EU Realizes That You Fight Child Porn At The Source… Not By Trying To Hide It

from the common-sense? dept

We’ve noted recently, that more and more governments are looking to deal with crime online by censoring it via filters, rather than actually going after those responsible. At least some people are finally realizing that this doesn’t make much sense. DH’s Love Child points us to the news that some EU politicians, in response to an initial plan to require filters to block sites deemed to have child pornography, have decided that a smarter plan is to actually go after the sources of child pornography:

Members of the Parliament’s Civil Liberties Committee ruled that complete removal “at source” must be the main aim in tackling child pornography online and that blocking access to websites is acceptable only in exceptional circumstances — when the host server in a non-E.U. country refuses to cooperate or when procedures take too long.

The original Commission proposal would have made blocking of child porn websites mandatory for all E.U. member states, prompting concern among Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) who tend to support Internet freedom.

“The new generation of MEPs has shown it understands the Internet and has courageously rejected populist but ineffective and cosmetic measures in favor of measures aimed at real child protection,” said Joe McNamee, of the European digital rights movement EDRi. “This is a huge and implausible success for an army of activists campaigning to protect the democratic, societal and economic value of the Internet,” he added

Surprising, but nice to see that not all politicians are so clueless when it comes to dealing with crimes that happen online.

Filed Under: , ,

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “EU Realizes That You Fight Child Porn At The Source… Not By Trying To Hide It”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
61 Comments
Not an electronic Rodent says:

Call be me a cynic but...

A possible EU directive that actually makes sense? It’ll have been ammended and say something totally different by the time it actually becomes a directive or have something additional like in order to comply all your country’s interenet traffic has to go through Germany.

Either that or much of central Europe will be sucked into the hole in the fabric of reality caused by twisting it so badly.

Lawrence D'Oliveiro says:

Does Filtering Make Sense?

Imagine somebody, possibly from overseas, is making obscene phone calls. Sometimes even children are picking up the phone, and being the targets of these calls. Do you

a) Implement filtering technology on the phone system, to stop the obscenties getting through,
b) Go after the callers and shut them down
c) Both of the above?

Imagine somebody, possibly from overseas, is sending obscene letters through the postal system. Sometimes they even get addressed to children. Do you

a) Implement filtering technology in the postal system, to prevent the obscene letters getting through
b) Go after the senders and shut them down
c) Both of the above?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

EU Realizes That You Fight Child Porn At The Source… Not By Trying To Hide It

more governments are looking to deal with crime online by censoring it via filters… some people are finally realizing that this doesn’t make much sense.

Filtering out child porn websites is bad. – Mike Masnick

OK way too far with putting words in people’s mouths plus is that not technically libellous?

Good luck with that.

Rob (profile) says:

The problem with filtering is that we’ve already seen time and time again that it is used improperly and/or overzealously, and it’s a gateway to more filtering, well beyond easy targets like child porn. And the idea that by filtering websites you can stop an activity is ridiculous. The activity just goes further underground, into darknets and the like, where it is FAR more difficult for law enforcement to track down the people who are actually participating in these activities.

The idea that filtering websites somehow protects children is ludicrous. Pedophiles will find what they are looking for on the internet no matter how hard they have to dig, and the general population – who are not looking for such content – will never see it either way. But the harder pedophiles have to dig for what they’re looking for, the harder it is for law enforcement to track them down. In a lot of ways, not filtering this material – leaving it out in the open *for those who specifically look for it* – makes it far easier to put a stop to those who are producing and consuming child porn. So yes, the real time and money should be spent on tracking down those involved, not pointlessly filtering the internet.

The eejit (profile) says:

Re:

Yes, but only because it drives people to the darker areas of the Internet, and encourages the use of VPNs and other such tools to hide their actions.

Note that this does NOT IN ANY WAY condone the actions of paedophiles. It just points out the flaws in the logic of governments like the US and ICE. IT has a time and a place. Just not all the time and everywhere.

Not an electronic Rodent says:

Re:

IT has a time and a place. Just not all the time and everywhere.

