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Three ISPs, France, Other Countries to Block Child Porn Web Sites



Sprint, Time Warner and Verizon have worked out an agreement with the New York State Attorney General to block access to Web sites and bulletin boards that host images of child pornography. This is a new tactic by law enforcement to stop the dissemination of these images and brings these companies into the effort by making them responsible, to a degree, for the content relayed across their servers and relay points.

Other Internet service providers, or ISPs, are expected to follow the lead of these three companies and are negotiating their approach with the attorney general's office.

Until now, the focus by law enforcement has primarily been on the perpetrators of child porn, those people who create the original images or those who go onto the message boards and Web sites to view or share the illegal content. The responsibility of the ISPs has been somewhat passive, relying on their subscribers to complain about images or other bad content before they would take action.

As the New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo pointed out, the individual ISP subscribers who would most likely come into contact with the illicit images are the very same people who create or intend to share them, so they would be unlikely to report the illegal activity. Still, it was undercover operatives from Cuomo's office who went on to the child porn sites and message boards in a sting operation. These agents then logged complaints with the ISPs, with the expectation that action would be taken to remove the images or block the sites. When the ISPs didn't respond to the complaints, that's when Cuomo's office took action.

ISPs have been reluctant to block Web sites and message boards, saying the nature of the Web makes it difficult to monitor content and determine who is really responsible for illicit content. But part of the agreement to block the sites includes access to an image bank maintained by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. When an image with child porn is found, the Center logs it and creates a "digital identifier." Then, if the same image appears on another Web site it can be quickly identified, and even lead to the discovery of other child porn images. Use of this tool and searching method can aid ISPs and investigators as they seek to root out child pornographers.

This move comes at the same time an international effort is ramping up, with Britain, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Canada and New Zealand already directing their ISPs to create "black lists" of sites that host child porn, and spread terrorist information or racial hatred. The latest country to announce it will join this effort is France, which will have its blacklist in place by September.

Some ISPs, like AOL, have already put major effort into blocking child porn Web sites and message boards on their own. And some social networking sites, like MySpace and Facebook, have already worked with law enforcement to prevent child porn purveyors from making use of their services.

Together, Verizon, Sprint and Time Warner have about 16 million customers. [Source: The New York Times.]

WB Network To Live Again Online



Like one of the undead characters from the '90s hit TV show "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," the WB Network is rising from the grave. Yet this time its incarnation will be solely online and targeted to the 16-to-34 year girls and women with a penchant for the 'Slayer' and other former WB Network broadcast shows. The shows, including the likes of 'Gilmore Girls,' 'Smallville,' 'The O.C.' and 'Friends,' will be free to view and entirely advertising supported.

TheWB.com
and KidsWB.com will both have original content, some of it developed by Charlie's Angels movie director Joseph "McG" McGinty Nichol and also Josh Schwartz, executive producer of 'The O.C.' and 'Gossip Girl.' [Source: The New York Times]

Disclosure: Warner Television and Switched share a corporate parent, AOL/Time Warner.

Free & Cheap Wi-Fi for Everyone with FON

If you have a Wi-Fi-enabled laptop or device, chances are you occasionally get online through hotspots at airports and hotels. Chances are also good that you've seen some pretty high prices. A company called FON hopes to change that by bringing cheap public Wi-Fi to everyone. Thanks to a new deal with Time Warner, it just may succeed.

With FON, the idea is simple: Basically, you buy a FON wireless router from FON for $39.95, which you plug into your broadband connection. The router splits the Wi-Fi network in two: One is secure for your use only, and one is public that anyone within range can use.

Why would you want to share? Well, if you travel a lot or like to use Wi-Fi somewhere besides your home, you (as a FON member) get free access to any other FON member's Wi-Fi hotspot. Right now, the service is huge in Europe, but only has about 60,000 members in the U.S. The Time Warner deal, which will include the FON service built-in to select routers, should up the number of FON hotspots in this country significantly. What's more, you can rest easy knowing you won't get kicked off of your service, since many broadband providers frown upon the practice of blasting your Wi-Fi connection out to the public on purpose for anyone to use.

The good news is you don't have to be a FON member to use the hotspots -- non-members can connect to FON hotspots for just $2 or $3 a day.

It seems that Wi-Fi hotspots are never around when you need them, so here's hoping the FON deal with Time Warner is just the first of many similar deals here in the U.S.


From USA Today


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