Clean unwanted files on your PC (disk cleanup)


MEMORANDUM FOR ALL UNITED STATES ATTORNEYS

Prosecution Under the Federal Obscenity Statutes

"As you are aware, within the past few years there has been increasing concern about the distribution of obscenity and child pornography both by traditional purveyors of "adult material" and in particular by those who distribute such material over the Internet. As a result of this unprecedented growth, I wish to remind you of the Department's policies and priorities in the prosecution of federal obscenity cases. There are a number of federal statutes relating to obscenity and child pornography. See 18 U.S.C. Ch. 71, 109(A), 110, & 117. Because there are many state statutes prohibiting obscenity and child pornography, and obscenity in particular is determined by local community standards, federal investigation and prosecution should be undertaken in those areas where there is a need for federal resources. Thus, the Federal role in prosecuting obscenity cases should be to focus upon the major producers and interstate distributors of obscenity and child pornography, while leaving to local jurisdictions the responsibility of dealing with local exhibitions and sales. See USAM § 9-75.320.

Thus, priority should be given to cases involving large-scale distributors who realize substantial income from multistate operations and cases in which there is evidence of organized crime involvement. However, prosecution of cases involving relatively small distributors can have a deterrent effect and would dispel any notion that obscenity distributors are insulated from prosecution if their operations fail to exceed a predetermined size or if they fragment their business into small-scale operations. Therefore, prosecution of such distributors also may be appropriate on a case-by-case basis. See USAM § 9-75.020. In particular, priority also should be given to large-scale distributors of obscenity over the Internet. See United States v. Thomas , 74 F.3d 701 (6th Cir.), cert. denied , 117 S.Ct. 74 (1996).

Because of the nature of the Internet and the availability of agents trained in conducting criminal investigations in cyberspace, investigation and prosecution of Internet obscenity is particularly suitable for federal resources As you are well aware, priority has been given during this administration to cases involving the use of minors in producing pornography and cases involving the interstate or foreign shipment of material depicting minors engaging in sexually explicit conduct (18 U.S.C. §§ 2251 et seq .). We continue to make these cases a priority. I encourage you to follow this guidance and that set forth in the United States Attorneys' Manual and to consult with the Criminal Division's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section. The Section is available to assist you in all advisory and litigation matters and has materials in its library that are useful in the prosecution of obscenity cases."

If you are suspicious about pornography being downloaded and kept on your computer hard drives by other members of your family, then the time has arrived for you to investigate. Media Detective is just the right tool to help you find out what you need to know.

Media Detective is the perfect pornography remover software package for cleaning porn from your computer's hard drives. Media Detective is a software utility that has been developed to help clean hard drives of offensive files, including pornographic material, undesirable images and movies. Using intelligent image and video scanning techniques, Media Detective can easily scan through the images and movies on your hard disk drives, checking each and identifying those containing nudity through statistical and analytical methods.

Files that then appear to have the characteristics of a pornographic image or movie are shown for user review, so that unwanted items can be cleaned from your disk. Not just a cookie eraser, Media Detective cleans out offensive material that cookie cleaners completely ignore.

There are many tracks eraser programs available which purport to remove pornography. But they only try to remove evidence of activity, and do actually investigate media files to determine if they contain nudity, and allow for their deletion. To actually remove porn the software must do some kind of porn scan and then invoke a porn remover pass to delete files.

The porn eraser functions of Media Detective are required to do a proper PC cleanup; cookie cleaners will not leave your pc cleaner of media files than before. Internet eraser and internet cleanup tools only serve to leave internet history cleaner. Various other hard drive clean up tools only really delete cache entries etc. leaving actual pornography on the computer.

And most hard drive cleanup tools leave the difficult task of effectively scanning for real porn files to software like Media Detective. It is guaranteed to leave your hard drive cleaner, to erase pornography and give the most effective disk cleanup available. No other disk cleaner software can delete pornography and delete porn as effectively.

Cookie eraser tools again only address a part of the problem. Cookie cleaner software will not clean up pornography in the true sense of the word, just signs that it has at some time been viewed. Therefore a computer clean up can only be done effectively by a computer cleaner like media detective. You can use it to safely clean up porn references, clean pornography directories and clean porn files. This will leave you with a clean hard drive and a clean computer.

CLICK HERE for more information, and the free downloadable demo!



Proposals on protection of young people from obscene materials ... ... capabilities in respect of obscene articles on the Internet by, ... requiring Internet service providers to remove or block access to obscene articles. ...


Children's Internet Protection Act ... (A) obscene , as that term is defined in section 1460 of title 18, United States Code ... as added by section 1721 of Children's Internet Protection Act, ...


CHILD PORNOGRAPHY CASES INVOLVING THE INTERNET ... with the GMP's Obscene Publications Unit in 2000, providing Internet ... of Internet policing and government attempts to restrict obscene content, ...

HOME
 
 
If you would like to make suggestions about this FAQ please contact us at this email address: