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EU's concealment of secret 'expert list' on CSAM regulation is maladministration

miohtama
44 replies
1d7h

17. The Commission representatives noted that many companies, which participate in the EUIF, are concerned about their security and public image. In addition, the topics discussed in the EUIF are often of a sensitive, operational nature and disclosure could be exploited by malicious actors to circumvent detection mechanisms and moderation efforts by companies. Revealing some of the strategies and tactics of companies, or specific technical approaches also carries a risk of informing offenders on ways to avoid detection. The Commission representatives provided additional confidential information during the meeting with the Ombudsman inquiry team on why the list of experts could not be disclosed.

If the goal of your company is to promote and get a wiretap on every single device and messenger app, IN SECRET, you should be concerned about your public image. I also suggest you should be also concerned human rights and your personal moral compass.

Time to drag out these bastards to the light.

baz00
24 replies
1d7h

I suspect the bastards are already well known and accepted bastards.

What is going on here is the EU doesn't want to look like it consulted bastards and is coming up with arbitrary reasons to hide that.

marcosdumay
22 replies
1d5h

Well, they are now. But honestly, it was surprising for me to discover that the people pushing for the wiretrap were actually only the ones selling wiretraps. I really expected some larger conspiracy.

amluto
11 replies
1d5h

Maybe you should try Occam’s Razor for conspiracies: the most straightforward conspiracy is likely to be the right one :)

For example, one might imagine that eIDAS 2 isn’t backed by a consortium of would-be spies but is more likely backed by a small consortium of crappy CAs that are sick of being forced to comply with CA/B Forum rules and want regulation to override the rules.

(The CA/B rules are very specific and extremely aggressively enforced. It’s not like the GDPR where you can apparently get away with messing around for quite a while. Multiple fairly large companies have had their CA operations effectively shut down by the CA/B Forum for noncompliance.)

marcosdumay
9 replies
1d4h

I'm sorry, but Occam's Razor isn't a perfectly clear guide.

A 1984-like law for wiretraping every citizen looking for double-plus-ungood speech is way too evil to come from a motivation of selling more wiretraps.

The people pushing it are societal vandals. That kind of thing should be persecuted as treason. You don't do treason just to increase your workplace bottom line, it's absurd.

derefr
6 replies
1d4h

You don't do treason just to increase your workplace bottom line, it's absurd.

Did you not hear about the Russian tanks that fell apart on their way to Ukraine because Russian soldiers had been looting parts of them to sell for vodka?

Most treason isn't called out with a big neon sign and a confirm dialog reminding the actor that they're committing treason. From the inside, most treason just feels like workplace fraud/embezzlement, or like laziness, or like "office politicking" where your office happens to be "the state legislature." It's almost always just petty crime, that happens to have big consequences.

lazide
3 replies
23h54m

Treason (in the US) has a specific meaning, which is knowingly aiding a (formal) enemy of the country you are a Citizen of - or explicitly committing acts of war against said country.

Those soldiers selling tank parks for vodka weren't committing treason, they were corruptly selling military parts (to presumably NOT the enemy) to get drunk. Which is pretty terrible, and would likely get you shot or imprisoned in most armies. But isn't treason.

Aiding a known spy of the enemy? Yes. Sending military supplies to the enemy? Yes. Working on behalf of the enemy (knowingly?) Yes, maybe. Depends on what you do.

That might be Espionage, or being an unregistered agent of a foreign power. Both with serious penalties on their own.

derefr
2 replies
20h9m

Knowingly sabotaging your own war-fighting capability when in a state of declared battle readiness, isn't treason?

I'm pretty sure intentional friendly fire is treason (or am I wrong?) You're "doing the enemy's job."

This is just that, without it happening during a battle, and without there being soldiers in the tank.

lazide
1 replies
19h37m

Stealing equipment (and selling it) to get drunk is not knowingly sabotaging your countries war effort.

It’s theft. In the military. To get drunk.

It’s far too short sighted and self serving to intentionally help the enemy, it’s just plain criminality. Not treason. Likely to still get one shot or sent to the Gulag of course. But no one sane is writing ‘treason’ on any of the paperwork.

Or is it treason if a woman refuses to have a child because she is ‘sabotaging the future war effort’? Or a car thief who steals a truck, because that truck ‘could be used to transport supplies’?

And where did this ‘intentional friendly fire’ come from?

derefr
0 replies
5h12m

Telling classified secrets to spies for self-serving reasons (e.g. because the spy will sleep with you or give you money) is treason. We can agree on that, right? People have been executed "for treason" for doing that, many many times throughout history.

The crime of treason doesn't involve/imply a mens rea of being an insurrectionist / working toward an enemy nation's goals. It instead implies a much more limited mens rea: that you knew that what you're doing would help an enemy nation win a war against your nation, and you did it anyway.

Or is it treason if a woman refuses to have a child because she is ‘sabotaging the future war effort’? Or a car thief who steals a truck, because that truck ‘could be used to transport supplies’?

No, because (among other reasons) in both of those cases, those are hypothetical gains lost, rather than concrete losses realized. The military didn't already own the child, or the truck.

If you steal a truck that's actually transporting supplies to the front — and thereby also steal the supplies — then yes, that is treason!

And, slightly more niche — if this is a monarchy, and the child would become king, and the mother bears the child but then kills it — then yes, that's treason too. At the moment that the child becomes an important state asset, killing them becomes a treasonous act.

Though, focusing on the truck, another reason this could be "not treason", is that a civilian stealing a random truck (presumably not a military-painted supply truck) isn't aware that it's a military asset.

Likewise, if someone hears a classified secret and repeats it, that's usually not considered treason.

In both cases, that's because civilians haven't been told that this truck, or that information, is important to the state. To them, it's just a truck, it's just gossip, etc. So they're just punished for whatever common-law crime they committed, if any.

But soldiers are told these things. They know that the truck is carrying supplies; they know that the info is classified. And so when they steal the truck/leak the info anyway, that's considered a betrayal of their country: treason.

dylan604
1 replies
1d2h

Does this mean because we've become accustomed to ignoring the petty crime treason, when the treason with a giant neon sign and an alert popup that says "THIS IS TREASON" shows up, we're too numb to take action on it?

lazide
0 replies
23h53m

The petty crime isn't treason, generally. The poster is wrong.

We're used to ignoring the pop-ups because of the steady escalation and increasing exhaustion. We're being frog boiled.

JoeAltmaier
1 replies
1d4h

It's so disappointing, how very little it takes to get so many to sell out. Murder for hire for a couple hundred. Selling votes for a thousand. Betrayal for a little nookie.

People are so much more venal than we give them credit for.

johndunne
0 replies
1d3h

It's a numbers game. A leader can find people poor/greedy enough to do nasty things for money, and then same leader can go find people who want nasty things done for hire. In an unequal society, there's always going to be people 'available' for this side of the system.

nvm0n2
0 replies
1d2h

The CA/B rules are - as the name suggests - largely written by CAs themselves.

Lord-Jobo
5 replies
1d4h

We are living in a global society that has been structured around the singular principle of individual enrichment, and have been for about 230 years, depending on where you live. The answer to almost all modern mysteries of human behavior will lie in that incentive structure one way or another.

Why do people steal of defraud? The potential individual enrichment is higher. Why engage in corrupt short-termerisms like accepting bribes? individual enrichment.

This is all the result of "greed is good" ^1 and its not sustainable.

1: https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2014/04/greed-i...

robertlagrant
4 replies
1d4h

It's not "greed is good", it's "specialisation is an n-way mutual win".

riversflow
1 replies
1d3h

Is it good when people specialize in destructive things? There are people who specialize in human trafficing, different types of fraud, etc. Is that an n-way mutual losss?

robertlagrant
0 replies
5h48m

Not exactly, I'd say. It is a mutual win for the people involved in the transactional aspect, but a tragedy for the victims. Having the ability to charge the prices you want for what you offer is a superb self-organising principle; it just isn't sufficient to describe everything we want. In this case: we should agree on certain common rules on what is off limits, but other than that we should get out of people's way so they can create value for each other.

thereisnospork
0 replies
1d2h

People love to bemoan greed but it is by far the best economic optimization algorithm humanity has managed to come up with[1].

[0]An AGI-led command economy is certainly interesting though.

partitioned
0 replies
1d4h

Who is the winner in this case?

derefr
3 replies
1d4h

What would the motivation be, for the rest of the actors in this conspiracy?

