Danish Police Accidentally Censor Over 8,000 Sites As Child Porn… Including Facebook & Google

from the censorship-is-bad,-mmmkay? dept

Reminiscent of the mooo.com screwup in the US, where Homeland Security’s ICE division “accidentally” seized 84,000 sites and plastered them over with a warning graphic about how they’d been seized by the US government for child porn, the Danish police similarly “accidentally” had 8,000 legitimate sites declared as child porn sites that needed to be blocked. Among the sites listed? Google and Facebook. Visitors to those sites, from ISP Siminn were greeted with the following message (translated, of course):

The National High Tech Crime Center of the Danish National Police [NITEC], who assist in investigations into crime on the internet, has informed Siminn Denmark A/S, that the internet page which your browser has tried to get in contact with may contain material which could be regarded as child pornography…

Upon the request of The National High Tech Crime Center of the Danish National Police, Siminn Denmark A/S has blocked the access to the internet page.

And people wonder why so many people around the world were so concerned about the threat of something like SOPA — which would make DNS blocking at the ISP level a lot more common.

So how did this “accident” happen?

According to NITEC chief Johnny Lundberg, it began when an employee at the police center decided to move from his own computer to that of a colleague.

“He sat down and was about to make an investigation, and in doing so he placed a list of legitimate sites in the wrong folder,” Lundberg explained. “Before becoming aware of the error, two ISPs retrieved the list of sites.”

It would seem that there’s a problem in this process. The fact that just one employee can change the list seems wide open to abuse. And the fact that the list seems somewhat automated beyond that is even more problematic. You know what would solve this problem? A little thing called due process. What a concept.

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 “Danish Police Accidentally Censor Over 8,000 Sites As Child Porn… Including Facebook & Google”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
44 Comments
silverscarcat says:

Due Process...

What is this thing called…

Due Process?

I know that I’ve heard it before…

You know, back before the Terrorists won and made the American people super paranoid and allowed the government to eat away at freedoms in the name of security…

Ah, must be something fictional.

After all, something like that would almost allow people to have a fair chance, and you know that would never happen.

“Those who give up essential freedoms and liberties for the sake of temporary security deserve neither.” – Benjamin Franklin

BuckRogers1965 (profile) says:

Isn't accusing someone of child porn slander?

Or is it libel? I never can figure out which is which.

Regardless, it is bad to accuse people of something so heinous which they did not do and block access to their business until they can prove that they are innocent.

The fact that a single police officer could accidentally block sites as legitimate as Google or Facebook without any due process tells me that the little guy could be screwed without any recourse at the whim of any number of police officers.

Imagine being an individual or small business trying to get your web site back on line after being accused of being a child pornographer by the national police. This could lead to people committing suicide with the politically correct climate in full force now.

Anonymous Coward says:

How about you get the story right?

Human error, it happens. The guy made a mistake, and the mistake was rapidly fixed. It happens.

You don’t think so? Ask your wonderful new hosting company why your site is either unreachable or has no stories about 10% of the time. Oh noes! They need to go to jail or something, they are clearly making errors!

Richard (profile) says:

Re:

Human error, it happens. The guy made a mistake, and the mistake was rapidly fixed. It happens.
Way to miss the point.

Yes human error happens – and so when anything important is at stake then systems should be in place to make sure this kind of accident doesn’t get through the system and into the outside world unchecked. This is not a matter of legal due process – this is a matter of basic quality control procedures – like every organisation is supposed to have

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

One person made a mistake that labelled 8,000 sites (including Google and Facebook) as being seized by the government over having child pornography.

You don’t see how this was actually a pretty big deal?

If Techdirt was unreachable due to the mistake of it’s hosting company, that’d be one thing. It’s understandable that such things do on occasion happen. While an inconvenience, it’s nothing to get in too big of a tizzy over.

But for one man to have the power to censor that many sites, while putting them in the awkward position of having to later explain that “Hey, it was an accident caused by one government worker, we DO NOT host or condone child porn on our sites”, that’s a pretty ridiculous amount of power to let one worker have. Even if accidental, it shouldn’t be that easy to allow to happen. Hence the point of the article.

How about you focus on the important issues instead of just trying to slam this site.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Neurosurgeon accidentally drills through your brain?

No problem. Mistakes happen.

Mechanic accidentally forgets to tighten some crucial bits on an air plane and said plane crashes killing everyone inside?

Human error. Let it slide.

Danish police accidentally censor over 8,000 sites as child porn?

My bad, won’t happen again

Do you understand what I am trying to say?

There are certain people that we trust to perform certain critical tasks. If they fail at doing their job, we get angry. Very angry.

