Surely this has to go against the European charter of human rights in some way. Isn't there protections for freedom of speech or of thought in there somewhere?
UK judges quietly declare text chat can be obscene
You could be committing a criminal offence next time you discuss your deepest fantasies with someone online. Alarmist? Only slightly. A ruling slipped out quietly by the Appeal Court earlier this year, and lurking in the background while the substantive case to which it applied came to court, makes it plain: the act of …
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Friday 3rd August 2012 11:31 GMT Anonymous Coward
Forget european law, it goes against itself.
In among the guidelines are, "bondage especially where gags are used" and films such as Pulp Fiction are legal to buy.
It is not a case of what is against the law, it is now a case of who the CPS decide to prosecute with it.
The original filing from parliament, as far as I understand it, didn't have a clue what it wanted to do. It only knew it wanted to protect society. It left the detail to the CPS, who have since resisted any attempts for a realistic review of their own guidelines in the face of how society has changed over the decades.
The law a few years ago was no different. A load of wankers crying "protect the children!" got MPs to do something when, in reality, they didn't know what they were doing, and I never got a straight answer out of Maria Eagle when she was heading her department before the last election, as to the various oddities that didn't add up about the whole process.
Net result, a load of people have been blindly making laws and guidance when, in reality, they don't actually have the remotest grip on what it is that they are trying to achieve.
It beggers belief to this day, as to how the CPS and maniacs who have introduced such daft, ill considered legislation, with only the faintest thread of direction ... can still see through all the egg on their faces. And they STILL haven't got the guts to press the reset button and do the job right.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 15:19 GMT b0llchit
Re: Does this include conversations...
Well, not sheep as such, but conveying an image such as:
Imagine that three judge panel sitting in a landscape on a bright sunny say. A cow comes along and all three judges have a fondling relation with that cow one after the other. Then the dominant bull comes along, really seeing red, and starts giving real thrusts of action to all three judges.
Is this violent and obscene enough to bet me extradited to the UK?
(when they do get an order, I can and will refer to the Arkell v. Pressdram case).
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Saturday 4th August 2012 14:21 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Does this include conversations...
The judgement is obscene. Publishing is one-to-many as any fule no. One-to-one is a private conversation. Grooming is already against the law so this is either bending the rules for one particular individual or yet another land grab for what little remains of privacy.
No sympathy whatsoever for paedophiles; but the implications of this ruling -after you add the inevitable mission-creep is truly horrific for everyone.
Bad judge. Bad.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 11:17 GMT The Axe
See how the #porntrail is going I wouldn't be surprised if the law is extended beyond just child abuse to pretty much anything. And it will likely be used only in cases where someone wants to damage someone else and can't find any other legal route. Why? Well because just about everyone has seen some obscene material. It's only a minority who have not looked at any porn at all.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 11:56 GMT NumptyScrub
quote: "I wouldn't be surprised if the law is extended beyond just child abuse to pretty much anything."
It already is. This is simply providing precedent that a one on one chat (text, IM) can be dealt with under the Obscene Publications Act. The Obscene Publications Act already covers anything a jury decides (on a case by case basis) to be depraving or corrupting.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 11:28 GMT Anonymous Coward
what about coca cola adverts
i find myself depraved and corrupted by them. and they get published to basically a global audience. will coke ever have to go to jail? i doubt it. an thats before you get into the obscene way they are polluting the environment, exploiting people etc. and of course no one cares. how many coke union organisers have been murdered this month? oops was i meant to keep that quiet?
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:58 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: what about coca cola adverts
You remind of the old Bill Hicks skit, he goes on about pornography then draw parallels to ( at the time ) the twin teenagers chewing gum in the Wriggleys ad's ( "When I see them, it's not gum I'm thinking about!" ) and finally finishes up with, "Sooner or later they won't bother with the product anymore, you'll just have naked women, with a cutthroat razor held next to her shaved-pubic region and the slogan will simply say 'DRINK COKE!'.".
These corps selling brain rotting sugar water and other laboratory developed tasty treats are already corrupting kids, by way of the product and advertising ( 9 year olds with eating disorders FFS?! ) . Use of full pornography in advertising is only a matter of time and because it makes millions of dollars for the fat-cats they won't get arrested for publishing obscene material as their highly paid team of lawyers will make sure they always have a get out clause.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 11:31 GMT Paul 5
this could be serious - and it's not about pr0n
Has the Court of Appeal thought this through?
