3 ISPs to block kiddie porn

MrBishop

Well-Known Member
Looks like they finally woke up.
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -- Internet providers Verizon, Sprint and Time Warner Cable have agreed to block access to child pornography and eliminate the material from their servers, New York's attorney general said Tuesday.

The companies also will pay $1.1 million to help fund efforts to remove the online child porn created and disseminated by users through their services, Attorney General Andrew Cuomo said. The changes will affect customers nationwide.
Time Warner Cable acted as soon as it learned that users were posting objectionable material and eliminated the newsgroups, a mainstay of the Internet from its early days, said spokesman Alex Dudley.

He emphasized that Time Warner didn't host or provide any of the content and was simply a portal, allowing groups to be created with content provided by the users.

"As soon as we were made aware of the issue ... we took steps to correct," Dudley said Tuesday.
The agreements follow an undercover investigation of child porn newsgroups. Cuomo said in a prepared statement that his investigation of other service providers is continuing. He has used similar probes and the possibility of civil or criminal charges to extract concessions on Internet safety in the past.

Last year, Cuomo reached agreement with the social networking sites MySpace and Facebook to toughen protections against online sexual predators.
Verizon acted immediately to shut down the sites, Verizon spokesman Eric Rabe said.
"There are people doing whatever they do on the Internet all the time and we can't possibly scan every use group," he said. "But there are some things we can do and as soon as it's brought to our attention, we work very quickly."
"The tension there is between allowing customers the ability to communicate with their privacy rights protected, and preventing people from doing things that are illegal," Rabe said.

Verizon and Time Warner Cable are two of the five largest internet service providers in the world. Verizon has 8.2 million subscribers and Time Warner Cable's Road Runner has 7.9 million. Sprint is one of the three largest wireless companies in the United States.
"We are doing our part to deter the accessibility of such harmful content through the internet and we are providing monetary resources that will go toward the identification and removal of online child pornography," said Sprint spokesman Matthew Sullivan. "We embrace this opportunity to build upon our own long-standing commitment to online child safety."
Linky



Gasp! You mean...there's kiddie porn on the internet??!? Nobody told us!! :bs:
 
In the police logs for a week or two ago, there was an entry in which a 13-year-old and 14-year-old were in trouble for possession of child pornography, etc. Similar charges to what this kid was slapped with. My editor figured that the kids were passing around real porn... I told him what's more likely is a girl took a pic of her tits with her cell phone and sent it to her boyfriend's phone, and the boyfriend was probably showing all his friends when a teacher got suspicious.
 
Umh...yeah. Wonder if the kids will end up with Sexual Offender status for that one. Sheesh!

The second guy...asshat. deserves whatever he gets for it.
 
TFA said:
have agreed to block access to child pornography and eliminate the material from their servers

The latter is possible, the former....I don't think so.
 
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