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Germany OKs a new law to fight child porn
GERMAN Chancellor Angela Merkel's Cabinet approved a new law yesterday to require the vast majority of the country's Internet service providers to block child-pornography sites.
The new law obliges all providers with more than 10,000 customers - 97 percent of all the providers - to block porn sites identified by the German Federal Criminal Office that feature minors.
Criminal authorities will regularly update lists of illegal sites and pass them to providers. Viewers who try to access such sites will encounter a red sign reading "STOP!"
The goal is to "dry up the market for child pornography as much as possible," said Economy Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg.
Under the new law, providers can also gather personal data to be used in criminal cases against viewers.
Minister of Justice Brigitte Zypries said this data will not be archived. Once tipped off, investigators will only monitor those trying to access the sites "in real time," she said.
"An abused child is behind each picture and each film," the Cabinet said in a statement outlining the legislation. Police statistics show an 111 percent increase in Germans viewing child pornography from 2,936 cases recorded in 2006 to 6,206 in 2007, according to the statement.
The Cabinet's decision comes on the heels of a high-profile child-porn bust. Security officials in the southwestern state of Baden-Wuerttemberg said last week they had broken up an international child-porn ring implicating alleged viewers in 91 countries including Brazil, Canada and the United States. Authorities confiscated more than 500 computers in raids across the country.
In the wake of the investigation, five of Germany's largest providers agreed yesterday to block child-porn sites on government blacklists within the next six months. The new legislation will expand those obliged to block child porn sites to virtually all providers.
The new law obliges all providers with more than 10,000 customers - 97 percent of all the providers - to block porn sites identified by the German Federal Criminal Office that feature minors.
Criminal authorities will regularly update lists of illegal sites and pass them to providers. Viewers who try to access such sites will encounter a red sign reading "STOP!"
The goal is to "dry up the market for child pornography as much as possible," said Economy Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg.
Under the new law, providers can also gather personal data to be used in criminal cases against viewers.
Minister of Justice Brigitte Zypries said this data will not be archived. Once tipped off, investigators will only monitor those trying to access the sites "in real time," she said.
"An abused child is behind each picture and each film," the Cabinet said in a statement outlining the legislation. Police statistics show an 111 percent increase in Germans viewing child pornography from 2,936 cases recorded in 2006 to 6,206 in 2007, according to the statement.
The Cabinet's decision comes on the heels of a high-profile child-porn bust. Security officials in the southwestern state of Baden-Wuerttemberg said last week they had broken up an international child-porn ring implicating alleged viewers in 91 countries including Brazil, Canada and the United States. Authorities confiscated more than 500 computers in raids across the country.
In the wake of the investigation, five of Germany's largest providers agreed yesterday to block child-porn sites on government blacklists within the next six months. The new legislation will expand those obliged to block child porn sites to virtually all providers.
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