you want to listen to them then? Do you think the legligatures and companies should be so quick to kow-tow?

      So fuck moral outrage. It's like a fashion fad. Google knows this. They respect peoples rights, even if they abhor their actions. And so should everyone. If you don't like it, then move to a totalitarian state. Or Brazil, where my above "apology to crime" is in fact illegal.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:The devil is not as ugly as it seems by rbanffy (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @01:46PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Google telling the truth? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Captain Perspicuous (899892) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:39AM (#15962898)
    Since the data on the Google platform [wikipedia.org] is mirrored around the globe for performance reasons, I'm not so sure Google is telling the truth here. I'm pretty sure the regular Google web index is mirrored in some Brazil data centre, and with Orkut having its major market share there too [wikipedia.org], I would assume that this data that is requested is already there, too.
  • I Remember Orkut (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Schezar (249629) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:41AM (#15962910)
    (http://www.frontrowcrew.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday June 16 2004, @09:55AM)
    Orkut was amazing... for about two weeks. I loved it. Our entire friend group jumped in, started making communities, and generally became very active. There was lots of discussion, and everyone was very happy with it.

    Then, the Brazilians came.

    My inbox slowly flooded with Portugese spam, mostly asking to be my friend. All of the communities I frequented filled with Portugese spam, mostly asking me to join other communities. They ignored the "language" preferences on communitues and overran practically every non-Portugese group. They constantly spammed one another. Many times, it was just two people having a private conversation with one another, but for whatever godforsaken reason sending this conversation to EVERYONE ON THEIR FRIEND LIST AND EVERYONE ON ALL OF THEIR FRIENDS' FRIEND LISTS!

    They completely took Orkut over in the space of a month. It was impossible to use the service if you didn't speak Portugese. They'd email me constantly asking me to join their friend lists and communities. It got so bad I had to remove all of my contact information from the site.

    It's not that they used their native language. I'm cool with that. You're free on the Internet to speak whatever language you want. The problem was they ignored and trampled everyone else, filling English-only boards and spamming constantly.

    That's my Orkut story. Seeing it in the news again reminded me of the potential, and of how annoying Brazilians can be online ;^)

    I wonder if anyone outside of Brazil even uses Orkut anymore.
  • Extradition (Score:1)

    by that_xmas (707449) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:00AM (#15963079)
    (http://www.livejournal.com/users/that_xmas/)
    Obviously, Brazil needs to extradite Larry Page or Eric Schmidt since they are violating Brazil's laws.
  • Child porn... (Score:1)

    by David Munch (939296) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:03AM (#15963110)
    (http://davidmunch.tk/)
    I seriously can't see why people are so much against releasing any kind of info, when the cops are going after child porn abusers.. Anyone care to elaborate?
    • Re:Child porn... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by BalanceOfJudgement (962905) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @12:02PM (#15963687)
      (http://balanceofjudgement.com/)
      I seriously can't see why people are so much against releasing any kind of info, when the cops are going after child porn abusers.. Anyone care to elaborate?
      The question really is not one of an individual legal case. If the demand for information would be always and forever limited to this case I would say, more power to you, give up the information.

      Unfortunately, actions like these establish that irritating little fellow called "precedent." Once authorities in Brazil and other countries realize they can strong arm a company into turning over personal information (whether based on the child porn pretext or otherwise, regardless of how solid that pretext is), you can kiss privacy goodbye.

      But more than that, you can kiss justice and government oversight goodbye. When the government can have more information on you than YOU have on you, you know the balance of power has shifted way too far in the government's favor. That's the kind of world in which you fear your own government more than any terrorist.

      I am not willing to open those kinds of doors. If that means some guilty people are harder to prosecute, that's what that means - that is the price of freedom. It makes sure that the vast majority remain free. Arguing otherwise requires arguing that the vast majority of free people are in fact criminals, which is a simply ridiculous claim to make - and if one were to rely on the claim that the law makes most people criminals (even for minor infractions like jay-walking or littering), one really should consider the idea that there's something wrong with the law.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Child porn... by the grace of R'hllor (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @12:08PM
    • Re:Child porn... by fullphaser (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @01:53PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • What must be done: (Score:4, Interesting)

    by rice_burners_suck (243660) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:06AM (#15963141)
    (Last Journal: Sunday November 04, @03:38AM)
    I think the free software community needs to get everyone together, along with lots of money and resources, and create a country somewhere in the world that has free software friendly laws.

    This country doesn't need to be very big. It just needs to have room for some enormous data centers. Everything would be based here, and countries like Brazil or the US would have no say in what's being hosted on the servers based there.

    Then, there would be no such thing as Google having to succumb to government pressure.

  • what data do they want (Score:2, Insightful)

    by gsn (989808) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:19AM (#15963260)
    I have an orkut account - some of the information like an gmail address is necessary to sign in. The rest of the information on your profile is entiely optional. They don't even have to ask google for the profile information - make a fake account and stick up a photo of some girl in a swimsuit and get a freind request and you get to see it as soon as its approved.

    The stupid thing is they expect criminals to be providing orkut with any legit info - for a long time my address was in Svalbard and the Jan Mayen Islands. This violates your TOS but really meh.

    I don't know if orkut keeps a record of what IP address you login from but its also probably useless with people login in from random places or using TOR. Sure there is google search info linked to your gmail account and we all know about googles 2038 cookie but delete your cookies after each session and search from the the main google page or the firefox bar or use a public computer or whatever and you avoid that.

    So I'm seriously confused by what data these guys are asking google for. The profile info which is likely to be the most useful if there is some accurate information is public or easy to get once you get authorized as a friend. I suspect they just want anything they can get their hands on and want to sort through it later. This is probably more work than they realize, and they will more than likely end up buried in a mound of data. They are probably better of doing some actual on the ground detective work.

    Also do Googlenauts define targeted advertising as enhancing the user experience - because my definition tends to lean more towards Adblock.
  • I, para um, dão boas-vindas a nossos overlords novos de Brazillian.
  • by MikeRT (947531) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:34AM (#15963382)
    (http://www.codemonkeyramblings.com/)
    If they go to them and say "we caught this user account accessing child porn," on what basis can Google morally and legally not comply? Google is not a court, and should have to comply with the law like the average person does. Anything less and they become, as Locke feared, a law unto themselves, which is the last thing we want any rich institution to become.
  • A Google Response? (Score:2)

    by WeAzElMaN (667859) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:41AM (#15963434)
    (http://www.bouncyglue.com/)
    This [blogspot.com] was posted about an hour and a half ago. I suppose Google'll wanna pre-emptively combat any negative press on this issue.
  • orkut (Score:1)

    by jovius (974690) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:59AM (#15963659)
    For some strange cosmic reason, Orkut means 'orgasms' in Finnish slang.. might explain why it hasn't really gotten off here :)
    • Re:orkut by saiha (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @02:19PM
  • Jurisdiction (Score:4, Informative)

    by rbanffy (584143) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @01:51PM (#15964525)
    (http://www.dieblinkenlights.com/)

    Hi.

    I see the problem as Brazilian authorities appear to be refusing to follow proper conduct. I agree that if the servers are in the US, then the laws that apply to those crimes is the US law and Brazilian authorities have no jurisdiction.

    I think it should be solved, instead, by the Foreign Relations Office, that could forward the request either to Google itself or to the local authorities - I am not sure if it would be the FBI or the DOJ. Both would be more than happy to help and, IIRC, they could even ask - and be granted - extradition of non-Brazilian citizens to the US so they could be prosecuted there. This is, of course, about the child-porn problems. Speech is more protected in the US, so, it should be safe to use a US-based server to express illegal opinions about such things as racism or neo-nazis. The server is in the US, so Brazilian laws should not apply. Not that I approve racism or neo-nazis - it's a matter of jurisdiction.

    OTOH, I am quite sure any employee of the Brazilian Google office that could have access to the requested data would be committing a crime in wherever-in-the-US the servers are by giving the requested information without proper authorization to foreign (from the server point-of-view) authorities and would face possible arrest upon setting foot on the US.