Neal says:

Re:

You make a good point and, truthfully, Mike misses one. All the due process in the world can’t prevent a human error like this. But there certainly could be, and should’ve been, a better process in place to manage and disseminate the list – one that safeguards against such simple errors. Imagine if this list didn’t contain big names like Google, but were a list of individual’s personal web sites that was being compiled for some other purpose. How many reputations and livelihoods might that ruin before someone noticed and fixed the error? How many of these individuals could never recover because there is no way or means to reach out to those who saw the censor warning and say “hey, we screwed up and accused an innocent party.”

Anonymous Coward says:

Hey, let’s try and look at this in a positive light? I mean, at least they’re really really good at censoring things! Not necessarily the things they mean to, or when they mean to, but I’ll be damned if they can’t swing that hammer with some power, even accidentally.

Ok…yeah…that’s the most positive I could come up with…oh God now I need a drink

Anonymous Coward says:

Bigger picture or low caffeine?

Why is it that, when one bothers to lift the rock and see what crawls out from beneath, these government “High Tech Crime” units seem to bear more of a resemblance to Keystone Kops with a metric butt-load of self-righteousness and self-entitlement thrown in than they bear to actual law enforcement agencies? I’m really trying to laugh at the level of gleeful buffoonery that law enforcement agencies around the globe define as Standard Operating Procedure, but really, isn’t it a bit past time that Someone In A High Place While In Possession Of A Brain realized that painting one’s actions in bold, colorful strokes of cretinism only /reduces/ respect for law enforcement agencies and their actions. Am I expecting too much, or do I just need a few more cups of caffeine to stabilize my (already low) expectations of the People We Depend Upon To Protect Us From Evil? Gah!

Machin Shin (profile) says:

Re:

There is human error like deleting your book report and there then is human error like opps I launched nuke at North Korea. For some odd reason though the second one never seems to happen. Ever wonder why that is? It is called safeties you moron.

When you have a great destructive power you don’t set it up so some bumbling idiot can launch it. You set it up so that it requires several people to be involved and so it never “accidentally” goes off.

There is NO excuse for a system like this to be setup in such a way it is susceptible to “human error”.

Berenerd (profile) says:

We still do it bigger...

Puh, only 8000? in the US we go big! 84000 is better! So what if you got google? Facebook? Bah! it still only counts as one!

USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA!

So yeah…hows that censorship thing working out for ya?

Bengie says:

Re:

“Neurosurgeon accidentally drills through your brain?”
Sued

“Mechanic accidentally forgets to tighten some crucial bits on an air plane and said plane crashes killing everyone inside?”
Sued

When people make mistakes, they should take responsibility for all damages caused by said mistakes. The only time people don’t take full responsibility is if there is a contract signed by both parties putting a limit on damages.

Who gets sued this time?

WysiWyg (profile) says:

Re:

“You don’t think so? Ask your wonderful new hosting company why your site is either unreachable or has no stories about 10% of the time. Oh noes!”

If I found out that my site was unreachable because some schmuck at the hosting company was using the servers to play Minesweeper, then yeah, I would be pretty pissed. And not just at the numbnuts that caused havoc, but more importantly I would be pissed at the company for having a system that allows the admins to play Minesweeper on the servers, despite this bringing them down.

(And yes, I know that’s not what happened, I just tried to put you analogy in place.)

Simple Mind (profile) says:

child pornography rampant *rant*

Are there really (any) websites out there that are just dumping child porn out there for all to see? Considering the effort being put into blocking CP websites it must be a major problem. I guess if you block one website, the evil child pronographers must jump to another like playing wack-a-mole. These guys must be totally motivated to make CP visible for everyone to see. I guess a significant portion of the population must be interested in looking at it considering the huge problem it is on the web. Who knew? And cops are just too few to deal with it by going out and arresting the perpetrators. We need to give them tools so they can sit behind a desk all day pushing buttons to block any hint of the dreaded CP threatening to ooze out onto everyone’s screens. If they were to go out and arrest the ones setting up these websites then what buttons would they need to push tomorrow?

Anonymous Coward says:

This part is quite startling

has informed Siminn Denmark A/S, that the internet page which your browser has tried to get in contact with may contain material which could be regarded as child pornography…

Its so nice to see you great and glorious western democracies, practice such obvious thought crime prevention.

After all, May and Could are the biggest criminals around.

Kronborg says:

Voluntary service

As far as I know the entire filtering system is a opt in system for ISP?s. It is a service that the Danish police offer ISP?s in corporation with Save the Children Denmark.
It is however unfortunate that it is possible for one error to have such consequences. However when the error was detected it was promptly corrected (the block lasted less than an hour) and the police apologized. Also the automation of the system is on the ISP side of the system.
Source in Danish: http://epn.dk/teknologi2/computer/article2710532.ece

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...