If anything, I'd say the "conspiracy" — or at least, the tacit collusion — is on the other side of this battle.

What few demographic studies we've done on the prevalence of pedophilia, say that something like 10% of men express some level of attraction toward children. (With almost none of them ever acting on this attraction, or mentioning it to anyone other than a psychiatrist.)

So potentially 10% of men everywhere — scattered all throughout industry and government — have clear motivation to push back against the creation of laws that would see their proclivities discovered and persecuted.

Of course, such people wouldn't out themselves by just defending the "rights of pedophiles" in any direct way. But they would act on any opportunity to ensure that mechanisms for "complete privacy" exist; and they would also stand behind others when they see them doing the same; and they would also learn all the rhetoric used by privacy advocates, and use it.

(Yes, there are other people on the side of "no wiretaps" besides pedophiles. I'm not saying "we can ignore the people against wiretaps because they're all just pedophiles anyway." What I'm saying is more that, insofar as "10% of men" is an accurate measure, that's a big implicit voting interest bloc! Probably one larger than all the world's egalitarian "privacy advocates" put together! And so there has always — and will always — be this group with their thumb on the scale, tipping any democratic action in society away from panopticons, for that group's own protection.)

partitioned
1 replies
1d4h

This doesn't seem correct. Someone who has these desires but never acted on them wouldn't need privacy because they never did or intend to violate a law.

shwaj
0 replies
1d2h

Or, it assumes that the only reason they didn’t act on this inclination is due to the fear of punishment. Which omits the possibility that they don’t do it because they know it’s wrong.

Edit: typo

kmeisthax
0 replies
1d

There's a very obvious anti-wiretap argument that also happens to be very anti-pedophile: Children don't like to be watched. A panopticon would be the perfect device for a pedophile to abuse.

sylware
0 replies
1d4h

"consulted bastards"? you mean that's why EU web is Big Tech only? Or you have to fill in dynamic PDF forms to get access to some critical services?

You know the EU digital regulator should have been an US citizen from Big Tech...

omginternets
14 replies
1d4h

I can't help but wonder what it would take for Europeans to develop a sense of mistrust in top-down governance.

masswerk
13 replies
1d4h

For most of the time, the Commission seemed to be a reasonable (as in "voice of reason") counterweight to regional governments and their insanities. Having said that, the EU appears to be wearing off in weird directions, lately…

omginternets
8 replies
1d3h

I beg to differ, but that's also missing the point. The more important point is how profoundly undemocratic the EU is as an institution, and how you'd expect a continent with recent experience of totalitarianism to be very careful with such things.

Have we already forgotten that a fair few countries rejected the EU constitution by referendum, only to have it shoved down their throats? Have we forgotten that Europe managed to produce some of the most brutal totalitarian states, and this within living memory? Are we really going to write this off as mere "maladministration"? Have we learned nothing?

I can already hear the objections. "But omginternets, this time the government is enforcing the right ideas!"

We're going to end up proving the Americans right. Let that sink in.

nvm0n2
6 replies
1d2h

The sad, awkward and near-unspeakable problem is that totalitarianism flourished in 20th century Europe partly because the culture was tolerant of it. That culture wasn't totally erased by the Allies at the end of WW2, which is why the EU's history is full of WTF moments like when Jean-Claude Juncker unveiled a giant statue of Karl Marx and then gave a speech defending him, claiming communism wasn't his fault [1]. Were European national leaders up in arms about this? No, not really :( The primary objections came from the Brits, some Hungarian MEPs, and, um, US Congress, three members of whom wrote to Mr Juncker reminding him that Marxist ideology led to extreme violence and the oppression of eastern Europe.

I think many Americans don't realize what the EU's history actually is. Juncker's honoring of Marx wasn't unexpected. The original proposal for the EU was made by communists imprisoned on an island during WW2. The Ventotene Manifesto specifically called for a socialist federation [2]. Spinelli devoted his life to the construction of the EU and spent 6 years as a member of the Commission, during which time he was actually a member of the Italian Communist Party! There is a major building in Brussels named after him, in his honor.

This attitude can be seen in the many disturbing quotes from major EU figures, like these from [3].

Juncker:

- "When it becomes serious, you have to lie"

- "We decide on something, leave it lying around and wait and see what happens. If no one kicks up a fuss, because most people don't understand what has been decided we continue step by step until there is no turning back."

- "Britain is different. Of course there will be transfers of sovereignty. But would I be intelligent to draw the attention of public opinion to this fact?"

Vivian Reding (a VP of the Commission)

- "We must now embark on the road to a United States of Europe."

- "When people ask politicians today “What will become of Europe?” or “Where is European integration heading?”, we usually give an evasive answer. “We don’t want a super state” that is generally the first thing we say. I must admit that I have in the past often resorted to this kind of thing myself.

Helmut Kohl, former German Chancellor

- “The process of Union is like the Rhine flowing into the sea. Anyone who stands in its way is crushed”

Guy Verhofstadt, MEP chosen to represent the EP in Brexit negotiations

- “The world order of tomorrow is not a world order based on nation states or countries. It’s a world order that is based on empires.”

Jean-Luc Dehaene, former Belgian PM and VP of the EU Convention

- "More than that, if the answer is No, the vote will probably have to be done again, because it absolutely has to be Yes."

Raymond Barre, former French PM

- "I have never understood why public opinion about European ideas should be taken into account."

etc etc.

[1] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/eu-chief-defends-marx-controv...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ventotene_Manifesto

[3] https://www.reddit.com/r/OutCampaign/comments/36ofm0/quotes_...

masswerk
5 replies
23h15m

Opposing origin narrative: The prewar, Christian "Paneuropa" movement. (There's even an obscure arguement over the matter, whether the 12 golden stars emblem on blue background is an emblem of Mother Mary or not.)

Please do not see "Marxists" everywhere, where it's not solely about unregulated capitalism. In actuality, the EU has been criticised quite a bit in the past for being the very spearhead of deregulation and denationalisation in Europe (compare the Maastricht agreement), which is probably not that Marxist, at all.

You may also check your "Marxists":

- Jean-Claude Junckers: Christian Social People's Party

- Vivian Reding: Christian Social People's Party

- Helmut Kohl: Christian Social People's Party (CDU)

- Guy Verhofstadt: Liberal Democrat (moved from neoliberalism more closely to centrisism)

- Jean-Luc Dehaene: Christian Social People's Party

- Raymond Barre: UDF (center right policies)

These are all conservatives, mostly Christian conservatives!

PS, regarding Spinelli: The PCI was actually a mix of communists and social-democrats, was a prominent proponent of Eurocommunism, which opposed the USSR, and Italy's second strongest party after WWII. Arguably, they were the only ones not in bed with mafiotic structures and/or Gladio-style stay-behind organisations. Not every person adhering to Marxist theory is automatically bad and evil. Most are actually idealists (somewhat at odds with their materialist viewpoints).

nvm0n2
4 replies
12h13m

I'm not aware of any alt origin story given the very clear and direct line between the EU and the Ventotene Manifesto. The EU's own diplomatic service tells the story the exact same way:

https://www.eeas.europa.eu/eeas/ventotene-manifesto-and-futu...

The Manifesto spread like wildfire through all the circles of the European resistance. This resulted in the founding of the movements for a European federation in several countries, the decisive Hague Congress of 1948. It resulted ultimately in the Schuman Declaration of 1950, which proposed the European Coal and Steel Community, the first step on our integration process, based on the supranational principle. Later on, in a career that included being Commissioner and Member of the European Parliament, Spinelli promoted the Treaty of the European Union of 1984, which was approved by the European Parliament. Originally rejected by the Council, it became a major influence in the writing of the Maastricht Treaty of 1992 that launched the monetary union and created the foreign and security pillar, of intergovernmental nature.

The EU was founded by communists, there's no real way around it.

Still, you are totally right that the EU is not specifically Marxist today, even though it has its origins in that world. But that doesn't mean there's no problem. Marxism is just one turn of the wheel, an iteration of the same underlying ideology that constantly shapeshifts whilst retaining its basic idealistic core. By the end of the 20th century Marxist economics was discredited. The working classes failed to rise up and revolt against their capitalist masters, turning out to be actually quite conservative and OK with capitalism. The places where "professional revolutionaries" did it for them trashed their economies and wrecked their societies.