If "publication" now includes sending a private message to one other person, then emails, texts, and possibly phone calls (over the internet, or by plain old-fashioned telephone) are publication.
This may mean many more things are covered by the law of libel (instead of mere slander). It may mean that copyrighted "content" is much more strictly controlled (not allowed to quote stuff over the phone / IM; not allowed to have background radio / CD playing while on the phone; not allowed to joke on the phone or by IM about blowing up Robin Hood airport).
It's possible that common sense will intervene, but I'm not optimistic.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 14:41 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: this could be serious - and it's not about pr0n
That's what I thought. So I read the act* and it has, for the purposes of that act only, an extremely broad definition of publish:
"For the purposes of this Act a person publishes an article who—
(a)distributes, circulates, sells, lets on hire, gives, or lends it, or who offers it for sale or for letting on hire; or
(b)in the case of an article containing or embodying matter to be looked at or a record, shows, plays or projects it or, where the matter is data stored electronically, transmits that data."
Given the law, the judges could hardly have decided differently but the decision has no effect on the meaning of publish for other offences. It's not great, but it could be worse.
* http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Eliz2/7-8/66/section/1
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Friday 3rd August 2012 17:46 GMT Dennis
Re: this could be serious - and it's not about pr0n
Just because a communication between two people counts as "published" (for the Obscene Publications Act) it doesn't automatically mean that the material was obscene. There is existing case law where the interpretation of "obscene" has depended on the actual or intended recipient of the material. There existing cases where the recipients were deemed to be of a sufficiently robust nature that the material would not deprave or corrupt them and thus it was not obscene.
I suspect GS was given the wrong advice. He should have continued to plead not guilty and allowed a jury to decide whether the one recipient was going to be depraved or corrupted by the material. I imagine there was a preceding dialogue that would demonstrate that the recipient was a like minded individual and hence not corrupted by the material.
Of course, it's possible that the material fitted within some definition of child pr0n. But if that was the case then some other legislation should have been used rather than the Obscene Publications Act.
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Saturday 4th August 2012 14:35 GMT Tom 35
Re: Yes it will
No that's not how it works.
If it's someone with power/friends they will decide there is not much hope of a conviction, tell them dads waiting outside and off you go.
If it's someone they don't like... bang, off to the cells you go.
1. Make it so everyone is breaking the law* by breathing.
2. Use selective enforcement to deal with people you don't like.
*Make sure to use the law first on scum bags that no one will defend. Once the law is established you can use it on anyone you don't like as long as they are not "important".
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Sunday 5th August 2012 10:40 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Take a letter...
Wait till another speed dater calls "rape" and see what happens, the last woman who cried it "because he didnt stay after sex" even though it was consentual.
Women can now use text messaging to "lure" a rich mark or their "stalk prey into a corner.
I can see a huge rise in pay-as-you-go throwaway sim cards
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Friday 3rd August 2012 11:54 GMT Ged T
I wonder what 'Online' means in the context of the ruling
If I to make a phone call to some (willing) party to discuss a sexual fantasy, is that "online"?
I mean, if the call is carried on the digital telephone network (C/SS7), is that "online"? "After all, a telephone call is carried *on* a wire*line*, you know, your honour.", said the prosecuting lawyer.
Again, is it "online" if it happens that my telehony provider is using VoIP technology to 'transit' such a call between originator and recipient/caller and receiver? "After all, VoIP is an internet technology, your honour.", said the prosecuting lawyer.
The lack of definition is just one wedge that can be used to cleave a wider 'applicability' and 'interpretation' to further the "they are all guilty, all the time" campaign that corrodes, further, the vestiges of freedom in this country.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:51 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: I wonder what 'Online' means in the context of the ruling
Under s1 of the Malicious Communications Act 1998
It is an offence to send an indecent, offensive or threatening letter or other form of electronic communication to another person.
Under s43 of the Telecommunications Act 1984 and Section 92 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994
A person who makes indecent, offensive or threatening calls to another via the telephone system network is guilty of an offence.
