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Free access? |
Free access |
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62% |
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Restrict access |
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31% |
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what you going on about |
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6% |
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Total Votes : 32 |
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innominate |
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 innominate Brolly Dolly

Joined: 18 Nov 2004 Karma :     
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 Posted: 09:09 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: T'interweb restrictions. |
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Going from this story
I am in two minds wether companies shoud be blocking ANY of our access to websites. Obvioulsy on one hand you have the reasons why to block them, exploitative in teh extreme, not to mention illegal. But surely it would also make sense to let people access what they want and then prosecute them afterwards if they have broken the law.
Also who says what go's on this banned list?
e.g. would any of the websites with the Muhammed cartoons be listed if the powers that be decide against them?
Personally I would rather have all access avaliable & then sort out the issues afterwards.
As for the increase in traffic to child porn sites, I think this is most likely due to virus/hackers, as far as I have come across it would be inkeeping with their sense of humour to have you unknowingly redirected to a child porn site.
Musing over. ____________________ I, as a responsible adult human being, will never concede the power to anyone to regulate my choice of what I put into my body, or where I go with my mind. From the skin inwards is my jurisdiction, is it not? I choose what may or may not cross that border. Here I am the customs agent. I am the coast-guard. I am the sole legal and spiritual government of this territory, and only the laws I choose to enact within myself are applicable. |
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RobB |
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 RobB Spanner Monkey

Joined: 29 Apr 2005 Karma :  
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 Posted: 09:44 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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As a general rule, free access to all, free speech, etc.
With regards to this specific story, you seem to be indicating that by blocking access to child pornography BT are doing a bad thing.
innominate wrote: | But surely it would also make sense to let people access what they want and then prosecute them afterwards if they have broken the law. |
The problem with this in the case of child pornography is that by the time the pictures have been put online, the child has already been abused. All well and good to go arrest the people who've clicked on the link, but that doesn't really help the child.
If you allow free access, and let people put up what they want, then there's a much easier market for child porn. Instead, every ISP should be doing what they can to stop it being posted/distributed in the first place, reducing the incentive to create the pictures.
It's probably impossible to stop the glorious interweb from being used for this reason, but why make it any easier. ____________________ - Yeah, you know the type, loud as a motorbike, wouldn't bust a grape in a fruit fight.
- The only thing I learned from love, was how to shoot somebody who outdrew you.
- If I don't meet you no more in this world, I'll meet you in the next one, don't be late. |
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8316 |
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 8316 Could Be A Chat Bot

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RobB |
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 RobB Spanner Monkey

Joined: 29 Apr 2005 Karma :  
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 Posted: 10:10 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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A fair point Siggi. The hope that by not allowing free, unrestricted posting of child porn is that less of it occurs in the "real world". This may be false hope, but that's probably better than no hope.
I'd also hope that somebody somewhere is using these sites and mailing lists as honey traps, and that these are working well. Would have also thought that the percentage of people that will have these fantasies and will act on them is fairly low. At this point you're stuck with the fact that if someone wants to think about fiddling with kids, you can't really stop them. Free thought if nothing else.
I've never been redirected, or sent to any child porn sites yet. Been "hijacked" and sent to many adult ones, but not child ones. ____________________ - Yeah, you know the type, loud as a motorbike, wouldn't bust a grape in a fruit fight.
- The only thing I learned from love, was how to shoot somebody who outdrew you.
- If I don't meet you no more in this world, I'll meet you in the next one, don't be late. |
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innominate |
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 innominate Brolly Dolly

Joined: 18 Nov 2004 Karma :     
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 Posted: 10:18 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: Re: T'interweb restrictions. |
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8316 wrote: | so let the paedophile look at abused children-then decide he wants to recreate some of that action for real? i don't think thats right really.
the pictures only fuel someones dirty mind IMO. |
Tbh I agree with you but I hold freedom of being able to look at what I want paramount. N.B I don't look at child porn, but I can see this kind of blocking being abused, as much as is happening with China and google atm.
Its a difficult subject , thats definatly not just a black/white answer.
RoB wrote: | I've never been redirected, or sent to any child porn sites yet. Been "hijacked" and sent to many adult ones, but not child ones. |
Mby I am just being naive then, but I jsut can't figure the massive increase in people just wanting to look at child porn. I would have assumed all the peado's would already have internet access already. If you are in that much of a niche you would tend to try and get your "fix" in anyway possible, so would assume most child porn viewers would get t'internet and a PC asap.
hmm, more musing needed I think ____________________ I, as a responsible adult human being, will never concede the power to anyone to regulate my choice of what I put into my body, or where I go with my mind. From the skin inwards is my jurisdiction, is it not? I choose what may or may not cross that border. Here I am the customs agent. I am the coast-guard. I am the sole legal and spiritual government of this territory, and only the laws I choose to enact within myself are applicable. |
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feef |
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 feef Energiser Bunny

