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thanks for the info
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Sig spot in a long thread :)
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So, this means affiliates? |
Remember, they can charge you with anything they want but convicting you is an entirely different matter. They will have to convince a jury that you deserve 5 years in prison for improper record keeping, even though you have absolutely nothing to do with CP. They don't just march you off to jail - you have a right to a trial by a jury of your peers. Stats say that 65% of men over 18 and 35% of women look at porn sites. Chances are that a few of these citizens would end up on your jury and some will see this law for what it is - an attempt to incriminate people involved in a legal business via regulation traps.
One of the reasons the government doesn't prosecute more obscenity cases is because when they do they LOSE them. The people on a jury decide your guilt or innocence - Not George Bush or Alberto Gonzales or Jerry Fallwell. There are literally thousands of laws on the books that the government doesn't enforce. There will undoubtedly be some test cases on this one and the outcome of those will determine how aggressively the feds will try to enforce these. This is just the beginning of a long legal process. |
Anyone get the Exemption part? What is actually required if your content was produced before 1995.. and.. if it was produced before 1995, what if you actually publish it on your site on or after June 23, 2005?
" Sec. 75.7 Exemption statement. (a) Any producer of any book, magazine, periodical, film, videotape, digitally- or computer-manipulated image, digital image, picture, or other matter may cause to be affixed to every copy of the matter a statement attesting that the matter is not covered by the record-keeping requirements of 18 U.S.C. 2257(a)-(c) and of this part if: (1) The matter contains only visual depictions of actual sexually explicit conduct made before July 3, 1995, or is produced, manufactured, published, duplicated, reproduced, or reissued before July 3, 1995" And... every video and photo must be re-encoded to have this statement on it if we publish after July 2005? ".............and produced, manufactured, published, duplicated, reproduced, or reissued on or after July 3, 1995, shall cause to be affixed to every copy of the matter a statement describing the location of the records required by this part." It's late here.. eye's burning from reading all the docs.. anyone get these parts? Thanks! |
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It's kind of like fighting a traffic ticket in court. It's pretty open and shut, either they have you on radar or they don't......if you've violated the regs then you've violated the regs, they make copies of your records when they come to inspect so that's all the evidence they need. I don't think a "sympathetic jury" comes into play here anymore than it would if you got caught going 90 in a 65 zone. :2 cents: |
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thanks for info
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Hope none of ya need it. We've been compliant for months.
Amendment VI In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to have the assistance of counsel for his defense. |
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From what I interpret it as, I need to map each associated URL to a set. Same as you do. But you're saying that the primary needs to keep a copy of each static URL where secondary producers use it too? What the use for that? If the feds raid someone, it will be the record holder for that domain/site/whatever and that's me. I need to keep track of which set is mapped to a specific URL. |
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That's where I'm not certain my understanding is correct, so feel free to offer legal opinions on this one. |
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Actually though, if there ever was an actual "2257 only" case the prosecution would not be allowed to disclose the web site or pictures to the jury, it would be irrevelant and prejudicial, so you would just br tried on the merits of the case. |
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Bump for this.... anyone? |
here's a scenario:
I have 50,000+ old feeders online I purchased legal content - ALL PRIOR to this new compliance date and have records I purchase no new content to add to the randomizer scripts or the feeders All I need to do is keep my old 2257 info and claim exemption from the new regulations due to the grandfather clause ... thats how I interpret it anyway ... correct? Now what did I miss about sponsor banners, anything? |
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Opinions on whether you need a specific statement for each item that is exempt or a blanket statement vary. |
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If your content was produced before 1995, correct, you need nothing new except a statement that you are exempt. If your content was produced AFTER 1995, you need to be fully compliant on all that content. Sponsor banners, as they appear on YOUR site, are part of your published content as a secondary producer, so your sponsor, theoretically the primary producer of any explicit banner image, should be giving you 2257 info for that banner and you should be keeping records as to location used within your site (s). |
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And , to agree with you... as I said elsewhere, if you want to operate illegally, why are those of you with the 'they'll never enforce it' viewpoint even bothering to contribute to this discussion? The sheer ridiculousness of legislation has no bearing on its legality or your compliance. |
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If you republish content that was produced before 1995 then that new publication is subject to the new rules and regulations surrounding 2257. Now here's where it gets tricky. When is a web page published? Is it the date you uploaded it to the server? Or is it whenever someone downloads the page? When someone accesses your webpage, your webserver sends them a copy of the page, basically republishing it, and your computer makes a new copy of the page on your hard drive. So it can be argued that any web page(s) that are receiving any traffic are republished every day and hence will be subject to the new 2257 regulations. I'm not making this up, the person at Justice in charge of this stuff (Osterban....not sure if I'm spelling his name right) holds this view of web publications. :2 cents: |
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ok, you legal scholars, which of these two images need 2257? which of the images are "lascivious"? or are neither? |
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Heres one that I have never gotten clarity on.