So no longer would people who shared Marx's basic intuitions focus their energies on organizing the working classes. They adopted standard capitalist orthodoxy instead, which is why the old left tend to describe the EU as "neoliberal". And they are indeed to some extent New Liberals economically, albeit their love for capitalism is half-hearted at best. They are reluctant converts. But the same underlying intuitions about human nature didn't go away. The principles that there are big gaps between the best and worst people, that society should be united under a dictatorship of the best people, and that it's OK to bend or break the rules to get that outcome, well, unfortunately these ideas somehow did not get discredited.

And so the people who would once have been Marxists shed the idea of fully planned economies and violent revolution, replacing it with a new form of subtle diplomatic revolution. The outcomes would be the same: people are still forced into a trans-national dictatorship of "professional revolutionaries" against their will, but now the mechanisms have altered. The mechanism would be a steady accumulation of international treaties erasing differences between nations, exploiting a loophole in many countries constitutions that allows governments to sign treaties without needing the consent of representatives, and by linking all those apparently separate treaties via carefully disguised "guillotine clauses" in which an attempt to back out of one causes the immediate revocation of all of them.

This focus on subterfuge is why so many quotes from EU elites are on the theme of backroom dealings, misleading the public about what they're doing, hiding things from the public, ensuring countries can't back out when it's too late and so on. It's why the EU has a culture of intense secrecy about everything, reflected in the article this thread is about, but it's not unique to CSAM expert lists. The way von der Leyen was selected is a secret, even the way EU law is made is itself a secret:

https://euobserver.com/eu-political/136630

And often even things that are stated publicly are manipulative propaganda, which is why HN has so many posters convinced of things that aren't true, like the supposedly democratic nature of how the Commission is appointed (not true, Juncker has said in the past he vetoed any Commissioner he didn't like, which is not how it's supposed to work and not how people usually claim it works).

So the EU is fundamentally still engaged in the same old tricks. It is in some sense progress that they do it via the pen now and not the sword, but that's relatively small consolation given that the desired end state is so similar.

masswerk
2 replies
6h48m

Regarding the Maastricht Treaty: Mind that there had been also a plan for a social union as a flanking policy to appease the left, which has never become a reality. Maastricht had been perceived as a major intervention in favour of a more neoliberal course – and I wouldn't call this exactly a smoking gun for any Marxist influences.

nvm0n2
1 replies
5h54m

The social union happened anyway via the backdoor (as always), when the ECB decided it would do "whatever it takes" to stop bond rates rising on Eurozone countries. That opened the door to arbitrarily large wealth transfers from richer to poorer countries, which were then ploughed directly into the benefits system (Greece is an example of this).

masswerk
0 replies
5h30m

So, where are the common social (minimum) standards?

Regarding Greece, mind that Greece debt was totally covered by German restitution obligations, which is also why banks (among them prominently German banks) rushed to propose credits to Greece, since this was backed by the German economy, supposedly a safe bet. It was only when Germany allowed itself a unilateral haircut that this became problematic. (Also compare the London Agreement on German External Debts, where the payment part has been factually canceled in favour of Germany. As an effect of this, while, e.g., the UK was repaying lend-lease debts right into the 21st century, significantly hampering its economy, Germany came out this without any war-related obligations, even – compare the Greece pension treasuries – taking ultimate possession over some of the war-time "acquisitions", while enjoying recronstruction aids at quite a scale. There's a major imbalance in this.) Moreover, the common currency provides more developed industries access to poorer markets on equal footing, thus providing the means for a transfer from the poorer, mostly Southern economies to the richer, Northern ones. Any attempt at a common control of bond rates just mitigates the effects of the common currency for those countries. (Opposing this is much like wanting to eat the cake and still have it, which isn't prone to work out well.)

masswerk
0 replies
10h12m

Mind that planned economy was not a Marxist institution or invention, rather, it was a carbon copy of the economic system of the (conservative) Germany empire in WW1, which had shown some impressive production rates. (In fact, these have never been achieved again.) There had been several attempts to copy at least some elements from this, all over Europe, in the inter-war years. (The Royal Navy, on the other hands, claims the fame for the first truly standardised and interchangeable product, rigging blocks. Mind that this kind of standardisation requires elements of planned economy, as well, and is also a prerequisite to any fully planned economy.)

Moreover, while John Stuart Mill described some kind of a market place inside factories, the advent of management soon brought the concentration of all manufacturing knowledge in a central representation, where it was dismantled, reassembled and redistributed to the various work stations. As compared to Mill's description, a Fordist factory already represents a planned production process. The idea of extending this beyond individual factories (and at the same time gaining some control over the antagonistic forces that dominated the economy) was somewhat natural and not that revolutionary as we may think. Another root may be the central planning and commissioning of roads, bridges and railways – and thus of economic development along those routes. It is not a coincidence that Charles Joseph Minard (who was quite in alignment to the Second Empire), who's famous charts already remind of the kind of knowledge required for a planned economy, had been General Inspector of Roads and Bridges in France.

(Meaning, while soviet planned economy was radical, it was by no means alien to the general development of economy, it was rather an extension of what we would now call conservative policies. The very idea of policy (as in "Policey" as a means of increasing the efficiency of a national body by general directives), is a conservative one. Therefore, it shouldn't come to much surprise that we find commonalities in both of them. Just because we find an elaborate state of planning in, say, a US manufacturing process, it doesn't mean that this is Marxist, nor does it mean that the EU is a Marxist conspiracy.)

Europe's experiences with untethered capitalism in the 19th century had been generally problematic, and it had waddled from the great crisis of the late 1920s and early 1930s directly into the war, now facing enormous efforts in reconstruction and redevelopment. The idea of doing better, this time, wasn't totally unconceivable. Especially, since European powers were also facing a significant loss of power and influence in general, and thus also limited economic prospects. (Even the first program of the German conservative party, after the war, declared untethered capitalism and Marxist economy as failed in equal ways, giving rise to what became the predominant model, social market economy, which met with analog concepts popular among social-democrats.)

boppo1
0 replies
1d3h

Yeah but the EU is relatively progressive & promotes immigration & multiculturalism, so they can't be totalitarian.

cultureswitch
1 replies
1d

The Commission is the governments of the member states.

Which makes it ironically the most corrupt and undemocratic part of the EU, despite being literally made of people elected through national elections. People who say member states are more democratic than the EU tend to have a problem with this one.

masswerk
0 replies
23h28m

Hum, the governments of the member states convene in the European Council, actually. (The Commission is more like a civil servants organisation, second rank to this and in delicate balance with the European Parliament.)

bradley13
1 replies
1d3h

Um, no. The EU parliament has occasionally been a counterweight to insanity. The EU commission has always shown its innate authoritarian tendencies. Wannabe little dictators, they are.

Now that lobbiests have more effectively gotten their teeth into the parliament, I am honestly pessimistic about EU governance.

kmeisthax
0 replies
1d

The commission isn't even "wannabe dictators", it's just where national governments policy-launder all their unpopular bills to. If something is going to piss off their citizens[0], they make the Commission make them do it, then blame the EU.

The specific reason why policy laundering is possible is because international organizations are only accountable to their member states and not citizens. Making them accountable to citizens means getting rid of those member state vetos and having direct elected Commissioners instead - i.e. moving closer to a federal model of Europe.

In America, we used to appoint Senators rather than electing them, as a vestige of pre-federal America where states were supposed to actually be co-sovereigns. The result was that - once Americans figured out how to use their political power effectively - every state gubernatorial race became a proxy vote for Senate anyway. I suspect we need something like this to happen in the EU, where politicians precommit to specific Commissioner appointments, until this becomes enough of a problem that the EU decides to make Commissioners elected.

[0] And, more generally, all EU citizens

miohtama
0 replies
6h41m
matheusmoreira
0 replies
1d2h

It's funny how these people are so concerned with their reputation. They're using children as political weapons to make citizens accept anything. They drag the reputation of anyone who opposes their total surveilance through the mud by accusing them of supporting heinous criminals.

dpedu
0 replies
1d2h

Are enough people going to care, though? Apple already pulled off exactly this on iOS and didn't receive much public heat at all.