Joined: 11 Feb 2002 Karma :   
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 Posted: 11:24 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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There is no doubt that protecting children from paedophiles is a priority, and that preventing people from visiting such site will, eventually, mean the sites are no longer profitable and eventually shutdown. it does require, however, a gobal crackdown on visits to such sites, which would be difficult to administer and monitor.
However, the metrics behind the numbers quoted by the media is questionable, and the "cleanfeed" technology provided by BT from which these stats have been taken has been in the spotlight for a couple of years now, and it's old news. it's worth reading what follows for a bit of background on this whole concept of traffic monitoring. the big question surrounds the fact that there's no way to identify accidental visits, hijacked visits, actualy site "visits" as opposed to "hits", and intent when visited. For example, an innocent image hosted on a childporn website might be linked from anotehr site (as many of the images might be linked from external sites in this forum) each time that innocent, unrelated image is viewed on a different site, it would be classed as a "hit".
in July 2004 for example, BT reported blocking almost 250,000 attempts to access websites containing images of child abuse in just three weeks.
However, this figure represent less than one millionth of the total Internet traffic handled by BT during the period. BT has almost 2m net punters
the ISPA commented on the data from Cleanfeed in July 2004 as follows...
Quote: | ISPA's Statement In Full
ISPA welcomes new developments in the fight against child abuse images appearing on the Internet. However ISPA feels caution is needed with the information and statistics so far available on Cleanfeed.
It is very difficult to comment on the statistics reported by BT regarding Cleanfeed as BT has not passed the data to ISPA.
At present there seems to be a significant disparity in the statistics that are being reported.
20,000 URL requests per day reported by [BT Retail chief exec] Pierre Danon on Tuesday morning on BBC Radio 4 does not equate to 230,000 URL requests per day between June 21st and July 13th, which would mean around 10,000 URL requests per day.
There is also a need to understand exactly what Cleanfeed is detecting.
At present we do not know if Cleanfeed is measuring the number of 'hits' (attempts to download individual files from illegal websites) or 'visits' (number of attempts to visit the website).
Also, if the Cleanfeed uses URLs of specific images, then that is likely to have an impact on the statistics. If the database contains URLs of images rather than the pages holding them, one page would cause several 'hits'.
Since Cleanfeed gives a "not found" error, people visiting the sites are going to assume that it was an error and probably retry at least once. That could potentially increase the statistics by a factor of at least 2. It would be better if Cleanfeed stated that the website is blocked and cannot be accessed.
Cleanfeed could also be detecting URL requests generated by a variety of other methods which would potentially inflate the figures reported. For example people may be mistakenly clicking on URLs whilst looking for legitimate websites, webcrawlers could be requesting the URLs, requests to access URLs could be generated by pop-ups and there are a number of other automated processes that could cause URL requests.
ISPA would like to conduct an analysis of the statistics to give appropriately informed comment on the system and the data that has been published. Only then will we be in a position to ascertain if and how many people are actually trying to access these websites, and hence understand the true scale of the problem.
Application of Cleanfeed to other ISPs
Each ISP has a different infrastructure. This means that there is no 'one size fits' all technical solution to preventing access to web sites offering illegal images in territories outside of the UK.
As with any technical solution, care must be taken to ensure blocking web sites offering illegal images does not cause unacceptable levels of collateral damage. Any such technical measures must be evaluated by ISPs over time to judge their success.
The Cleanfeed solution now under trial by BT will only prevent "casual" browsing of known web sites. It will not hinder organised distribution of such images. It will not prevent access to new web sites offering illegal content, nor will it prevent children being abused.
The very presence of images of child abuse on the Internet is a problem. Preventing access is not a solution to the presence of these websites.
UK ISPs are successfully taking responsibility for removing illegal content hosted on their system once they have 'actual knowledge' that the materials are illegal. The UK Internet industry has been running a self-regulatory 'notice and takedown' procedure for criminal content for years. The success of this scheme is borne out by statistics released by the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) in 2004.
In 2003 less than one per cent of illegal images reported to the IWF were hosted on the UK Internet.
The majority of illegal content on the Internet originates from the US and Eastern Europe. The Internet industries, law enforcement agencies and Governments in these territories should take action similar to the UK to limit access to illegal content. |
As a result, BT insisted that any attempt to identify the number of people accessing illegal content on the Internet is "pure speculation".
their official response is as follows (22 July 2004).
Quote: | BT's Statement in Full
From Mike Galvin, BT Director of Internet Operations
"BT has been totally clear about the figures. Basically, there was an average of 10,000 blocks a day between 21 June and 13 July but the figure was 23,000 a day during the last week when the test period had ended and the system was fully in place. These figures include both deliberate and accidental attempts to access blocked sites as well as multiple attempts. The figures give no indication of the intent behind an access attempt so any claim to identify the number of people from the number of blocked visits is pure speculation.
"BT has always said the technology is not a total solution to this challenging problem, but it is a start. BT agrees with ISPA that the IWF has made great progress with tackling the hosting of such sites in the UK and BT sees this technology as a step forward. It is different in that it tackles the problem from another angle by preventing people from deliberately or accidentally sites including those located overseas.
"The fight against child abuse is a global one and so it is important that everyone works as closely as they can with the relevant law enforcement agencies and bodies such as the IWF. As a result, we have said we are willing to share the technology with other service providers on a non commercial basis and so we look forward to discussions with them." |
____________________ Mudskipper wrote: feef, that is such a beautiful post that it gave me a lady tingle
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ali-b |
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 ali-b Trackday Trickster

