House votes to tighten net child porn regulations

By the Betanews Staff | Published December 6, 2007, 8:40 AM

The US House of Representatives late Wednesday approved a measure by a vote of 409-2, to expand the responsibilities of ISPs to reign in child pornography on their servers.

Under the new law, Internet service providers will be required to preserve child pornography images as evidence, and report to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children the online screen names and locations of suspected child predators, along with the times when the images in question were accessed.

Fines would be levied on ISPs that do not cooperate. If an incident is not reported, an ISP could be fined $150,000 per image per day, which would increase the penalty by three times. If the ISP fails to do so again, the fine would double. The bill will now be passed on to the Senate for approval, where it is expected to pass.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

This is getting me sick. I thought this is a free country, aka for people. Why do we need the government tell us how to live our life? We don't need a big government, we need a small government like how it is intended for. Just let free market to work it out. This "enhancement" doesn't do a damn thing, except make our life (in this case, ISP) miserable. The predators can always host it with some off shore host.

Score: 0

|

Looks like the ISPs will risk heavier penalties than the child predators. $150,000 per image per day? Thats nuts.
Might as well require the US Postal Service to inspect every piece of mail for child porn.

Score: 0

|

Stop giving them ideas. They're already eroding away most of our rights as it is and it's always under the banner of "Child Pornography" or "Anti-Terrorism". Makes me sick to my stomach.

Score: 0

|

I feel sorry for the person sifting though all this crap, they must really need therapy.

And what about all the thumbnails attached to all too many sites containing dubious content, they constitute having it stored on the computer unless you take precautions.

Warez and crack down loaders will show up like a millionaire in a wh*** house.

Would be a database worth some money.

Score: 0

|

I'm thinking the only people who know more about porn and prostitution than anyone else is republican congressmen. Between the DC madam and "wide-stance" Larry Craig and serial molester Mark Foley, maybe we should start by arresting that bunch of pervs first.

Score: 0

|

Congress has found the root password to the constitution: child porn.

Score: 0

|

i would like to read this bill myself, because although child porn is horrible, unless the government is paying the ISP's to monitor it and making sure that privacy isnt imposed upon, the bill must be bulls***, either to increase abilities to monitor the internet by the feds or as a ploy to get whoever proposed it elected.

Score: 0

|

everyone can agree that child porn is bad. closer and closer to election year, who wants to be the guy on the ballot that complained this was stupid. 2 people i guess. probably the only two that read the thing.

that said, i havent read the damn thing and im not an ISP but after the 2257 reversal i'd be really interested to see what the hell they're trying to do with this one and how they plan to make it stick. 2257 was ridiculous for web hosts. i hope they learned something from the last flop.

Score: 0

|

I have no problem with this in theory - people involved in child pornography need to be put away for multiple lifetimes.

Having said that, how exactly is an ISP supposed to preserve such images without first finding them? And how do they FIND them without capturing and keeping EVERYTHING, essentially permanently, and then having that information available for any "legitimate" requester, i.e. a significant impact on privacy?

As for child pornographers, they will simply encrypt everything (if they're not already), making this law useless.

Score: 0

|

Big Brother again ..... but i do nthink the penality is abit steep .. how can they monior all the traffic

I do agree they should be locked up and only come out in a wodden box and should be catrated

or better still swing them from the gallows then it would not cost £2000 a week just to keep them

Score: 0

|

Credit card transaction and accessing it is enough, at least it is here in the UK.

Score: 0

|

Who are the 2 who voted against it and do they want to be re-elected next year?

Score: 0

|

Yea im wondering what their reasonings for thier votes are.

Score: 0

|

Ron Paul was one of the two. He voted against it because it is unconstitutional and outside of the authority of the congress.

Not only is he running for reelection he is also running for President. You can register republican and vote to restore the authority of our Constitution by voting for Ron Paul.

Score: 0

|

I side with the two Republicans that voted against the bill, Rep. Ron Paul and Rep. Paul Broun.

Nobody here is against protecting the young, and there are already laws out there that provide such protections. Not only is this bill redundant and therefore provides no real protection, it is unconstitutional.

The bill is forcing providers to report cartoon images of all things.

(...obscene visual depictions including a "drawing, cartoon, sculpture, or painting.")
http://www.news.com/8301...-38.html?tag=nefd.pulse

Damn what the Constitution says, just push forward bills with awesome sounding acronym names and claim they are to protect the children. It takes no thought or effort, nor does this law actually protect the young because, as stated, there are already laws in place.

The ones that voted for the bill aren't doing it for you, they are only preying upon your vulnerabilities to serve themselves.

The ones that voted against the bill, they are the ones fulfilling their sworn duties to uphold the Constitution.

Score: 0

|

Bing gets geekier with new Wolfram Alpha integration

Microsoft's Bing is now teamed up with Wolfram Alpha for computational search results.

HP to acquire 3Com for $2.7 B in cash, focus on China

A long and uncertain comeback trail comes to an end for the one-time network equipment giant.

Universities reject Kindle DX as a textbook replacement

Two universities running Kindle DX pilot programs have rejected the device.

Snow Leopard and Windows 7 still can't crack the netbook problem

Apple has killed Atom support in OS X 10.6.2 and Windows 7 Starter Edition is stripped of "basic" functionality.

Facebook for iPhone developer goes from Apple supporter to 'I quit!' in 3 months

Fed up with Apple's App Store policies, the developer of Facebook for iPhone has bailed on the iPhone.

Bing vs. Google rematch on video search

After Microsoft folds some old MSN Video features back into Bing, do they add to the search engine's functionality or take away?

New EU telecoms framework mandates user consent before getting cookies

Do you want a cookie? No. Do you want a cookie? No. Do you want a cookie? No. Do you want...Are you annoyed yet? That's a preview of 2011.

The Samsung Intrepid: A nice phone, if you can accept Windows Mobile

Samsung appears to have built solid enough hardware, but it's the software that seems uncomfortable and unintuitive.

A real beta process at work: Mozilla fires up Firefox 3.6 Beta 2

In the clearest sign yet that public input really does help the development process, a flurry of bug detections provoked Mozilla to release Beta 2 of the next Firefox.

Kindle for PC opens in beta, underwhelms

Amazon has opened the beta of Kindle for PC, a companion to the Kindle, but little else.

European ministers approve watered-down 'neutral net' language

The latest provision in the EU's telecoms regulatory framework would let businesses cancel individuals' Internet access, if they go to court first.