    As it is configured now, it looks more like a pissing contest between Google and the Brazilian authorities. I side with Google, in that the data is not under Brazilian jurisdiction and Brazilian authorities are refusing to follow proper procedures for the case.

    And yes, I am Brazilian and live in Brazil.
    --
    http://www.dieblinkenlights.com/ [dieblinkenlights.com] [dieblinkenlights.com]
  • US legal system (Score:1)

    by fabrica64 (791212) <fabrica64@yah[ ]com ['oo.' in gap]> on Wednesday August 23 2006, @02:29PM (#15964826)
    >> The same thing holds true for Yahoo, Microsoft and any social networking site that chooses to operate in jurisdictions where privacy of the individual is not paramount in the legal system. I didn't know that individual privacy was parmaount in US legal system. I visited US from Europe last month and they took all of my data, fingerprint and photo at port of entry... and put on Windows systems
  • by josemurilo (997967) on Saturday August 26 2006, @06:31AM (#15984458)

    The big media attention to the case is in direct proportion to the scale of Brazilian participation in the virtual environment. It's really huge, and could provide an interesting laboratory on how to deal with digital identity on the web. But observers are quick to point out that Google's loose attention to Orkut development -- especially the lack of proper controls in the subscription process -- has had a decisive impact in the formation of the Brazilian user base. Everybody in the country knows that most of the users of social networks are kids, and most parents are not even aware that the site is not supposed to be allowed to people under 18. Who's to blame? Would Google pay such loose attention if the majority of users were in the US?

    There must be some common ground for a positive settlement. It seems obvious that some Brazilian officials lack understanding of the web global dynamics AND Google has made equivalent errors in not paying close attention to inappropriate membership and behaviors of Orkut users until now. But the present 'tug of war' format of the debate will not help anybody. All sides should keep in mind that the case can be an opportunity bringing important insights about how to deal with identity in the web environment. Brazilians are ready (eager?) to explore these possibilities. It would be important also that Google Brazil's team should be prepared to think and move with respect for local cultural sensibilities while dealing with the implications created by such a huge experiment in social networking. It is obvious that 'adsense' sales people are not prepared to understand the deep issues that will keep emerging from the incredible digital laboratory spontaneously generated by social networking. Google's one-size-fits-all approach may just not fit everywhere, every time.

    more here [globalvoicesonline.org]
  • Re:If it's on the internet... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by alx5000 (896642) <alx5000@alx5 0 0 0 .net> on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:37AM (#15962875)
    (http://vistoenbp.net/)
    I don't know where to start.

    First of all, not everything you can tack up on a wall is legal. Child porn, for example.
    And not everything you can get on such a wall is legal either. Child porn, for example.

    No offence, but I cannot really express how blatantly stupid seems to me what you just wrote.
    [ Parent ]
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Re:If it's on the internet... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by giazzon (997285) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:42AM (#15962921)
    It's not that simple. People are used to create a kind of a second life in Orkut-like websites. They use it to deal, explore and (why not?) have fun with their "deep & personal & non-acceptable" feelings. It goes from food to sex (sometimes both) and it can be as simple as a star trek addiction. But you have the extremely dark side of it, in this case the child porn. Google has the ability to unveil each and every single Orkut user, including what they use to search for in Google Search. Child porn is a crime. Those involved should have their privacy broken. But that will make clear to everyone that their secret passion for licking foot toes can also be unveiled. Will Google allow that?
    [ Parent ]
  • Re:Karma unwhoring (Score:1)

    by giazzon (997285) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @10:58AM (#15963060)
    You should include "how to read a stupid comment from UbuntuDupe and not think he's an idiot"..
    [ Parent ]
  • Re:Karma unwhoring (Score:1)

    by charlesrg (945432) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:02AM (#15963093)
    I can see that you know very little about Brazil.
    [ Parent ]
  • Re:Huh? (Score:2)

    by BalanceOfJudgement (962905) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @11:53AM (#15963581)
    (http://balanceofjudgement.com/)
    Forgive my ignorance of the US/Brazillian legal systems but why not just get a warrant from a US court? If this is a legitimate investigation and the request is narrow enough (eg: not a fishing exp), where's the problem?
    Eh. The only court in the United States empowered to handle international legal disputes is the US Supreme Court.