14
0 replies
1d7h

Security through obscurity has proven time and time again to not work.

belter
25 replies
1d7h

I had it with these people. The next time there are elections for the Commission I will...hey...wait a minute!...

bad_alloc
13 replies
1d7h

Well, the Commission is elected by the elected governments of the member states. In a similar fashion, many heads of state are voted in by the elected government and not directly. Both procedures can be seen as iffy, but for the EU this was a deliberate compromise to get potential members on board.

denton-scratch
5 replies
1d3h

Well, the Commission is elected by the elected governments of the member states.

Nope.

Commissioners are appointed by the member governments. Each government has an allocation of commissioners to appoint. They are usually failed politicians of the party of government (all political careers end in failure). They have to be signed off by the EU parliament (I think), but nobody in Europe knows the background of every political has-been in other EU countries.

matthewdgreen
4 replies
1d3h

I believe that the EU Council (elected heads of state) gets to appoint the EU Commission President, with an approval required from the Parliament. The remaining 26 Commissioners are selected by the Council of Ministers (appointed ministers for each EU member state, and hence an additional layer of indirection away from the actual electorate.) Then Parliament has some substantially more limited ability to review these appointments, but I don't think they get an outright veto.

realityking
1 replies
1d3h

The European Parliament does get an outright veto or rather the opposite, without explicit approval from the EP commissioners can‘t be appointed.

The catch, they can only approve (or not approve) them as a group. Usually the parliament will indicate which nominated members they find unacceptable and those respective countries nominate new candidates.

Reference: https://www.europeactive.eu/news/european-parliament-gearing...

Arguably this is more democratic than how we appoint government ministers in Germany. The chancellor gets elected by parliament and then appoints (and fires) ministers on their own authority without any check by parliament.

denton-scratch
0 replies
1d2h

The catch, they can only approve (or not approve) them as a group.

OK, that's what I thought, but I had doubts, because I read something contrary recently. Thanks for clarifying.

Can German chancellors appoint anyone they like as ministers, or do they have to appoint someone who has been elected to the Bundestag? Because commissioners are not elected.

So, as I recall, there's been exactly one instance in which the EU Parliament has rejected all the Commissioners; they sacked the lot, because it was evident that they were mostly corrupt. Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.

denton-scratch
1 replies
1d2h

selected by the Council of Ministers

I don't think that's right, is it? Apart from anything else, the Council of Ministers isn't a fixed group of people; if the meeting is about fisheries, then it's the fisheries ministers from the member governments, and so on. Each meeting of the Council of Ministers is a different group of people. And anyway, they can't select anyone they like, because each member country gets an allocation of commissioners (one or two, I think).

I believe there are plans afoot to remove that rule, so that countries like Liechtenstein no longer get one commissioner. About time too.

matthewdgreen
0 replies
1d2h

This is what the Wikipedia article says. The EU itself has a series of websites that describe the various EU institutions and their selection processes, but they are much less descriptive about the appointment process.

Vinnl
3 replies
1d6h

Which is to say: in your next national elections (Dutch ones are in two weeks!), vote for someone who'll use their influence to get a Commission you approve of.

sgift
0 replies
1d6h

And in the EU parliament elections.

jokethrowaway
0 replies
1d5h

That's hilarious

This is never a talking point because it's so detached from normal people life and it's actionable - it's not a good empty promise they can taper cities with and then never fulfill.

The ideal empty promise is something that will take more than 5y to evaluate and people care about.

Gud
0 replies
1d2h

Or even better, vote for someone who will dismantle this nominally democratic system and implement something better. We can do better.

https://www.eda.admin.ch/aboutswitzerland/en/home/politik-ge...

nvm0n2
0 replies
1d1h

The Commission President has a de facto (not de jure) veto power over who the member states nominate so in reality the Commission is selected by its President.

The President is in theory selected by the Council (leaders of the member states), but in practice the whole process is secret so nobody knows how it happens. Certainly the Commission often ends up with extremely dubious Presidents where nobody can explain on what merits they gained that position.

And then the selection of both President and Commissioners is supposed to be ratified by the Parliament but last time they were given a vote with a single option on it. You could either support vdL or abstain. And it's not a real Parliament anyway so nobody with any political ambition actually runs for it, it's a joke chamber made up of yes-men and people who think their countries should leave the EU entirely. Even Juncker didn't take it seriously.

So nothing about the Commission relies on elections.

josefx
0 replies
1d6h

It is one thing to have that structure and hold to it, it is another matter to hold sham elections to select possible candidates and then pick people that weren't even on the list. Every time I hear of it it seems to go out of its way to shit on the very core concepts of democracy, maybe not because it is that way by design, but simply because it can.

belter
0 replies
1d5h

Your comment ignores the well known fact, that within party factions, election for the golden salaries of Brussels and the European parliament are a compensation mechanism. For the losers within the power plays of internal Party politics in Europe. The winners run the Government and run Ministries. The losers are sent to Brussels.

pembrook
6 replies
1d7h

Ahhhh yes. A fun case study in how democracy can devolve into byzantine bureaucracy.

cool_dude85
5 replies
1d5h

EU was designed to be run by technocrats and, as much as possible, totally insulated from any kind of democracy. There's no "devolution" going on here.

bojan
2 replies
1d3h

The proposed European Constitution went a long way to fix this, but was unfortunately rejected in French and Dutch referendums.

The people didn't want the EU to reform.

omginternets
0 replies
1d2h

The proposed European Constitution went a long way to fix this

Uhh... what?

Firstly, it was rejected by more than just the French and the Dutch. Secondly, the reason it was rejected is precisely because, for lack of democratic process, it structurally favors this kind of authoritarian opacity.

The proposed constitution doesn't even begin to fix this; it is instead the very cause.

nvm0n2
0 replies
1d1h

The Constitution was implemented anyway after it was rejected by voters, by passing an endless series of "amendments" to the existing treaties, a mechanism chosen specifically to give national governments an excuse to not do the referendums that their constitutions required.

matthewdgreen
1 replies
1d3h

A technocratic government might produce good outcomes sometimes, but the main problem here is that the "technocrats" seem to be relatively inexperienced with information technology.

omginternets
0 replies
1d3h

The 'techno' prefix in 'technocrat' does not refer to information technology, or even science. It instead refers to a technical specialist in the exercising of governmental or managerial authority.

I can't think of a single instance in which a technocracy has produced a good outcome.

snowpid
2 replies
1d7h

where do you live? And can you vote directly for your government?

denton-scratch
1 replies
1d3h

Most people don't get to vote directly for their government. They vote for a local representative, or MP.

In the EU, most countries don't even have a government party, because most governments are coalitions, which may not have even existed before the elections.

So you don't even get to vote for the party of government, nor its leader. It's all very indirect.

Closi
0 replies
1d2h

It's simple! You just vote for someone who then votes for the person who decides who will vote for the person that is the European president.

It's like democracy except so indirect that it's total shit.

Can't trust the people to actually choose who to put in charge - have to leave that decision to the leaders selected by the other leaders who were voted by the other leaders.

Kenji
0 replies
1d7h

I had it with these people.

You've had it with the EU bureaucrats? What a shame, CSAM has been detected on your phone. Prepare to be apprehended.

cwoolfe
24 replies
1d7h

It is possible to detect CSAM in end-to-end encrypted messaging by doing it on-device on the client side before it is encrypted and/or on the receiving client side after it is decrypted. iMessage already does this in the latest release. Most smart phones have AI-enabled chips that would be able to run images/videos against classification algorithms. The tricky part would be enforcing that users use clients which do this, so the task becomes regulating allowed messaging clients, which might be impossible. That being said, one could probably knock out 80% of the problem by legally forcing the hand of all the major platforms to do client-side scanning. At that point, only the truly dedicated would move their comms to another platform. Mobile users are very susceptible to nudges.

4bpp
5 replies
1d6h

Do you imagine that a significant proportion of CSAM is shared by users who are so casual about it that they would be "very susceptible to nudges"?

cool_dude85
2 replies
1d5h

I suspect that a large portion of CSAM is nude selfies that might be susceptible to "nudges" in the behavioral economics sense.

salawat
0 replies
1d5h

To hell with your "nudges". It It's a cutesy way of saying "flex of State power", and everyone effing knows it.

No. It's not appropriate.