Which is exactly what the article says pejorative stupidity notwithstanding:

Members of the Parliament’s Civil Liberties Committee ruled that complete removal “at source” must be the main aim in tackling child pornography online and that blocking access to websites is acceptable only in exceptional circumstances — when the host server in a non-E.U. country refuses to cooperate or when procedures take too long.
Emphasis added

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Two issues here:

First off, if you drive people into darker corners, they are not as easy for the casual “pedo in training” to find. Think of it as the difference between street corner drug dealing and deals made quietly in the back of a bar. Yes, you can still buy drugs, but it isn’t in everyone’s face all the time, teaching them that drugs are okay or tolerate. In the same manner, filtering websites does remove the stuff from general public view, and puts the pedos on notice that someone is actively looking at them.

Second, things are not mutually exclusive. I don’t think anyone in the US government thinks that filtering websites solves the problem. Are we not allowed to have a multi-pronged attack? Do you not think that perhaps in the hours after they took over these domains that they didn’t log every IP that hit them?

Mike’s answer is pretty typical of what is going on here: Just lie still, don’t fight, and it won’t hurt so much.

The eejit (profile) says:

Re:

ON the contrary, the argument is that there will be places that become ‘reputable’ for their hiding. And as for the multi-pronged thing, paedophilia seems to be the excuse du jour for restricting liberty.

And giving a paedophile warning is probably the most stupid thing you can do. I refer you, of course, to the Soham murders in the UK, where a convicted sex offender got through the system designed solely to be more ‘secure’ for our children. Moral outrage is not the answer; a carefully designed operation, targeting those distributors surgically, is.

vivaelamor (profile) says:

Re:

‘It’s an actual signed up user, “anonymous”.’

If it were a signed up user then they’d have a profile button. It’s just someone who typed a name into the comment box. TAM had an account until they stopped using it, although some seem to believe they still post anonymously.

“Are you shocked them someone else calls Mike out on his weird views?”

Are you calling out the EU parliament for the same views?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

yeah, weird views like telling local police to no longer arrest street level drug dealers, and that the only acceptable arrest is the actual farmer producing the drugs.

It is amazing that you cannot see the benefits of an “A and B” approach. Even the quote provided indicates that in the end, they still support filtering if the server is outside of the EU or if the process to get them shut down takes too long. They support “A and B” options, why can’t anyone grasp that?

Chuck Norris' Enemy (deceased) (profile) says:

Where are the sources?

I am sure there will be some ‘local’ sources of child porn but what happens when this stuff is created in other countries wherein the EU or the censoring nation has no jurisdiction, which I think is most often the case. Sounds like a good excuse to send in the troops. ‘War on Drugs’ ‘War on Terror’ …coming soon… ‘War on Child Porn (for the children)’

Not an electronic Rodent says:

Re:

Why do you insist that it is an “either / or” choice? Can’t it be both?

Whatever he is suggesting the article and the proposed directive do allow for both. It was the anonymous troll that first suggested otherwise.

The suggestion is not that filtering does not occur but a recognition that it must be very carefully controlled and targeted as it is basically ineffective for enforcement. The additional suggestion is that if a blanket filtering system were set up as originally suggested that it is open to abuse and it’s negative effect is not in any filtering of child porn but the wider filtering that would inevitably happen in it’s name. Depending on the type of filter used for example this site could have been filtered by now for the repeated use of the worlds “child porn”

Anonymous Coward says:

Mike… Why is this news? Despite your proclamations of this being something new and having “common sense”, this is just business as usual.

For example:


blocking access to websites is acceptable only in exceptional circumstances — when the host server in a non-E.U. country refuses to cooperate or when procedures take too long.

In other words, blocking websites will happen all the time.

Look, I’d love to see some rational thought applied to this area, but why are we deluding ourselves that this story is anything but typical moral panic? Does Techdirt need the page views that badly?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

There is no benefit, censor laws always, always get expanded and encompass more than they initially intended too.

Also your analogy is wrong, the right one is to take away an ad or sign and do nothing to go after the criminals because the minute you took down their sign they scattered and will not be coming back.

