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"The instruments of torture for the modern Inquisitors are extended
caches of Internet history, logs on senders and receivers of email, databases on
IM and chat room participation.”
“Caching 120
billion unique page views for 100 million Americans for two years to provide possible
prosecutorial evidence on a thousand perverts is misguided and dangerous."
"Personal blogs and sites with user
profiles would be deputized to enforce new laws.”
NetRightsAdvocates
Internet Privacy and
Bloggers at Risk in 110th Congress: Sen. McCain and Rep. DeGette
In the upcoming 110th
Congress, several bills will be submitted that deal with the on-line
exploitation of kids and child predators. Rep. DeGette's will severely compromise the
Internet privacy of every American. Senators Charles E. Schumer's
(D-NY) and John McCain's (R-AZ) bill will deputize every online service--even
personal blogs--to report "child pornography" and any site allowing personal
profiles to screen, remove and report registered sex offenders or face
confiscatory fines.
As an illegitimate child of the Foley
affair, this legislation reflects governments fear of the Internet, as the Net
redefines traditional commerce, media, politics and journalism.
The current proposed
legislation also addresses the inability of most Parents to adequately supervise their
children’s access to the Internet at home and the dispersal of Internet access
using new mobile technologies
away from the “protected” access points of schools, libraries and
the home.
Current
Reporting of Child Pornography
Under current procedures when
an ISP becomes aware of an instance of child
pornography, the ISP provides the information to the National Center for Missing
& Exploited Children (the “NCMEC”). The NCMEC, a not-for-profit corporation
mandated by Congress, serves as the national clearing house on missing and
exploited children. The NCMEC provides the appropriate local law enforcement
agency of the facts, which obtain a subpoenas for the
alleged predator’s Internet history from the reporting ISP. The obtained
information could be used a prosecutorial evidence.
Rep. DeGette: Cache All Net
Activity for All Users for Two Years!!!
Every American Targeted: The more egregious of the bills
will be proposed by Representative Diana DeGette, a Colorado Democrat, who is
planning on introducing legislation to force Internet Service Providers to
maintain data on every American net activity. The Justice Department has been campaigning for this for years and the
notoriety of the Mark Foley incident has served as a catalyst.
Caching 120 Billion Page Views: DeGette’s horrendous
initiative would require ISPs to cache senders and receivers of emails, chat
room activity, IM activity and users’ Internet histories for all 100 million
U.S. users for an evergreen two-year period. In case a child predator or
pornographer was identified, his entire Internet activity could be subpoenaed,
scrutinized and provided as evidence in his possible trial.
Caching 120 billion unique page views for 100 million
Americans for two years to provide possible prosecutorial evidence on a thousand
perverts is a misguided and dangerous invasion of American’s privacy.
While the “ends” are desirable the “means” are despicable. Currently, for
business reasons, ISPs cache their users’ Internet activity, but not in the detail specified in DeGette’s
proposal. ISPs do this for valid business reasons,
generally to resolve possible billing disputes for periods of time matching the
billing cycles.
Better Approach: A better approach is to make
additional resources available to local law enforcement agencies to follow-up
promptly to the NCMEC’s specific leads so that subpoenas can be requested and
issued and the alleged predator’s Internet records obtained in a timely fashion.
Sen. McCain: Deputize Blogs
and Social Networks to Fight Kid Porn or Face Severe Penalties
McCain’s bill, introduced in
the lame duck session of the 109th Congress, is frightening in both its
breadth and also in its lack of specificity. Millions of commercial Web sites
and personal blogs would be requires to report illegal images posted by their
users or pay fines of up to $300,000. McCain’s proposed bill, “Stop the Online
Exploitation of Our Children Act,” (or, “SOEOCA”—which means in Navajo—“Beware
of the warrior from the desert!”) requires that reports be submitted to the CyberTipline of the NCMEC
(National Center for Missing and Exploited Children), which, in turn, will
forward the reports to the relevant law enforcement agency. While the
proposed act authorizes $20 million for the Internet Crimes Against Children
Task Force, one can imagine that the system will be inundated with reports.
Historically, the weak link in the system is the local law enforcement agency that often prioritize actual
violent crimes over "victimless" crimes. Timeliness is an issue—which DeGette’s bill would address.
Sen. McCain: All Online
Services Targeted—Including Personal Blogs
McCain’s bill would deputize
all “online services" to report instances of “child pornography.” These
reporting rules could prove problematic for individual's blogs and smaller Web
sites, because the definitions of child pornography have become relatively
broad, ill-defined, and subject to personal
interpretation. "Pornography is in the eye of the beholder."
Sen. McCain: Huge Fines for
Even Inadvertent Reporting Failure
The penalties would bankrupt
most individual bloggers and many commercial sites. An online service provider
that “knowingly and willfully” fails to make a report would be subject to fines
of $150,000 for a first failure to report and $300,000 for a subsequent failure
to report. Luckily, an online service provider that “negligently” fails to make
a report would be subject only (that's "only") to fines of $50,000 and $100,000 for a subsequent
failure to report.
Sen. McCain: Store All Data
for Six Months and Register All Net Predators
The Act also specifies the
information contained in the report; requires the online service provider to
store the relevant image and vital information for not less than 180 days (or
for an unspecified longer period as requested by the NCMEC or the referred law enforcement
agency) after the report date; prevents the online service provider from
destroying any related data for; authorizes the NCMEC to disseminate elements of
pornographic images to online service providers; indemnifies personnel at the
NCMEC; targets convicted sex offenders by creating a federal registry of any
“e-mail address, instant message address, or similar Internet identifier used
by” such offenders and mandates fines and up to a 10-year imprisonment for
offenders who fail to register; and increases the penalty for violations of
selected sections of the federal criminal code by adding on an additional
10-years, served consecutively.
Sen. McCain: Social Networking
Sites to Dump Sex Offenders in Registry
The proposed Act also directs
“any online service provider that is a social networking site” to take
“effective measures to remove any web page hosted by that provider that is
associated with any identifier listed” in the federal registry, under the Sex
Offender Registration and Notification Act. According to CNET News.com, a
McCain aide said on December 8 that the measure was targeted at any Web site
that “you’d have to join up or become a member of to use,” with or without any
payment.
During July, another bill which
“vaguely targeted social-networking sites” was approved by the House. Senators
Chuck Schumer, (D-NY) and McCain indicated that they intend to introduce similar
legislation dealing with sex offenders and social-networking sites early in the
110thCongress.
http://www.allin.com
http://www.2600.com
http://www.rsf.org/http://www.rsf.org
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The Advocates support the goals of the NCMEC, a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit
organization, which serves as a national clearinghouse for information and a
resource for child protection. NCMEC's congressionally mandated
CyberTipline, a reporting mechanism for child sexual exploitation, has handled
nearly a half million leads. The organization received $32.6 million in
tax dollars in 2005.

