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Senators Call for Universal Internet Filtering

Posted by samzenpus on Wed Jul 25, 2007 08:23 PM
from the welcome-to-your-new-child-friendly-web dept.
An Anonymous Coward writes "US senators today made a bipartisan call for the universal implementation of filtering and monitoring technologies on the Internet in order to protect children. Their statement came at the end of a Senate hearing in which civil liberties groups were not invited."
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  • Is Freenet ready yet? What do you mean they're still coding it in Java?

    • by bakana (918482) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:37PM (#19991659)
      Why do people think it is okay to put the responsibility of the parent onto the government? The parent isn't supposed to just take away access to a TV or Computer; they are supposed to instill discipline and judgment into their child. Even if I was in a room with three TVs and two computers; if I were told by my parent not to turn either of them on, I didn't. Not because I was the model child and didn't get into trouble, but because I was taught that every action has a consequence. We had the old Tandy 1000s in my school, and if you didn't follow the rules you didn't get to play. When the rules were broken there were consequences and we quickly learned to try to not break the rules. We were also taught about dangers and why we shouldn't do things. Stop trying to put your parental responsibility on the government. Do it yourself or don't have children.
      • It's more closely tied to your second point but even that's just PR spin and campaign hype.

        The majority of the push for this sort of thing is money. The allocations of taxpayer money to devote to these pet filtering and monitoring projects will be huge. One particular military subcontractor, Battelle, was already building an _ENORMOUS_ datacenter in Aberdeen, MD, when I left in '07. Why were they building? Most people working at the (existing) tiny site new that it would be mostly devoted to computer science technology but few people knew exactly what. The inside word was that there were going to be enormous contracts coming down the line for processing, indexing, storing, retrieving, and minin gargantuan amounts of data.

        Politicians and top-level businessmen work together for years to figure out how to grant themselves a huge chunk of the taxpayer pie. When the news releases start making it to the headlines it's not a matter for debate anymore--it's after the fact justification. The insider trading knowledge that these folks have, by being able to both write the laws and determine the size of the checks and decide to whom the checks are written, is a golden gift from God for the gravy train.
      • by dircha (893383) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:05PM (#19991319)
        "Are they completely aware the program won't do one damned thing to solve any problem, but the propose it anyway just so they can put a blurb in their campaign ads about how they protect children."

        Well you don't have to look far, when voting against a measure like this will guarantee that next election cycle your opponent will run a black and white ad with ominous music saying, "Sen. Jim Bob wants to protect the rights of sexual predators to contact your children on the internet!"

        House races especially are dirty like this. This crap happens all the time, I've even seen it in live debates.

        And you want to know the really sad part? A lot of voters eat this stuff up. If you're average Soccer Mom Susie, all of a sudden you're not sure you can trust the candidate anymore, and if you already hated the candidate, well now he or she is the devil himself.

      • by SQLz (564901) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:29PM (#19991591) Homepage Journal
        Kids are seeing boobies. Is that the world you want to live in!
        • by WeblionX (675030) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:47PM (#19991735) Homepage Journal
          As long as I don't have to see the kids.
        • Is that the world you want to live in!

          Not just yes, but Hell Yes! The human body is nothing to be ashamed of, though specific people should be ashamed of thier own body.

          Falcon
        • by Lavene (1025400) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @11:53PM (#19992739)

          Kids are seeing boobies. Is that the world you want to live in!
          Sometimes I really wonder what's going on inside the heads of those deciding whats inappropriate or not. I watched an American program about an animal clinic on TV the other night and they blurred the dogs penis and anus???? Who, for the love of Jebus, will suffer any damage from seeing a dog's penis? Who would, unless he/ she already is greatly disturbed, even think there is a need to blur animal genitalia?
          • by Knutsi (959723) on Thursday July 26 2007, @02:15AM (#19993485)
            I sometimes wonder if all the drama and secrecy surrounding such things are worse for the kids than actually seeing the real deal. It makes it tempting, and fosters an unnatural attitude towards if. There are loads of cultures where kids grow up seeing boobies, sex and all kinds of "taboos" without going mental.

            It's like when parents get divorced. I, and most of those I know with divorced parents lived happily with parents in separate places, but the _drama_ surrounding the actual divorce hurt some. Those where the parents split up as friends had no problems, since they had a relaxed attitude towards it.

            When we treat something natural as sacrilege, we get messed up! Just look at all those priests abusing kids...

