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Internet Virus Frames Users For Child Porn

JORDAN ROBERTSON   11/ 9/09 12:10 AM ET   AP

Computer

Of all the sinister things that Internet viruses do, this might be the worst: They can make you an unsuspecting collector of child pornography.

Heinous pictures and videos can be deposited on computers by viruses – the malicious programs better known for swiping your credit card numbers. In this twist, it's your reputation that's stolen.

Pedophiles can exploit virus-infected PCs to remotely store and view their stash without fear they'll get caught. Pranksters or someone trying to frame you can tap viruses to make it appear that you surf illegal Web sites.

Whatever the motivation, you get child porn on your computer – and might not realize it until police knock at your door.

An Associated Press investigation found cases in which innocent people have been branded as pedophiles after their co-workers or loved ones stumbled upon child porn placed on a PC through a virus. It can cost victims hundreds of thousands of dollars to prove their innocence.

Their situations are complicated by the fact that actual pedophiles often blame viruses – a defense rightfully viewed with skepticism by law enforcement.

"It's an example of the old `dog ate my homework' excuse," says Phil Malone, director of the Cyberlaw Clinic at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet & Society. "The problem is, sometimes the dog does eat your homework."

The AP's investigation included interviewing people who had been found with child porn on their computers. The AP reviewed court records and spoke to prosecutors, police and computer examiners.

One case involved Michael Fiola, a former investigator with the Massachusetts agency that oversees workers' compensation.

In 2007, Fiola's bosses became suspicious after the Internet bill for his state-issued laptop showed that he used 4 1/2 times more data than his colleagues. A technician found child porn in the PC folder that stores images viewed online.

Fiola was fired and charged with possession of child pornography, which carries up to five years in prison. He endured death threats, his car tires were slashed and he was shunned by friends.

Fiola and his wife fought the case, spending $250,000 on legal fees. They liquidated their savings, took a second mortgage and sold their car.

An inspection for his defense revealed the laptop was severely infected. It was programmed to visit as many as 40 child porn sites per minute – an inhuman feat. While Fiola and his wife were out to dinner one night, someone logged on to the computer and porn flowed in for an hour and a half.

Prosecutors performed another test and confirmed the defense findings. The charge was dropped – 11 months after it was filed.

The Fiolas say they have health problems from the stress of the case. They say they've talked to dozens of lawyers but can't get one to sue the state, because of a cap on the amount they can recover.

"It ruined my life, my wife's life and my family's life," he says.

The Massachusetts attorney general's office, which charged Fiola, declined interview requests.

At any moment, about 20 million of the estimated 1 billion Internet-connected PCs worldwide are infected with viruses that could give hackers full control, according to security software maker F-Secure Corp. Computers often get infected when people open e-mail attachments from unknown sources or visit a malicious Web page.

Pedophiles can tap viruses in several ways. The simplest is to force someone else's computer to surf child porn sites, collecting images along the way. Or a computer can be made into a warehouse for pictures and videos that can be viewed remotely when the PC is online.

"They're kind of like locusts that descend on a cornfield: They eat up everything in sight and they move on to the next cornfield," says Eric Goldman, academic director of the High Tech Law Institute at Santa Clara University. Goldman has represented Web companies that discovered child pornographers were abusing their legitimate services.

But pedophiles need not be involved: Child porn can land on a computer in a sick prank or an attempt to frame the PC's owner.

In the first publicly known cases of individuals being victimized, two men in the United Kingdom were cleared in 2003 after viruses were shown to have been responsible for the child porn on their PCs.

In one case, an infected e-mail or pop-up ad poisoned a defense contractor's PC and downloaded the offensive pictures.

In the other, a virus changed the home page on a man's Web browser to display child porn, a discovery made by his 7-year-old daughter. The man spent more than a week in jail and three months in a halfway house, and lost custody of his daughter.

Chris Watts, a computer examiner in Britain, says he helped clear a hotel manager whose co-workers found child porn on the PC they shared with him.

