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China Jails Porn Site Leader For Life 324

eldavojohn writes "The AP has picked up the story of a man convicted of serving internet porn in China. They report that he has been jailed for life. Eight accomplices were given sentences ranging from a few months to almost a decade. Some might view internet pornography as morally wrong but I wouldn't think it to warrant a lifetime sentence." From the article: "Xinhua reported that police said it was difficult to know the exact amount of profits the Web site earned. Police found about 200,000 yuan ($25,000) in the bank accounts of the nine. When the site was closed in October last year, it contained more than 9 million pornographic images and articles, the police said."
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China Jails Porn Site Leader For Life

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  • Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)

    by The Hobo ( 783784 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @03:36PM (#16985716)
    I visit the websites for the articles.
  • by eldavojohn ( 898314 ) * <eldavojohn@noSpAM.gmail.com> on Saturday November 25, 2006 @03:36PM (#16985718) Journal
    Since I submitted the story yesterday, I found a good Ars Technica article that explains how the internet has been a sexual revolution for the Chinese and the government's negative attitude towards it [arstechnica.com]. It's funny to me because not too long ago, China underwent huge birth control programs instituted on all levels. I would think that internet porn for everyone would prevent a little extra hanky panky but I supposed that's another debate as to whether or not it inhibits it or enforces it.

    From that website (dated December of 2005):
    According to a Chinese government official, 221 people have been arrested, and almost 600 web sites have been shut down since March in a crackdown on "obscene" Internet content.
    I'm certainly not intimately familiar with these cases but I do hope that they are jailing the correct people and that these people deserve it. A life sentence is nothing to sneeze at, especially in China.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Oh yes, these people deserve it. Much the same as landowners deserved to be tied to ceiling fans and swung about till they died during the communist revolution. Imagine that! Owning land! Or selling pictures of naked adults!
    • by reporter ( 666905 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @04:22PM (#16986082) Homepage
      There is no shortage of hypocrisy in Chinese culture. The Chinese government imprisons, for life, the operator of a pornography site.

      Yet, the government gives an implicit "okay" to prostitution. About 33% of Chinese men returning from the mainland to Hong Kong have purchased the services of a prostitute [nih.gov].

      Why is pornography worse than prostitution? Pornography is about fantasy. Prostitution is about reality, and in China, prostitutes are sometimes children.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by maspatra ( 1031940 )
        Here's a funny story on hypocrisy in that vein:

        About 10 years ago, I lived in the PRC for a couple of months doing database work. I remember going one of those big Samusung stores--the kind that are like computer bazaars with tons of vendors--and there were cops who stood outside and searched everyone's bags as they left to make sure that they didn't have any porn.

        Later on, I got pickpocketed at a bus stop. When I went to the police station to report the crime, there were a bunch of cops in a lounge t
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by tehanu ( 682528 )
        It's not hypocrisy in Chinese culture. It's because there have always been two major forces in Chinese governments. First is very strong moral conservatism. Because this is part of Confucianism the people involved are usually very upstanding and are not corrupt and generally quite idealistic though very very conservative. Then there is massive corruption because of the autonomy usually given to provincial and then local rulers. China's a big place with lots of people and the bureaucracy has always been
        • by tehanu ( 682528 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @06:34PM (#16987174)
          Oops, sorry, forgot to format it properly:

          It's not hypocrisy in Chinese culture. It's because there have always been two major forces in Chinese governments. First is very strong moral conservatism. Because this is part of Confucianism the people involved are usually very upstanding and are not corrupt and generally quite idealistic though very very conservative. Then there is massive corruption because of the autonomy usually given to provincial and then local rulers. China's a big place with lots of people and the bureaucracy has always been too small to micromanage everything. Also because of its persecution by the First Emperor who was a Legalist Confucianism doesn't like legalism that much. The idea is to install good moral principles in the bureaucrats rather than have them follow strict laws. So local governors usually have a great deal of power. Also there is a saying in many parts of China "The world is big and Beijing is a long way away."

          On the flip side, the moral conservatives are *very* conservative and controlling micromanaging bastards(see pre-Deng Xiao Ping Communist Party for an example). The very things that allow corruption to flourish are *also* the things that allow people freedoms from central control. There's also the very important role that families and local area affiliations and clans (well not so much now) have to play.