Funny thing this Internet, you can sometimes find the answers you are looking for by searching using a few key words.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:50 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Send the cops to Amazon right away
Nah, cause it's too main stream. The tv movie "Last house on the corner" includes a rape scene that is fairly brutal. It aired after this law came into existence. I thought that law outlawed films with rape in them. But this was on main stream tv. I bet if the same scene was on a private video someone could get convicted with it.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:04 GMT Semaj
"This decision ... closes one door where people that would abuse children share and indulge in their fantasies online without the use of images, and prior to now have felt beyond the reach of the law in doing so."
Excellent news - now not only are children such as Lisa Simpson protected but now they can also protect those who aren't even depicted! With any luck they'll be able to arrest those who even THINK of children soon (the pedos will have to prove they aren't thinking about kids). </sarcasm>
Do they really think that making it as much of an crime to engage in FANTASY as carrying out the acts for real a good idea? Don't they see that those with such interests will then be more likely to just have kids of their own purely to abuse them?
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:05 GMT Jane Fae
Not just about "online"
I note at least one poster assuming this is merely about the online world. No: that's not what this ruling means.
A point made to me by the CPS, which for space reasons i could not include in the article was:
"the point of the appeal against the terminating ruling was the Crown Court judge’s interpretation of “persons” not whether or not an online chat was subject to the Act, which is made clear in paragraph 21 of the judgment"
It just so happens that the most likely place for one-to-one chat to be picked up nowadays is online...and the OPA is adapting to a new digital reality.
Jane
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:10 GMT Khaptain
Frustration frustration frustration
When the law-makers have difficulty defining the laws how the hell are we supposed to stand a chance in insuring that we live law-abidingly.
Rules and regulations no longer appear to have any other purpose than ensuring that the populace can be held to account for almost anything that they do. This is turn ensures that the corrupt remain in power.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:10 GMT PsychicMonkey
What about...
If I write a novel, which I release online (or offline) which is about a detective trying to hunt down a rapist/killer, as part of the novel is describes what the perp has done to his victims. Most people would get aroused by it (which I believe is required?) but some might.
Does this then mean I have produced obscene material?
This is utterly ridiculous. Another "well meaning" law to be abused.
Isn't it time we reboot the matrix?
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:28 GMT Purlieu
Offline
We're gradually being driven offline. You can hardly say boo in case some prude gets "offended". Like being offended gives them extra rights somehow. Then there's avoiding saying something about Robin Hood Airport etc. Any why is it these days that whatever happens, somebody has to go to jail?
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:46 GMT chrisf1
argumentum ad absurdum
I followed the article's link to the 'charging practice' part of the Crown Prosecution Services website covering the Obscene Publications act.
This contains blunt text that has highlighted a number of practices of which I was not previously aware of a perverted sexual nature. I therefore consider it depraved and obscene and it has by definition corrupted my innocence.
I therefore would like to complain about the CPS website under the obscene publications act .
It is also one of the most entertaining official documents I have ever read - for all the wrong reasons.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:51 GMT Yet Another Anonymous coward
Ignoring the sex for a moment
If text and IM chats are now publication - what about using them at work?
Are IM discussion with HR, or legal now still allowed?
Is a patent invalidated if we discuss it internally on Lynq in the same way as I would on the phone?
If I get an SMS about a server down - has that been published? Do I need to make a market announcement to the shareholders since I have published material affecting the performance of the business.
And I might just be being cynical but of course there is now no need for a warrant to intercept sms/IM because you have "published" it.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 18:21 GMT Yet Another Anonymous coward
Re: Ignoring the sex for a moment
I work in medical stuff for a PLC.
There are memos every day about what can and can't be said publicly without there being an official stock market announcement. There are vastly more complex rules about confidentiality of data. We even had to change email provider because the previous one had servers in the USA and the lawyers decided that if an email went through American wires then a whole new set of HIPAA rules would apply.
Then there is a different set of rules about patents and who things can be discussed with at different filing stages of a filing. We even have a pet lawyer sit in on some meetings so that they can be claimed as privileged during discovery.
If some judge has just determined that all point-point electronic communications are "public" then the whole medical/financial/defence industries are going to have to go back to quill pens.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 12:53 GMT Anonymous Coward
I am confused?
