Australian ISPs Required To Report Child Porn 655
rolling_or_jaded writes "As of the 1st of March 2005, Australian ISPs and web hosts will face fines of up to $55,000 if they can be used to access child pornography and do not refer the information to the police. Yikes. How on earth are the ISPs (and web hosts -- like my own very small-time and humble company) supposed to enforce this?"
With vaporware (Score:5, Funny)
With vaporware!
Re:With vaporware (Score:2, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Don't demonise them (Score:5, Interesting)
US: Sexual acts depicted on women under the age of 18
UK: Sexual acts depicted on women under the age of 16
So it's sick if you bang a 17 yo in the US but fine and healthy to do it in the UK.
Also, the US proposed a law saying that child porn would include poses by adult women dressed up as underage girls (no dressing up as a tarty schoolgirl!).
Legally, kiddie porn is banging a young woman. According to what is used as the reason for all the draconian laws and rights removal, kiddie porn is screwing six year olds.
In several cases, the molester (not always male!) was assaulted as a child. They've been fucked up in the head and now, to prove they are grown up, they do what grown ups did to them.
Sad, but not sick.
Personally, I don't recognise kiddie porn. I recognise rape. I understand that even consentual sex may not be correct if the situation is such that consent is not informed (rape drugs, retarded adults, young children), but that is only loosly correlated with age.
Think about this: it used to be absolutely fine and dandy to marry at nine (especially if you were royalty). Now we say "you must be 16" or 18, or 21, or 14... The fact that the age of consent changes shows that there is a band where it's not right, but it may not be wrong.
For these reasons and more, I will not demonise people accused of child abuse.
Re:Don't demonise them (Score:4, Insightful)
Proposing a law isn't the same as MAKING a law. This proposed law was struck down almost instantly...there is currently no law stating that a grown woman can't dress as a teen...or vice-versa even.
In several cases, the molester (not always male!) was assaulted as a child. They've been fucked up in the head and now, to prove they are grown up, they do what grown ups did to them.
For these reasons and more, I will not demonise people accused of child abuse
Having it done to you as a child does not mean anything. ANYTHING. You grow up, you're making decisions now that YOU are going to abuse/rape a child...then that's totally on you. You cannot blame your past. For instance, my parents used to beat me with a belt...but I've never once hit or spanked my child and he's almost 12 now. Was I suppose to spank him and if I did I could just use "well, it happened to me as a child so it's ok for me to do it to my child". No...I have a brain...I can think for myself. I made a conscience decision to NOT do something.
So yes, I WILL demonize people accused of child abuse. They are making a decision, they are doing it. They could have broken the cycle...but no, they have to blame it on what happened to them, and it seems with enablers like you, they have an easy out. We are NOT locked into a behavior just because it happened to us as a child.
Re:Don't demonise them (Score:4, Insightful)
I hope that you will at least wait until they are convicted.
Re:Don't demonise them (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Don't demonise them (Score:3, Funny)
Rule of law? That's for liberal terrorist-lovin', latte-drinking pedophile defenders. Kill 'em all and let God sort 'em out. You're either with us or against us.</sarcasm>
Fuck You (Score:3, Insightful)
I was going to state that now as a man, it is hard not to think back to what happened. On how 14 year olds look cute and I have to resist looking for child porn sites.
I think its completly disgusting.
However, sir, you are a complete moron who tries to state facts of a subject you are completly ignorant of.
Sexual molestation haunts you the rest of your life and can seriously affect sex drive.
It take
Re:Fuck You (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't you dare tell me that we are NOT locked into a behavior because of what happened to us as children. It is very, very difficult to overcome your sexual erges.
If this is legit, then I'm sorry for what happened to you...but you are NOT locked into your behavior. You do NOT have to go out and molest a child. You DO have control over yourself. You're coping out and are a complete coward if you really think like this.