          So in this situation you have a bunch of people in the central government who are not corrupt, idealistic and morally conservative trying to harshly enforce their brand of moral puritany. On the other hand you have the often much more free-wheeling provincial governors who don't care about what central government says. All of Chinese history has been a struggle to get a balance between the two extremes so that the micromanaging puritans can't control every aspect of people's lives and that corruption due to people not listening to central government doesn't get completely out of control. Both sides know this and there is a certain armed truce with the provinces and local areas listening to some things that the central government says (especially if sufficient force is applied) or at least pretending to and the central government tries to concentrate on the battles it can fight.

          Also the prostitution is probably occuring in the Southern provinces, particularly Guangdong and those have always been especially independent of Beijing, so much so that Beijing gets pissed off. Strangely enough the Southern Provinces can also be some of the most fiercely loyal to China, more specifically Han Chinese. I just laugh when people expected that the fact that Guangdong is the most rapidly developing area of China is going to lead to actions to topple the Communists. Now, if the Communists were non-Han Chinese then well maybe yeah.
      • by code65536 ( 302481 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @06:36PM (#16987190) Homepage Journal
        I dunno if the Chinese government implicitly okays prostitution. Just because it is prevalent in some contexts does not mean that they condone it. I won't be surprised if they have prostitution "crackdowns" every now and then.

        You see, pornography is very prevalent in China; heck it is as prevalent as pirated movies and software in China (keep in mind the estimates that >90% of software is pirated), meaning that there are parts of China where you can literally see this stuff in plain view just be strolling down the street (there is a positive correlation between prevalence and distance from Beijing, so you probably won't see this in Beijing). China does piracy crackdowns every now and then to show people (mostly the congresscritters in Washington) that they do care and will take a tough stance on piracy. Piracy is illegal in China. And you face extremely severe consequences if you are prosecuted. And that, my friend, is the big "if", since it is not uncommon to see cops visiting one of the many small stores selling pirated goods to buy stuff (at a discount, of course) for their own consumption. As I said, porn is quite prevalent. A lot of the places selling pirated movies also sell pirated porn. And you can sometimes even see explicit covers of such products as you are walking down the street because the vendors will sometimes set them up so that they are street-facing.

        Sure, they'll throw a few guys in jail now and then, but this is just a show to tell people that the government is Mr. Tough Guy and that violating the laws is Bad For Your Health. But in practice, nobody--including most of the people in government--gives a damn.

        The central government is also not that dumb. They know that if they strip people of their sources of pleasure, they will be in trouble (they already have more than enough boiling discontent that they are trying to keep a lid over), so I'm not surprised if they are purposefully limiting their action to a few show cases to just nominally assert their authority while unofficially condoning it. Of course, that probably isn't any consolation for the bloke in jail.
      • by dbIII ( 701233 )

        and in China, prostitutes are sometimes children.

        In the USA and a lot of other places this happens too and it is also seen as criminal behaviour. In a suprising number of places around the world some prostitutes are also literal slaves - unpaid and imprisioned - but in nearly every one of these places that is also criminal behavior. If you are going to criticise the Chinese government there are a lot of real things they endorse you could bring up instead.

        We should never criticise the USA as whole for som

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by tryptych ( 1023927 )
        It's interesting you define this as hypocrisy, whereas the great nation of USA, who's biggest export is filth and pornography on an astronomical scale can also decry a "wardrobe malfunction" and get apoplectic about someone revealing a nipple in the middle of a football match. Time to get real, I think.
    • by rolfwind ( 528248 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @04:32PM (#16986160)
      The most effective birth control is tied with richer 1st world countries, perhaps whitecollar jobs and education. Western European countries and Japan have generally low native birth rates, middle-class+ America probably is too to an extent though it's population keeps growing with immigrants (as it always has).

      I don't know the dynamics, but probably it has to do with the cost of bring up kids as a middle/upper class family (it's more expensive to pay for college/toys/etcetera than what a low income family usually gives their kids), the fact that women are more likely to work a job, and other such factors.