4bpp
0 replies
1d5h

This may well be true according to the legal definition, though a system that matches against a fixed list of hashes, perceptual or otherwise, rather than working on magical AI, would not catch those. However, if this is all that the measure would be effective against then this is rather at odds with the proponents' narrative which makes this out to be about pictures produced and shared by adults with criminal intent.

seanp2k2
0 replies
1d3h

I’m not sure if it’s a happy or sad thing how unaware most people, even the technically-savvy crowd, are about the extent of human trafficking and slavery in 2023. Is it proof that civilization is working how so many don’t need to concern themselves with hunting and gathering, fighting wars, fighting crime, or fighting in general to survive, and are free to spend their time on recreation and the pursuit of happiness instead of survival?

bloopernova
0 replies
1d4h

I think that it's only going to get faster, easier, and more accurate to generate sexualized pictures and videos of someone younger than 18.

Whether you or I consider that "real" CSAM, is moot. What matters is that more and more girls are going to be deepfaked into content they didn't consent to (and in fact can't consent to due to their age.

The proliferation of that content will lead to new laws driven by parents and politicians eager to "think of the children". However impractical, I could see image generators being treated like drugs or firearms and being highly restricted or banned.

aaomidi
4 replies
1d6h

Please don’t AI detect CSAM. That is a disaster waiting to happen.

vacuity
2 replies
1d6h

It works great! Until it doesn't, and then someone gets put into jail and the court doesn't bother reviewing the AI's verdict because how could it go wrong?

figglestar
0 replies
1d5h

Even if no one charges you it still creates a mess for the accused. We already saw how google handled a verified false positive scan that the police determined was innocuous.

Freak_NL
0 replies
1d6h

It's not that you would end up in jail (although granted, that level of fuck-uppery is possible), it's just that anyone flagged would go through hell with real-world consequences before everything is cleared up.

unaindz
0 replies
1d6h

And do not hash detect it either. If you mass scan eventually you are gonna hit a collision .

majke
2 replies
1d6h

I think the problem is different. This is not about a technical possibility. This is about who will submit and manage the CSAM fingerprints. With the technology it will be trivial for oppressive governments to query which citizens have a copy of a particular image on their phone.

Consider a scenario:

- you use whatsapp, end-to-end encrypted by an USA company

- someone, perhaps a random stranger, sends you an image in which there is a criticism to a ruling party in Dabujistan

- your whatsapp has turned on the feature to save images on your phone

- you happen to transfer via Dabujistan

With CSAM tech, and fingerprints managed by the governments, you might be subject to jail.

mordae
0 replies
1d1h

This is about who will submit and manage the CSAM fingerprints.

Not it's not. It's about "Why the fuck should I be under constant surveillance?"

Our computers are practically brain extensions at this point. I don't want anyone wiretapping my thoughts or coming close to it by wiretapping my private conversations with my family. Fuck off.

JCharante
0 replies
1d2h

The unfortunate part about a centralized CSAM list is that now you need a committee to review every CSAM addition (not just the hashes but the source material to confirm it's CSAM and not political) and the committee has to have enough people to make sure the committee isn't all in kahoots

Freak_NL
2 replies
1d6h

Why should my phone be acting like I'm a criminal? That's like searching the bags of everyone who exits the supermarket, or police doing door-to-door house searches "just in case". What's next? Verify every photo I take with my phone?

seanp2k2
0 replies
1d4h

Or make everyone go through metal detectors and millimeter wave scanners at the airport, take their shoes off, treat any liquid over whatever the small limit is like it’s bomb-making material (but still let that person fly; checkmate, would-be bomber!)…it’s all security theater. Notice how they don’t release their testing rates on how many of the test weapons and threats make it through TSA security, because then it would be too easy to point to that and rightfully assert that they utterly fail at their mission while wasting untold lifetimes worth of human time and make travel that much more miserable. https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2015/06/reassessing_a... (2015) is a good read on that if you don’t already know.

My point is that when politicians do something “to save the children”, it’s rarely about actually helping anyone but themselves.

buildbot
0 replies
1d4h

Yeah that's what this person wants, to scan every photo you take...ick.

stephen_g
1 replies
1d6h

iMessage does not do this in any release, that plan was abandoned due to legitimate privacy concerns. The feature that is implemented is a parental control that can be enabled on the devices of minors, that blurs any detected nude images with a warning 'do you want to see this'.

It's not possible to detect CSAM without breaking the security model of the system for everyone, if the system can make any kind of report of detected content to an outside entity. If the system scans messages client side and then sends anything to do with the message to authorities, that is breaking the end to end encryption.

This is either done by 'AI', which means huge numbers of false positives that are actually legal, private and probably intimate get sent to authorities (hence breaking the end-to-end security model for that legal content), or by a secret, un-auditable collection of hashes - which are still fuzzy matched, so there would definitely be false positives (again, breaking the security model for legal content), but potentially also Governments could start to add other, legal material to the database, such as certain political material to detect dissidents. Since it's un-auditable, there is no way to know whether it's actually just illegal material in the database.

So whether it's AI or PhotoDNA or whatever, there's no way to do it that doesn't break the security model and cause more danger to innocent people, including destroying the privacy of children as well as adult, law-abiding citizens.

sneak
0 replies
23h1m

It is worth noting that due to endpoint key escrow on by default in the non-e2ee iCloud Backup, iMessage is already presently broken and not e2ee as Apple has endpoint keys available to them to decrypt almost all iMessages that transit the service (Messages in iCloud) in realtime.

Even if you enable iCloud backup E2EE, or disable iCloud entirely, iMessage is still not E2EE as your conversation partners are escrowing (to Apple) the keys from the other endpoint.

didntcheck
1 replies
1d4h

What classification algorithm can detect CSAM, given that humans cannot reliably determine someone's age? [1] [2]

[1] https://www.eldia.com/nota/2010-4-23-actriz-porno-salva-a-fa... [ES]

[2] anyone who still gets ID'd for alcohol despite being well over 18, and often over 25 too

seanp2k2
0 replies
1d4h

Yeah, no one who’s actually had to work with this on a technical level would seriously suggest our current GPT-4 level of AI for detection. It’s hash-based with some sugar on top.

razakel
0 replies
1d6h

How do you plan to do that without having a database of known CSAM on the device?

andersa
0 replies
1d7h

If the app is processing data in a way you do not want before sending it, especially one that will no doubt be constantly argued to scan for more and more things they find objectionable, then it defeats whole point of end to end encryption, and you might as well just not do it at all.

AJ007
0 replies
1d6h

A greater point here is that end to end encryption in this context is almost entirely a lie.

baz00
23 replies
1d7h

I suggest people read the full decision from the ombudsman: https://www.ombudsman.europa.eu/en/decision/en/176658

It shows what an absolute bureaucratic mess it all is.

seanw444
17 replies
1d7h

The bureaucratic evolution and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race.

pphysch
16 replies
1d

We would never reach 8B population and successful space programs without huge bureaucracies. Unless of course by "human race" you or Uncle Ted mean "my personal fulfillment".

nonrandomstring
11 replies
1d

would never reach 8B population

You make it sound like that's a positive achievement.

There are "Limits To Growth" [0]

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Limits_to_Growth

TeMPOraL
10 replies
1d

Which we won't overcome without huge bureaucracies either.

Also, while the population growth itself may not be a positive achievement directly, it's kind of necessary for all the scientific, technological and cultural achievements. Unless you don't see those as positive either - in which case I don't think there's anything left to discuss.

naasking
6 replies
23h31m

That's just more of what the OP was pointing out: why are you assuming overcoming those limits is good?

This is just natural selection in action: only people who are good at slotting into bureaucracy and being well-behaved cogs in the wheel will thrive in this environment, and other types of humans will die out. This exact same argument suggests we should not tolerate indigenous people who live separate from civilization. Adapt or die right? But this conclusion is typically quite abhorrent to the same type of people who advocate for your position. Can't have it both ways.

dvdkon
3 replies
23h9m

I think both viewpoints (contemporary civilisation is good and we should let "uncivilised" people live without interference) are reconcilable: I can believe that modern bureaucratic liberal democracy is the best system we have, partly because it allows for dissenting views, partly because of other reasons. At the same time I can advocate for letting groups of people control their territory and form states that aren't liberal democracies, since that's yet another form of allowing for dissenting views.