The FACT is that you are in complete control of what you do. If you molest a child, then YOU did it. You made a conscience decision to molest that child...and for that you should be punished. NO EXCUSES! I'm so sick of this bullshit of "oh, don't blame me, blame the guy that blah blah blah blah"...sorry pal, rationalize this all you want, but the fact is it's on your shoulders.
It's a tough road I'm sure. I'm sure you have really bad feelings and yes, it will haunt you the rest of your life...but think about the kid that you may molest. Do you want to condem him or her to a lifetime of horror?
Sexual urges are one thing...ACTING on those urges is another. Seek help and GET help...it's ok to get help you know. We all need a little help in our lives. And do not act on your urges. I wish you well.
Re:Don't demonise them (Score:5, Insightful)
That doesn't mean, of course, that you should ignore child abusers, nor that they get free passes, nor that they get away scott free.
Re:Don't demonise them (Score:5, Interesting)
I heard that sgant likes to molest children. So now anyone can demonize him/her.
Really though. When I was 16 I was accused of molesting my sisters. The time when these sick things were to have occured, I wasn't even in the same state. It's fortunate that I was out of town. A friend of mine and I were taken into custody and questioned without our parents or an attorney present. We were asked questions like:
"Are you sure you and your friend didn't smoke a little weed and decide to have a good time?"
My mother was out of town that week on business and my father (whom I was visiting when the alleged acts occured) lives in another state.
It turns out the people in daycare got it in their heads that my sisters had been molested. My sisters were taken by the police and questioned. Medical exams, preformed on my sisters without the consent of or even informing my mother or their father, showed no such abuse.
During the questioning, they never asked me where I was when these acts were to have occured. This all came up later. In the absence of any physical evidence and going on the coerced word of 4 and 2 year olds, they turned to the only other man in the house. They then started accusing my mothers boyfriend (my sisters father). Now I have a pretty low opinion of the man, but he's not a child molester.
See none of these facts mattered. I had been accused of molsesting children in a small town. That was enough to demonize me in the eyes of some of the parents of my friends. One of which was a juvenal probation officer who believes to this day that I'm a child molester.
Re:Don't demonise them (Score:3, Interesting)
But again, I'll repeat it here. I didn't mean to put accused into that sentence. But see how things as little as putting "accused" into a sentence can be totally blown out of whack?
being falsely accused has to be one of the worse things in the world, because in the eyes of the community, you ARE guilty. I certainly didn't mean to suggest if you're accused of child molesting I would demoni
Re:Don't demonise them (Score:3, Insightful)
Good, a much more reasonable stance, but we only have the words on paper to go by. Yes I agree being responsible for your actions is very important and a good standard to go by.
I have an issue with the certaintly of the community standards about what is good vs. what is bad behaviour.
Not to dismiss your own decisions on parenting, but the "studies" done on what is good or acceptable parenting practice may be flawed and have very long term negative effects.
Re:Don't demonise them (Score:5, Funny)
So... If I paint a pornographic picture on my 17yo girlfriends belly, that's childporn?
*ducks*
Your Opinion Doesn't Count (Score:4, Insightful)
You may not want to demonize child abuse, but I do, as well as its apologists, which you certainly appear to be.
Arguing that child porn isn't evil or doesn't even exist because different legislatures have used different age categories when codifying its prohibition is inane and specious. Different locations have different speed limits, too. Would you argue, then, that speed limits do no exist and should not exist?
The ame applies to your attempt at historical analysis. The legal age for marriage has always varied, and still varied, from one society to the next. This is because the "legal age" for marriage is not, and should not be, synonymous with the age at which we come to sexual maturity.
Your argument boils down to the same kind of childish, petulant, arrogant and ultimately unconvincing argument so abundantly produced by the adolescents who post here.
If the Australian government wants its ISP's to block sites carrying illegal material, it ought to supply ISP's with a list of IP addresses to block. If the law doesn't provide for that, then it needs to be fixed. End of story.
