
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/1 ... 05916.html
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Now... the problem becomes... differentiating between a hijacked browser redirect "viewing" and an intentional "dirty old man" viewing. If you can split that hair, then you catch the criminals without wrongfully incriminating you and me.some images in his computer cache, temporary files automatically stored from sites he viewed, cannot be held against him under state law.
In addition to popups and redirects, the cached images could've come from ads and not the "content" (I use that word very loosely here).RoyGBiv wrote:How many times has something you clicked on redirected you to a shocking web site unexpectedly.?
I agree with this part of the ruling..Now... the problem becomes... differentiating between a hijacked browser redirect "viewing" and an intentional "dirty old man" viewing. If you can split that hair, then you catch the criminals without wrongfully incriminating you and me.some images in his computer cache, temporary files automatically stored from sites he viewed, cannot be held against him under state law.
Ah, well that's a little different...puma guy wrote:Having a pop-up appear is not what the judge referenced in her ruling.
"Judge Victoria A. Graffeo simplified things, writing, "The purposeful viewing of child pornography on the internet is now legal in New York."
Seeking out and seeing something, promotes people to make the item. Making the item harms children.Rex B wrote:From a legal standpoint, the ruling seems proper.
How can just seeing something be illegal?
Exactly correct even though most of us don't like the end result in the real world. "Possession" is the key and without downloading something it's impossible to prove "possession." If it were otherwise, as others have mentioned, anyone could be criminally responsible for unintentional redirecting, Internet viruses (as opposed to email), etc.Rex B wrote:From a legal standpoint, the ruling seems proper.
How can just seeing something be illegal?
I was thinking about this as it could relate to national security. Unauthorized viewing of classified documents is a crime, but passing the information to the enemy could be treason.Rex B wrote:From a legal standpoint, the ruling seems proper.
How can just seeing something be illegal?
You can't view an image (or any document) on a computer without downloading it. If the computer doesn't download the data, there's nothing to display. How do they discern whether it was downloaded intentionally or accidentally?Charles L. Cotton wrote:Exactly correct even though most of us don't like the end result in the real world. "Possession" is the key and without downloading something it's impossible to prove "possession." If it were otherwise, as others have mentioned, anyone could be criminally responsible for unintentional redirecting, Internet viruses (as opposed to email), etc.Rex B wrote:From a legal standpoint, the ruling seems proper.
How can just seeing something be illegal?
As they say in real estate, location, location, location.Dave2 wrote:You can't view an image (or any document) on a computer without downloading it. If the computer doesn't download the data, there's nothing to display. How do they discern whether it was downloaded intentionally or accidentally?Charles L. Cotton wrote:Exactly correct even though most of us don't like the end result in the real world. "Possession" is the key and without downloading something it's impossible to prove "possession." If it were otherwise, as others have mentioned, anyone could be criminally responsible for unintentional redirecting, Internet viruses (as opposed to email), etc.Rex B wrote:From a legal standpoint, the ruling seems proper.
How can just seeing something be illegal?
This is the crux of the issue. The browser will store the images in cache memory when you go to a page, but you haven't actually downloaded them to save them yourself. I have accidentally gone to sites I did not intend to go to. One good example is http://www.whitehouse.gov" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;. I accidentally went to http://www.whitehouse.com" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;. It is unregistered now, but used to be a porn site. Funny thing is, I did this during the Clinton administration, so wasn't sure I had gone to the wrong site at first.jmorris wrote:As they say in real estate, location, location, location.
If it's in the browser's cache a reasonable assumption is that the browser saved it as part of fetching a page. If it's in the user's documents, pictures, download, etc folder that he controls then the reasonable assumption is that the user saved it.