This runs into problems for global matters (global climate change and pollution) and conflicts with an overriding belief in a global morality (depending on how much you are willing to entertain the idea that your idea of morality isn't the "correct" one), but some compromise variation of this idea is certainly self-consistent.

naasking
2 replies
22h43m

Define "uncivilized". If I choose to occupy a national park and live off grid and disconnected from society, do I qualify? Or is some kind of ancestry on a land required? If so, why? Isn't such a requirement kind of arbitrary? Why does my accidental birth into this society necessitate that I must slot into this bureaucracy?

At the same time I can advocate for letting groups of people control their territory and form states that aren't liberal democracies, since that's yet another form of allowing for dissenting views.

What if they want to home school all of their children, do they have to abide by some kind education standard? The bureaucracy will come for you for any choice it finds unpalatable.

I don't see a way to reconcile these without a lot of special pleading. In the end, a form of natural selection will dominate and only the type of people who can fit well into the most optimal bureaucracies will thrive. Maintaining indigenous rights and the rights of "uncivilized" humans will be simply a curiosity, like how we keep animals in a zoo, rather than some coherent recognition of an inherent right to exist and live apart.

I'm not taking a particular side on this question here, I used to be all pro-civilization, science, research and expansion into space, etc. in the Star Trek sense, but I've increasingly recognized the natural selection aspects of this and the apparently inherent incompatibility with liberty.

TeMPOraL
1 replies
22h33m

I used to be all pro-civilization, science, research and expansion into space, etc. in the Star Trek sense, but I've increasingly recognized the natural selection aspects of this and the apparently inherent incompatibility with liberty.

Oh, that. I too have a gnawing feeling that progress of technology and civilization is fundamentally incompatible with individual autonomy. At the very least, because to the extent new advancement put more of potentially destructive power in the hands of individuals, the more control the civilization needs over said individuals, in order to protect itself from any of such individuals going rogue and using their power destructively. That's one thought, I have couple more like this, and they all add up to "progress and civilization, or personal autonomy, pick one".

naasking
0 replies
5h36m

the more control the civilization needs over said individuals, in order to protect itself from any of such individuals going rogue and using their power destructively

There's an implicit assumption here that people could not be educated or conditioned to tolerate such risks so they could have their liberty, and therefore stricter oversight will always occur. That might be true, but it wasn't always true, particularly in the US, so we should acknowledge this possibility.

These days this conflict is seen in the gun control issue: one side is OK with higher death rate from guns to enjoy those liberties, and the other wants a more authoritarian system for more safety.

Tolerance for such risk would change how society is structured somewhat too. Probably less concentrated populations, and more independent and local governance to mitigate the possibility of massive loss of life. Centralization has efficiency advantages though, but with the internet maybe that isn't as much of a concern anymore. I don't see us moving in that direction, but it might be a viable possibility.

almostnormal
1 replies
22h20m

This is just natural selection in action: only people who are good at slotting into bureaucracy and being well-behaved cogs in the wheel will thrive in this environment, and other types of humans will die out.

It would require that slotting into bureaucracy increases the ability and opportunity to procreate for the individual over not slotting into bureaucracy. I doubt that is the case. Strong adherence to a bureaucratic lifestyle significantly reduces the number of offsprings compared to a more chaotic way of living.

naasking
0 replies
18h22m

I think it does to some degree. The chaotic life may lead to more accidental pregnancies, but also higher mortality of every kind. Stable, family-value oriented, borderline conservative belief systems like those circa 1950s US leads to steady population growth. Other systems, like where Western countries are now with negative native population growth and considerably less social cohesion, are possibly less stable long-term. Time will tell.

nonrandomstring
2 replies
23h26m

"scientific, technological and cultural achievements" are not a brute force effort.

TeMPOraL
1 replies
22h54m

They're stochastic in nature and driven mostly by us hitting actual limits, both of which improve with growing population. Things may be different now, because we've crossed a meaningful threshold in how the world operates, but - AFAIK - at least until recently, overall development level and rate of advancement closely tracked population size.

nonrandomstring
0 replies
22h34m

closely tracked population size65;5402;1c

They tracked it. That's all. I see no convincing argument that advanced civilisations occur only in a pool of enormous labour surplus.

The utilitarian in me, and the compassionate human, prefers a world that takes 50,000 years to reach a sustainable, comfortable technological society with a smaller population, than one that grows in 5,000 years to far beyond it's capacity, overproducing consumerist junk, poisoning its planet and seeing billions dying in wars and famines so that a few of us can bow down before the altar of "growth",

Maybe the fact that we have to kill so many of our own kind in order for one percent to live in luxury and pat themselves on the back about "achievements" means we're not really as smart as we think we are as a species?

gunapologist99
3 replies
21h42m

... and successful space programs

Elon Musk is the opposite of a huge bureaucracy.

mcmcmc
1 replies
21h13m

Has Elon put a man on the moon yet?

gunapologist99
0 replies
20h25m

Meanwhile we wait to go to Mars while that same bloated bureaucracy slow walks the Super Heavy.

pphysch
0 replies
19h29m

This is bait, right? SpaceX is almost as big as NASA, and relies a lot on things NASA invented as well as direct USG funding.

jokethrowaway
4 replies
1d5h

The EU is just too large and infringes on the natural rights of too many people.

Your typical country government is already too much but somehow they get away with it with a pinch of nationalism and tribe mentality, the EU is so over board that I think people will actually rebel / or people with a brain will migrate away eventually.

cultureswitch
1 replies
1d

And yet the UK which left the EU is by leaps and bounds way ahead in the race to become even more of a surveillance state than any one in the EU.

FirmwareBurner
0 replies
23h55m

That's why they left. They can move faster in that directions without outside influences.

bojan
1 replies
1d3h

I still trust the EU way more than my national government.

The EU has apparently enough checks and balances that it gets caught when there is an attempt like this. My national government does have them as well, but they are mostly not being acted upon even when they clearly detect misbehavior.

Saline9515
0 replies
19h5m

You can't repell an EU law.

cultureswitch
22 replies
1d

Did we ever stop to consider the theory of harm of CSAM circulating in private communications? Because I don't see how bytes being copied around in secret actually hurts children in any meaningful way.

Obviously it is wrong to create child porn intentionally. But that's already illegal and people who do this are laughably bad at ITSEC. Like seriously, read the stories of CSAM making "studios" who got caught. Either law enforcement is so bad that any remotely shrewd criminal defeats them, either the criminals are just not all that technically savvy. Either way, the tools to catch actual child molesters are effective and adequate.

omginternets
10 replies
1d

I think you're right that we should be able to debate this question, but I also have a hard time believing that circulating CSAM has no detrimental effect whatsoever. I find it quite credible that the production and distribution of original child-abuse content can earn a social reward for pedophiles, and in so doing, encourage them to continue or expand their practice. I also find it credible that it can form the basis of a "street cred" system that binds online communities of child abusers together.

On car forums, you're cool if you're the first to do a particular mod. In pedo communities, I'd expect you to be "cool" if you violate a new, hitherto-unseen kid, or violate one in a new and creative way.

But that's already illegal and people who do this are laughably bad at ITSEC. Like seriously, read the stories of CSAM making "studios" who got caught.

Separately, this doesn't follow. Catching criminals with laughably bad OPSEC doesn't exclude the existence of successful criminals with very good OPSEC.

naasking
6 replies
23h35m

but I also have a hard time believing that circulating CSAM has no detrimental effect whatsoever

Some studies have shown that availability of animated CSAM reduced recidivism among child molesters. That we treat these two categories of CSAM the same, along with the assumption that it encourages more harm, are some of those conversations that need to happen.

omginternets
4 replies
20h55m

That's fair, but if you'd gander a look at another comment of mine in this thread (the long one), I'm not sure what to do with that. This is a very utilitarian argument, and I suppose I need convincing that the benefits really do outweigh the cost, because we're about to gamble with child rape victims.

I am aware of the purported benefits of decriminalizing certain kinds of CSAM, but utilitarian arguments are suspiciously silent on the subject of costs.

Have you thought of any dangers in this approach, and how they can be avoided?

I mean this in the gentlest way possible. I'm really trying to think this through, and would appreciate your input.

naasking
1 replies
6h12m

I am aware of the purported benefits of decriminalizing certain kinds of CSAM, but utilitarian arguments are suspiciously silent on the subject of costs.

