Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×

Comment Re:Not aimed at abuse of minors (citation needed) (Score 1) 212

The point is not that they don't care at all about sexual abuse of minors, because of course they do, but they also have a (not so) hidden agenda against consensual adult sex work, which is why they made the law so much broader than it needed to be. Here is some reading on this from sex blogger Violet Blue. As others have also noted, this is just part of a bigger bipartisan war on sex that also places porn in the firing line.

Comment Re:Just wanted to point out the following: (Score 1) 212

Well in fact we are charging minors with sex offences, and that's something that Prostasia will be addressing. In many states, you can be charged as a minor for producing child pornography, by taking selfies for your boyfriend or girlfriend. As a result, you can end up on the sex offender registry, which can be for life (again, depending on the state). While the distribution of such selfies is a real problem, it's pure insanity for the young teens involved to be charged criminally.

Comment Re:Nice Name... (Score 1) 212

It means "protection" in Greek, as in, child protection. But yes, we've heard all the jokes already! The biggest factor with choosing a name for a new organization is often whether the associated domain names available. The fact that we could score both prostasia.org, prostasia.foundation, and prost.asia was what sold us on the name... despite the fact that people will make jokes.

Submission + - New child protection nonprofit strikes back at sex-negative approach of SESTA (youcaring.com)

qirtaiba writes: When the SESTA online sex trafficking bill passed last month, it sailed through Congress because there were no child protection organizations that stood against it, and because no Member of Congress (with the brave exceptions of Ron Wyden and Rand Paul) wanted to face re-election having opposed a bill against sex trafficking, despite its manifest flaws.

In the wake of the law's passage, its real targets—not child sex traffickers, but adult sex workers and the Internet platforms used by them—have borne the brunt of its effects. Website like the Erotic Review and Craigslist's personals section have either shut down entirely or for U.S. users, while Backpage.com has been seized, leaving many adult sex workers in physical and financial peril.

A new child protection organization, Prostasia Foundation, has just been announced, with the aim of taking a more sex-positive approach, that would allow it to push back against laws that really target porn or sex work, under the guise of being child protection laws. Instead, the organization promotes a research-based approach to the prevention of child sexual abuse before it happens. From the organization's press release:

Prostasia Director Jaylen MacLaren is a former child prostitute who used a website like this to screen her clients. She now recognizes those clients as abusers, but she does not blame the website for her suffering. “I am committed to preventing child sexual abuse, but I don’t believe that this should come at the cost of civil liberties and sexual freedom,” Jaylen said. “I have found ways to express my sexuality in consensual and cathartic ways.” ...

Nerea Vega Lucio, a member of the group’s Advisory Council, said “Child protection laws need to be informed by accurate and impartial research, and ensuring that policy makers have access to such research will be a top priority for Prostasia.”


Comment Can anyone confirm receiving such an email? (Score 1) 62

Is there anyone here (an anon please!) who received this supposed welcome email and can post the headers for us to see? Or are we supposed to take LEA's word for it? How would none of the thousands of Alphabay members not have noticed this email address and doxxed him earlier? Color me skeptical.

Comment Re:What article (Score 1) 523

I live in Malaysia and I can't agree with the "don't like Chinese people" part. You probably mean that "Malays" don't particularly like Chinese people (which may or may not be true; I'm not touching it). But as you've suggested, Malays are only one of the three ethnic groups that make up Malaysia; Chinese and Indians are the others. And in some parts of Malaysia, like Penang (beautiful place for a programmer to live!) Chinese are in the majority. There are also Chinese political parties who are strong in both the government and the opposition coalitions. Mostly the Malays and the Chinese get along fine, though they do have distinct cultural identities and people are relatively open with their gripes about the other cultures.

Comment This is a complete fiction (Score 5, Informative) 454

As any expert will tell you, none of these pie-in-the-sky proposals about the ITU taxing the Internet or the like have any chance of being pushed through. Even the US government itself doesn't take the risk seriously, except for political purposes like this. This is all just the latest step in a huge beat-up about something that could never happen. The motivation is just to distract from the real Internet governance changes that do need to happen, and that are being discussed much more sensibly in other fora (such as at the WSIS Forum last month in Geneva). That doesn't mean that we need to keep an eye the ITU, because it is true that it's a very secretive and closed organisation, but at least let's be honest about the risks.

Comment Re:The US made it (Score 2, Informative) 454

The US did not make the Internet. Quoting from this history, "The earliest pioneers included a Frenchman, Louis Pouzin, who introduced the idea of data grams and an Englishman, Donald W. Davies, who was one of the inventors of packet-switching. Another of the great pioneers in Britain was Peter T. Kirstein, who went to America at the beginning of the Arpanet in 1969 when it was decided that Davies could not go for reasons of national security." And of course as we all know Tim Berners-Lee, another Englishman, invented the web.

Slashdot Top Deals

Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo. - Andy Finkel, computer guy

Working...