Re: Australia's New South Wales tries net-censorship
At 17:47 4/6/96, David K. Merriman wrote:
Makes me wonder if browser companies/authors couldn't be dragged into any such conflicts. If Person A inadvertently stumbles across Pedophiles 'R' Us on the net, and quickly moves on, I have yet to see a browser that lets him/her say "quick - delete that last cacheing operation", thus *making* him/her 'guilty' of criminal possession.
Netscape in the Cache Preferences has a button to delete your cache contents so button would seem to serve this need (while being a little overkill for this capability since it deletes everything and you must then rebuild your cache from scratch).
"Robert A. Rosenberg" <hal9001@panix.com> writes:
At 17:47 4/6/96, David K. Merriman wrote:
Makes me wonder if browser companies/authors couldn't be dragged into any such conflicts. If Person A inadvertently stumbles across Pedophiles 'R' Us on the net, and quickly moves on, I have yet to see a browser that lets him/her say "quick - delete that last cacheing operation", thus *making* him/her 'guilty' of criminal possession.
Netscape in the Cache Preferences has a button to delete your cache contents so button would seem to serve this need (while being a little overkill for this capability since it deletes everything and you must then rebuild your cache from scratch).
While I doubt that many people inadvertantly stumble across the mother load of illegal porn on the Web, the "store and forward" nature of Usenet can certainly create such problems, particularly for those in the habit of grabbing all new messages in their favorite newsgroups before reading them. I'd be interested to know if the courts have ever had a case in which a person has been declared to have been in "possession" of illegal material merely by virtue of its momentary presence in their cache, screen buffer, or usenet spool. There is a case now involving the University of Pittsburgh in which the Feds are attempting to prove that an individual was in possession of certain child porn images on his own PC during a brief span of time in 1993. There was also a case in which a BBS operator was charged based on an allegedly illegal image found in a directory containing unchecked user uploads. Had the cops done nothing, the image would have been wiped shortly thereafter. -- Mike Duvos $ PGP 2.6 Public Key available $ mpd@netcom.com $ via Finger. $
Excerpts from internet.cypherpunks: 8-Apr-96 Re: Australia's New South W.. by Mike Duvos@netcom.com
I'd be interested to know if the courts have ever had a case in which a person has been declared to have been in "possession" of illegal material merely by virtue of its momentary presence in their cache, screen buffer, or usenet spool.
There is a case now involving the University of Pittsburgh in which the Feds are attempting to prove that an individual was in possession of certain child porn images on his own PC during a brief span of time in 1993.
For it to be a crime, I would presume that the courts would require "guilty knowledge" of the act. (At least I hope they would!) As for the Pitt "child porn" case, I've spoken with the fellow's roommate and have some more info at: http://fight-censorship.dementia.org/fight-censorship/dl?num=1924 -Declan
participants (3)
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Declan B. McCullagh -
mpd@netcom.com -
Robert A. Rosenberg