How does "full-hand fisting" become better or worse, or obscene, or less or more obscene than "full fist handing"?
Is that just a girl girl thing, a guy girl thing, a girl guy thing, a guy guy thing; and does it make a difference if it's vaginal, anal or penile?
Obviously though the insertion aspect would make it full hand fisting or is that full fist handing?
I suppose the issue rests on exactly what is being inserted into what, in order to define the point of insertion and reception.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 13:08 GMT Anonymous Coward
The question of online
I find it interesting to note that the question that the appeals court ruled on was about the act itself, and the interpretation by His Honour Judge MacDonald where he said it was the same as two people in an empty room having the same conversation was not based on what the act says. In the judgement the relevant bit of the act is:
(3)For the purposes of this Act a person publishes an article who—
(a)distributes, circulates, sells, lets on hire, gives, or lends it, or who offers it for sale or for letting on hire; or.
(b)in the case of an article containing or embodying matter to be looked at or a record, shows, plays or projects it or, where the matter is data stored electronically, transmits that data."
All the appeals court did was rule that since this the data was stored electonically and transmitted it could be considered under the act. As far as I can tell the appeals court did not make any ruling on whether the material published was obscene. In fact, as far as I can tell, they even gave a way out when they referenced:
The other provision of the 1959 Act we should mention is section 2(6) which provides:
"In any proceedings against a person under this section the question whether an article is obscene shall be determined without regard to any publication by another person unless it could reasonably have been expected that the publication by the other person would follow from publication by the person charged."
And it seems to my non-legal mind all the defense had to show was that there was no reasonable expectation that further publication could be expected. Of course it could be saying the exact opposite, in which case please be kind.
It think it was worth commenting on the Girls Aloud case since only text was involved, while in this case there were images which as far as I can tell could have prosecuted seperately if the publication piece didn't stand up.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 13:17 GMT Anonymous Coward
Missionary position, lights off and dont enjoy it
Thats the british view of sex and be dammed if you'll be allowed to do anything else.
On the one hand I understand why it was applied in this case, on the other, this IS going to be abused. As a member of the Alternative community I know they will eventually be comming for me, even though I've never done anything wrong or thought anything definable as wrong, I just think different. Outsid ethe bedroom I'm in a loving, stabl;e relationship, I run my own business, pay my taxes and keep on the right side of the law. But its increasingly the case of be different, stick your head up out the trenches and it'll get taken off but someone on a moral crusade.
Its ok To be Gay now, and hell that took way to long to happen, but because you enjoy a bit of slap and tickle in the bedroom, you are now a potential criminal, child molester and all round deviant.
I really really wanted to have some great, long, soapbox rant about it but to be honest I cant, I just feel saddened by it all. I hope our children will enjoy the boring, sterile, unexciting, lawer controlled world we are creating them. I just feel so sad and disparing about the world my children are going to be born into, granted they'll be safe, but I'd intended making sure of that myself anyway.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 13:49 GMT Graham Bartlett
Re: Missionary position, lights off and dont enjoy it
Too right. And lest people think this is a one-off,
* Simon Walsh, who worked for Boris Johnson, was fired for having two pictures of naked men. One was young but definitely over 18; and the other was wearing a gasmask. The CPS are pressing charges for kiddy porn in the first case and extreme porn in the second case.
* A woman using the pseudonym "Legally Bland" was sacked from her job as a social worker, because she attended BDSM parties and had some photos taken of herself. Never mind that the policemen she'd worked with turned up to speak for her at her hearing. She's currently fighting this (with the help of an organisation called BackLash) under unfair dismissal laws.
There's a bitter irony in these people having their lives destroyed at the same time as "Fifty Shades of Grey" is topping the bestseller charts...
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Friday 3rd August 2012 17:12 GMT Anonymous Coward
Re: Missionary position, lights off and dont enjoy it
In the Simon Walsh case, which is the one that has the #porntrial hash-tag on Twitter, a lot of people are asking how the police came to know about a 3 year-old Hotmail message with attachments. Apparently the CPS has now dropped the charge over the photo of the gas-mask wearer.