Re:Your Opinion Doesn't Count (Score:4, Insightful)
This is an interesting point, but I don't think it is objectively as cut-and-dry as you seem to make it.
After all, what definition of sexual maturity should we use? Physical? Do we go by onset of puberty, some span of time after onset, some general guess as to the end of puberty? Somewhere in-between? If we want to get even more ridiculous, we can talk about mental maturity with regards to sexuality (which some people never achieve in their entire life).
Additionally, your example of speed limits isn't entirely appropriate. Some States (and I use that term to mean soverign governmental entities, not just US states) have no speed limits at all, for example. Apparently they need not exist at all. For that matter, child pornography laws have a very young history. The original intent, no doubt, was to prevent exploitation and abuse of children. A laudable goal to preserve the continuance of society. However, it is rather obvious that applying the same laws to 8 year olds as compared to 17 year olds, based on the idea they they have the same mental capacity and sexual maturity (as if the latter is consistent from person to person) is dubiously supportable and the assignment of ages has been arbitrary (in fact, the original reasoning for age-of-consent laws was not to protect children, but rather to protect the virginity -- and value -- of female children; it had little, if anything, to do with protecting kids for emotional or psychological reasons).
What it really boils down to is that human development, criminality, and sexuality are complex topics. Sexual crimes, in particular, while easy to think of in black-and-white terms, frequently result from complex mental problems in the offender. It's not as simple as someone waking up one day and deciding to start up a child porn ring for shits and giggles. Human adults are geared biologically to be sexually attracted to other human adults. I'd be interested to find out what exact intentional thought process you think people voluntarily engage in that results in the pre-empting of a biological imperative, to the detriment of the individual involved (similarly, people satisfied with their existence and with sound mental capacities don't tend to go out and become crack dealers, prostitutes, or rapists of the adult variety; yet none of those even approach the scorn that crimes against children offenders receive).
Our society (and similar ones) choose to make sexuality between a person above one age and a person below another age a legal anathema, this is true. In fact, there are sociological arguments to be made in favor of such prohibitions. However, don't fool yourself into thinking that its always been that way, or that there's an independant value system that every society eventually syncs up with. Keep those brain cells moving, it'll do us all a lot of good.
Re:Your Opinion Doesn't Count (Score:4, Insightful)
In other words, silly debates about defining and quantifying the margins of something have no bearing on its actual existence.
Child abuse is whatever a society says it is. Unless an individual can convince his society to go along with him, his opinion is irrelevant.
None of this has anything to do with the health of my brain cells (thanks for the gratuitously condescending remarks). And I discovered a long time ago that there is no "independent value system" with all the ansers. That's why the collective opinion of a society count for everything and the individual opinion of one person count for very little.
Re:Your Opinion Doesn't Count (Score:3)
Re:With vaporware (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:With vaporware (Score:5, Insightful)
As an asside, they are planning to ban parents from taking photos during school swimming carnivals soon here in Australia for fear of pedophiles taking photographs.
People are trying to look like they are doing something even though their proposed "solutions" make no sense.
Confirmed in other local news (Score:3, Insightful)
On Monday [abc.net.au] this was demonstrated in no uncertain terms as faced with an evacuated terminal, a bank up of empty Virgin Blue aeroplanes on one side and a bank up of intending travellers on the other, nobody had a wit to try to find a way to get the passengers onto their planes by a route which bypassed the terminal.
Virgin seem to have already forgotten that it is still only two and a half years since they moved out of the hastily developed "domestic express" termina
Nearly getting the point (Score:3, Insightful)
None of those systems are really needed to operate domestic flights, but, as in so many other areas of supposedly modern society, the expertise that once existed in how to do that has gone missing to such an extent that it has become excluded from their universe of possibility.
My point on security was that post-9-11 preoccupations
Re:Nearly getting the point (Score:3, Informative)
Hmm... You don't need ticketing systems to ensure t
Re:With vaporware (Score:3, Funny)
Thanks for giving us Americans one more reminder that there are indeed other countries even more fucked up than us.
