Source: CNet
By: Lisa M Bowman
In a crackdown on the spread of pornography among underage surfers, a bill introduced late last week in the US would require file-swapping companies, such as Kazaa, to get parental permission before allowing minors to use their services.
The bill, called the Protecting Children from Peer-to-Peer Pornography (P4) Act would require the Federal Trade Commission to regulate peer-to-peer networks and take steps to ensure that children aren’t accidentally coming across porn.
While many people use services such as Kazaa for downloading music they have also become a very popular source of hardcore pornographic images and videos.
The bill’s sponsors said as many as 40% of all files traded on the networks are porn.
Republican sponsor Joe Pitts said in a statement: "Our legislation gives parents the tools they need to protect their children from pornography and threats to privacy posed by peer-to-peer file-trading networks. By working together to protect children, we are building a broad and bipartisan coalition."
The bill calls on the FTC to require peer-to-peer companies to get parental permission before minors use their services. It would also require peer-to-peer companies to honour the wishes of parents who have put a "do not install" beacon in their computers, indicating that they don’t want file-swapping software on their children’s machines.
However, such technology has yet to be developed, and it’s unclear how such a beacon would work – a rare instance of legislation being one step ahead of technology.