            On a semi-related note, I also remember seeing a great play called "Blackbird" once, that talk about a sexual abuse case. The question raised by the play is whether the court case, the police interrogation, the parents crying, the need for discretion and forcing the kid to lie to his/her friends did far more damage than the act itself could ever have. Worth having a look at when you feel like screaming "Somebody think of the children!" (thank you, South Park, for this amazing quote).

            Note to those who wish to derail the argument: the last example is not to condone abuse of kids, but rather to poke at the way we go about handling such things once they happen.

      • Well, consider the people involved. From TFA:

        Commerce Committee Chairman Daniel K. Inouye (D-Hawaii) and Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee Vice Chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) both argued that Internet was a dangerous place where parents alone will not be able to protect their children.
        For those not keeping track at home, that's Daniel "1.3%" Inouye* and Ted "Series of Tubes" Stevens. Not exactly the two sharpest knives in the drawer, particularly on technology issues. They're both 'zombie politicians,' kept around by their respective constituencies only because their seniority puts them in positions to funnel pork-barrel projects back home.

        * Referring, of course, to Inouye's absolutely dismal record at actually getting anything passed, or for that matter, even supporting anything that gets passed. Of 289 bills he sponsored since Jan 21, 1997, only FOUR have become law. And for that, I think we can all be grateful. (source [govtrack.us])
          • Every once in a while when there's a discussion about the latest ".xxx" or ".porn" TLD, the idea of a ".kids" or ".kids.[countrycode]" domain comes up. (Actually I think ".kids.us" already exists, there's just very little there.)

            While I still think it's a conceptually flawed idea, it's at least better than trying to either censor or round up all of the 'smut' and put it into some sort of a blacklist. Fundamentally, if you're trying to make a 'clean internet,' whitelists are the way to go; not blacklists.

            Putting the 'kids' domain under the CC TLDs is even better, because it avoids having to create some sort of international consensus on what's appropriate for children, which isn't feasible. Whatever the Congresscritters decide is OK for kids (violence = okay!, sex = bad!) in the U.S. can get into .kids.us, and what's OK for kids in France goes in .kids.fr (though I doubt they'd call it "kids"...) and people can restrict access based on their personal values. Enforcement takes place at the name-registrar level; if you don't comply to the standards for that domain, the registration gets pulled.

            The problem with this is is that it's a solution looking for a problem that most people really don't seem to care about.
  • by Tuoqui (1091447) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:26PM (#19990901) Journal
    is that any argument that invokes 'Think of the Children' automatically loses. We grew up in a dangerous world, so will they. Its up to the parents to monitor what they're doing not the state.
    • by TubeSteak (669689) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:58PM (#19991247) Journal

      We grew up in a dangerous world, so will they. Its up to the parents to monitor what they're doing not the state.
      "We" grew up in a dangerous internet enabled world.
      "They" (Senators/Congress/most parents) didn't.

      Parents used to know the locals in their neighborhood and that was enough to adequately monitor their children. Now the neighborhood is everyone on the internet.

      Some of their fears are legitimate, so don't dismiss them out of hand.
      "We" just need to make sure they don't do anything rash.
      • by TapeCutter (624760) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:39PM (#19991665) Journal
        When I was a kid in the 60's one of the first books I remember reading and being totally absorbed by was called A wrinkle in time [wikipedia.org]. A few years ago I was dismayed to find out that it was #32 on a list of books most frequently banned by US schools.

        The thing I remeber most about the book is that it was an excellent and entertaining introduction to basic physics and geometry, apparently the thing that the "censors" disliked the most was the fact that witches were involved.

        Seems to me that this kind of censorship can only end in tears. I could see an exception being make is for explicit (pre-pubecent) kiddy-porn, snuff-films and the like, since the material itself is evidence of a vile crime. OTOH: Leaving that material up has proven to be an excellent way to track down highly organised child abuse (re: Denmark in the 90's).

        As a parent who kids are now adults, I agree that parents do/did have ligitimate concerns but somewhere in the back of my head is a voice that says Murdoch has more to do with this than your average parent. ("29,000 perverts deleted from MySpace" - today's coincidental headline).

        As for growing up in a "dangerous world", I can assure you that what was "normal" behaviour in the 60's towards kids would now land you in jail.
      • by Firehed (942385) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:40PM (#19991675) Homepage
        Oh big deal. If you can't teach your kid not to get in a stranger's car, you've failed at parenting. The threats haven't changed, just the rules. Learn them, and teach your kids accordingly.
      • by Shihar (153932) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @10:49PM (#19992271)
        We grew up (Rather I did [I'm 22]) without the internet. Even when it really started to boom it was not near as bad as it is today. The world is alot more dangerous today then when I was a kid. Hell I could walk to school without fear or rape or something like that.

        This is a good hearty laugh. You are safer today than you ever were. Your generation will live longer then any of the humans that came before you, you most likely you are going to die of a very mundane and boring age related disease. Want to talk about scary? Imagine a world where stepping on a nail is potentially lethal, a scrap can lead to an amputated arm, you can die of a sore throat, or you are a few minutes away from nuclear Armageddon.

        What do you have to worry about today? Over eating or smoking. Yeah, that is right... the thing to most likely kill you is stuffing too much food down your gullet or a voluntary behavior. Oh god, the horror... the horror. Your pool is dramatically more likely to kill you than a terrorist. You stand a far better chance of being killed in a car accident than being murdered, and the rate of murder and rape in respect to the overall population has been on a nose dive since the 80s*.

        The only thing that has changed in this world is that you are far safer and far more likely to live to be a crotchety old bastard than ever before. We don't need politicians "protecting the children" and more than we ever have.

        *http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/05cius/data/table_01.html
  • Say what now? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Verteiron (224042) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:27PM (#19990911) Homepage
    From TFA:
    "While filtering and monitoring technologies help parents to screen out offensive content and to monitor their child's online activities, the use of these technologies is far from universal and may not be fool-proof in keeping kids away from adult material," Sen. Inouye said. "In that context, we must evaluate our current efforts to combat child pornography and consider what further measures may be needed to stop the spread of such illegal material over high-speed broadband connections."

    How does he jump from kids seeing pr0n to pr0n of kids? Is this a special type of logic you learn when you get into politics?

    • Re:Say what now? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by greg_barton (5551) * <.greg_barton. .at. .yahoo.com.> on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:46PM (#19991127) Homepage Journal

      Is this a special type of logic you learn when you get into politics?

      Yep. It's called juxtaposition. See "Al Qaeda in Iraq"
    • Re:Say what now? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by wytcld (179112) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:59PM (#19991265) Homepage

      How does he jump from kids seeing pr0n to pr0n of kids?

      He doesn't understand that the computer's not watching him. So then if "kids are being exploited online" ... and as an occasional porn surfer I can testify that the kiddie porn is nowhere some curious kid is at all likely to find it, or adult is at all likely to stumble on by mistake - which is to say I've no idea where it is because obviously those who trade it are well aware they need to hide and keep their groups small. But I digress. In the senator's mind the computer must be directly exploiting kids by luring them to sites where dirty old men instruct the kid to disrobe in front of the computer, while they beam the kids performance out to all their dirty old friends. Or something.

      In other words the senator has no friggin idea what being online is actually like. The worst that happens is some 13 year olds find a few videos of adults at orgies. I've overheard the neighbor kids talking about that as they walk down the street. It's a curiousity, but obviously doesn't mean a lot to them. It wouldn't bother me if that stuff was blocked from such kids, but it doesn't bother me that it's not. It was just in the news that porn site revenues have taken a steep drop in the last year. It seems that our culture's been so saturated with the stuff that people just aren't motivated to buy it like they used to. Maybe the senators figure if they can create a more restrictive environment again, it'll revive the porn industry.

      After all, that's worked well with recreational drugs.

      • Ha! (Score:5, Insightful)

        You said "Research" and "Ted Stevens" in the same sentence...I don't know if you remember, but this is Ted "The internet is a series of tubes" Stevens, the guy knows flat nothing about technology...Hell, he probably thinks this is technically feasible, when anyone with a networking background would just start laughing.

        Hopefully fossils like him will just die off or (even better) get thrown out of office and replaced by people who aren't utterly clueless. Our only hope in this situation is for him to kick off, unfortunately, because he'll never stop winning in Alaska as long as he keeps up with the "Bridge to Nowhere" pork projects.
  • 1984 much? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jshriverWVU (810740) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:28PM (#19990913)
    Orwell must be looking down and shaking his head.
  • by JimXugle (921609) <Jim@xu[ ].com ['gle' in gap]> on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:29PM (#19990923)
    I would like to make a bipartisan call for the universal firing of every congress critter who supports this idea in order to protect us from stupidity. Congressmen are not invited to comment on this request.
  • Ironic Tubes (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Digitus1337 (671442) <lk_digitus AT hotmail DOT com> on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:31PM (#19990951) Homepage
    Anyone else notice that this is being headed by Senator Ted Stevens? Why is anyone listening to him about this kind of a thing?
    • Re:Ironic Tubes (Score:5, Insightful)

      by MillionthMonkey (240664) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:58PM (#19991255)
      Why is anyone listening to him about this kind of a thing?

      Hopefully nobody. But Ted has to keep talking. He's got some interesting things going on right now [adn.com] and it's best for him to keep the topic on children.

      It would be so much nicer if corrupt oil companies were to do a better job of wiring up unethical politicians' houses for Internet when doing them construction favors. We could have been spared all that tube talk. At least put in a kiddie filter for the guy, he's old.
  • COPA Part Deux? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by RancidPickle (160946) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:31PM (#19990953) Homepage
    They tried this, and COPA was gutted after the civil liberties folks got back in the loop. I wish Ted 'Series of Tubes' Stevens and Senator 5-0 would stop trying to govern parenting. Heck, isn't Stevens up against the wall for some illicit activities in Alaska? Looks like he can't even protect himself from himself, let alone watching out for other people's kids.

    Let parents deal with kids. If the parents can't do it, there are local resources that can help. Legislating to the family unit won't work. There are more important national things begging for attention, like getting a bridge built to a barely inhabited island in AK.
  • by intrico (100334) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:33PM (#19990975) Homepage
    Freedom is a THREAT to national security! //end sarcasm
  • "While filtering and monitoring technologies help parents to screen out offensive content and to monitor their child's online activities, the use of these technologies is far from universal and may not be fool-proof in keeping kids away from adult material," Sen. Inouye said.
    Or, to rephrase that:
    "There are ways for parents to keep their kids from the stuff we want to censor out, but we don't trust them to do it. Also, those darn kids are to sneaky for their parents to stop."

    Whatever happened to letting the parents do their job and parent?
      • I have a lingering feeling that I've been trolled one of the subtlest trolls I've ever seen. Hello, "Velvet Flamebait".

        I remember hearing on the radio that children as young as ten years old are learning how to bypass filtering.

        I find that to be somewhat encouraging, actually. Children as young as ten already know more about the Internet than Ted Stevens ever will! So maybe, in another 10 years or so, he'll lose his job and the world will be a better place.

        Perhaps we need ISPs willing to filter the web on their end for certain customers who request it?

        Mine is, actually, but that's not a solution. What that does is it means your kids will go to their friends' house, where you can't monitor them yourself. Or they'll get a DS or a PSP ("Playstation Pornable" was the sensationalist headline), even a laptop (for the schools that give them laptops), and hop on the neighbor's open wireless access point.

        Really, as a parent, you have three choices when it comes to "bad" influences:

        • Isolate. This is what you're trying to do. At one point, it worked -- you could move to Suburbia, where there's all kinds of friendly neighbors, and you could hide Playboy in the sock drawer, where the kids would never find it (or so you thought). You really could create a little bubble of security for them to grow up in, never mind that they'd be less equipped to deal with the real world.
        • Inoculate. Teach them your values. Actually teach them right from wrong. How you do this depends on your parenting style, but the idea is that even if they are exposed to material you don't approve of, they will know the correct response. In other words, a good kid might find that Playboy of yours, know he wasn't supposed to read it, and actually not open it.
        • Ignore. Don't sweat the small stuff. Maybe your kid finds that Playboy and reads it. Fine, it'll make the whole "birds and bees" talk easier. You don't have to like it, but it won't kill them, and this way, they will take you seriously when you tell them to stay the fuck away from child porn, snuff, drugs, etc.

        There's a lot more to parenting than that, of course. But you do need all three of those things.

        It's a lot harder to raise a kid in the inner city than it is in the suburbs, so you do want to at least do some geographical isolation. That way, even if they know about hookers from GTA, there aren't any around, unless you're really looking.

        More importantly: If they're really looking, they will find gangs, drugs, and sex. (Sex, drugs, and rock & roll.) Same with the Internet. If you are trying to fight a battle to keep them isolated, you will lose. The only sure way to prevent them from being corrupted by all the evil out there (or whatever you think will happen) is to make them incorruptible, and that is what I mean by "inoculate".

        And even more importantly: Give it up. I don't care how diehard of a Christian you are, I don't believe in a God who will send them to Hell just for looking at a naked body, or the act of love. (Well, sex, really, most porn isn't about love...) You also have to figure there is a fair chance that they will not become Christian -- or Muslim, or whatever your faith is, but that's really the point. And the list goes on...

        It's up to you where to draw the line, but I think if your child grows up to be happy, considerate, honest, productive, and successful -- maybe I forgot a few, but it's pretty simple -- in other words, if your child grows up to be a good person, you've done your job. For example: they may play violent videogames that you don't approve of -- but never even come close to hurting someone in reality. I call that a win.

  • by mariox19 (632969) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:37PM (#19991031)

    We have Republicans in Congress propositioning their same-sex underage pages, others sleeping with prostitutes, and a Democrat president a few years back getting frisky with his intern and a box of (contraband) Cuban cigars -- and all this makes it onto the news.

    Who's going to protect the children from being exposed to the examples from these pinnacles of morality?

  • by Jackie_Chan_Fan (730745) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:38PM (#19991049)
    This has nothing to do with the children... It has everything to do with complete control of YOU.

    VOTE 3rd party immediately.
  • Apparently so are the rest of them. Specifically the first and tenth....

    It's becoming increasingly apparent that the second might need to be taken out and exercised in the near future. :(
  • by dircha (893383) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @08:54PM (#19991201)
    "While filtering and monitoring technologies help parents to screen out offensive content and to monitor their child's online activities, the use of these technologies is far from universal and may not be fool-proof in keeping kids away from adult material"

    And the same can be said of the fucking postal system.

    While it's true that parents can screen the letters that arrive at and are sent from their home post office box to somewhat guard against their children using the postal system to solicit, receive, and exchange adult material, the practice of screening by parents is farm from universal and even when applied may not be fool-proof.

    We had better start filtering and monitoring all domestic mail as well. And, my God, what about international mail? We'll have to screen that for sure, maybe even just stop it all.

    And, and, ...oh God no!! What about satellite dishes and even shortwave! Those porn terrorists could be beaming it directly into our homes. Why if a minor were to come into the possession of a electro-magnetic wave receiving device, it could be the end of civilization as we know it!

  • Might This Be.. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by BlueStrat (756137) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:09PM (#19991365)
    Might this be the first step towards legislating mandatory adoption of Trusted Computing as a way of controlling the internet and content, using the tried-and-true "think of the children!" method of bulldozing reasoned opposition by those that prefer their computers do what *they* want, instead of what corporations and the government wants?

    For those unfamiliar, here's a link to an EFF page on Trusted Computing.

    http://www.eff.org/Infrastructure/trusted_computin g/20031001_tc.php [eff.org]

    Here's another link to an excellent piece by Ross Anderson.

    http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~rja14/tcpa-faq.html [cam.ac.uk]

    Not trying to be all tinfoil-hat-like, but it seems these days that it's trumped-up issues like this that precede an attempt to limit freedoms and increase control of the population. Awareness of these possibilities is the first and most important step to preventing a world none of us wants to live in.

    Cheers!

    Strat
  • by Software Geek (1097883) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:09PM (#19991367)
    RTFA! The senate did not, in fact, pass a law banning or filtering anything. They commissioned a study to propose alternatives. That is the politician's polite way of saying "I'm not going to do anything meaningful for you today. Come back in two years, after I get re-elected."

    Vote Quimby!
  • by Foamy (29271) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:22PM (#19991509)
    F--- the F'in Children already.

    Parents.

    Do

    Your

    F'in

    Jobs

    or better yet, don't breed 'em if you don't want the responsibility.
  • by NeverVotedBush (1041088) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:58PM (#19991825)
    It's the same thing as all the Patriot Act crap wasn't really for fighting terror, it was a wholesale monitoring of the US public by a paranoid administration. It's like calling wrecking the educational system "no child left behind". It's like a whole lot of what is going on these days -- call a violation of our civil liberties or Constitutional rights something that sounds patriotic or like it is protecting kids, or protecting 'Merca.

    Maybe they should just go ahead and call this what it really is - just another step towards a totalitarian police state.
  • by Animats (122034) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @11:55PM (#19992755) Homepage

    Sens. Stevens and Inyoue had a similar hearing last year. [senate.gov] Not much happened.

