Child Porn Onion

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Child Porn Onion
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Internet searches for child abuse images will be blocked for the first time by Microsoft and Google after months of mounting pressure.
New software is to be introduced that will automatically block 100,000 “unambiguous” search terms which lead to illegal content, Google chief executive Eric Schmidt told the Daily Mail.
UK Prime Minister David Cameron hailed the decision by the two internet giants as “significant progress” after the companies had insisted that it “couldn’t be done, shouldn’t be done”.
The restrictions will be launched in the UK first, before being expanded to other English-speaking countries and 158 other languages in the next six months.
A further 13,000 search terms linked with child sex abuse will flash up with warnings from Google and charities warning the user that the content could be illegal and pointing them towards help.
Cameron told the newspaper that child protection experts drew up the list of unique search terms which would undoubtedly lead to sex abuse images and videos.
“If you used these, you were looking for child abuse images online,” he said.
“At the time, Google and Microsoft – who cover 95 per cent of the market – said blocking search results couldn’t be done, that it shouldn’t be done.
“They argued that it was against the very principle of the internet and search engines to block material, even if there was no doubt that some of the search terms being used by paedophiles were abhorrent in a modern society.
“I did not accept that then and I do not accept that now.”
Calls for the internet companies to take action against searching for illegal content reached boiling point following the trials of child killers Mark Bridger and Stuart Hazel earlier this year.
Bridger, who murdered five-year-old April Jones, and Hazel, who killed 12-year-old Tia Sharp, both used the internet to search for child- abuse images before the killings.
Cameron told the newspaper: “We learnt from cases like the murder of Tia Sharp and April Jones that people will often start accessing extreme material via a simple search in one of the mainstream engines.”
Schmidt said Google has been working with Microsoft, which owns the Bing search engine, and law enforcement agencies since the summer following strong warnings from the UK Government to take action.
“We’ve listened and, in the last three months, put more than 200 people to work developing new, state-of-the-art technology to tackle the problem,” he said.
“We’ve fine-tuned Google Search to prevent links to child sexual abuse material from appearing in our results.
“While no algorithm (instructions for software) is perfect – and Google cannot prevent paedophiles adding new images to the web – these changes have cleared up the results for over 100,000 queries that might be related to the sexual abuse of kids.”
Google’s new technology will also be able to remove up to thousands of copies of an illegal video in one hit.
When a child abuse video is discovered, the software can attach a unique code to it which can remove all copies from the web.
The system is also designed to identify new code words or terms paedophiles start to use and can block search results for these too.
The measures were revealed yesterday by Google and Microsoft ahead of a cyber summit on online child abuse at Downing Street.
Cameron said he will work with the National Crime Agency to monitor the effectiveness of the new technology and is prepared to resort to law if it fails to work.
“If the search engines are unable to deliver on their commitment to prevent child abuse material being returned from search terms used by paedophiles, I will bring forward legislation that will ensure it happens,” he said. “There are some terms that are so shocking and unambiguous that I believe they should return nothing at all.
“It’s not an infringement of free speech, it’s responsible business practice.”
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PA Media, formerly the Press Association, is the national news agency of the United Kingdom and Ireland.
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Australasian Science July/August 2019
Australasian Science: Australia's authority on science since 1938
By Roderic Broadhurst, Emeritus Professor, Australian National University
Child sexual abuse material is rampant online, despite considerable efforts by big tech companies and governments to curb it. And according to reports, it has only become more prevalent during the COVID-19 pandemic.
This material is largely hosted on the anonymous part of the internet — the “darknet” - where perpetrators can share it with little fear of prosecution. There are currently a few platforms offering anonymous internet access, including i2p , FreeNet and Tor .
Tor is by far the largest and presents the biggest conundrum. The open-source network and browser grants users anonymity by encrypting their information and letting them escape tracking by internet service providers.
Online privacy advocates including Edward Snowden have championed the benefits of such platforms, claiming they protect free speech, freedom of thought and civil rights. But they have a dark side, too.
The Tor Project was initially developed by the US Navy to protect online intelligence communications, before its code was publicly released in 2002. The Tor Project’s developers have acknowledged the potential to misuse the service which, when combined with technologies such as untraceable cryptocurrency , can help hide criminals.



Read more:
Explainer: what is the dark web?