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 feef Energiser Bunny

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Ranger05 |
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 Ranger05 Renault 5 Driver
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feef |
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 feef Energiser Bunny

Joined: 11 Feb 2002 Karma :   
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 Posted: 12:09 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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Ranger05 wrote: | The internet should be completely free of restrictions IMO.
Anyone looking at child porn should be punished, but you cant restrict honest internet users just because a very small minority are breaking the law. |
an honest user won't be visiting kiddie porn sites.
<hypothetical situation alert>
so it'd be okay for me to buy pictures off a child abuser and sell them via a website. afterall, noone's going to stop anyone getting to my site, and I can make some wedge out of it.
I don't care that the abuser is only doing it cos he knows he'll be able to sell the images to me. Gives him an excuse to indulge his sick fantasies. Who knows.. me might never even have started abusing if there wasn't an outlet for him.
If I didn't have any visitors to my site cos it was blocked bgy the ISPs Id' be out of business, and he'd not have any reason to abuse as many kids as he is.
He might still abuse one or two for personal pleasure, but not the sheer quantity he's ben peddling for me.
but then, since noone's going to block my site except the people that don't want my content, well.. I keep my customers don't I.
and without blocking my site, there's less way of monitoring which sick fucks Are buying the pics from me.
still.. internet's for free speech isn't it.
no restrictions on anything no matter how sick and twisted it is.
oh, look an email from a punter asking if we've got any kiddie snuff movies. I'll ask my supplier........................ ____________________ Mudskipper wrote: feef, that is such a beautiful post that it gave me a lady tingle
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ali-b |
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 ali-b Trackday Trickster

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feef |
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 feef Energiser Bunny

Joined: 11 Feb 2002 Karma :   
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 Posted: 12:19 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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ali-b wrote: | feef wrote: | allowing the individual to control access to sites will not prevent the site's existance. |
Unfortunately, I don't think that would be the case. These sites would still exist for those who wanted them to, maybe not in web site form, but FTP, WebDAV or whatever.
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the hardcore ones, yes... but you'd be amazed at how many oppertunist sites there are out there from people just wanting to make money. it would stop these casual browsers, and from what I know, the majority of paedo websites are there to make money from casual browsers.
AIUI the website owners are not the abusers in these cases, but buy content from organised abusers who enjoy what they do, but also make money out of it. In that respect it's worth their risk. removing this revenue generator for the abusers will (hopefull) reduce their activity, and increase the risk since they know selling on content will be harder.
ali-b wrote: |
feef wrote: | The child will already have been abused by the time you block access.
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This is a sad fact, but very true. Shouldn't we be tackling the problem from this angle rather than after the fact by censorship?
A. |
why not from both sides?
I'm pretty sure the inside world of child porn is already being tackled.
a ____________________ Mudskipper wrote: feef, that is such a beautiful post that it gave me a lady tingle
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ali-b |
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 ali-b Trackday Trickster

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NBO |
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 NBO Two Stroke Sniffer
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feef |
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 feef Energiser Bunny

Joined: 11 Feb 2002 Karma :   
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 Posted: 12:57 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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ali-b wrote: | Yeah, I'm pretty sure that child abuse is being tackled. And I must admit I thought that the main traffic to these sites would be from 'lifetime users' rather than casual browsers, that was a bit of new info. |
the "lifetime" users tend to have contacts within abuse rings, and don't get their jollies from websites. they use secure logins on servers, and (increasingly) also appears to be via private hubs on filesharing networks.
(i worry about my own knowldege of the 'net sometimes)
some reasearch has also shown that exposing this content to casual browsers who may have dormant paedophiel tendancies can awake those feelings. removing the ability to show that content to these people may prevent a child abuser from discovering their own tendancies.
It was a loing time ago that I read this, and I wasn't in my own field of research at the time, but woud be interested to see more in this area.
Ther's too much of a conspiracy theory about the whole "thin end of the wedge of censorship" thing. I don't think censorship to that level could feasibly be introduced into the western world. it's differnt in China where ALL internet access goes via government owned networks. in tis country, there's too many links outside government control for them to all be monitored, and full on censorship such as that you fear couldn't be carried out.
If BT started deciding to censor random websites, you'd go else where. if the gov decided to force censoprship on UK ISPs then you'd get your content via secure links to overseas ISPs. it just couldn't be enforced here. as such I believe your fears are unfounded.
a ____________________ Mudskipper wrote: feef, that is such a beautiful post that it gave me a lady tingle
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 ali-b Trackday Trickster