      So China really just has to become a 1st world country to reliably lower the birthrate. The other factors I have seen don't seem to count for much.
      • Chinese women get in average 1.73 [wikipedia.org] children, which is significantly less than what is needed to sustain the population over a long term. The population is still increasing though, due to expanded life expectancy. But India will soon replace China as the worlds most populous nation.

        BTW: The second world countries (the old "Eastern Bloc") has in general even lower birth rates that the first world countries, so imitating Western lifestyle is not the only option.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by billcopc ( 196330 )
        I don't think we can draw any sort of correlation like that. Some might say we have a low birth rate because we're more liberal about sexuality, with less emphasis on procreation and mostly healthy views on recreational sex. Or maybe we're so obsessed with physical perfection that only a small subset of our population is having sex, while the chinese will fuck anything :P Or maybe our social structure is so fucked up and warped around money that it simply doesn't make business sense to have kids. Or may
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by mdwh2 ( 535323 )
      It's not just places like China wanting to crack down on the "revolution" that has come with the Internet.

      Here in the UK, the Government plans to criminalise possession of certain types of images it has labelled "extreme" (covered on Slashdot here [slashdot.org]) - even though the images feature consenting actors or are faked/simulated; this is about censoring "obscene" images because they are inherently seen as harmful to those who view them (more information at http://www.backlash-uk.org.uk/ [backlash-uk.org.uk] ).

      My understanding is that t
  • I wonder if the purveyors were also spammers? I haven't received any porn spam since about last October. Coincidence?

  • by Josh Lindenmuth ( 1029922 ) <joshlindenmuth@NOSpam.gmail.com> on Saturday November 25, 2006 @03:38PM (#16985736) Journal
    And to think, only 3 weeks ago Chinese officials tried to convince the UN that the Chinese government does not censor the internet [com.com].
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by goddidit ( 988396 )
      Sentenced for life for smaller porn amount that average slashdotter downloads in one day,
      that's pretty unreasonable, but it isn't censoring, it's law enforcement.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by MBGMorden ( 803437 )
        Sorry, I was unware that something ceases being censoship as long as they have an unjust law backing it up.
        • You have a point, but I guess a problem is in that case that China has shitload of laws that make publicizing certain material "unjust". It's not like China censors things without having their laws backing them up. I think the problem is really their laws supporting what other cultures would call censorship, and the problems bleed into each other a bit.
      • What the hell kind of definition of "censorship" are you using? It doesn't matter whether law enforcement is involved or not; it's still censorship (in fact, I would argue that censorship enforced by the law is usually the worst type.)
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by j_s_summers ( 783810 )
      According to your logic, the United States censor the internet too, because we arrest Child Pornographers. Right?
  • by __aaclcg7560 ( 824291 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @03:38PM (#16985738)
    If pornographers are getting life, then spammers should get the death sentence. Of course, it would also undermine the capitalist underpinnings of the internet since porn and spam go hand in hand.
  • Feh... (Score:3, Funny)

    by Bonker ( 243350 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @03:41PM (#16985762)
    9 million pornographic images and articles

    Tsk. Slackers. That's hardly worth buying a new spindle of DVDRs for, let alone going to prison for life.
  • by gd23ka ( 324741 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @03:48PM (#16985826) Homepage
    "Some might view internet pornography as morally wrong but I wouldn't think it to warrant a lifetime sentence"

    Some view smoking marijuana as morally wrong but people spend decades in prison here for smoking a joint.
    • by pla ( 258480 )
      Some view smoking marijuana as morally wrong but people spend decades in prison here for smoking a joint.

      The fact that we have stupid laws in the US doesn't make China's stupid laws any more sensible.

      If any potential "harm" doesn't go outside your own body, ALL humans, whether Chinese or American or whatever, should have the right to do whatever the hell they want to themselves. If that means wasting time by smoking pot (because, let's all admit it, you can't really say anything worse about it), not a
      • by KillerCow ( 213458 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @05:20PM (#16986604)
        Some view smoking marijuana as morally wrong but people spend decades in prison here for smoking a joint.

        The fact that we have stupid laws in the US doesn't make China's stupid laws any more sensible.


        This might make it a little more clear on what he was saying:

        "Hello, kettle? This is pot. You are black."