If you host a non-explicit thumbnail or preview of a picture that links to an explicit version of the same picture hosted by someone else (for ex an affiliates site/hosted gallery) are 2257 docs required for YOUR thumbnail. Some seem to think yes other no.... |
No matter how it goes, I know they are busy building prisons in Texas. As soon as they are ready, I'm sure they will fill them.......They always do.
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Although they do not any form of intercourse, masturbation, or S&M (though I do personally believe viewing the 57 is a form of masochistic abuse) they do however depict lascivious exhibition of the pubic region. Using the legal deffinition of the word at least. |
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ok, take the girls off the couch, wipe those smiles off their faces, take the jewelry and makeup off them, and put them in a doctor's office background. change the page title to "female images by age, external reproductive organs". now do they need 2257? you see how silly this is going to get? |
So, to this point, areas of greyness I've identified that really need a legal opinion, or many legal opinions, from actual lawyers.
1. Content produced before 1995.... grandfathered as excluded...BUT... if you put it on a new web page, are you in effect publishing it anew, and then have to comply? 2. it says 'you can't be the record holder in the us and shoot a model with non-us id'..Now, being as elsewhere they've said secondary producers have no obligation to check the validity of primary producer info... Anyone located outside us can shoot anyone anywhere, and need gov't id to be legit...gov't id for the model from one presumes her country of residence...Since the primary record holder is then outside the US, no issue. Now, sell that content to a US company, and as a secondary producer they have no obligation to challenge the validity of the documentation, as far as I read. So.. can so any US company then use that content, they just cant be the primary producer? Or by being the 'record holder', are they barred from using it? 3. The definition of production date as applied to a webpage, which probably has legal precedent in copyright case law, if nothing else. 4. The definition of 'not able to control content' , which is an exclusion for things like google, but probably not BBS owners, and this one probably already has legal precedent.. 5. The question of what, exactly, happens if as a non-compliant company based outside the US you make direct sales to US based consumers. 6. To what extent must a primary producer make the effort to track usage of the content by secondary producers and have records for that usage? |
Affiliates
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Interesting thread on Sanitizing (removing info from) Id's
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2257 says Quote:
E is not included in the definition for purposes of 2257! |
bump so we can see it all.
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WOW, apparently you are correct. THANK YOU!!!!!!! what a bunch of doubletalk: :Oh crap it starts with this: (2) ?sexually explicit conduct? means actual or simulated? (A) sexual intercourse, including genital-genital, oral-genital, anal-genital, or oral-anal, whether between persons of the same or opposite sex; (B) bestiality; (C) masturbation; (D) sadistic or masochistic abuse; or (E) lascivious exhibition of the genitals or pubic area of any person; and you dig deeper, and it clarifies with what you said: (h) As used in this section? (1) the term ?actual sexually explicit conduct? means actual but not simulated conduct as defined in subparagraphs (A) through (D) of paragraph (2) of section 2256 of this title; |
no, wait.
from my reading it means "E" is inclusive of sexually explicit content. :( same guys who wrote 2257 also write US tax code. |
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Keep in mind 2256 is primarily used for definitions in child porn crimes, and that is why there is an E it doesn?t apply to adult porn IMO |
my reading of it is that they specifically left (E) out because they know the word "lascivious" is usually an adjective, and subjective.
and because they left it out of the clarification i conclude that it is still inclusive in the category of "sexually explicit conduct". maybe we can get 6 different attorneys to opine with 6 different opinions. i'm not smart enough, i only have 6 years of college :Oh crap |
ok, i see your point, i will go back to 2257 now. thanks.
