I was recently thinking about how amazing it is that with this decentralized community we would have no censorship from big corporations and then I asked myself: what about illegal content? The kind of content that really should not be shared? As an example, what if someone creates a Lemmy instance and starts creating a community around CP? Or human trafficking? How do we deal with it? I know that instances can choose with whom they can access the content, so if most popular instances blacklist that “illegal” instance its content wouldn’t be easily visible, but it would still be in the Fediverse. Also, will all popular instances have to be quick to blacklist these “illegal” instances? Isn’t that a little to difficult? If we go the other way, where they create a whitelist, wouldn’t that harm small legit instances? Is there a plan to fight off illegal content?

  • fubo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    As usual, it’s the same as email. There will need to be various sorts of spam filtering developed in order to keep the platform usable. In the meantime — if you see it, report it and delete it.

    Suppose you open up your email and you see that you’ve received a piece of spam that contains CSAM (CP). You have not committed a crime — but you also mustn’t keep it. So you report the spam to your email provider, and you delete it from your mailbox. If you’re very diligent maybe you report it to NCMEC.

    Suppose you run an email server. You’re aware of the existence of spam (alas!) and you do your best to block spam using various technologies ranging from DNSBLs to ML classifiers. If someone on the Internet sends spam containing CSAM to a user on your server, you didn’t send it; they did. The sender committed a crime. Your spam filters just didn’t catch that particular instance. So when your user reports it to you, you improve your spam filters. And you delete it.

    Suppose you run an email server. Your spam filters might include a reputation score for other email servers. When your filters notice that a large fraction of the messages from a particular server are spam, they switch to automatically block all mail from that server. Then even if that server tries to send spam to your users, the offending messages never even hit your server’s disk.

    Expect that as this platform matures, it will need many of the same sorts of spam-mitigation technology that email and other federated services have used.


    I’m repeating “and you delete it” once again because that’s important. You mustn’t retain copies of illegal files even as training data for your spam classifiers. The big email providers & social media companies go to a bunch of effort to keep data about CSAM files, without having to keep the actual files.

  • AlmightySnoo 🐢🇮🇱🇺🇦@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If it’s still on the internet you report them to law enforcement. But I’d bet that those intent on hosting those kinds of materials would have already started their own instances on the dark web and there sadly isn’t much we can do in that case. Only way to deal with them seems to be law enforcement’s approach of trapping those predators by posing as clients but then again, that’s their job, not yours. What you can do is 1- defederate, 2- warn other instance admins and 3- report to the police.

    • JoshNautes@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Which is the the scenario I talked about of having a “blacklist”. You saind on step 2 to “warn other instance admins”. As I see it I would have to first, know who are the admins of every popular instance, then I have to manually warn them one by one, and that is assuming I did not forget any. And we are not even talking about other Services like Mastodon that could communicate with this “illegal content” will I have to warn the admins of the instances there as well? I think what I’m asking is: Is there a way to easily do this? A report system not for a local community, but for the Fediverse itself? And on step 3 you said: “report to the police”. What would my local police be able to do with a server running on a random country anywhere in the world?

      • Ech@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        As I see it I would have to first, know who are the admins of every popular instance

        Every instance will have a list of admins in the sidebar on the “main page” (the page the pops up when you just type in the instance domain). And you aren’t warning every admin. Just the admin of the instance you are looking from and (if you want) the admin of the instance you found the illegal material on.

        What would my local police be able to do with a server running on a random country anywhere in the world?

        “Law enforcement” would be a better way to phrase it. Your countries higher level law enforcement should have a way to report such things and, one would hope, would have a way to pass that information on to the relevant agency with jurisdiction.

        As for a way of reporting a community/instance to the “Fediverse”? Not really. The whole point is that everything is decentralized. It’s up to each instance to decide what is unacceptable for them.

  • dill@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    Legality also totally subjective, it’s a big gray area for sure

    • cats@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I think the morality of legality is subjective, but isn’t legality itself objective?

      • Ech@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        If law makers, judges, lawyers, and law enforcement officials were all perfect? Yes, it would be. That is not a world we live in, though.

    • JoshNautes@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, I totally understand that. As a personal example: I’m against its civil usage of firearms, if someone is using the Fediverse to sell them, who am I to say that that is illegal? It might be illegal where I live, but maybe it is legal where they live, we can’t really be judges on these kind of topics. I used the term “illegal” because I couldn’t find a better term to describe those kind of subjects that (hopefully) 99.99% of people would totally NOT be okay with it showing up on their homepage, like the two examples I provided. What is the plan for that?

  • Coeus@coeus.sbs
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    1 year ago

    For the user, all you can do is report and block. It is ultimately up to the mods and admins of their individual communities to remove bad content.

  • minnix@lemux.minnix.dev
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    1 year ago

    As an example, what if someone creates a Lemmy instance and starts creating a community around CP? Or human trafficking? How do we deal with it?

    Can you elaborate on who “we” is?

    • LUHG@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Instances. Like Lemmy.world or beehaw.

      We’d need a global blacklist flag, something that instance owners can maintain. Then they can decide what to allow or block.

  • Wander@yiffit.net
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    1 year ago

    Fortunately images and thumbnails uploaded by remote users are hosted on the remote instance, not yours.

    You should focus on making sure that your instance’s communities stay within the legality of your country, as well as flag and deal with any illegal behavior by your users.

    For anything remote you have two options:

    1. Block the whole instance (not recommended unless it’s clear that the whole instance is dedicated to something that’s illegal in your country or if they host something incredibly disturbing)

    2. Click on “Remove” on the main page of a remote community. This will remove the remote community and make it inaccessible to local users but keep you federated to their instance.

    You cannot control what other servers do. There will be servers out there hosting illegal stuff. But that’s not something you or I need to fix, that’s where law enforcement needs to be involved. The only thing you can do is block. If it’s something serious like CP or human traficking, grab any logs you might have from them, report to authorities, purge content from database and block instance.

    • Kierunkowy74@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Dear /kbin admins and users:

      Fortunately images and thumbnails uploaded by remote users are hosted on the remote instance, not yours.

      True for Lemmy, false for /kbin. Example meme post from lemmy.ml - the image has been fetched and is present on kbin.social’s database.

    • Zak@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Fortunately images and thumbnails uploaded by remote users are hosted on the remote instance, not yours.

      True for Lemmy. False for kbin and Mastodon which create local copies.