What is also known is that apparently Simon Walsh was previously involved with prosecutions against police officers while in the job he was sacked from. Now, what possible reason could the police have for trying to put one over on him?
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Friday 3rd August 2012 13:52 GMT Anonymous Coward
Oh won't someone etc...
Kent Police reject this. They told us: "The only crusade Kent Police is on is to protect children from abuse including sexual exploitation. This decision ... closes one door where people that would abuse children share and indulge in their fantasies online without the use of images, and prior to now have felt beyond the reach of the law in doing so."
Ah, seems the police are no strangers to the "Oh won't someone think of the children!" gambit. Unbelievably though, they seem to have made it work.
You know what, damn this country. I'm sick and tired of people telling other people how to think, act, behave or speak. What gives anyone the right to decide what two consenting adults can or cannot do, or even can or cannot talk about? A lordship? Yeah, because they are not historically known for bizarre sexual preferences [Lord Laidlaw anyone?].
It's 3pm and I am definitely leaving for the pub.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 14:30 GMT JimmyPage
And so we have another law
where no one needs to complain, for someone to get banged up.
I for one, am heartily sick, of seeing the criminal justice system being used to dictate some arbitrary morality upon society. I really have no interest in what people watch, or do amongst consenting adults, as long as no one else gets hurt. Endof.
Remember the extreme porn law ? Just taking a screencap of certain films, despite being BBFC approved will get you banged up. And you're forbidden to mention the clip came from a BBFC approved film in court.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 14:38 GMT LordHighFixer
I am still wondering why
The Olympic committee has not been prosecuted for that pictograph depicting Lisa Simpson, a known minor, giving oral pleasure to a yet to be identified other. Clearly it is published and pornographic. And what are those other figures near by? Is she being forced to perform this action?
Mine is the one with a well worn copy of Lolita in the pocket.
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Friday 3rd August 2012 16:26 GMT Ken Hagan
That audience of one...
"There could be no sensible reason for the legislature having excluded otherwise obscene material from the scope of the legislation, merely because it was likely to be read by, and therefore liable to deprave and corrupt, only one person..."
Perhaps there couldn't, but it surely offers a simple defence. Since the audience is one person and the jury has to decide whether the material is likely to deprave or corrupt, can't they just ask the audience? The recipient just stands up in court and swears under oath that they weren't bothered by it. The jury pretty much *has* to decide that the material "wasn't likely to" deprave because they have sworn testimony that it "didn't".
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Friday 3rd August 2012 16:52 GMT Trevor 7
Did the UK judges go to US public schools?
The inability to determine the difference between singular "person" and plural "persons" is something I expect out the US public school system.
Sounds like the first judge understood the concept.
Is this some sort of chav - effect: the more of them there are the stupider they become
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Saturday 4th August 2012 02:03 GMT AdamWill
Offences against children?
"This is a landmark case [and] a good opportunity from a law enforcement point of view. It opens up the possibility of more people being prosecuted for offences against children."
Surely you missed a word out there. It should obviously read "It opens up the possibility of more people being prosecuted for offences against imaginary children."
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Saturday 4th August 2012 16:48 GMT Allan 1
So basically, my texts and skype conversations to my girlfriend, currently in the US, are now illegal as they containt "flirtations and descriptive content" that would make some people cringe.
How long before they just make sex itself illegal except for procreation, and even then it will require a licence and full montoring unfrt RIPA by council officials to make sure its not being actually, enjoyed?
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Sunday 5th August 2012 09:58 GMT Anonymous Coward
Not the place
Guys this isnt the place, please remeber the way our legal system works, not happy with the results? then take private action. These forums are not the place to be carrying on your case.
The fact of the matter is, win or loose this case has further poisoned our right to be consenting adults because the wrong law has been applied to the wrong sitauation.
If, TC, you think that this is the ONLY time this will be applied then whilst I'm truly sorry for what you have been through, you are being neive.This will now at the very least become one of those 'other offenses' used to bolster a case and broadside people who shouldnt have to worry about it. 'Oh dear Mr xxx, we cant prove that you were texting when you hit that padestrian, but oh, lookee here, you texted your wife you were going to tie her up and spank her when you got home an hour/day/week ago.....' Thats the way the real world works.