Watts found that while surfing the Internet for ways to play computer games without paying for them, the manager had visited a site for pirated software. It redirected visitors to child porn sites if they were inactive for a certain period.

In all these cases, the central evidence wasn't in dispute: Pornography was on a computer. But proving how it got there was difficult.

Tami Loehrs, who inspected Fiola's computer, recalls a case in Arizona in which a computer was so "extensively infected" that it would be "virtually impossible" to prove what an indictment alleged: that a 16-year-old who used the PC had uploaded child pornography to a Yahoo group.

Prosecutors dropped the charge and let the boy plead guilty to a separate crime that kept him out of jail, though they say they did it only because of his age and lack of a criminal record.

Many prosecutors say blaming a computer virus for child porn is a new version of an old ploy.

"We call it the SODDI defense: Some Other Dude Did It," says James Anderson, a federal prosecutor in Wyoming.

However, forensic examiners say it would be hard for a pedophile to get away with his crime by using a bogus virus defense.

"I personally would feel more comfortable investing my retirement in the lottery before trying to defend myself with that," says forensics specialist Jeff Fischbach.

Even careful child porn collectors tend to leave incriminating e-mails, DVDs or other clues. Virus defenses are no match for such evidence, says Damon King, trial attorney for the U.S. Justice Department's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section.

But while the virus defense does not appear to be letting real pedophiles out of trouble, there have been cases in which forensic examiners insist that legitimate claims did not get completely aired.

Loehrs points to Ned Solon of Casper, Wyo., who is serving six years for child porn found in a folder used by a file-sharing program on his computer.

Solon admits he used the program to download video games and adult porn – but not child porn. So what could explain that material?

Loehrs testified that Solon's antivirus software wasn't working properly and appeared to have shut off for long stretches, a sign of an infection. She found no evidence the five child porn videos on Solon's computer had been viewed or downloaded fully. The porn was in a folder the file-sharing program labeled as "incomplete" because the downloads were canceled or generated an error.

This defense was curtailed, however, when Loehrs ended her investigation in a dispute with the judge over her fees. Computer exams can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Defendants can ask the courts to pay, but sometimes judges balk at the price. Although Loehrs stopped working for Solon, she argues he is innocent.

"I don't think it was him, I really don't," Loehrs says. "There was too much evidence that it wasn't him."

The prosecution's forensics expert, Randy Huff, maintains that Solon's antivirus software was working properly. And he says he ran other antivirus programs on the computer and didn't find an infection – although security experts say antivirus scans frequently miss things.

"He actually had a very clean computer compared to some of the other cases I do," Huff says.

The jury took two hours to convict Solon.

"Everybody feels they're innocent in prison. Nobody believes me because that's what everybody says," says Solon, whose case is being appealed. "All I know is I did not do it. I never put the stuff on there. I never saw the stuff on there. I can only hope that someday the truth will come out."

But can it? It can be impossible to tell with certainty how a file got onto a PC.

"Computers are not to be trusted," says Jeremiah Grossman, founder of WhiteHat Security Inc. He describes it as "painfully simple" to get a computer to download something the owner doesn't want – whether it's a program that displays ads or one that stores illegal pictures.

It's possible, Grossman says, that more illicit material is waiting to be discovered.

"Just because it's there doesn't mean the person intended for it to be there – whatever it is, child porn included."

