by Terrence O'Brien on December 20, 2010 at 11:40 AM

The Conservative Party in the U.K. is pushing for ISPs to start filtering content at the source, blocking pornography by default. The plan is being promoted by Conservative MP Claire Perry and Communications Minister Ed Vaizey. Unsurprisingly, children are being cited as the reason for all the hubbub, as the party wants to protect British youngsters from being exposed to sexually explicit content ...
by Amar Toor on July 14, 2010 at 04:15 PM

What do you call a porn-free Internet? Here, we'd say "our worst nightmare," (bad-um), but for Indonesian web surfers, they might soon have to call it "reality." That's because the world's most populous country of Muslim majority is planning on invoking an anti-pornography law to restrict any online fun smut that might soil its citizens' computers.
Gatot Dewa Broto, a spokesman for Indonesia's ...
by Amar Toor on June 23, 2010 at 04:00 PM

Hackers are, by definition, a strange breed. But few are quite as disturbing as 31-year-old Luis Mijangos, who has been charged with extorting sexually explicit images and videos from a women he targeted with malware. According to federal prosecutors, Mijangos scoured peer-to-peer networks for his targets, to whom he sent malicious software disguised as MP3s. Once opened, the file would infect his ...
by Amar Toor on June 7, 2010 at 11:10 AM

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What do you have to do to leave your mark on Major League Baseball's official site? You could hit your local batting cage, weight room, or Mexican pharmacy. Or, you could just flood the site's messageboards with porn, as a group of knuckleheaded knuckleballers recently did.
Since July 2009, MLB's message boards have been flooded by dozens of "threatening, abusive, obscene, vulgar, ...
by Amar Toor on May 20, 2010 at 10:30 AM

If you really want to get to the bottom of a particular subculture, you've really got to immerse yourself in it. With this in mind, then, a group of five security "researchers" studying the online porn industry recently decided to live the dream bite the bullet, and create their very own adult site.
In their paper, which will be presented at The Ninth Workshop on the Economics of Information ...
by Warren Riddle on May 10, 2010 at 11:56 AM

Highlights from this morning's other big tech headlines....
Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales recently turned snitch on his former Wiki-compatriots, but he probably won't make too many enemies for doing so (outside of the Wikimedia Commons circles, at least). Wales reportedly alerted federal authorities to the presence of child pornography under two separate Commons categories, saying "I ...
by Warren Riddle on January 16, 2010 at 04:36 PM

One of the first and most obvious truisms of advertising is that "sex sells." When said sex is on a billboard, and extremely graphic, it also apparently stops traffic. According to FOX News, "traffic jerked to a standstill" in Moscow last night when hardcore pornographic footage was broadcast on two downtown billboard video screens.
The screens are professionally operated by ad firm Panno.ru, ...
by Terrence O'Brien on December 7, 2009 at 02:25 PM

Matthew White, of Sacramento, California, has found himself in a rather unfortunate situation; he's been accused of downloading child pornography. On the advice of his public defender, White is pleading guilty in hopes of cutting his potential 20-year sentence down to three and a half years. After serving his time, White will have to serve 10 years of probation and register as a sex offender.
...
by Terrence O'Brien on November 9, 2009 at 01:21 PM

Malware and viruses have a lot of tricks up their sleeves -- from stealing passwords and harvesting credit card information, to simply destroying data and crashing PCs. But of all those nasty abilities, the worst and most confounding is the ability to secretly load a PC with child pornography.
It's difficult to understand the motives for dumping boatloads of child pornography on the hard drives ...
by Terrence O'Brien on September 16, 2009 at 12:41 PM

Governments and the Internet go together like water and vinegar. When world leaders aren't accidentally posting sensitive information about their country's nuclear sites, or "losing" hundreds of e-mails connected to an ongoing legal investigation, they're often breaking video-sharing sites, or blocking services like RSS altogether. One branch of the U.S. government was even without Internet access ...
by Leila Brillson on September 5, 2009 at 05:01 PM

To the easily flustered: avert your eyes. Swedish director Mia Engberg has produced 12 short films that she dubs, as oxymoronic as it sounds, 'feminist porn,' the AFP reports. Artsy, with slow close-ups of men and women, lots of laughter and 'unsexy' imagery like hugging, 'Dirty Diaries' -- as the series is called -- hopes to celebrate sexuality, not please men. Enterprising, and not without ...
by Leila Brillson on July 10, 2009 at 03:07 PM

Whether you overindulge in it or find it morally repulsive, the pornography industry and technology have a very, well, intimate relationship. When the world was deciding between VHS and Betamax, the adult industry chose VHS, and everyone listened. Hopefully, this trend doesn't cross over into content, because, as the New York Times reports, the Web is destroying the creativity behind pornography. ...
by Kendra Cunningham on June 2, 2009 at 06:01 PM

Just this week, Microsoft introduced Bing, a new search engine, to the world. Despite some positive reviews, the Google competitor is already stirring up controversy. It turns out that, with just a few simple clicks in the site's security settings, videos can be previewed from within Bing's search results. So, what's all the hoopla about? Any video can be played, which means pornography can be ...
by Terrence O'Brien on April 25, 2009 at 06:11 AM

We're not sure exactly what Brad Williams, the now-former IT director for the city of Norcross, Georgia, could have been thinking if he in fact did as he's been alleged to do -- used his work computer to download some 24,466 pornographic images. As part of an investigation into William's poor job performance, monitoring software was loaded on his office PC, eventually revealing the ...
by Evan Shamoon on March 13, 2009 at 05:32 PM

In a move we can only assume is being made somewhat begrudgingly, Linden Lab, the company that makes the persistent online universe 'Second Life,' has announced that it's going to start cracking down on the game's seedy underbelly. Various measures are being implemented to take the edge off: All "adult" services and sales will take place inside a predetermined section of the 'Second Life' ...