Our sucessive Govts love bad and overly broad laws, because our legal system works on precident this makes for a bad situation, hence the examples cited in earlier pages. Put on the sex offenders list because of a cartoon of Lisa Simpson? Really? And thats ok is it? A law should be clearly defined so there are few loopholes as possible for people to use. A law should NOT be a generic 'let some other entity decide what they feel like', not least because every defenedant you haul up is going to argue the case and pull the ruling apart.
Thought crimes are not covered by our laws and they should not be (although I can think of cases where just existing should). Trying to legislate the danger and badness out of our world will simply not work and lead us into a state where our kids are still stuck to TV screens and Consoles because they cant/dare'nt do anything else. A world where a quick glance will land any man (or woman) in hot water because the opposite sex 'looked 18 yeronner but I didnt ask before I looked'
The issue here is that most of us are of a pretty broad mind, however the generation before us generally wernt and these people are the ones that make the law and try to inflict their morals on everyone else, because they can and they dont possibly beleive they can be wrong.
Mrs TC, I'm sorry that you've been through this, I really am, but whats been done in your name is not just or correct. I am a parent, soon to be for a second time, and I know how I'd react in your shoes and I know I'd not be impressed. I would like to think that I wouldnt allow my case to be used to further the relentless hunt for boogie men and terrorists either. These people do exist but they are a great way to get any law the govt want passed, I mean who would fight against a law to catch these people. Before that it was the Communists, and then the Nazis..... There always has to be a boogie man.
Anon so I dont have to sack myself for voicing my opinions
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Sunday 5th August 2012 10:58 GMT TDP
If this is communication between one private individual and another, and the wording of the judgement refers to publishing, surely it cannot be applied as to publish is to make available by definition to more than one person, you cannot publish to one person only ?
Publish:
1. To prepare and issue (printed material) for public distribution or sale.
2. To bring to the public attention; announce.
Public:
Adjective: Of or concerning the people as a whole.
Noun: Ordinary people in general; the community.
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Sunday 5th August 2012 12:33 GMT Anonymous Coward
Here's the unintended definition:
By this ruling, everything Stephen Hawking says is published, because he can only speak using an electronic medium. Likewise, if you speak to someone who you know uses a hearing aid then you are publishing because you are using their electronic device to send them a message.
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Sunday 5th August 2012 18:37 GMT BleedinObvious
Leveson Inquiry is all a bit pointless then
If all the texts count as publication, there's no such thing as phone hacking (text snooping) any more, and all those who had their phones hacked should be jolly well happy with this judge.
OTOH, the press should start doing more phone hacking and exposing now - probably the only thing keeping t.h.e.m. straight, when the laws are so ripe for abuse^M^M^M^M^M^M^M^M^M.
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Sunday 5th August 2012 18:50 GMT johnwerneken
Ignoring reality
In reality speech is regulated sometimes. First, there is the 'shouting fire in a crowded theater' situation: there may be instances where a comment could lead directly to real physical harm. Perhaps bans on disclosing national secrets are another example of this. Second, there is the 'fighting words' argument, which I find to be plausible if much weaker than the 'fire' case. The rationale is that some speech is highly likely to produce inter-personal violence. I am not persuaded it should therefore be censored, but I am persuaded that it should be avoided. Third, there is speech whose sole purpose and real result would be to further a criminal conspiracy - it is part of the crime of conspiring to commit a(nother) crime.
And then we have this, the idea that speech per se, not entailed consequences, is harmful. I don't believe it; the ugly-as-well-as-obscene might offend but I don't see how it could cause one to become depraved (whatever that is). In some ways children deserve more protection than adults from society simply because they lack means of defense. BUT isn't that protection mostly the responsibility of parents and other adults in the community, and not of the State?
Images of child pornography are a bit different, sort of being the fruits of the abuse of children. Perhaps there ought to be a distinction between photographic evidence that someone has abused real children, and cartoon images of approximately the same thing...
Certainly COMMENTING on such acts to a limited and willing audience is NOT endangering society, it is just offending those of us that would prefer not to be reminded that we clearly have some fellow citizens who are in favor of deplorable abuse and perhaps given to committing such abuse as well. Disgusting maybe but not criminal, at least not in my opinion.
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