US wrongly suspends 84,000 websites

 

Bungled action sacrifices free speech in pursuit of child abusers.

The US Government’s child pornography enforcement action “Operation Protect Our Children” had huge collateral damage over the weekend when it mistakenly suspended 84,000 websites under the mooo.com domain.

The Department of Homeland Security announced a victory on Tuesday, claiming the "execution of seizure warrants against 10 domain names of websites engaged in the advertisement and distribution of child pornography”.

But they failed to mentioned that the action spearheaded by DHS Immigration and Customs Enforcement Cyber Crimes Center, also accidentally took down mooo.com, the  most popular shared domain at afraid.org, run by domain name services provider, FreeDNS.

Visitors to the websites, mostly owned by bloggers and small businesses, were from Friday redirected to a page containing DHS and Department of Justice logos with the message that possession of child pornography could land an offender up to 30 years imprisonment, according to the Torrent Freak blog.   

While authorities lifted the registrar-level suspension on mooo.com by Sunday evening, FreeDNS warned customers that it may take as long as three days to fully restore websites across the web.

It said on Saturday that “Freedns.afraid.org has never allowed this type of abuse of its DNS service”.

Angry site owners slammed US law enforcement's power to bypass legal process to shut down websites.

“You can rest assured that I have not and would never be found to be trafficking in such distasteful and horrific content,” said one affected blogger who runs Grey Ghost.

“You'd get no argument from me that there are truly distasteful and illegal things on the Internet ... But there are also proper ways to deal with these problems.”

Website owners affected by the departments' investigations into copyright infringement have made similar complaints about wrongfully being taken down.

The operator of the dajaz1.com hip hop blog has complained that allegedly infringing material for which his site was taken down was given to him as promotional material by record labels and artists.


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US wrongly suspends 84,000 websites
US law enforcement bungled at the weekend, taking out 84,000 websites in a cyber-raid on alleged child abusers.
"Yep, this is THE United States that was held up as the bastion of web freedoms by Aussie bloggers just last year... Anon, this has nothing to do with Conroy nor with the filter. You putting too ..."
By Maxxi2
 
 
 
Comments: 3
anonymous
Feb 17, 2011 3:22 PM

Gasp! You don't mean that the people running the secret government censorship made a mistake!

OMG, who will be brave (or silly) enough to tell our censorship czar Conboy that his filter is not infallible? Still, as long as it can be used to silence the views of his opponents, he'll still think it's just fine.
RaTTyRaTT
Feb 17, 2011 10:23 PM
Um, did you actually READ the article? This is not about Conboy's pathetic attempt. This is about the UNITED STATES (that big continent on the other side of the pacific called North America!)

Please try and stay 'in topic' or at least have a go at the right person. References to Conboy is fine, but mistaken identity from not reading is intolerable.
Maxxi2
Feb 18, 2011 9:20 AM
Yep, this is THE United States that was held up as the bastion of web freedoms by Aussie bloggers just last year...

Anon, this has nothing to do with Conroy nor with the filter. You putting too much Red Bull in your Corn Flakes again mate?

The mis-action was a total pain, and inept, but we are going to have some embarrassing hiccups whilst these guys learn how to do their jobs properly.

Many folks have been advocating, very very loudly, that authorities should be focused on taking down websites with child porn stuff on them.

So they did take em down. Just took down one too many domians.

Does add an interesting aspect to the argument that such sites do not exist.... (well we now know that none are on Mooo.com...)

Good initiative, baaaaad execution. What do you expect from US Homeland Security?
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US law enforcement bungled at the weekend, taking out 84,000 websites in a cyber-raid on alleged child abusers.
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