Does reason (1) mean that we should disincentivize CSAM production by funding a large, free, publicly accessible and searchable database of CSAM images, to make current CSAM producers unable to compete with free? If we believe the RIAA and MPAA, anyway.
(2) and (3) can be handled by enforcing a delay of, say, 15 years between CSAM being produced and it entering the database (and censoring any identifying information, of course), and by giving people the choice to opt out before their pictures are added.
> (2) and (3) can be handled by enforcing a delay of, say, 15 years between CSAM being produced and it entering the database (and censoring any identifying information, of course), and by giving people the choice to opt out before their pictures are added.
The problem isn't CSAM being in the database, but being disseminated in public. The database is designed to reduce public dissemination.
(2) and (3) can be handled by enforcing a delay of, say, 15 years between CSAM being produced and it entering the database (and censoring any identifying information, of course), and by giving people the choice to opt out before their pictures are added.