Tor is an overlay network that exists “on top” of the internet and merges two technologies. The first is the onion service software. These are the websites, or “onion services”, hosted on the Tor network. These sites require an onion address and their servers’ physical locations are hidden from users.
The second is Tor’s privacy-maximising browser. It enables users to browse the internet anonymously by hiding their identity and location. While the Tor browser is needed to access onion services, it can also be used to browse the “surface” internet.
Accessing the Tor network is simple. And while search engine options are limited (there’s no Google), discovering onion services is simple, too. The BBC , New York Times, ProPublica, Facebook, the CIA and Pornhub all have a verified presence on Tor, to name a few.
Service dictionaries such as “The Hidden Wiki” list addresses on the network, allowing users to discover other (often illicit) services.
The number of onion services active on the Tor network is unknown, although the Tor Project estimates about 170,000 active addresses. The architecture of the network allows partial monitoring of the network traffic and a summary of which services are visited. Among the visited services, child sex abuse material is common.
Of the estimated 2.6 million users that use the Tor network daily, one study reported only 2% (52,000) of users accessed onion services. This suggests most users access the network to retain their online privacy , rather than use anonymous onion services.
That said, the same study found from a single data capture that about 80% of traffic to onion services was directed to services which did offer illegal porn, abuse images and/or child sex abuse material.
Another study estimated 53.4% of the 170,000 or so active onion domains contained legal content, suggesting 46.6% of services had content which was either illegal, or in a grey area.
Although scams make up a significant proportion of these services, cryptocurrency services, drug deals, malware, weapons, stolen credentials, counterfeit products and child sex abuse material also feature in this dark part of the internet.
Only about 7.5% of the child sex abuse material on the Tor network is estimated to be sold for a profit. The majority of those involved aren’t in it for money, so most of this material is simply swapped. That said, some services have started charging fees for content.
Several high-profile onion services hosting child sex abuse material have been shut down following extensive cross-jurisdictional law enforcement operations, including The Love Zone website in 2014, PlaypEn in 2015 and Child’s Play in 2017.
A recent effort led by German police, and involving others including Australian Federal Police, Europol and the FBI, resulted in the shutdown of the illegal website Boystown in May.
But one of the largest child sex abuse material forums on the internet (not just Tor) has evaded law enforcement (and activist) takedown attempts for a decade. As of last month it had 508,721 registered users. And since 2013 it has hosted over a million pictures and videos of child sex abuse material and abuse porn.
The paedophile (eroticisation of pre-pubescent children), haebephile (pubescent children) and ephebophile (adolescents) communities are among the early adopters of anonymous discussion forums on Tor. Forum members distribute media, support each other and exchange tips to avoid police detection and scams targeting them.
The WeProtect Alliance ’s 2019 Global Threat Assessment report estimated there were more than 2.88 million users on ten forums dedicated to paedophilia and paraphilia interests operating via onion services.
There are huge challenges for law enforcement trying to prosecute those who produce and/or distribute child sex abuse material online. Such criminal activity typically falls across multiple jurisdictions, making detection and prosecution difficult.
Undercover operations and novel online investigative techniques are essential. One example is targeted “hacks” which offer law enforcement back-door access to sites or forums hosting child sex abuse material.
Such operations are facilitated by cybercrime and transnational organised crime treaties which address child sex abuse material and the trafficking of women and children.
Given the volatile nature of many onion services, a focus on onion directories and forums may help with harm reduction. Little is known about child sex abuse material forums on Tor, or the extent to which they influence onion services hosting this material.
Apart from coordinating to avoid detection, forum users can also share information about police activity, rate onion service vendors, share sites and expose scams targeting them.
The monitoring of forums by outsiders can lead to actionable interventions, such as the successful profiling of active offenders. Some agencies have explored using undercover law enforcement officers, civil society, or NGO experts (such as from the WeProtect Global Alliance or ECPAT International ) to promote self-regulation within these groups.
While there is a lack of research on this, reformed or recovering offenders can also provide counsel to others. Some sub-forums seek to offer education, encourage treatment and reduce harm — usually by focusing on the legal and health issues associated with consuming child sex abuse material, and ways to control urges and avoid stimuli.
Other contraband services also play a role. For instance, onion services dedicated to drug, malware or other illicit trading usually ban child sex abuse material that creeps in.
Why does the Tor network allow such abhorrent material to remain, despite extensive opposition — sometimes even from those within these groups? Surely those representing Tor have read complaints in the media, if not survivor reports about child sex abuse material.
Roderic Broadhurst has received funding for a variety of research projects on cybercrime and darknet markets from the Australian Research Council, Australian Institute of Criminology, Korean institute of Criminology and, the Australian Criminology Research Council. Since April 2019 he has served on the Australian Centre to Counter Child Exploitation Research Working Group.
Matthew Ball does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Originally published in The Conversation .

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Child pornography website later operated by Australian police as a sting operation

^ Jump up to: a b c Håkon F. Høydal, Einar Otto Stangvik and Natalie Remøe Hansen. "VG exposed the largest child sexual abuse forum. It was run by the police" . VG Nett . Archived from the original on 2018-01-10 . Retrieved 2018-01-23 .

