Privacy’s gone when posting child abuse images to a P2P network, US judge rules

A US court has turned the tables on child predators who use technology to share images of the abuse, ruling that investigators’ use of an automated search tool to ferret out known child porn images was not a violation of the defendants’ Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable search.

Read more: Privacy’s gone when posting child abuse images to a P2P network, US judge rules

Story added 13. November 2013, content source with full text you can find at link above.