        Larry Flynt [wikipedia.org] and Marvin Miller [wikipedia.org] may have some interesting tales to tell you about prosecution of pornography in the U.S.

        Perhaps China is just "applying contemporary community standards" in determining if this man should have been punished.

        See also: moral relativism [wikipedia.org].
      • by cdrguru ( 88047 )
        The problem is that we have this wonderful idea that there should be a "social safety net" whereby people can choose to be supported by taxpayers so they can spend all their time in a stupor.

        If the people that chose this life were left to fend for themselves and starve, that would be fine with me. Telling me that I need to pay to feed, clothe, house and buy drugs for these people is a bit much, don't you think?

        Unfortunately, I am very much in the minority. You can retire from life in the US and live off w
        • The problem with your line of reasoning is that the war on drugs is much much MUCH more expensive than the extra money we'd spend supporting junkies. Just realize what the war costs us:

          1. Manhours. We could easily cut our police force in half if they didn't have to worry about drugs (see point #4.)

          2. Imprisonment. It's DAMNED expensive. It includes welfare (food, shelter, medical care) and a whole lot more. You might be in favor of a more barbaric prison system, but some of us still believe in huma
        • by Mr2001 ( 90979 )

          The problem is that we have this wonderful idea that there should be a "social safety net" whereby people can choose to be supported by taxpayers so they can spend all their time in a stupor.

          If the people that chose this life were left to fend for themselves and starve, that would be fine with me.

          Would you also extend that to people who get injured playing sports, skiing, driving a car, walking across the street, or making any other voluntary choice? Or only drugs?

          Or are you just one of those... well, I can

    • by Tim C ( 15259 )
      Some view smoking marijuana as morally wrong but people spend decades in prison here for smoking a joint.

      Decades inside just for smoking a joint? Do you have any sources to back that claim up?
      • He was exaggerating, but not by much. And then there are three-strike laws in some of the stupider states; if it's your third time getting caught smoking a joint, we may well be talking about decades.
      • If you grow your own or otherwise possess a lot of it (e.g. if you smoke a LOT) then you could very well be charged with possession with intent to sell, and because of the way the laws are written there's nothing you can do to prove you weren't going to sell it. Once they manage to charge you as a drug dealer (instead of a user), you very well could be put away for a decade or more.

        It also bears mentioning that shortly after 9/11 it was revealed that law enforcement agencies were holding seminars to ill
  • by cgenman ( 325138 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @03:55PM (#16985870) Homepage
    Chen Hui was handcuffed and lead out of People's Court in Shanxi by two buxom sherrif's deputies in expensive wigs.

    "Oh, we'll punish the naughty boy," said the tall blonde one, stroking her gun suggestively.
  • by rjnagle ( 122374 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @04:01PM (#16985924) Homepage
    Obviously I don't condone such draconian measures, and I'm generally a free speech enthusiast.

    But isn't it interesting how governments of two of the most important nations of the world have strict controls on pornography.

    China, because they like censorship in general.

    But India has always put tight controls on sexually-related material. I don't know if they have a decency/obscenity code that webmasters need to follow. But certainly there is next to no production of porn-related material (especially when compared to Japan and US).

    We cannot call India "backwards" or "repressive" with regard to free speech or sexual expression. They just haven't warmed up to porn.

    Perhaps pornography is simply a Western invention and a predilection that strikes people in Asia as bizzare. Then again, I have no doubt that people in these countries are freely downloading Western porn; they just aren't producing it themselves.

    One has to ask whether tolerance of porn/erotica is less a measure of liberalism than social norms. On the other hand, I feel pretty sure that in Asia/India and Arab countries prostitutions is rampant.

    So pick your poison: prostitution/AIDS or porn/stripping.

    One might even make the argument that whereas porn has been infiltrated by lots of feminists/actresses-turned-directors, brothels have remained a bastion of male rule.