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Here glance at the chapter 110 index
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/h..._I_20_110.html That will give you an idea of how the definitions in 2256 apply to other things, and that is why it doesn?t seem to make sense if you assume the definitions found in 2256 are only there for 2257. |
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Now let me try to explain what they said. You have the following: (2) ?sexually explicit conduct? means actual or simulated? (A) sexual intercourse, including genital-genital, oral-genital, anal-genital, or oral-anal, whether between persons of the same or opposite sex; (B) bestiality; (C) masturbation; (D) sadistic or masochistic abuse; or (E) lascivious exhibition of the genitals or pubic area of any person; Then further down you find this: (h) As used in this section? (1) the term ?actual sexually explicit conduct? means actual but not simulated conduct as defined in subparagraphs (A) through (D) of paragraph (2) of section 2256 of this title; In 2257 is says "actual sexually explicit conduct" which is A-D if it is not simulated, since simulated is exempt. Which one attorney called this the Hollywood exemption clause since they are very prone to using this in movies without using (E). So we know that (A) through (D) are covered if its real. Now on to that pesky (E) which seems like it should not even belong here. (E) would not be simulated so it is always actual. The new regs do not use (A) through (D) like they did before and just say actual sexually explicit conduct. We are just playing it safe though and more likely than not actual could have the same meaning as before and (E) would not be included, unless of course it needs an exemption statement. Shit I think I even confused myself. Laws do that to you. |
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haha. thanks for clearing that up :Oh crap BTW love you sig. |
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While some of you may be correct in your assumptions that just using a thumbnail of the model's face or only using "softcore" material may put you outside the scope of the 2257 regulations, the counsel I have been given is "why take the chance?"
It's a gray area that isn't worth risking your freedom over. If you don't have the ID's then don't post the content....if you have old pages with content that you don't have the ID's for then take it down, because the definition of "publish" when referring to a web page is also another gray area. If you publish a page today that has porn movies from 1982 on it, is it exempt? Depends on whether or not the DOJ is looking at the day the movie was made or the day your page was published. If you uploaded the page a year ago and haven't changed it....is that when the page was published? Or was it published today when I downloaded it from your server and a "copy" was made of the page? The safest bet is to take down anything you don't have ID's for, period, the end. It's not worth risking 5 years of your freedom and afterwards living the life of a convicted felon.....don't try to get "cute" with the law. |
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I fully get what your saying. I also understand that 2256 applies to many other cases besides any that would originate from 2257. Our lawyer made it simple though since it was very grey. He said to apply 2257 to anything that is showing pink. This of course is beyond what is required but we would rather have to much than not enough. |
I agree you can never go wrong with less risk, but I just wanted to clarify that what you were saying is not required by the code, I don?t even think I would call it a gray area as there is no case law on the matter, and the code (exempting e) has been that way for some time. Let me give you a couple of examples of what I think a gray area would be in regards to the definition of sexually explicit.
1. Say you publish a picture of a girl groping her own tits and she has her o face on. Could it be argued she was masturbating? 2. Say you publish a picture of a fully clothed girl or guy rubbing their crotch are they masturbating? |
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this is the media age, and we need some practical, decisive answers on this sort of stuff simply because the stakes are high. i will ask the hypothetical question again: there are 10,000 public nudity sites on the net, colorado river, mardi gras, fantasy fest, nudes-a-poppin, sf gay freedom parade, etc etc. no way in the world you can get 2257 docs on this stuff. but it is public, thousands of people in the crowds, and hundreds, if not thousands of photographers. and a girl on bourbon street up on the balcony turns around and pull her panties down and spreads her cheeks for a thousand adoring fans, and they've been doing this since the 1960's. DO YOU NEED 2257? |
and, IF you DO need 2257, what happened to the concept free speech in the USA?
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