The reason they're suspiciously silent is because there is little to no evidence for the existence of such costs. The harms of CSAM with real children is clear as the victim is on camera, but who is victimized by animated CSAM? The allegation is that exposure to porn encourages deviant thoughts that eventually culminate in molestation. This is contradicted by lots of sex research in ordinary people and porn, and the small studies of child molesters suggests that it reduces recidivism too, like I said.

So the situation we're in is that the government has banned something with little to no evidence of actual harm. It's the obscenity laws against porn all over again. Shouldn't the government ideally have to demonstrate actual harm before regulating behaviours?

I understand the impulse to the precautionary principle, but it doesn't seem warranted here.

omginternets
0 replies
1h21m

Meh, if you're not able to list even a single risk, then you clearly haven't thought of this very much.

Surely you can imagine the harm of sharing the video of someone's rape? Don't you think we should try to avoid this for the sake of those who have already suffered?

tremon
0 replies
8h2m

that the benefits really do outweigh the cost

So let's start by enumerating the cost of cartoons and comics depicting CSA (e.g. some hentai, which is usually ambiguous about age). Other than the cost of production and distribution which is the same as any other form of comics, I'm drawing a blank here.

fsflover
0 replies
10h55m

I suppose I need convincing that the benefits really do outweigh the cost

I suppose that the government needs to do the actual research first, and only then introduce new surveillance measures and prohibitions, not vice versa.

correlator
0 replies
3h46m

Any citations?

gambiting
1 replies
22h23m

>I'd expect you to be "cool" if you violate a new, hitherto-unseen kid, or violate one in a new and creative way.

Simple posession of videos of rape and murder is not illegal(in most places) and yet it would be hard to imagine anyone making an argument that it should be illegal because someone might get internet fame for producing them. Or rather - we know that people produce this kind of thing "on order" and we still don't think that banning the posession of this material is going to stop the actual crimes behind them being commited. Why is this any different?

omginternets
0 replies
21h1m

I think you may be reading into my position on a separate, but related question: what exactly should be illegal with respect to CSAM possession?

You've pointed out exactly the kind of incoherences in law that I was hoping to bring to mind. Agreed, on the surface there is little difference between possession of snuff vs CSAM. I'm not sure what to do with that observation, though, because I have trouble assessing:

1. Is surface-level analysis is correct? Or is there something bigger at play?

2. What is the appropriate level of punishment vs rehabilitation?

To the first question, there are obvious differences between child abuse and murder, but I can't think of an example in which one of those differences would also lead to a different conclusion about the nature of the recording. Similarly, I don't think the act of recording the crime is significantly changed by any of the differences between child abuse and murder.

With that in mind, what do we do? Do we consider video-taping murder as bad as video-taping child abuse? My own gut-check reveals that I rationally think murder is worse than rape, but then again, rape somehow seems more taboo. If I consider the taboo element, I reach the opposite conclusion: that rape is worse than murder. Adding in the "child" element, I observe a main effect of making everything worse, but the interaction of "rape" getting disproportionately worse than "murder".

Again, this is just me, but I would like to understand where these conflicting feelings come from. My sense is that rape triggers us on a symbolic level... something about Man betraying Woman. I'm old-fashioned enough to think archetypes matter, so I'd like to get a bead on this before formulating any policy opinions.

falserum
0 replies
23h47m

Rhetorical, but relevent, question: Will new measures help catch people with good opsec capabilities?

I have doubts, that new measures will move the needle much.

xcdzvyn
2 replies
23h59m

Supply and demand dictates that more CSAM is made the more it is watched, no?

falserum
1 replies
23h41m

Usually it is the opposite mr. Cunningham.

kelseyfrog
0 replies
17h30m

So you're saying that if we flood the market with CSAM that the demand will go down?

soulofmischief
0 replies
23h18m

Any argument not addressing the fundamental issue which is the general right to private communication and storage in the digital age, concedes that argument.

Instead of debating smokescreens and planted arguments, we should be forcing the conversation to stay on the topic of fundamental privacy and avoid the entire gamut of CSAM/piracy/terrorism arguments typically employed.

sneak
0 replies
23h9m

None of this is actually about CSAM. That’s just the unassailable cover story for implementing society-wide surveillance.

rany_
0 replies
16h18m

Obviously it is wrong to create child porn intentionally. But that's already illegal and people who do this are laughably bad at ITSEC.

That's because you're reading about the dumb CP producers that got caught.... who by definition messed up with their ITSEC or in some other way.

qwertox
0 replies
11h17m

Because I don't see how bytes being copied around in secret actually hurts children in any meaningful way.

Isn't this probably the biggest source of revenue for criminals? Money for bytes, which creates more incentives to commit more crimes?

qingcharles
0 replies
22h4m

Yes, there is definitely harm. If I was abused as a child, I don't want those images continuing to circulate and be seen by anyone. This is like the revenge porn laws. I want control over my naked image.

I still don't agree with these laws, though. The good outweighs the bad.

Besides, I suspect that AI CSAM will probably be more interesting and more satisfying in the future to those that desire it, and that creates a whole separate conversation.

hansvm
0 replies
5h0m

If your only goal is reducing incidence/severity of hurt children, at least two arguments still quickly spring to mind:

(1) Removing the buyers has different macroscopic effects from imprisoning the producers. In a world where private circulation is legal but production is not, the expected result is less production (great!), high prices and incentives for the remaining content (uh-oh), and more creative, intelligent, risk-taking, impoverished (whatever differences make taking the new risks worth it) producers. That long tail is had to crack down on because the high incentives will almost certainly lure in some unsavory individuals. It's a lot like the global ivory trade.

(2) The truth of the following matter is murky to me (and as I understand it, to experts as well; I'd love for somebody else to chime in), but there's an argument that exposure to material at best doesn't help the addiction and is likely to make it worse. CSAM is a bit hard to study, but to the extent that it's comparable to other vices, proxies for murder and rape (movies, games, ...) there's some body of evidence that the substitute behaviors strengthen the addiction and make actual offenses more likely, rather than satiating a need and making real-world offenses less frequent (this is a bit different from the video_games->violence argument because the sample is different and small enough that you wouldn't have necessarily expected that deviant behavior to show up in macro-level stats for a society-wide study).

It's probably worth debating that sort of thing to ensure we're actually going to do some good in the world, but IMO it's a lot more damning that the majority of tech-related CSAM laws are unlikely to help in the manner described, are prone to increasing CSAM issues massively in their secondary effects, have significant other negative collateral, and appear only to be introduced as a Trojan horse for less savory motives. Even if stopping distribution is worthwhile (I think it probably is), the proposed laws are at best totally worthless for the stated goals.

danuker
0 replies
21h48m

My guess is induced demand. A CSAM user will want more, the more they get. Same as any addiction.

aqme28
0 replies
23h45m

This has nothing to do with criminalizing the creation of CSAM. It's fingerprints on existing material that has been identified by law enforcement. "New" material won't have been fingerprinted yet.

Despegar
21 replies
1d4h

The only way for this system to work would be if the database of CSAM were managed by consensus by geopolitical rivals. That is, it would have to include Russia and China. This is the only way to ensure that Western governments don't abuse their access in the future to surveil dissident groups.

Trusting that NCMEC can't be compromised is a nonstarter. I would trust a system where Chinese, Russian, American, British, etc police agreed that the database only includes CSAM.

jstarfish
6 replies
1d1h

The hyperbole around the issue of CSAM is starting to outweigh the threat itself. The crimes committed against a minority of the population isn't worth this much drama. We don't even pay this much attention to murdered children.

This isn't going to unite international rivals against it any more than an asteroid hurtling toward the planet. Only the western world gives a shit about it, which means it's easily weaponized by anybody outside of it.

Rather than backdooring every device on the planet, a more practical solution would be to just take away kids' phones and chain them to the radiator. To protect the children from CSAM, lock them up.

We don't like to admit it but face the facts: children are property as far as the State is concerned. Same as any other asset, livestock and firearms, they can be "taken" away from you and "given" to others for dividends (which, when you think about it, describes the act of trafficking itself).

You don't protect your home by unlocking everyone else's. That sort of "solution" makes you an actual menace to society.

nonrandomstring
5 replies
1d

to just take away kids' phones

Absolutely. Just the first part, seriously. No need for chains and radiators. Let's ban kids under 16 from access to phones and the open Internet. It would MASSIVELY improve just about everything about childhood and mental health of the young.