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G |
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 G The Voice of Reason
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 feef Energiser Bunny

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 G The Voice of Reason
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jok |
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 jok Scooby Slapper

Joined: 06 Dec 2005 Karma :  
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 Posted: 14:30 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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I voted for free access and no censorship. I also think that these blocks are a the right thing to do.
This is less a matter of censorship and more of matter of doing exactly what you'd expect to happen: access to material illegal on every level from production to distribution to possession being made difficult.
If someone hosts kiddie porn inside the UK, for example, it's possible for the local law enforcement to yank the physical server thus stopping distribution pretty effectively. If it's hosted outside of the UK, they can (and do) forward anything they find to the relevant authorities, but that's about all they can do immediately; except, of course, block access to it. The effect is the same (no more access), it's just the implementation that different (and not as effective). This isn't strange or draconian, it's exactly what you'd expect.
If you think the blocks shouldn't be in place, work against the laws that mandate them or come up with a very good reason why it's better to let people commit the crimes instead of stopping them at the very last point possible.
The above is not to say that the government or any other agency should have a free reign to decide what to block; what they block and how they decide to what to block must be well known and open (which it is, in this instance). As soon as someone decides to block access to something that isn't illegal or that you strongly feel should not be illegal (regardless of whether you like it), then it is time to take action.
Just my  ____________________ CG125 (stolen->recovered!) || Wars do not decide who's right, only who's left. |
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innominate |
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 innominate Brolly Dolly

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daz|n00by |
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 daz|n00by The Internet

Joined: 11 May 2004 Karma :  
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 Posted: 15:42 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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The starting of policing the internet has already started,
mark my words that not in the to far future we will only be allowed to see what those above allow us to see.
The End Is Nigh. ____________________ "Its Better To Burn Out Than Fade Away!!!!!!" "Lifes a bitch and then you Die"
"I`m a tool, one with just enough intelligence to know it, just enough spirit to resent it...but not enough backbone to do anything about it. " Siggi 2006 pure class. 
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 G The Voice of Reason
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jok |
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 jok Scooby Slapper

Joined: 06 Dec 2005 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:11 - 07 Feb 2006 Post subject: |
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G wrote: | Could be that you make it more likely that children will be abused as people have to find more shady avenues to persue the aquistion of material.
Thinking along the lines of Cannabis prohibition here | Drugs (as well as prostitution) are a good example to illustrate how legal pressure does not always make a problem go away and instead, at best, concentrates it. In those cases (cannabis in particular), though, there is a strong argument that prohibition harms all those involved more than decriminalisation or legalisation would. I don't think the same can be said about child porn, so the two are not easily comparable.
As I understand it, currently the blocks are far from effective enough to stop someone even only reasonably determined from accessing such material. It's on the order of having a "X kerb crawlers arrested this month" sign on the side of the road. It'll deter someone who's not sure they really want to and leave those who already are largely unaffected, which also suggests the two are not entirely comparable. (For what it's worth, I'm not too happy with the apparent implementation of the block as described in this BBC article comparing the filtering here and in Saudi Arabia. The "honest" approach described strikes me as as much more, well, honest).
G wrote: | Also, where does 'pornography' stop? Is it just pictures of real live people, or life-like cgi, or cartoons, or written descriptions? | If you trust Wikipedia, you can read about the exact rules. As far as I can make out, anything made to "appear like a photograph" (in terms of realism) are not allowed if they are "indecent"; that would include photo-realistic CGI art and photoshopped pictures (bunched together as "pseudo-photographs"), but not cartoon drawings or stories. I'm not too fond of that idea since it covers a lot of things that can be produced without harm to any real child, but that issue comes back to attacking the law rather than it's implementation (Wikipedia also has an article going into more detail on what is covered under those terms).
(If you think the "pseudo-photograph" idea is a bit outrageous, then this might also interest you: there was a rather chilling consultation paper regarding violent porn; it proposed a ban on certain types of material irregardless of whether those involved in the making of it had given informed consent, which I find absurd).
G wrote: | It's not really the subject that I am questioning, but that it appears to be more being put in place to placate people that something is actually being done. | True, its had more than its fair share of witch hunts. However, I don't think that, on the whole, this is one of them. ____________________ CG125 (stolen->recovered!) || Wars do not decide who's right, only who's left. |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 19 years, 101 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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