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View Full Version : Internet only has 1% porn says Study


Demontestament
11-15-2006, 11:10 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/internet/11/15/internet.blocking.ap/index.html

PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (AP) -- About 1 percent of Web sites indexed by Google and Microsoft are sexually explicit, according to a U.S. government-commissioned study.

Government lawyers introduced the study in court this month as the Justice Department seeks to revive the 1998 Child Online Protection Act, which required commercial Web sites to collect a credit card number or other proof of age before allowing Internet users to view material deemed "harmful to minors."

The U.S. Supreme Court blocked the law in 2004, ruling it also would cramp the free speech rights of adults to see and buy what they want on the Internet. The court said technology such as filtering software may work better than such laws.

The American Civil Liberties Union, which challenged the law on behalf of a broad range of Web publishers, said the study supports its argument that filters work well.

The study concludes that the strictest filter tested, AOL's Mature Teen, blocked 91 percent of the sexually explicit Web sites in indexes maintained by Google Inc. and Microsoft Corp.'s MSN.

Filters with less restrictive settings blocked at least 40 percent of sexually explicit sites, according to the study of random Web sites by Philip B. Stark, a statistics professor at University of California, Berkeley.

"Filters are more than 90 percent effective, according to Stark," ACLU attorney Chris Hansen said Tuesday during a break in the trial. "Also, with filters, it's up to the parents how to use it, whereas COPA requires a one-solution-fits-all (approach)."

COPA follows Congress' unsuccessful 1996 effort to ban online pornography. The Supreme Court in 1997 deemed key portions of that law unconstitutional because it was too vague and trampled on adults' rights. It would have criminalized putting adult-oriented material online where children can find it.

The 1998 law narrowed the restrictions to commercial Web sites and defined indecency more specifically.

In 2000, Congress also passed a law requiring schools and libraries to block porn using software filters if they receive certain federal funds. The high court upheld that law in 2003.

Justice Department lawyers Theodore Hirt and Raphael Gomez declined to comment Tuesday on Stark's findings.

Stark prepared the report based on information the Justice Department obtained through subpoenas sent to search engine companies and Internet service providers.

Google refused one such subpoena for 1 million sample queries and 1 million Web addresses in its database, citing trade secrets. A judge limited the amount of information the company had to provide.

Stark also examined a random sample of search-engine queries. He estimated that 1.7 percent of search results at Time Warner Inc.'s AOL, MSN and Yahoo Inc. are sexually explicit and 1.1 percent of Web sites cataloged at Google and MSN fall in that category.

About 6 percent of searches yield at least one explicit Web site, he said, and the most popular queries return a sexually explicit site nearly 40 percent of the time.

But filters blocked 87 percent to 98 percent of the explicit results from the most popular searches on the Web, Stark found.

Stark also said that about half the sexually explicit Web sites found in the Google and MSN indexes are foreign, making them beyond the reach of U.S. law. But he agreed with government assertions that the most popular sites are domestic.

"COPA -- right out of the bat -- doesn't block the 50 percent (posted) overseas," Hansen said. "So COPA is substantially less than 50 percent effective."

Closing arguments in the four-week, non-jury trial before Senior U.S. District Judge Lowell Reed Jr. are expected Monday.

The law, signed by then-President Clinton, requires Web sites to get credit card information or some other proof of age from adults who want to view material that may be considered harmful to children. It would impose a $50,000 fine and six-month prison term on commercial Web site operators that allow minors to view such content, which is to be defined by "contemporary community standards."

The law has yet to be enforced. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a preliminary injunction, ruling in June 2004 that the plaintiffs were likely to prevail.

The plaintiffs, including Salon.com, say they would fear prosecution under the law for publishing material as varied as erotic literature to photos of naked inmates at Iraq's Abu Ghraib prison.

I guess they never heard that smash hit "The Internet is for Porn" I mean 1% of the internet is still a huge ****ing number when you look at how many websites are out there.

kurisu7885
11-15-2006, 11:32 AM
Even if they shut down US based web servers, said sites woudl jsut move their servers to an offshore location outside of US jurisdiction, simple. Regardless of how hard they try, the government cannot win this.

KN
11-15-2006, 12:05 PM
We have work to do, Anonymous....

BetaSword
11-15-2006, 12:35 PM
Wait... If this law was passed... Does that mean you'd need a credit card number to get into /b/? Dear lord, no...

Oh. And wouldn't this open up large amouts of scamming as a possibility?

Silver_Derstin
11-15-2006, 12:36 PM
Wait... If this law was passed... Does that mean you'd need a credit card number to get into /b/? Dear lord, no...

Oh. And wouldn't this open up large amouts of scamming as a possibility?

What? Scamming? What's that? Is this something that only occurs when the tubes are all clogged?

Idiotic old men doing idiotic old things. I wish they'd just die already.

kurisu7885
11-15-2006, 12:39 PM
Wait... If this law was passed... Does that mean you'd need a credit card number to get into /b/? Dear lord, no...

Oh. And wouldn't this open up large amouts of scamming as a possibility?

4chan isn't a commercial site, not that it won't stop them fro mtrying to make you need a card there.

Tollwutig
11-15-2006, 12:40 PM
Wait... If this law was passed... Does that mean you'd need a credit card number to get into /b/? Dear lord, no...

Oh. And wouldn't this open up large amouts of scamming as a possibility?

Pretty much yeah, want someone's credit card information just create a fake porn site, and put a couple of nude pictures up. People will be so immune to submitting credit card information to porn sites they won't think twice. Instant ability to do fraud.

kurisu7885
11-15-2006, 12:44 PM
Pretty much yeah, want someone's credit card information just create a fake porn site, and put a couple of nude pictures up. People will be so immune to submitting credit card information to porn sites they won't think twice. Instant ability to do fraud.

Horny teenager + mommy or daddy's credit card = you get the idea.

KN
11-15-2006, 12:46 PM
Dear old men,

United States != Intarwebs.

DO NOT WANT law. Become an hero.

Silver_Derstin
11-15-2006, 12:48 PM
Dear old men,

United States != Intarwebs.

DO NOT WANT law. Become an hero.

Dear People of the Intarwubs,

United States owns the world, therefore we own the internet. No? I mean, we do own the world, no?

Old Men

ZippyDSMlee
11-19-2006, 09:18 PM
Wait... If this law was passed... Does that mean you'd need a credit card number to get into /b/? Dear lord, no...

Oh. And wouldn't this open up large amouts of scamming as a possibility?

Scaming is become a new lobbyng group why look they have net gambling illict so they can rake in money off shores :rolleyes:

wxDiva
11-20-2006, 01:59 AM
Dear People of the Intarwubs,

United States owns the world, therefore we own the internet. We can do whatever we want with the internet, since we have metric ****-tons of the taxpayers' monies and can pay for whatever porn we want. **** the rest of the world. What are they going to do? Bomb us or something? Haha...they can't send bombs down the internet, we can clog them up with poker chips!

xoxo
Old Men

Fixxed for great justice.