Re:With vaporware (Score:4, Interesting)
Meanwhile, back on topic, if I knew that someone was downloading child porn, my first point of contact would be the police, not their ISP. The fine also seems pretty pointless, considering that its such a small amount. If its a major company like BT or NTL, they would probably make that sort of money in the time it took you to submit the report.
Re:With vaporware (Score:5, Informative)
They are NOT required to go looking for it.
They are NOT required to pre-screen content before allowing posting/hosting.
They are NOT required to take preventative measures.
They are NOT required to implement filtering or blocks.
Get the message?
All the law says is that they are NOT allowed to turn a blind eye when someone complains about child porn hosted on or transmitted through their facilities. Then all they have to do is forward the complaint on to the police for action.
This is no worse than doctors being required to report signs of child abuse in their patients.
John.
Yet another act of pointless legislation *sigh* (Score:5, Insightful)
All the law says is that they are NOT allowed to turn a blind eye when someone complains about child porn hosted on or transmitted through their facilities. Then all they have to do is forward the complaint on to the police for action.
I would assume it is illegal for them not to report it to the police in Australia, although I don't know what the legal situation is there I'd wager they already legally bound to report all criminal activity (and I'm sure possession of child pornography falls into that category).
What is it with politicians and trying to push through redundant legislation for causes in the public eye?
Surely it's more efficent and appropriate to ensure we are enforcing the appropriate laws we do have - and if they are unenforceable, amend them appropriately rather than create an unfathomable myriad of narrow 'crime specific' laws (especially ones like this which will almost never be used, and merely serve to justify bureaucracy).
Re:With vaporware (Score:3, Interesting)
No, this is worse. As I read it, if I were in Australia and someone who didn't like me called up my ISP and said I had child porn on my site, the ISP would be required to report me to the police, even if I don't have any such thing on my site. This makes it easy to harass innocent people.
It's quite possible, since I haven't read the text of the bill, that the ISP is required to verify the complaint, but that seems like it's forcing the ISP to play the role of investigative agency.
Finally, this law would
Re:With vaporware (Score:3, Informative)
Quoting from the article almost nobody seems to read : "Under the new laws, an ISP or ICH will face penalties [...] if they are made aware that their service can be used to access material that they have reasonable grounds to believe is child pornography or child abuse material and they do not refer details of that material to the AFP within a reasonable time."
Well, although the above poster might be par
it's simple (Score:5, Funny)
Re:it's simple (Score:3, Funny)
You DISABLE the evil bit. Enableing the evil bit allows people acess to things like child porn and naked pictures of Oprah Winfrey and the like.
New jobs? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:New jobs? (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to work for a free adult host. One thing I did was write a system to monitor the bandwidth usage of individual users and display the results, sorted high to low by megabits, everyday. The regular users were obvious, you knew who they were and what their sites consisted of. But pretty much everyday, 1 or 2 sites would jump to the top of the list. These sites were always newly created and they were always child porn. I would then go and delete the accounts and the files. The FBI, US Customs and local PD all told me it was illegal to delete, move or even shut down child porn sites. We had to rotate our logs 3 times a day, so by the time the authorities came by (on their own investigations) the evidence was always long gone. We hated the CP for what it was, but it also consumed huge amounts of bandwidth so we couldn't afford to keep it around.
This shit popped up every single day of the week. I used to roam the CP bbses which advertised the new sites and post stuff like "THE FBI IS MONITORING (the company I worked for.)" It would freak the shit out them.
Heh, I still have an old file cabinet from that company that is labeled "The PedoFile."
Re:New jobs? (Score:3, Insightful)
I wouldn't keep that stuff around. True or not you get labelled a pedophile and your life is over.
