- cross-posted to:
- fediverse@zerobytes.monster
- cross-posted to:
- fediverse@zerobytes.monster
An in-depth report reveals an ugly truth about isolated, unmoderated parts of the Fediverse. It’s a solvable problem, with challenges.
An in-depth report reveals an ugly truth about isolated, unmoderated parts of the Fediverse. It’s a solvable problem, with challenges.
Wait until the people who wrote the report learn about the 4chan random board
This isn’t a problem with the fediverse. It’s a problem with people who are ok with this stuff hosting their own servers. Real cp is a quick torch (or even google because this stuff is on the clearnet too) search away, even before the fediverse
Anyway, just join an instance that blocks this
I agree that the problem isn’t with the Fediverse itself, any more than it is with email, usenet, encrypted messengers, etc.
The thing is, it’s a problem that affects the network. While “block and move on” is a reasonable strategy for getting that crap out of your own instance’s feeds, the real meat and potatoes of the issue have to do with legal and legislative repercussions. If an admin comes across this stuff, they have a legal obligation to report it, in most jurisdictions. In fact, the EARN IT and STOP CSAM acts that politicians are trying to push through Congress are likely to make companies overreact to any potential penalty that could come from accidental cross-pollination of CSAM between servers.
Unfortunately, this thing becomes a whole lot messier when an instance discovers cached CSAM after the fact. There was a Mastodon instance that was recently taken down without any turnaround time given to the admin to look into it, the hosting company was just ordered to comply with a CSAM request that basically said “This server has child porn on it.”
Also, regardless of whether you report it or block it and pretend you never saw anything, that doesn’t change the fact that it’s still happening. At the very least, having tooling to make the reporting easier would probably be a big boon to knocking those servers off the network.