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Of all the sinister things that Internet viruses do, this might be the worst: They can make you an unsuspecting collector of child pornography. Heinous pictures and videos can be deposited on compute...
Of all the sinister things that Internet viruses do, this might be the worst: They can make you an unsuspecting collector of child pornography. Heinous pictures and videos can be deposited on compute...
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04:11 PM on 01/05/2010
With child porn you are guilty no matter what. How do I know this? I have a son serving 10 years in prison for child porn that got on his computer while using Limewire. We know this because the files were downloaded within seconds of other files during a max download not minutes which is what it would take if you were looking for it . When we asked why they didn't go after the people putting it out there we were told there is no way of knowing who put it there. Don't even bother reporting it to authorities either your best bet is to destroy the computer
03:23 PM on 11/15/2009
My God, what happened to innocent until PROVEN guilty? Doesn't this qualify as a very, very reasonable doubt?
11:38 AM on 11/12/2009
Child pornographers deserve what happens to them.
11:41 AM on 11/12/2009
One last time. Not sure what's going on with my computer today... sorry to Huff Post moderators if this is the 4th attempt. I thought I had submitted this comment (and tried again, and again), but I think each time, it may have not made it to the Huffington servers, so.

My comment:

It should be possible to oppose child pornography without effecting hysterical witch hunt legislation.

Child pornography is this one strange area of law where post-pubescent males are assumed to be guilty, unless proven beyond the slightest doubt to be innocent.

Policy for dealing with child pornography suspects is a case of mysandry that people seem to take for granted.

On a separate, but related, note: when adolescents exploring their sexuality are incriminated for sharing pictures with each other, we as a society have reached an astonishing climax of histrionic puritanism.

I understand how evil child pornography is, but I do not understand why people feel the need to create a warped and unjust system for dealing with it.
11:35 AM on 11/10/2009
I was beginning to suspect this was happening to people. There should not be caps like this. They should be fully compensated for how it has ruined their lives. There needs to be an investigation as to how it got there. I wonder whom Fiola was investigating who put this virus there.
09:29 AM on 11/10/2009
Huff Po' Readers and commentors,

Please, STOP turning this into an Operating System shootout. The exploit this article describes does not relegate itself to one system or another, it is simply a byproduct of having an infected system. As such, and being that all systems have vulnerabilities, it won't matter if you use a Windows, Linux or Apple system.

I realize many of you see this opportunity to sway a reader or two to jump on your bandwagon, but that it not what this article is about--and further I think you are doing the readers, some of whom are rightfully worried about this scenario, a disservice.
12:00 AM on 11/12/2009
Well said, it is very sad that Linux / OS/X users have such a disgusting attitude with no perspective whatsoever. I use Windows daily and don't even remember when was the last time I had a virus on my machine.
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03:41 PM on 02/15/2010
If you use Windows daily then the odds are you have malware on your computer. You may not have good enough software to find it though. I used to run a few programs because the commonest ones won't always catch what comes along. I've been running microcomputers since the Osborne so I know they are very succeptible to malware. The Osborne wasn't. It wasn't hooked up to a network (ha-ha, 1980s). Now I'm running a version of unix and I'd swear I see things which make me think malware is visiting. My cousin says it can't be, that the system is too well defended but I wonder.
12:21 AM on 11/10/2009
The difference between Huffpost and slashdot comments

Huffpost "Thank goodness I use OSX/Linux" or "Oh heck I use Windows this is scary"

/. "If you lowered the CPSVPM and made it self deleting this would be an excellent tool to frame someone with. Also, this demonstrates why CP possession laws are insane".
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PenguinLinux
got root ?
10:33 AM on 11/10/2009
The same can be said about anything.. people posting on message boards about medical conditions vs doctors posting about medical conditions. Which one is generally accepted as more knowledgeable about the medical field? The non-doctors or the doctors? Doctors of course.