The Handbook provides a legal pathway for the online player to access
sites using state-of-the-art "circumven-tion technologies" to defeat state
censorship employing content denial filtering technology. Rolled-out in
installments The Handbook provides updated solutions as the provisions of the
Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement Act of 2006 are enacted in 2007.


Tiny Stars is a nonprofit organization committed to
exposing the growing multi-billion dollar industry of the child sex trade and
working behind the scenes alongside law enforcement to capture international child predators.


The Internet Keep Safe Coalition is a not-for-profit organization that teaches
basic rules of Internet safety to children and parents.
 
The Protection Project is a human rights research institute based at the Foreign
Institute at The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies to
address the issue of tracking in persons as a human rights violation.

Summary: Protection
from Sexual Predators Act.
In late 1998, Congress enacted
the Protection from Sexual Predators Act (“PSPA-1998”), which (Title I) amended
the federal criminal code to solicit by any form of communications the personal
information of a person under 16 with the intent to entice, encourage, offer, or
solicit any person to engage in illegal sexual activity; (Title II) provides for
the prosecution of individuals for the production of child pornography if the
image was transported by any means in interstate or foreign commerce; (Title
III) doubles the maximum term of imprisonment for abusive sexual content with a
child under 13; (Title IV) prohibits and sets penalties for using any means to
or attempt to transfer obscene matter to a child under 16; (Title V) increases
penalties for offenses against children and for repeat offenders; (Title VI)
provides for pre-trial detention of persons for scheduled federal sex offenses,
(Section 604) requires ISPs to report to law agencies child pornography,
(Section 605) expands the list of sex crimes against minors eligible for civil
remedy; (Title VII) expands FBI’s serial murder authority, (Section 702) amends
the criminal code for kidnapping offenses; (Title VIII) restricts federal
prisoners unsupervised access to the Internet; and (Title IX) directs various
studies on the Internet and child pornography.

Summary: The Children’s Internet Protection Act of 2000
In late
2000, Congress enacted The Children’s Internet Protection Act (“CIPA-2000”),
which required school and libraries to employ filtering software to address: (a)
access by minors to inappropriate matter on the Internet; (b) the safety and
security of minors when using electronic mail, chat rooms and other forms of
direct electronic communications; (c) unauthorized access by minors online; (d)
unauthorized disclosure, use, and dissemination of personal information
regarding minors; and (e) restricting minors’ access to materials harmful to
them. The current proposed legislation addresses the fact that Parents have
failed to supervise their children’s access to the Internet at home and that now
new mobile technologies have dispersed Internet access away from the “protected”
schools, libraries and the home access point.

Summary: Stop the Online
Exploitation of Our Children Act

McCain's bill would deputize all “online service,” including: “(i) Internet content hosting
service; (ii) domain name registration service; (iii) Internet search service;
Internet social networking site, chat room, message board, or any other similar
service using the Internet; (v) Internet service that provides e-mail, instant
messaging, or any other similar service using the Internet; (vi) electronic
communication service; (vii) Internet service provider (including any wireless
carrier that provides Internet access); (viii) Internet image or video sharing
service; and (ix) remote computing service,” to report instances of “child
pornography.”
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