Is like a early warning sign for criminals.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

I see you are opposed to targeting the source of Child Porn.

It’s clear that you’re creating child porn, which explains why you are so in favour of ineffective filtering over targeted enforcement.

Since you are clearly profiting off of paedophilia, you have lost all moral grounds, and will be ignored henceforth (after Mike reports your IP to the police).

Anonymous a-hole says:

Re:

Filters don’t work in much the same way that removing the adult section of CL didn’t work in stopping child trafficking.

Pornographic pictures (and movies) are to catching the sons-of-bitches who create them as flies are to a rotting cow corpse. Until you remove the source carcass, swatting at the flies isn’t going to help much.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

You have to sort of read up on the concepts of pedophilia and how people progress some “just a thought” to “testing out scenarios” to “actual action”, and a bunch of other steps in between. This sort of thing is common in many different types of crimes that require planning, ranging from rapists to bank robbers. Most normal people stop themselves at the “just a thought” level.

The internet allows isolated people who might never have considered acting on their impulses to meet other people to chat, to discuss, and in the end to encourage each other toward ultimately taking action. They learn scenarios, they see other people being “successful” in their attempts to lure children, and so on.

No, it doesn’t mean “turn off the internet”, it just means that this is a problem amplified by the ease of communication. Make that initial contact harder, or make that initial contact more risky, and perhaps some may not do it.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Your logic makes Mike look like a totally straight shooter, which just isn’t the case.

I want child porn filtered, I want it blocked, and I want the poeple who make it prosecuted. I want anything that has any positive effect to be used.

Mike wants them to leave the sites up while they try to figure out who is doing it, only to discover the miracle of proxies, bounces, and rootkit equiped PCs.

My clear intent in these messages is to ask Mike why he is so intent in leaving child porn sites up.

mirradric says:

Re: Re:

Did you even read???
Mike is in fact arguing that blocking/filtering is ineffective due to the fact that merely filtering leaves the websites up (not taken down), allows the people to continue producing their porn (creators and distributors not caught) and when they discover the miracle of proxies and vpns (filters no longer working), they’ll have access again. It also makes it harder to catch them later since they have been forced to have a more specialized and dedicated infrastructure to evade law enforcement as a side effect.
Mike is saying that it’s better (easier and more effective) to just pluck out those weeds together with their roots rather than waste time triming each weed till they can’t be seen.

Not an electronic Rodent says:

Re:

I want child porn filtered, I want it blocked, and I want the poeple who make it prosecuted. I want anything that has any positive effect to be used

The first 2 clauses are partially contradictory with the second 2, which is the point of the article and the EU’s suggestion.

Mike wants them to leave the sites up while they try to figure out who is doing it,

That’s nowhere close to what it says, and I suspect you know it and are just trying to paint Mike with a black hat in a particularly disgusting way, either that or I’m impressed you can find all the letters on the keyboard. I’m not suprised he hasn’t responded to you – were I he I wouldn’t dignify such a ludicrous, baseless and vile assertion with a response either.

Anonymous Coward says:

Only pedophiles would support the filtering of child porn sites.

All filtering does is hide the problem. Pretend it isn’t happening, whilst all these kids continue to be abuse. And the pedophiles are there at home getting their jollies from child porn sites which they accessed by bypassing the filter, which is incredibly easy to do.

Then they go and say “I support the filter, so I definitely don’t like child porn. Meanwhile these other people oppose the filter. They’re evil.” Happens all the time. They don’t fool anyone (except stupid people).

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

a) You have the power to filter the internet on your own, why don’t you do it?

b) It is not the government premise to tell others what is good or bad and it is dangerous to let it do it as noted by judges in the past, that is why people have the power to censor what they don’t like but not the government.

c) If it is blocked is an early warning sign to any predator that they are being watched. Those predators are not all dumb, they adapt and learn and this type of action only improves their knowledge about how to evade the law.

d) It doesn’t stop the violence against the children, it just hide it, so out of sight is out of mind.

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...