Geeks don't hang out on here as much as they do on /. so of course you aren't going to get all of the geey posts. You won't get the geeky posts about computers on a NASCAR message borad either? So what's your point? (Oher than to display your superiority complex, that is)
08:38 PM on 11/09/2009
Err...,Ahh..., I think this virus is despicable, but keeping an eye on your hard drive space would be beneficial. I assume this virus puts child videos on your hard drive and this type of media takes large amounts of hard drive space. I hope this isn't a loop hole allowing guilty pedophiles off. This is the chink in the law a crafty defense attorney dreams of.
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08:31 PM on 11/09/2009
God I like my Linux/Ubuntu system! lolll
08:56 PM on 11/09/2009
Same here. I have 5 PCs at home. Nearly 2 years ago, I decided that it was just too costly and risky for me to continue to use Windows as my main Operating System when Ubuntu Linux was freely available, worked great and was not susceptible to any of these computer threats that rely on your PC running on Windows to work. So I converted all my PCs to Ubuntu but still keep Windows installed on 2 of my machines (dual-booting both operating systems) to run a few Windows applications. My Windows machines are kept offline, so I don't have to worry about security issues affecting them, or most importantly, me.
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10:39 PM on 11/09/2009
am getting ready for my next computer purchase; i think you've just sold me.
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11:01 PM on 11/09/2009
i've only been on mac and windows my whole life. where can I go research (and get laymans opinions) on linux/ubuntu Open BSD, etc. Anybody got a good recommendation? I'm in the market for a new system.
07:42 PM on 11/09/2009
Interesting. So if you want to get a co-worker or boss fired and charged with posession of child pornography, all you need to do is place these files on their machine and anonymously contact the police.
wow! that sounds easy.
In this country, you are guilty first and have to prove your innocence.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LeaderofMen
Bilingual former US Marine.
07:20 PM on 11/09/2009
Get a Mac.
09:35 AM on 11/10/2009
You either didn't read the article or don't understand it's reach.
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07:18 PM on 11/09/2009
oh oh oh........lets give the government control of the internet.. To protect "the children".

Has anyone else heard the old saying Problem, reaction, solutuion?
07:17 PM on 11/09/2009
You asked for it, you got it...THE WINDOWS OPERATING SYSTEM.
09:35 AM on 11/10/2009
You either didn't read the article or don't understand it's reach.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thomashusted
06:31 PM on 11/09/2009
LET ME GET THIS STRAIGHT PEOPLE ARE GOING TO JAIL FOR 6 YEARS FOR CHILD PORN ON THEIR COMPUTER WHILE THE BANKSTERS WHO HAVE RAPED THE COUNTRY AND WORLD FOR BILLIONS OF $ NOTHING HAPPENS??? I THINK SOMETHING IS A LITTLE OFF HERE! AND YES PEOPLE WHO ARE INTO CHILD PORN ARE VERY SICK PEOPLE BUT WHAT THEY NEED IS HELP, THERAPY OR WHATEVER. IF THEY ACTUALLY DID A SEXUAL ACT WITH A MINOR OF COURSE THEY SHOULD GO TO JAIL BUT TO BE THROWN IN JAIL FOR YEARS FOR JUST WATCHING IS CRAZY! AND THEN THEY JUST END UP COMING OUT AS HARDEN CRIMINALS IN MOST CASES, NO BETTER OFF THEN BEFORE.
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03:58 PM on 02/15/2010
People who rape children like to photograph what they are doing and trade their photographs.
They aren't "sick". They have perverted sexual desires. However, because they gain sexual pleasure from their activities, they don't want to change. I was a prison librarian. I met several pedophiles. They were not at all conflicted about what they had done or their desires. Orgasm is very much like the effect of cocaine. Some people treat their sex activities very much like a drug. People with normal sexual behaviors don't understand compulsive sexual behavior. Some people will so restrict their pleasure seeking activiites that they have no pleasure except sex. And then, having no other sources of pleasure, such people can become compulsive in their behavior.
Even runnning Ubuntu, I think I should check my computer.
06:16 PM on 11/09/2009
I've been online since 1991 and gave never encountered child "material." I suspect that most of these child material sites are run by the g0vt.
06:29 PM on 11/09/2009
I've been online a little longer and have never encountered child porn either. I don't want to see it. I do know people who have had it sent to them. One was a police officer who promptly turned them in.
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Fingerbo
05:37 PM on 11/09/2009
I don't use this word too often, it tends towards hyperbole, but this is pure evil. No less.