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by roel_v
3451 days ago
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Sure, but (unless I'm misreading your undertone) what's the problem then? When the police find a bloody knife on somebody's kitchen table and the blood matches that of the victim that bled out outside, they also have to prove that it's the owner's. Everybody in this thread is up in arms how there is no way to 'prove' the files were the owner's, like it's some sort of special case that no lawyer or judge ever had to consider before. There's nothing special about the 'evidence' angle of this issue. |
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For example if I plant murder evidence in your home either myself, or an associate of mine must of physically entered your residence. We likely came into contact with the physical item, handling it, etc. Furthermore the associate if caught is very likely to roll on me.
For computers none of these are true.
I could automate placing child-porn on THOUSANDS of computers. If done properly there would be little to no evidence the owner did not do this themselves.
I could plant child porn in your computer _while_ I'm pretending to be somebody else (IP + MAC + login location + OS + credentials, etc.) so even if the CP was proven to be planted it is traced to somebody else and they prosecuted.
There is no parallel to this in the real world. The game theory of bribing somebody to do your dirty work is far far messier then a bot. Computers offer ways of hiding that make the physical world laughable.