Kinderpornografie: Teenagers angeklagt, da sie ihre eigenen Fotos untereinander austauschten.


Share

,

  1. #1 von Devils Advocate am 15:49 - 15:49

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 1 Thumb down 0

    Child porn law, misapplied, can victimize kids

    According to news reports, teenagers who shared video of the alleged gang rape in Pitt Meadows are “freaking out” about the fact that they may face charges of distributing child pornography.

    By Vancouver Sun September 22, 2010

    Fortunately, Canada has largely avoided such cases, thanks to better prosecutorial judgment and to the Supreme Court of Canada’s 2001 decision in R. vs. Sharpe. While the Criminal Code is broad enough to capture behaviour such as occurred in Pennsylvania, the court fashioned two limited exceptions to the law.

    First, the court held that it does not constitute an offence for minors to take explicit pictures of themselves for their own private use. And second, the court exempted the recording of lawful sexual activity between minors, provided the minors share the images only with each other.

    This means that a boyfriend and girlfriend can share pictures of themselves engaged in sexual activity without facing the long arm of the law. But if they share those pictures with others, or place them on the Internet, then charges could follow.

    Similarly, if minors send explicit pictures of themselves to others, they could, theoretically at least, end up on a sex offender registry.
    Source: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/westcoastnews/story.html?id=568ec8c8-a097-45ad-abb3-2912674d7cb6&k=37723

  2. #2 von DevilsAdvocate am 07:35 - 07:35

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 1 Thumb down 0

    14-year old child pornographers? Sexting lawsuits get serious

    A 14 year old boy used some undue pressure to convince a 14 year old girl to produce a masturbation video and showed bad character passing it on.

    Still it pretty rough for a 14 year old to be saddled with severe felony charges and life long sex offender registration for bad judgment and bad character.

    Most 14 year olds probably did not have the legal schooling to be aware of all the dangers of having pictures of themselves and their friends. Sadly, you have to start teaching your 5 year olds about child porn and teenage sex laws.

    http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2011/03/14-year-old-child-pornographers-sexting-lawsuits-get-serious.ars/

  3. #3 von admin am 10:18 - 10:18

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 1 Thumb down 1

    Sexting being treated as a crime, and cyber-bullying being illegal are two of the stupidest things I have ever seen. What next? Assault charges for playground fights. Disorderly conduct for throwing food in the lunch room. Resisting arrest when they throw a temper tantrum..

    Sh*t happens. Lets try not to get the police involved unless its really important.

    Found this great quote at http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2011/03/14-year-old-child-pornographers-sexting-lawsuits-get-serious.ars?comments=1#comment-21395961

  4. #4 von Karen am 08:17 - 08:17

    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 0 Thumb down 0

    This is some advice that I came across when I was worried about my child sexting:

    Don’t wait for an incident to happen to your child or your child’s friend before you talk about the consequences of sexting. Sure, talking about sex or dating with teens can be uncomfortable, but it’s better to have the talk before something happens.

    Remind your kids that once an image is sent, it can never be retrieved — and they will lose control of it. Ask teens how they would feel if their teachers, parents, or the entire school saw the picture, because that happens all the time.

    Talk about pressures to send revealing photos. Let teens know that you understand how they can be pushed or dared into sending something. Tell them that no matter how big the social pressure is, the potential social humiliation can be hundreds of times worse.

    Teach your children that the buck stops with them. If someone sends them a photo, they should delete it immediately. It’s better to be part of the solution than the problem. Besides, if they do send it on, they’re distributing pornography — and that’s against the law.

    If you are concerned about your child sexting, I used an app called Mobileminder to keep an eye on what my son was texting. With Mobileminder I was able to check his text messages, pictures, call logs, etc. from my computer. If you are concerned about your own child I would highly recommend using Mobileminder. The website is www. mobileminder .com

(wird nicht veröffentlicht)


Switch to our mobile site