Europol Focuses on Child Centric Crime
October 16, 2023
Note: This essay is the work of a real and still-alive dinobaby. No smart software involved, just a dumb humanoid.
Children are the most vulnerable and exploited population in the world. The Internet unfortunately aides bad actors by allowing them to distribute child sexual abuse material aka CSAM to avoid censors. Europol (the European-only sector of Interpol) wants to end CSAM by overriding Europeans’ privacy rights. Tech Dirt explores the idea in the article, “Europol Tells EU Commission: Hey, When It Comes To CSAM, Just Let Us Do Whatever We Want.”
Europol wants unfiltered access to a EU proposed AI algorithm and its data programmed to scan online content for CSAM. The police agency also wants to use the same AI to detect other crimes. This information came from a July 2022 high-level meeting that involved Europol Executive Director Catherine de Belle and the European Commission’s Director-General for Migration and Home Affairs Monique Pariat. Europol pitched this idea when the EU believed it would mandate client-side scanning on service providers.
Privacy activists and EU member nations vetoed the idea, because it would allow anyone to eavesdrop on private conversations. They also found it violated privacy rights. Europol used the common moniker “for the children” or “save the children” to justify the proposal. Law enforcement, politicians, religious groups, and parents have spouted that rhetoric for years and makes more nuanced people appear to side with pedophiles.
“It shouldn’t work as well as it does, since it’s been a cliché for decades. But it still works. And it still works often enough that Europol not only demanded access to combat CSAM but to use this same access to search for criminal activity wholly unrelated to the sexual exploitation of children… Europol wants a police state supported by always-on surveillance of any and all content uploaded by internet service users. Stasi-on-digital-steroids. Considering there’s any number of EU members that harbor ill will towards certain residents of their country, granting an international coalition of cops unfiltered access to content would swiftly move past the initial CSAM justification to governments seeking out any content they don’t like and punishing those who dared to offend their elected betters.”
There’s also evidence that law enforcement officials and politicians are working in the public sector to enforce anti-privacy laws then leaving for the private sector. Once there, they work at companies that sell surveillance technology to governments. Is that a type of insider trading or nefarious influence?
Whitney Grace, October 16, 2023