    Maybe it boils down to the technological issues; once enough people are armed with videocameras and ftp accounts, mores will change. But until that time, people in China and India will go gaga over Paris Hilton and Western porn stars.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday November 25, 2006 @04:10PM (#16985986)
      pornography is simply a Western invention and a predilection that strikes people in Asia as bizzare

      Funny, I was just thinking that Japanese pornography strikes me as bizarre.
    • by AlXtreme ( 223728 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @04:20PM (#16986062) Homepage Journal
      But India has always put tight controls on sexually-related material. I don't know if they have a decency/obscenity code that webmasters need to follow. But certainly there is next to no production of porn-related material
      Kama Sutra?
      • by rjnagle ( 122374 )
        obviously. I'm talking about the latest manifestation of erotica: pornographic videos. India is a very tolerant society with a long tradition of sexual artwork and literature.

        That does not explain why the Indian government restricts porn sites today. If it were only China, I would say, the ban is just symptomatic of repressive society. But India is not considered a repressive society. It is also a democracy.

        There is probably more victimization (and disease) in the brothel than in the video production studi
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by EvilIdler ( 21087 )
      >Perhaps pornography is simply a Western invention and a predilection that strikes people in Asia as bizzare.

      I think you have not heard of certain Japanese perversions..perhaps Asia didn't invent porn
      (although I think Indian murals are prior art!), but they certainly wrote some damn fine manuals.
    • You've never been to Japan have you?
      I used to think it was a bit weird until I saw this [snopes.com]
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by deepestblue ( 206649 )

      Perhaps pornography is simply a Western invention and a predilection that strikes people in Asia as bizzare.

      There's no "Asia". China and India are so huge and diverse that they have very little in common. The US and France probably have more in common than China and India.

    • >Perhaps pornography is simply a Western invention

      Try Paleolithic. It's as cross-cultural as alcohol.
    • wtf???? (Score:3, Informative)

      Um, hate to break it to ya, but ancient India produced some of the most kinkiest artworks known to man. In fact, pretty much all of Asia was, at one point in time, relatively sexually liberated. Some of them lost that liberation over time (I believe in India's case it had something to do with Muslim influence, both direct and indirect.), but many (most?) of them gained inhibitions after interacting with the West. As I understand it, Japan didn't have any porn taboo at all until the American occupation.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by coaxial ( 28297 )

      Perhaps pornography is simply a Western invention and a predilection that strikes people in Asia as bizzare. Then again, I have no doubt that people in these countries are freely downloading Western porn; they just aren't producing it themselves.


      What? Asia is full of porn. Porn, love hotels, brothels, hostess bars (i.e. emotional prostitutes), strip clubs. Seriously. How were you not aware of this? And no. The bars don't cater to only a a foreign clientel. Many Japanese bars frequently put up big Jim
  • by Teun ( 17872 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @04:02PM (#16985940)
    "Some might view internet pornography as morally wrong but I wouldn't think it to warrant a lifetime sentence."
    I find this part of the story submission rather peculiar.

    What is morally wrong is to impose your own morality (like porn is bad) on others.
    Regardless whether this imposition is by a government or by an institution.

    As long as such a thing as the consumption and serving of porn is done between consenting adults there is morally absolutely nothing wrong.
    (Yes I know some in Holland, Michigan differ with me but I'm from the Original Holland)

    As long as a society, like here the Chinese, is of the opinion they can meddle in the private affairs of their people they are at best suspect.

    • What is morally wrong is to impose your own morality (like porn is bad) on others.

      According that definition, you are also morally wrong because you are saying that it is morally wrong to say porn is morally wrong, ie imposing your own morals on people. As long as they don't get the government involved, who really cares if someone says porn is wrong. If they want to go on their little crusades, let them. Want to make "porn rehab centers" and whatnot, who cares. They want to boycott businesses that dee
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by Teun ( 17872 )
        According that definition, you are also morally wrong because you are saying that it is morally wrong to say porn is morally wrong, ie imposing your own morals on people.
        You conveniently forgot this bit: between consenting adults
        • Huh? Your counter argument doesn't even address the issue I brought up. Your original argument was that it's morally wrong to say something is morally wrong(provided it occurs between consenting adults) I was merely pointing out that by your own definition, you are morally wrong since you are making a judgement call on what other people think.