    But it takes alot to bring a case before them, so it'd probably be awhile before we saw any US legal action.

    [If anyone knows differently let me know. My recollection of the US Constitution says this is so but I don't know the 200 years of intervening history that may have delegated that power to other US courts]
    [ Parent ]
  • Limitations (Score:3, Insightful)

    by hummassa (157160) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @12:06PM (#15963728)
    (http://slashdot.org/~hummassa | Last Journal: Wednesday August 22, @05:11AM)
    We should invade the privacy of millions in case someone has a picture of a naked 17 year old.
    No. Google should turn in the IP address of a specific Orkut account that posted an announcement for the auction of the virginity of a ten-year-old, with nude pictures of her.
    [ Parent ]
    • Re:Limitations by QCompson (Score:2) Wednesday August 23 2006, @12:45PM
    • Re:Limitations by madcow_bg (Score:1) Wednesday August 23 2006, @04:54PM
  • Re:Karma unwhoring (Score:1)

    by fmoliveira (979051) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @01:30PM (#15964359)
    Amerians had more problems with inflation than us in the recent past. And there was no recent defaulting of bonds. But its a pain to know that I am paying that bonds with my taxes, and that the goverment that asked for these bonds was never, ever, near to defending my best interests. I dont recognize this government as representing me, and neither this debt. And there is noone acceptable to vote this year's election too, guess we're screwed again. Immigrating to Chile? We have people immigrating to usa or to the 1st world, not to Chile nor another 3rd world country.
    [ Parent ]
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • by madcow_bg (969477) on Wednesday August 23 2006, @05:17PM (#15966016)
    Man, where should I start...
    I live in Brazil and the news have been reporting this for months now.
    So you're already poisoned with the one-sidedness of the media coverage. Nice excuse, though.

    This post makes it seems like the Justice suddenly wants to close Google's office because some investigation they started now, but people are using their service to do things that are crime here, and the government just wants to know who it is so it can take the proper actions.
    So, basically, they don't want to go wiretapping? They just want everything, now.

    It's not only the child porn, but there have been other issues, like people advertising place where others can buy drugs.
    Well ... they know the DAMNED PLACE and they still WANT MORE INFORMATION?

    Another problem is with communities that are against religion, professions, colors, etc.
    Wooooow, dude. What's all the fuss? Who the f*ck is going to tell me I cannot write about f*cking w**te j*ws? (I wouldn't, but that is my right. That is my private life.)

    It's not that they don't have the right to be against it, but many of them use orkut to share stories about things they did to injury people that follow that religion, or teenagers telling how they abuse their maids... and they laught about it.
    So, it is a story, then. What's wrong with that? Who the f*ck are you to come on my property (my diary, for example) and be offended for what I have written? Well, you should not read it. Aren't books protected as free speech? So should be my diary.

    Child porn is just one of the things the justice is trying to end, but there are lots of crimes that people do freely.
    Right. I knew that talking about children porn was a crime. So is not believing you're government.

    Orkut in Brazil have been really uncooperative, since if a company has a legal representative office in our country, this office should ask this information. It's not that hard. Microsoft, Yahoo and other companies always provide information about this kind of stuff even though their servers are in the US if it's involved in this kind of investigation.
    _SARCASM And I personally admire Yahoo for giving information to the Chinese government. /_SARCASM

    Google on the other side have been refusing to help for months just telling "our servers are in the US, we can't do anything", and the Justice telling "You are Google too, talk to them and get this information", and they just refuse.
    Ever wandered why Google is percieved in a much, much better light even in geek communities, where trust is hard to earn? Now you know.

    I like google, but they are not helping with this at all.
    That's why I like them.
    [ Parent ]
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