Banks unite to fight child porn

Banks unite to fight child porn

Nobbynobs

Registrant
This is a bit of an old story now, but with all the discussion on here about NAMBLA and the other pedo organisations I think it is worth mentioning.

https://marketplace.publicradio.org/shows/2006/04/19/PM200604193.html?refid=0

The Financial Coaliton Against Child Pornography has set for itself the goal of eradicating commercial child pornography by 2008. To do this, the Coalition is bringing together the substantial resources of the major banks, Yahoo, Paypal, Amex, Visa, Mastercard, and Microsoft, along with the major Internet players.

Police forces have been working with the Coalition and Microsoft for a while now, resulting in some major breakthroughs in the fight against child porn.

Personally I think this is huge. It shows that the powers that be are finally doing something about pedos. Sure, child porn is only one part of the whole pedo world, but I think it's a major step in the right direction.
 
I think this is a great step. However, at the risk of being something of a wet blanket here, I'm not sure it's a very BIG step. I was under the impression that most of this stuff is traded on free peer-to-peer networks and private websites.
 
Even if it is traded over private P2P networks, at some point it still has to be traded through the WWW. This is where the ISP's, law enforcement, and others come into play.

While this may or may not be a BIG step, I think everything helps.
 
And in the banks' defence, they are specifically interested in the commercial child porn, which is a major industry.

For the P2P stuff, I hear Microsoft has been working with police on that, but it's going to be a challenge.

A note I forgot to add is that my perp photographed me, and there are probably child porn pictures of me circulating out there. This announcement has helped me a lot in my recovery. It is good for me to know that there are people working to ensure that pedos won't be financially profiting from my victimisation for much longer.
 
I know that every movie on the internet has a digital footprint.I think it is called TTL source, and what that means is, that every CSA movie must also therefore have a TTL root.

This coding was used to make sure that downloading a movie or anything else, meant the movie you asked for was the movie you get.
Its a bit like not knowing what the movie is until you have the whole file.

It is not just movies but anything downloaded.
So it would not be impossible to track the digital footprint of the said movies, whether it was on the net or p2p.

Its a bit like DNA, same principle, but nobody seems to be openly working on it.
I checked sourceforge, and unless I got my search wrong, there is nothing much going on.

Some p2p networks run bots, to check members for child porn, but they only use keywords.
If the bot finds this stuff they report your Ip to the cops.

I bet though, there will be some clever computer hack working on something in his bedroom as we speak. Forget about microsoft, they havent a clue, windows is testimony to that,

ste
 
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