^ Jump up to: a b Brad Hunter (2017-10-12). "Canadian man was king of kiddie porn" . Toronto Sun . Retrieved 2018-01-23 .

^ C. Aliens (October 16, 2017). "Task Force Argos Operated a Darknet Child Abuse Forum for 11 Months" . DeepDotWeb . Archived from the original on January 24, 2018 . Retrieved 2018-01-23 .

^ Jump up to: a b Knaus, Christopher (2017-10-07). "Australian police sting brings down paedophile forum on dark web" . The Guardian . Retrieved 2018-01-25 .

^ McInnes, William (2017-10-08). "Queensland police take over world's largest child porn forum in sting operation" . Brisbane Times . Retrieved 2018-01-25 .

^ Jump up to: a b Maria Knoph Vigsnæs, Håkon F. Høydal, Einar Otto Stangvik, and Natalie Remøe Hansen. "UNICEF: – Clear violation of UN children's convention" . Verdens Gang . Retrieved 2018-01-23 . {{ cite news }} : CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( link )

^ Håkon F. Høydal, Einar Otto Stangvik, and Natalie Remøe Hansen. "– Police acting as judges" . Verdens Gang . Retrieved 2018-01-23 . {{ cite news }} : CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list ( link )

^ Jump up to: a b "Four Men Sentenced to Prison for Engaging in a Child Exploitation Enterprise on the Tor Network" . United States Department of Justice . 12 August 2019.

^ Dustin Godfrey and Kristi Patton (2018-01-09). "Child exploitation forum moderator in Penticton sentenced to five years - Kelowna Capital News" . Kelowna Capital News . Retrieved 2018-01-23 .

^ Cormack, Lucy (2017-11-24). "Former private school science teacher sentenced over child exploitation" . The Sydney Morning Herald . Retrieved 2018-01-23 .

^ "Subscribe to read | Financial Times" . Financial Times . 10 November 2019 . Retrieved 2020-04-13 . {{ cite news }} : Cite uses generic title ( help )

^ "Hunting Warhead - a CBC/VG podcast" .

^ "Hunting Warhead - CBC News" .



Tor
.onion domain
Tor2web
*Maintains additional presence on the surface web

Childs Play [ sic ] was a darknet child pornography website that operated from April 2016 to September 2017, which at its peak was the largest of its class. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] The site was concealed by being run as a hidden service on the Tor network . After running the site for the first six months, owner Benjamin Faulkner of Guelph , Ontario, Canada was captured by the United States Department of Homeland Security . For the remaining eleven months the website was owned and operated by the Australian Queensland Police Service 's Task Force Argos , as part of Operation Artemis .

The website was run by Australian police for 11 months, and involved impersonation of the forum owner WarHead (Faulkner's alias) which required police to regularly post child abuse images, in order to convince users that the site was not compromised. [1] [4] [6] Ivar Stokkereit, a legal adviser to the United Nations Children's Fund ( UNICEF ) in Norway, stated this was "a clear violation of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child , even though the police’s intention is to prevent new offenses in the long run". Amnesty International also criticized the actions as "unacceptable under human rights law". ECPAT (End Child Prostitution, Child Pornography and Trafficking of Children for Sexual Purposes) supported the proactive approach taken by Task Force Argos. [6]

James Sheptycki , professor in criminology at York University , criticized the transfer of the website from its original server in Europe to Australia as " jurisdiction shopping ", being done due to the favourable legal framework in Australia that would allow the website to continue running in this way. [7]

The capture of the site, and its subsequent use to gather information, has led to arrests and convictions:

In November 2019 the Canadian network CBC in collaboration with Norwegian VG ( Verdens Gang ) published a six-part podcast [11] [12] [13] called Hunting Warhead , chronicling the investigation by VG journalist Håkon Høydal and a Norwegian computer security expert of child sexual abuse networks on the dark web. In the course of the six episodes, CBC journalist Daemon Fairless examines the background of Benjamin Faulkner and the course of events that led to his capture.


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The offenders are paying a premium to watch the sexual abuse of children in the Philippines live on their screens, a sickening new report reveals.
Kelly Burke / Crime / Updated 19.02.2020
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More than 200 Australians have collectively paid more than $1.3 million to watch live streamed child sexual abuse filmed in the Philippines.
In the video above, a report in December found Facebook responsible for two thirds of all reported online child sex abuse
Watch the latest News on Channel 7 or stream for free on 7plus >>
And the offenders often request how they want the child to be sexually abused as the crimes are happening, a new report says.
The shocking statistics were revealed on Wednesday in a report by the Australian Institute of Criminology , which says it has identified more than 2,700 financial transactions linked to 256 webcam child predators between 2006 and 2018.
The institute said it matched the transactions using AUSTRAC (Australian Transaction Reports and Analy
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