Hi all,
I've been doing some reading on the www. today and wanted to hear your thoughts on this (and if the discussion is good I'll link it to HSC legal threads)..
Link to article is here and I suggest a read.
For just under a year (terminating September this year) the world's largest child porn (from hereon known as child abuse) forum was being run on the dark web by Australian police officers, in an effort with police officers from Canada, US, and Europe.
It was a website where users shared videos and photos of under age (read: non-consenting) people. The article goes into detail, but to summarise: the police obtained the passwords of the forum administrators, then impersonated them to gain the faith of the site's users. The site has now been terminated and several charges have been laid against users. So essentially, the police claimed the need to facilitate the site in order to gain enough evidence to prosecute. I'm sure you can imagine the international aspect of a site like this, so it was a huge project called Operation Artemis.
Ethical issue:
A mother of one of the children on the site said her child should not be used as bait, and if she is, she should be compensated. Admittedly, the thought of my child being on the site under police control, even if it ended in greater prosecution, makes me queasy. What the police officers did was legal, with police officers being given exemptions from typical laws regarding the facilitation of child abuse in order to prosecute crimes. The police officers weren't there for personal gain - projects in alignment with this one has lead to 1000 prosecutions and 500 children being identified and removed from this kind of abuse.
So, what do you think? As I said it makes me queasy, and I hope there's support for these officers to move on from the disturbing content that they've seen on a personal level.
Does anyone think the site should've been shut down as soon as it was overtaken, instead of prolonged and facilitated for nearly a year?
Edit: Not sure if I've stressed this enough - but I'm not here to criticise the movements of these officers. i'm genuinely interested in the way people ethically navigate this upon hearing about it, because it really left a mark on me and I thought about it for quite some time.