We had to deal with law enforcement on a regular basis. The 'PedoFile' was where we kept whatever records we needed to to keep track of these dealings. The label that I speak of is simply a piece of masking tape with the word PedoFile written on it. All the contents are long gone. Doesn't matter anyway, when you work i
Re:This is SAD (Score:3, Insightful)
The reason why we ban child porn today is because (to my mind at least) we believe that
a) old men and young kids will damage the kid
b) the kid has rights that must be protected (not so in ancient greece)
d) making the porn violates the rights of the kid in the porn (they are too young to stand up for themselves)
Re:This is SAD (Score:3, Interesting)
In my state they have actually ruled something is child porn if it involves a picture of child (any picture of any person under 18) and the viewer is in least bit aroused. The viewer is then guilty of possion of child porn.
At least IIRC that is how they convicted some guy who had some NEWSPAPER clipings featuring adds with minors in pj's.
Mycroft
Re:This is SAD (Score:5, Insightful)
Mycroft
Re:New jobs? (Score:3, Interesting)
There are a set of 15 mirrored servers, which serve one site, where each server would collect 2Gb of log files in approximately 6 hours. I won't link to the site itself (adult), but Here [alexa.com] is the Alexa reference. It's rough hosting a site that's one of the largest on the Internet.
If we need the logs on a temporary basis (like for abuse monitoring), we 'cat
PLEASE UPDATE THE STORY (Score:2, Informative)
How do they decide? (Score:5, Interesting)
Ok, if we're talking about pre-teens and the like then it's obvious - but how do you know for sure if someone is older than the appropriate age for the legal jurisdiction in which the download takes place?
Given the wonders of make up and photography and different countries/states may decide that 16 / 18 / 21 is considered under age.
Re:How do they decide? (Score:5, Informative)
In talking, the topic of child porn came up as it would be something we cooperate should that type of investigation land on our networks door-step. The Officer said that they could have found 20 images of a 'child' in various stages of undress, and the last one was an image of a fully disclothed child, but without a clear shot of their face. Out of all of that they would have no way (with out obvious birthmarks and the like) to classify any of the images as child pornography because there was no definitive way to link the final image to the identity of the child.
Pretty depressing stuff, but that is the reality the poice face when trying to prosecute this kind of thing.
Imagine the steps ISPs would have to do to come to the same conclusions.
PLEASE UPDATE THE STORY (Score:4, Informative)
There are no issues like you mention, because this story is total rubbish.
Slandering the Australian Government is tradition on Slashdot, but this story really takes the cake.
Re:PLEASE UPDATE THE STORY (Score:3, Insightful)
It's essentially saying that the ISP must provide a crime-reporting service for the police. What if I report child porn to my local real estate agent? Why aren't THEY required to provide this service as well?
Crimes should be reported to the police, not ISPs. If an ISP is made aware of a crime, and they feel the report has merit, they should notify the police, but I don't see a reason to specifically call out one crime and require that all reports must be forwarded to the p
Simple solution (Score:5, Funny)
Easy:
Dear Police,
My ISP can be used to access child pornography.
Thanks,
Every ISP on Earth
Exactly. (Score:5, Insightful)
Couldn't have said it better myself.
I'm sure the government is now trying to work out how to get the voice telcos to report that their voice networks can be used to arrange child abductions by groups of pedophiles too.
Re:Simple solution (Score:2)
Re:Simple solution (Score:2, Troll)
Re:Simple solution (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Simple solution (Score:2)
Re:Simple solution (Score:2)
Re:Simple solution (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, some of the regulations can not be fully enforced, but that does not mean they shouldn't be legislated.
I have worked for one of the top 3 ISPs in Australia, and they do work quite closely with the police. This is mainly in the tracking side of things: threatening emails, spam, etc.
By the way, you seem to have misunderstood the fines part of the article. The fines are not for using an ISP to access CP, but it is for not disclosing who is accessing CP when they find out. It is essentially an extension of the existing child abuse legislation: if you suspect abuse, you have to report it!
Periodic Hysterias (Score:5, Insightful)
Civil liberties mean nothing when you can get a good hysteria going.
