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Don't forget this part:

>(e) Failure To Report.—A provider that knowingly and willfully fails to make a report required under subsection (a)(1) shall be fined— (1) in the case of an initial knowing and willful failure to make a report, not more than $150,000; and (2) in the case of any second or subsequent knowing and willful failure to make a report, not more than $300,000.

I find these clauses at odds with one another in that the Failure to Report clause created a tangible duty upon the provider, which, were I a judge, would satisfy me that rhe provider was, in fact, deputized.

Does nobody actually read the legislation that is passed and realize that oops, I just passed am unconstitutional law.

That they include the construed... clause just solidifies for me that the legislators in question were trying to pull a fast one.



It’s because they wanted their cake and eat it too, get as close as possible to the 4th amendment without crossing the line.

Put simply, if they have knowledge of it they have a duty to report, but they can’t be compelled to try and find out.

In theory this means that if they happen to stumble upon it or are being alerted to it by a third party (e.g. user report) then they have to report it, in practice many voluntarily monitor it, maybe because they want to avoid having to litigate that they didn’t have knowledge of it or maybe because it’s good PR or maybe because they care for the case.

I think in most cases it’s all of the above in one degree or another.


I have no qualms with voluntary monitoring and reporting. However the inclusion of the penalty imposes a tangible duty. That tangible duty is enough to convince me this act is effectively a de facto deputization. The act of searching is, in essence "look out for, raise signal when found". This Act does everything it can to try to cast the process that happens after the search phase as "the search forbidden by the 4th Amendment" instead of the explicitly penalized activity, which is couched as "voluntary, and not State mandated despite a $150000 price tag assessed by... The State". Even going so far as creating a quasi-government entity, primarily funded by the State whose entire purpose is explocitly intended to act as a legal facade to create sufficient "abstract distance" through which the State can claim "it twas not I who did it, but a private organization, Constitional protections do not apply"

Words mean things, and we've gotten damned loose with it these days in my opinion when the want strikes. "Voluntary" anything with a $150000 fine for not doing it is no longer voluntary. It's now your job. If it's your job, and the State punishes you for not doing it, you are a deputy of the State. I do not care how many layers of legal fiction and indirection are between you and the State.

If you can't not comply without jeopardy, it ain't voluntary.


> I find these clauses at odds with one another in that the Failure to Report clause created a tangible duty upon the provider, which, were I a judge, would satisfy me that the provider was, in fact, deputized.

Absolutely not. That section requires a report under the circumstances where a provider has obtained “actual knowledge of facts and circumstances” of an “apparent violation” of various code sections (child porn among others). It doesn’t place on the provider the burden of seeking out that knowledge. In other words, it covers the cases where, for example, a provider receives a report that they are hosting a child porn video and are pointed to the link to it. Providers can’t jam their fingers in their ears and shout LALALA when they’re told they’re hosting (or whatever) CSAM and given the evidence to support it. They don’t have to do anything at all to proactively find it and report it, however.

Think of it like this. I, as a high school, teacher, am a mandated reporter of child abuse. It’s literally a crime (a misdemeanor) for me not to report suspected child abuse. But I don’t have to go out and suss out whether any of my students are being abused. That doesn’t make me a state actor for 4th Amendment purposes (although I am otherwise, because I am a public school teacher, but that’s a different issue).


Except it does make you a state actor, and even children know it, as even the 9-11 year old demographic has literally disclosed to me, the "crazy uncle" in their life, that they are not comfortable being open with any type of guidance counselor or state licensed therapist due to knowledge of just such a dynamic.

A spade, is a spade by any other name. If the state will come down on you for not doing something (message generation), you are a deputy of the State. Period.




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