    This year, they heard fewer witnesses. [senate.gov] A summary:

    • Lauren Nelson, "Miss America 2007": "I am here today to ask you to please implement mandatory education on Internet Safety for all of our children."
    • Dr. David Finkelhor, Director, Crimes Against Children Research Center Horton Social Sciences Center, University of New Hampshire: "Online Sex Crimes against Juveniles: Myth and Reality" -- "Our research with youth suggests that giving out personal information is not what puts kids at risk. Nor does having a blog or a personal web site or frequenting My Space. What puts kids in danger for these crimes is being willing to talk about sex online with strangers, and having a pattern of multiple risky activities on the web -- going to sex sites and chat rooms, and interacting with lots of people there."
    • Ernie Allen, National Center for Missing and Exploited Children: Our mission: to follow the money. This new initiative is the Financial Coalition Against Child Pornography. First, we will aggressively seek to identify illegal child pornography sites with method of payment information attached. Then we will work with the credit card industry to identify the merchant bank. Then we will stop the flow of funds to these sites.
    • Christine Jones, General Counsel, GoDaddy: We do use our Universal Terms of Service broadly to cancel privacy when the Go Daddy Abuse Department determines it is being used for ANY improper purpose.

    The witnesses heard are reasonable ones. We used to see a big presence from the religious right at these things, but that's not happening this time. Nobody was asking for much on the legislative front.

    • Re:this is why (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ScrewMaster (602015) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:06PM (#19991329)
      Or as Lewis Black put it: "Republicans and Democrats, working together. The only thing stupider than a Republican, or a Democrat, is when these little pricks work together."
    • by Tony (765) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @09:31PM (#19991597) Homepage Journal
      I'd love to be a libertarian, but it seems I'd have to believe that the free market works, and corporations are free to do business however they wish.

      I wouldn't mind, assuming we returned corporations to a public charter system, in which a corporation may have its charter revoked if it is found to behave illegally. And, I'd like to see some vengeance against the to executives, and make it so if Kenneth Lay dies, we get to see his body so all the ex-Enron employees who were fleeced out of their retirement funds can piss in his cold dead mouth.

      'Cause I don't think he's dead.

      If the libertarians can promise me that, I'm a convert. 'Cause except for the whole trust-in-the-free-market thing, I'm mostly there.

      Actually, I'm a liberal anarcho-constitutionalist. But that's pretty damned close.
      • by tftp (111690) on Wednesday July 25 2007, @11:25PM (#19992567) Homepage
        YMMV or "it all depends", as they used to say in ancient Egypt. Physical activities come with a serious chance of lasting physical harm, whereas a virtual entertainment is as safe as it gets. Teens are driven by hormones and not by knowledge. A kid may get involved in something that police later calls a rape, what do you do then? (regardless of the gender of the kid in question.)

        It is definitely up to you to prefer one way or another for your children, but in my unqualified opinion there is nothing wrong with satisfying the temporary chemically induced desire with mere patterns of pixels. Even the most burning need can not withstand viewing of 10,000 pr0n photos that are easily available on Usenet or elsewhere. After the pressure dissipates the kid would be able to actually think before making a commitment. Hormones are a poor substitute for a well considered decision.

        It is, of course, possible to argue that one-sided attraction to computers (or their screens) is unhealthy. It may be so. But anything one-sided is unhealthy, and a parent should ensure that dangerous activities are done in VR and reasonably safe activities are done in real life, and not the other way around.

        • by StewedSquirrel (574170) on Thursday July 26 2007, @01:30AM (#19993259)
          Because raping a 17 year old is also a "sex offense" and so is a 16 year old snapping a picture of herself on the cell phone.

          Absurd?

          OK, we agree.

          A 15 year old?

          Abusrd?

          A 14 year old?

          Absurd? Questionable?

          a 12 year old? EXECUTE THE FUCKER!

          wait... what about a really big 12 year old.

          What about a really stupid 17 year old?

          Execute the fucker.

          Wait, I have an idea, lets take an extreme case (a 2 year old) and then use it to justify an entire argument.

          But wait... how many sex crimes are actually perpetrated against 2 year olds? 75% of "child sex crimes" are perpetrated against teenagers.

          Execute them?

          I'm confused.

          Mark Foley? Surely he's a schmuck. But.... execute the fucker?

          OK fine, but what about my best friend. He was 12 when he banged his friend's mom. He still talks about it like it's the freaking icing on the cake of his life and he's almost 30. Should she be executed?

          Where do you get off thinking there is some icon of "evil" and some glowing halo of "not evil" and you can automatically decide one gets death and the other gets a medal?

          Oh wait... your reaction was based on irrational, emotive impulse, not logic. I forgot.

          Stewed