Re:Periodic Hysterias (Score:2)
"Civil liberties mean nothing when you can get a good hysteria going."
What civil liberties are being violated here?
Re:Periodic Hysterias (Score:3, Funny)
Slashdot.org has been allowing its users to discuss child pornography.
Think of the children.
Sincerely,
Senator J. McCarthy IV
Re:Periodic Hysterias (Score:2)
Re:Periodic Hysterias (Score:3, Insightful)
I have baby pictures of myself. In one, I'm in the tub, about age 7. Can I be convicted of a crime by having this photo? What if I put it in my personal web page? You can't see much in the photo, because 2/3 of me is under water and suds, but it is clea
Re:Periodic Hysterias (Score:3, Interesting)
Definition of pornography:
It's not a legal definition, but I believe even the legal definition has something similar.
Simple! (Score:3, Funny)
simple solution for an ISP... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:simple solution for an ISP... (Score:3, Funny)
RTFA (Score:5, Informative)
Under the new laws, an ISP or ICH will face penalties of $11,000 for the individual and $55,000 for body corporates if they are made aware that their service can be used to access material that they have reasonable grounds to believe is child pornography or child abuse material and they do not refer details of that material to the AFP within a reasonable time.
What that equates to is if child porn is reported to the ISP/webhost, they have to then report it to the Australian police quickly or face penalties. This isn't some ridiculous content-policing scheme - its just imposing a penalty on those who don't forward child pornography reports to the police at a reasonable pace.
Re:RTFA (Score:5, Insightful)
"What that equates to is if child porn is reported to the ISP/webhost, they have to then report it to the Australian police quickly or face penalties."
Correct. Just as has been the case for several years in the USA.
When this happened to me -- somebody let me know that a member of my site was using their storage to host child porn, I very quickly called the FBI, who in turn sent me to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children [missingkids.com].
For me, there was no gray area. I didn't think for one minute of my rights being violated. I didn't think for one minute about losing my Slashdot cred (which, by definition, I must not have in the first place) by doing so. In short, the phrase "your rights online" did not even occur to me; if any phrase came to mind, it was "you shore got a purdy mouth" or some similar one that I envisioned the scumbag hearing sometime soon.
In short, I think that if an ISP operator is upset by a law that requires them to report child pornography to the authorities once they're made aware of it, then perhaps they shouldn't be running an ISP.
Re:RTFA (Score:4, Insightful)
That's because these sites are much less prevalent than child porno sites.
Re:RTFA (Score:4, Insightful)
This crime is by nature a habitual one
The "crime" you were actually replying to was someone convicted of possession prohibited information.
From the context of your comment you clearly had mentally changed "this crime" to mean the actual crime of child abuse. A mental substitution for one subject for another. This is an emotional subject and that happens a lot. But when you subconsiously substitute one thing for another it leads to flawed conclusions. It is particularly bad when you are discussion pulling out a gun and forcibly imprisoning people. If you are going to say someone committed a criminal act you need to be CRYSTAL CLEAR on exactly what criminal act you imprisoning him for.
I certainly agree with you that child abuse laws need to be viorously enforced. However I for one have a problem with the concept of "possesion of prohibited information" being a criminal act. Someone who commits an actual crime like child abuse - or crime against blacks and jews and gays - should certainly be in prison. However I have a problem with the notion that possession of neo-nazi-literature could itself be a crime. A crime to possess certain information. Doesn't that concept bother you?
I happen to like redheads. Call me a "red-ophile" chuckle. I have at times downloaded images from usenet by the tens-of-thousands and later sorting through for the rare redheads and deleting the rest. When you download tens of thousands of random images from usenet some of them will inevitably be underage porn. Hell, those under age images might even have been posted to usenet from a country where porn involving 16-year-olds is perfectly legal. Now here is where I am a bit puzzled... someone downloads ten thousand images and saves one group of a hundred deletes the rest and it's perfectly legal. Someone else downloads the exact same ten thousand images and saves a different set of one hundred deleting the rest, and somehow he has commited a criminal act? The only distinction was the choice of which files to delete. I kinda thought the commission of a crime had to involve an actual criminal act against someone.
