April 21, 2006
U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said that Internet service providers aren’t doing enough to fight the child pornography traded and sold over their networks, and he plans to send Congress legislation to make sure that ISPs crack down on the industry.
During an address to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children on Thursday in Alexandria, Virginia, Mr. Gonzales said that the U.S. Justice Department will propose the Child Pornography and Obscenity Prevention Amendments of 2006.
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However, the DOJ has a checkered record in working with the search engines to combat child porn.
The DOJ has subpoenaed data from major search engines like Google, Yahoo, AOL, and Microsoft’s MSN to help revive the Child Online Protection Act (COPA), which was struck down by the courts.
Google initially resisted the subpoena but later agreed to a scaled-down request (see Google Makes Deal with DoJ and Judge Limits US Data Hunt).
The accession by the other search engines to the DOJ’s wide-ranging information request for millions of search terms also attracted concerns from civil liberties groups (see Portals Gave Data to DoJ).
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http://www.redherring.com/Article.aspx?a=16585&hed=ISPs+Urged+to+Fight+Child+Porn§or=Capital&subsector=EconomyAndPolicy