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Penet Bites the Dust
An interesting Net tidbit. Note that the "International Conference
on Child Sexual Exploitation" in Stolkholm which served as a platform
for these accusations and various coordinated stories in numerous
media outlets is simply a circus put on by ECPAT, a well-known
pressure group whose propaganda is modeled after the now-defunct
National Coalition on Pornography, and whose spurious and laughable
claims about child pornography and vast pedophile conspiracies would fill
volumes. The only odd thing here is that the mainstream press is
presenting this gathering with a perfectly straight face, as if it were
some sort of credible event, which of course it is not.
-----
HELSINKI (Reuter) - A Finnish Internet specialist said on Friday he
was closing his remailer, or anonymous forwarding system, after
rejecting allegations it was being used as a conduit for child
pornography.
Johan Helsingius, whose remailer is one of the largest in the world
with over half a million users, said in a statement he was closing
down the system because the legal issues governing the Internet in
Finland are unclear.
``The legal protection of users needs to be clarified. At the moment
the privacy of Internet messages is judicially unclear,'' said
Helsingius, who said he set up and ran the remailer in his free time
partly as an initiative to help abused children.
Internet remailers are computers which receive and forward messages
with a pseudonym or anonymous source.
There are about five large ones in the world, and they exist to enable
anonymous discussion of sensitive subjects -- for instance by victims
of child abuse, potential suicides or people in politically repressed
societies.
Helsingius, supported by Finnish police, earlier this week dismissed
claims in Britain's Observer Sunday newspaper that his remailing
system handled up to 90 percent of child pornography on the Internet.
``I have also personally been a target because of the remailer for
three years,'' he said on Friday. ``Unjustified accusations affect
both my job and my private life.''
The newspaper reported the charges, by a U.S. policeman and FBI
adviser, as Belgian police were investigating horrific child sex
crimes and ahead of an international conference in Stockholm on the
commercial sexual exploitation of children.
In Helsingius's statement, Helsinki police sergeant Kaj Malmberg was
quoted as saying he had found no evidence of child porn being
transmitted from Finland.
--
Mike Duvos $ PGP 2.6 Public Key available $
[email protected] $ via Finger. $