There are a lot of things I don't like. There's a lot of information I wouldn't mind seeing wiped from the face of the earth. However I think the notion that possession of information can somehow be a criminal act is a very bad and very dangerous idea. You do not bend and break the fundamental basis of law just to target something you do not like, no matter how much you hate it. I'll say it again, nail people who commit criminal acts of child abuse. Do not distort the fundamental meaning of "criminal act" to go on some holy crusade.
-
Hype (Score:5, Informative)
To read an official summary of the legislation, check out this site: http://www.ag.gov.au/ISPresponsibilities
Re:Hype (Score:5, Informative)
This is not out of step with other nations, either. In Canada, the law states that anyone finding child pornography is legally obligated to report it. There are heavy penalties for failing to do so.
Child Abuse (Score:3, Funny)
Does this mean you could do 10 years for googling effective ways to spank a child?
Re:Child Abuse (Score:2)
Yes, actually (Score:5, Informative)
People seem to think that just because your computer is in your home that you are safe. The computer is a doorway that can let every seedy thing in the world find a way into your house and should be treated as such.
Re:Yes, actually (Score:3, Informative)
the insane hysteria whipped up by pseudomoralizing retards in the media, legislature, and public ends up resulting in the victimization of completely innocent people [bbc.co.uk]
enforcement? (Score:3, Informative)
Slightly misleading (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Slightly misleading (Score:2)
Age of Porno-Consent? (Score:3, Interesting)
So this law might have significantly different effect there, considering how many sixteen and seventeen year olds own cheapass webcams.
Damn it, now I sound all creepy. But I really am curious.
--grendel drago
Re:Age of Porno-Consent? (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm not aware of any specifics relating to age of consent for photography, though I've no doubt they exist. I would imagine it depends on which state or territory you're in.
Re:Age of Porno-Consent? (Score:3, Funny)
Read the law first *then* make comments (Score:4, Informative)
a) It's not a new law it's merely an amedment to the existing legislation
b) It only kicks in if the ISP is found to know about access to or hosting of child porn. It does *not* expect the ISP to watch for access to child porn. It is merely an incentive for ISP's to actually report access to or hosting of child porn rather than wiping/disconnecting user and pretending it never happened.
Yes I'm aware of what the media is saying. It's the medias job to beef up things like this and it keeps the "won't anyone think of the children!" brigade happy.
The law does not force ISP's to do filtering, it does not expect them to block access to child porn site it only ensures that ISP's report known access/hosting to the AFP within a decent time frame. Something just about every sysadmin with a sense of ethics would do in any case here in Australia in any event.
it's unclear to me what this actually means (Score:3, Interesting)
shouldnt they block it if they know its 'banned'? (Score:3, Funny)
re hosting, yeah thats an easy one to catch.
Why doesnt Autralia as a whole have a firewall like China and make those 'dodgy' sites disappear to all.
Solution! (Score:3, Interesting)
I fail to see (Score:4, Funny)
Computer, camera and auto manufacturers should stop making these items which can be used in the creation and distribution of child porn, hotels house child porn makers and provide a haven for them, schools don't keep the children 24 hours a day, making the children available to pornographers, parents had the children in the first place, obviously leading to child porn, politicans consume most of the child porn, and Ayers Rock hasn't gone and fallen on the pornographers.
It seems rather clear to me that this still has not been taken to extent it needs to be to prevent all child porn. Why aren't lawmakers doing their jobs?
And when is someone going to go after the children? They obviously have something to do with it - they're in all of it. Geez, do I have to fix your big fence too? Get some priorities! Go after the problem, not the symptoms!
The next day... (Score:2)
- JoeShmoe
.
