Deep Web Child Porn

Deep Web Child Porn




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Deep Web Child Porn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

^ Jump up to: a b "Back in booming Lolita City: the online child pornography community is thriving" . Weirderweb.com. 6 June 2013. Archived from the original on 10 June 2013 . Retrieved 3 March 2015 .

^ "18 USC § 2256 - Definitions for chapter" . Legal Information Institute. 6 February 2013 . Retrieved 13 June 2013 .

^ "Coroners and Justice Act 2009 Part 2 Chapter 2 "Images of Children" " . legislation.gov.uk. 2009 . Retrieved 13 June 2013 .

^ Jump up to: a b Finklea, Kristin (7 July 2015). "Dark Web" (PDF) . Washington, D.C. : Congressional Research Service . Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 October 2021 . Retrieved 4 December 2021 – via University of North Texas Libraries . {{ cite journal }} : Cite journal requires |journal= ( help )

^ Gallagher, Sean (23 October 2011). "Anonymous takes down darknet child porn site on Tor network" . Ars Technica . Retrieved 10 February 2012 .

^ Liebowitz, Matt (3 November 2011). "Anonymous releases IP addresses of alleged child porn viewers" . NBC News . Retrieved 25 January 2012 .



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

Lolita City was a website that used hidden services available through the Tor network . The site hosted child pornography images and videos of underage males and females ranging up to 17 years of age (18 is the minimum legal age in many jurisdictions, including the US, for a person to appear in pornography). [1] [2] [3] The website was hosted by Freedom Hosting , a defunct Tor based web hosting provider . [4] : 6

As a hidden service, Lolita City operated through the .onion pseudo top-level domain and could be accessed only via the Tor network. [5] Like adult pornography sites, Lolita City featured and promoted specific models whom fans could follow. Some of the photographers were professionals, others were hobbyists. The site included softcore and hardcore images, and the subjects ranged from near-newborns and toddlers to 17-year-olds and included both boys and girls. As of June 2013, the website hosted about 1.4 million pictures. Videos had been available on the site since November 2012. [1]

In October 2011, the hacktivist collective Anonymous launched "Operation Darknet", in an attempt to disrupt the activities of child porn sites accessed through hidden services. [6] Anonymous published in a pastebin link what it claimed were the user names of 1,589 members of Lolita City, including membership time, and number of images uploaded. Anonymous said that it had found the site via The Hidden Wiki , and that it contained over 100 gigabytes of child pornography. Lolita City was taken offline for a short time in a denial-of-service attack by Anonymous. [4] : 7


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 abuse 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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Shocking revelations of child sex abuse on Facebook
Shocking revelations of child sex abuse on Facebook
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Five dead, six rescued as boat capsizes after possible collision with whale
Teen charged after elderly woman is allegedly stabbed during break and enter
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Driver is stabbed after alleged road rage incident on busy Sydney road
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Who should give way? Drivers baffled by four-way intersection quiz
‘Suspicious device’ detonated after emergency declaration south of Brisbane
Chevron Right Icon Connect with 7NEWS
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 Analysis Centre) records that linked the accounts in Australia to people arrested for child sexual exploitation in the Philippines.
The live-streaming nature of the material was particularly sickening, the institute’s report noted, because of the real-time element.
“Offenders often request how they want the child to be sexually abused either before or during the live-streaming session,” the report said.
One Australian alone spent almost $300,000 on live streamed material, the report found.
An analysis of the 256 Australians identified paints a typical profile of someone in the 50s or 60s, most (55 per cent) with no previous criminal history.
The youngest live streaming purchaser was 27 years and the oldest was 82.
The report found perpetrators came from a wide range of backgrounds, with stated occupations including aged care worker, boilermaker, carpenter, chef, computer technician, driller, driver, gardener, lawn mower, rigger, road freight transporter, sales assistant and tradesperson.
“Others described their occupation as accountant, architect, clerk, general manager, quality technician and self-employed,” the report said.
“One described her occupation as housewife. “
The AUSTRAC transactions suggested many users over time escalated the frequency of access to the live-stream facilitators and increasingly spent larger amounts on each session.
The institute noted that while child sex crimes were rife in multiple countries, the Philippines has been identified by international law enforcement agencies, NGOs and academics as the global ‘hub’ for live streaming such material.
In November 2019, live streaming of child sex abuse came to national attention after AUSTRAC took legal action against Westpac Bank over 23 million alleged breaches of anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism laws.
Westpac was accused of failing to monitor $11 billion worth of suspicious transactions, including those to the Philippines suspected to be for child sexual exploitation.


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