There are plenty of technologies emerging with the density of memory and GPT type compression (that's what neural networks really do... compression) to facilitate "curated education in a box", and small network (family and friends) communication.

jstarfish
3 replies
23h44m

Sure. I was exaggerating to make my point-- in no context has "safety through disarmament" ever been a thing.

The Louvre doesn't respond to people stealing paintings by disabling all the security cameras. Prisons don't protect the public by being free-range. Nuclear disarmament is too complex to go into here, but hypocrisy abounds. Barring that one incident, the Mint doesn't protect the money supply by storing it in the middle of a Walmart parking lot (predictably, it got stolen).

Every time we seek to secure anything, we make the coveted object more inaccessible to pursuers. That's how Protection works.

Anyone telling you lowering your guard and becoming vulnerable will somehow increase anyone's safety is one distraction away from slipping a roofie into your drink. It's the sort of gaslighting one expects from a pervert or voyeur.

nonrandomstring
2 replies
23h27m

Not sure I understand you. Are you seeing smartphones as a weapon? Something that is empowering?

jstarfish
1 replies
22h1m

In some hands, empowering, in other hands, a weapon. It's less about smartphones specifically and more an abstraction for the internet itself. Take the internet away and it removes the metaphysical vector for exploitative outreach to children.

It would make it very difficult to produce new CSAM if you eliminate the channels over which children are discreetly coerced into running away or producing it themselves.

nonrandomstring
0 replies
21h20m

I lived through the 70s. Worked at the BBC for a while. Nonces (kiddy fiddlers) are a social psychiatric problem. Policing networks or endpoints is treating the symptoms.

Nonetheless I agree the utility that children get from access to the mainstream "Five Giant Enshitified Websites" doesn't really surmount the damage done. The main harm, in my opinion, is simply to general mental health and wellbeing. So that just adds to the case for an age restriction for smartphones. If that reduces potential contact with nonces then all-good, but the reality is that child abuse happens by people IRL, usually trusted family or neighbours.

Maybe the tide is turning and we're "getting there", and that's why I defended and supported many parts of the UK Online Safety Bill - even though other parts of it are trash. However this focus on CSAM to push unworkable restrictions is the usual dishonest politics and posturing.

We have more general problems with minors and the Internet, and most of them are "live rail" issues the media and politicians won't touch.

xcdzvyn
0 replies
23h57m

It would MASSIVELY improve just about everything about childhood and mental health of the young.

Honestly it'd make the internet a lot better for adults too.

fragmede
6 replies
1d4h

That sounds as effective as, oh, I don't know, the UN security council. Why not just argue against having the whole thing entirely?

lazide
2 replies
23h59m

The UN security council is VERY effective at what it's actual purpose is, which is preventing all out nuclear war between the major super powers. That is why the confirmed nuclear powers are the only ones with veto powers (minus Pakistan/India/NK, interestingly).

Everything else is quite explicitly window dressing.

fallingknife
1 replies
22h50m

Mutually assured destruction does that. The security council has nothing to do with it. Also, at the time of its founding, the US was the only country with nukes, so that's not the logic behind who the permanent members are.

lazide
0 replies
21h53m

Ah, but not by many years. I guess it was more 'the global powers got nukes first', rather than 'the nuclear countries got the veto'. Interesting!

SpicyLemonZest
0 replies
1d

The UN security council is hardly a non-entity. They aren't great at addressing certain kinds of geopolitically contentious problems, but UN peacekeepers have 12 active deployments. (https://peacekeeping.un.org/en/where-we-operate)

Despegar
0 replies
1d3h

This is the only compromise I would accept, otherwise I'm in favor of E2E with no backdoors. People who care about preventing CSAM and prosecuting pedophiles should consider this an improvement over the status quo.

4ugSWklu
0 replies
1d3h

I’m unsure what you’re saying here, can you clarify?

Is it that Baseline seems overly bureaucratic and will be ineffective, or that people should not support any CSAM lists at all?

4ugSWklu
6 replies
1d4h

This does already exist somewhat as the INTERPOL Baseline list - https://www.interpol.int/Crimes/Crimes-against-children/Bloc...

Does this meet your threshold?

Despegar
4 replies
1d4h

If national legislation by Western governments provided that only signatures from this org could be included, then I'd support it. But I don't know anything about this INTERPOL list, does it actually require consensus by all of these countries? Or can one country influence what's included in practice? There has to be an effective veto by all the countries involved for anything to be included.

4ugSWklu
3 replies
1d3h

“To be included in the Baseline list, child abuse images and videos must be recognized as such by our specialist network of investigators, and meet specific criteria in terms of the severity of the image content, for example those believed to feature children aged 13 and under.

The strict criteria ensure that the Baseline list refers only to images and videos which would be considered as illegal in any country.”

INTERPOL has a very large membership, including Russia and China. The baseline list is reviewed so only media that is illegal in every country INTERPOL operates in is included.

I’m not sure how a veto system as you’re suggesting would work practically, but this might be the closest thing.

Despegar
2 replies
1d3h

The veto system would have to require that the equivalent of Russia and China's NCMEC agrees that the image/video's signature that's going to be included in the database is actually CSAM at a low level operational level. Without that consensus, it should be technically impossible for anyone to include a signature.

4ugSWklu
1 replies
1d3h

I think in a perfect world that would be great. Unfortunately, it’s difficult to see how a system like that could ever be implemented within our lifetimes.

I personally think Baseline is a good pragmatic approach. It includes only known media, where they retain the originals for sense checking, and only includes things judged to be CSAM by trained experts. It’s probably the lightest touch possible solution that is still somewhat effective.

Despegar
0 replies
1d3h

I don't see why it's impossible. It requires coordination and millions of dollars in funding by all the respective governments, but if the world thinks CSAM is a serious problem, then it's a drop in the bucket.

CSAM doesn't need to be added to the database in real-time. It can be done quarterly, giving each national agency time to deliberate on the content.

omginternets
0 replies
1d

If you'll forgive this tangent, I am not sure it is a good idea to maintain a "worst of" list. I can already imagine pedos competing for first place.

gpvos
1 replies
1d3h

CSAM = child sexual abuse material

GuB-42
0 replies
21h28m

Also called "child pornography".

The term had me confused at first because I though it consisted of evidence of child sexual abuse, including things like medical records showing traces of abuse. But no, it is just child porn, stuff that gets pedophiles excited, which may include stuff where no real child abuse has taken place (ex: lolicon).

Footnote7341
1 replies
23h46m

Isn't it illegal to save, view, or post, the new zealand shooting in NZ and Australia. Add those hashes to the list too why not...

the exact same twisted logic that we use in this crusade surely it would apply to videos of people getting killed not just raped right?

or is there a unique puritanical weirdness that allows CSAM to get a pass to where states should be violating all of our devices

gunapologist99
0 replies
21h39m

Can you imagine if holocaust museums didn't exist? If Auschwitz was paved over and it was illegal to talk about it?

ritzaco
0 replies
1d4h

Suggestion for improvement

26. Given the Commission’s failure to identify the list of experts despite the complainant’s clear interest in it, the Commission should register this now as a new request for public access to documents and handle it in accordance with Regulation 1049/2001.

I know the ombudsman doesn't really have power and can only provide recommendations but surely "and the people who initially denied the request should be fined/fired/imprisoned" or some such language would have been OK to add? Seems like 'we can ignore the law until someone jumps over the substantial hurdles to complain about us ignoring the law and then we can follow the law' is not good for democracy.

miohtama
0 replies
6h41m

The secret expert list is now published

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38205743#38205787

lakomen
0 replies
2h5m
jmyeet
0 replies
1d3h

Sadly, this sort of thing isn't new. Governments around the world are trying to avoid any kind of public scrutiny for what they're doing.

I'm reminded of the Trans-Pacific Partnership ("TPP") from ~8 years ago. Very few people were even allowed to see the text of the treat [1] yet the people's represntatives had to ratify this when their own constituents weren't allowed to see it? Wikileaks and others leaked drafts and it was as bad as people thought it was going to be.

Defenders argue that trade negotiations need to happen in secret so as to not worsen our negotiating position. This really translates to "we don't want to afford the public the opportunity to oppose it". The EU now is finding some BS rationale for operating in the shadows.

[1]: https://www.npr.org/sections/itsallpolitics/2015/05/14/40667...

Phil_Latio
0 replies
1d6h

25000 lobbyists. If they don't deliver, what are they good for?!