A new low... (Score:4, Interesting)
You know...I heard saw the Slashdot title on "Report Child Porn" in the RSS feed and I seriously was wondering why the editor was asking for links to child porn sites. A travesty indeed!
Since when has context been important, anyway?!?
Huh? (Score:2, Informative)
Easy path to deterrence (Score:2)
they want it bad, they get it bad (Score:2)
Re:they want it bad, they get it bad (Score:2)
I don't get your point. How hard can it be to investigate reports of kiddie porn? You already have an abuse desk, right? It's simple: if your abuse desk gets a report of kiddie porn on your host, just take a few seconds to look at the site in question, and if it's kiddie porn, take action.
Really, this is basic stuff that you should be doing anyway. I don't see how an ISP operator could see any moral value in providing a haven for kiddie porn collectors, let alone justify mailbombing law enforcement as
As one who lives in Denver area, I say good. (Score:2)
A Reasonable Sounding Law (Score:3, Informative)
This question is misguided according to the article.
"(Liability) if they are made aware that their service can be used to access material that they have reasonable grounds to believe is child pornography or child abuse material and they do not refer details of that material to the AFP within a reasonable time."
The ISPs are not the enforcers, the police are. Furthermore, it does not state that it is the duty of the ISP to try to track down infringment - but simply forward any reported infringement that comes their way. I do not find anything unreasonable here. It simply says that if the ISP is made aware that such activity is happening through their service they, by law, must report that to the police. It does not state that if such activities are happening then the ISP is liable no matter what. They are only liable if they are "made aware" and then neglect to act. I don't see anything wrong with this.
I would have to see more specific information on the law to consider it unjust. But from what the article states, I do not understand the author's alarm.
How are small-time ISPs supposed to enforce this? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Why the isp's? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Seiously How are they even going to try to enforce this? Unless They have an army of trained web-content filtering monkeys, it's going to be next to impossible."
I'll break it down for you:
If anybody can't be bothered to investigate a report of suspected kiddie porn on their own server, then they should not be running an ISP.
Maybe in your little theory world... (Score:3, Informative)
To take a simple
Re:freenet (Score:3, Interesting)
Why do you say that? We've had a similar law in the USA for years, and it hasn't spelled the death of the ISP industry.
Re:Why not take it one step further? (Score:2)
Re:Ridiculous. (Score:5, Informative)
No, just a typical Slashdotter, more interested in shooting from the lip than in bothering to RTFA. As several other posters have already pointed out, this law requires ISPs that learn about kiddy porn on their systems, or viewed through their systems, to report the incident to the police in a reasonably timely manner, and nothing else. It doesn't make them responsible for content, it doesn't force them to censor anything, it doesn't force them to do anything at all except report kiddy porn to the police. Now please, get off your soapbox, back on your meds and next time, RTFA before showing everybody what a fool you are.
Re:Maybe we can put the Asio racks to good use (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Maybe we can put the Asio racks to good use (Score:3, Interesting)
There is nothing in Australia that resembles the FBI.
ASIO was purely an intelligence gathering organisation with no enforcement powers that worked with a variety of law enforcement agencies (Australian Federal Police, Customs, State Police etc). Recently it was decided to suddenly turn them into a law enforcement organisation - after a decision to be seen to do something about terrorism and possibly after the minister of the time saw a James Bond film. The Australian Federal
Re:Not nearly enough (Score:3, Insightful)
Firstly, this discussion pertains to notifications of the possibility of child porn. If I called your ISP and told them you were hosting CP, and you lived in Australia, they'd have to pass that information on to the police. Whether you actually did it is a matter for the police to decide, so toss yourself on the fir
Re:Not a problem as I see it.. (Score:3, Informative)
Certainly not me. Under current laws I'd probably be charged with viewing child pornography.
Much better to just delete the stuff and forget about it, than to attempt to get the actual source busted. The law is fucked and it encourages people not to report.