          I don't think porn is morally wrong, but I do find people that get on high horses to be extremely abrasive. Including myself :P
      • by wes33 ( 698200 )
        According that definition, you are also morally wrong because you are saying that it is morally wrong to say porn is morally wrong, ie imposing your own morals on people.
        the poster to whom you reply was not *imposing* his morals on anyone (no one was was sent to jail for sending a porn monger to jail, for example). There was an expression of opinion about morality (a rather peculiar one IMO) but you seem OK with that ...
  • Jail time. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by zotz ( 3951 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @04:14PM (#16986016) Homepage Journal
    "Some might view internet pornography as morally wrong but I wouldn't think it to warrant a lifetime sentence."

    In my supposedly free country, if I understand things correctly, and I have chatted with a lawyer about it, one can get 4 or 5 years of jail time for each non-genuine DVD or CD that you have in your posession. I don't think that is warranted either myself.

    I don't even think the statutory damages are warranted myself.

    all the best,

    drew
    http://www.ourmedia.org/node/262954 [ourmedia.org]
    Sayings - Deterred Bahamian Novel
  • Laws != morals (Score:2, Insightful)

    by gravesb ( 967413 )
    A great reason why morality shouldn't be the sole basis for laws. Luckily, the US Supreme Court has overturned most laws that specifically say activites against the community morality are a crime. In countries as large as China, and the US, morals will vary greatly from place to place and person to person, and legislating it is a mistake. Those differences give us strength.
  • by loid_void ( 740416 ) * on Saturday November 25, 2006 @04:24PM (#16986086) Journal
    It seems that China has always quickly doled out heavy punishment for what it deams crime hoping to get the "big" message across to "the people." It apparently works, as they do have a very low crime rate in comparison to say, the good ole USA.
    • by Yokaze ( 70883 )
      > It apparently works, as they do have a very low crime rate in comparison to say, the good ole USA.

      Not necessarily. From what I've heard, you can buy in Sanlitun (Beijing) cheap films on DVD. More openly American films and a little bit more hidden (i.e. not on the open street) pornography. This, of course, is all illegal. But a crackdown happens only every now and then and only if a big-wig will show its face, or some international event comes. The reason, why there won't be mass-arrests is, that almost
    • by cgenman ( 325138 )
      Those numbers are difficult to compare, and especially difficult to point to a single exact cause for. The crime rate in china revolves around state-reported numbers, the accuracy of which cannot be verified. The numbers they DO have are for reported crimes, which people in china are hesitant to do knowing the ramifications of getting the state involved. And there is the excessive smuggling, counterfiting, prostitution, etc, which the state really doesn't care about.

      On a larger scale, there are societal
    • I think other factors could be contributing to this, or at least working together with such penalties... US is among the countries that still have death penalties, and I haven't really seen that as a major deterrent compared to countries who lack such penalties.
      • That's because we're pussies about it. It should be simple:

        A. Murder:
        - If you kill someone, you go to jail, unless it was self defense.
        - If you /purposefully/ kill someone and it wasn't self defense, you will be killed yourself.

        B. Rape:
        - If you have intercourse with someone who was of a clear head and refused, you will be killed.
        - If you drug someone into unconsciousness in order to have intercourse with them, you will b
  • Some might view internet pornography as morally wrong but I wouldn't think it to warrant a lifetime sentence."

    What type of porn are we talking? For relatively vanilla stuff, I'd agree that life in jail is way off...in most countries generic smut peddling might be seen as unsavoury, but AFAIK it's not a crime.

    However, if we're talking snuff, paedophilia, or beastiality, I don't have any objection myself to the idea of someone involved in such to go away for a long time. Maybe not life, but I wouldn't see 2
  • by c.r.o.c.o ( 123083 ) on Saturday November 25, 2006 @04:47PM (#16986310)
    ... is useless without pictures.
  • When the site was closed in October last year, it contained more than 9 million pornographic images and articles, the police said.

    And someone got to count them all. They'll probably throw him in jail next for obviously being corrupted by what he saw.

    Obviously they couldn't have edited, even viewed, that much material individually with the number of people involved. I have to question that number at all. Sounds like an estimate of losses due to filesharing by the RIAA. Overall a good reason not to be

  • Some might view internet pornography as morally wrong but I wouldn't think it to warrant a lifetime sentence.

    So, you think the judge shouldn't have been so lienient?

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