NEWS RELEASE
Thursday
July 17, 2008
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Contact:
Rob Stoddard/NCTA 202-258-2851
Joy Sims/NCTA 202-222-2350
NCMEC Communications 703-837-6111
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HISTORIC AGREEMENT WILL STRENGTHEN THE FIGHT
AGAINST
CHILD PORNOGRAPHY
Agreement Will Help Reduce the Proliferation of
Child Pornography Online
Washington, DC – Cable operators that bring Internet service to 87
percent of homes in the United States will take additional voluntary measures
to limit the distribution of child pornography on the Internet under an agreement
announced today among the National Cable & Telecommunications Association
(NCTA), the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), and
the National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG).
Under the unprecedented industry-wide agreement, all cable operators represented
on NCTA’s Board of Directors have agreed to help reduce the proliferation
of child pornography by signing a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with NCMEC. This
commitment represents the largest number of broadband subscribers protected
by the terms of the MOU as these operators offer broadband Internet service
to more than 112 million homes.
"Building on our strong commitment to online safety, the cable industry
wants to help combat child pornography and exploitation," said Kyle McSlarrow,
President & CEO, NCTA. “By signing the NCMEC MOU, cable Internet
service providers are reaffirming their strong commitment to online safety
and Internet literacy for all American families."
"We are deeply grateful for this industry-wide attack on child pornography," said
Ernie Allen, President & CEO, NCMEC. "It is not possible to arrest
and prosecute every offender. We must be creative and build new public-private
partnerships to address this insidious problem more effectively. Today's
announcement represents a bold step forward."
On behalf of NAAG and the 45 Attorneys General who have signed a letter in
support of the NCTA-NCMEC MOU, Rhode Island Attorney General and NAAG President
Patrick C. Lynch commended NCMEC and NCTA on the agreement.
“Although NCMEC has recently signed similar agreements with individual
companies, this agreement is notable as the first such agreement NCMEC has
reached with an entire sector of the nation’s communications industry,” Lynch
wrote. “The NCTA agreement with NCMEC will limit the ability
of predators to store and exchange images of exploitation of those who are,
by definition, among the more vulnerable in society. We congratulate
the cable industry for taking a strong stand in support of child safety.”
Specifically, the cable companies have agreed to use NCMEC's list of active
websites identified as containing child pornography, to ensure that no such
site is hosted on servers owned or controlled by those companies. The companies
will also report these instances to NCMEC's CyberTipline and where appropriate
revise their policies around other potential sources of child pornography,
such as, for example, newsgroups.
The agreement with NCMEC will provide cable broadband service providers with
an invaluable source of information to help them enforce their terms of service,
all of which forbid the hosting of such illegal materials on their servers. The
information provided by NCMEC to cable service providers will also help them
identify instances of child pornography, facilitating their reporting of such
material to NCMEC as required by federal law. This in turn enables NCMEC
to refer these cases to law enforcement for investigation and prosecution.
The cable operators that have agreed to execute the MOU within 30 days include:
Comcast Corporation; Cox Communications; Charter Communications; Cablevision
Systems Corporation; Bright House Networks; Suddenlink Communications; Mediacom
Communications; Insight Communications; Bresnan Communications; Midcontinent
Communications; Broadstripe; GCI; Harron Communications; US Cable Corporation;
BendBroadband; Eagle Communications; and Sjoberg’s, Inc. Time
Warner Cable has already signed the MOU.
NCTA’s agreement with NCMEC is the latest milestone in cable’s
efforts to ensure online safety and promote Internet literacy for all families
and Internet users. When NCTA launched its PointSmartClickSafe online
safety initiative (www.PointSmartClickSafe.org)
in June 2007, cable ISPs pledged in a code of conduct to support law enforcement
in its efforts to ensure online safety for American families.
# # #
NCTA is the principal trade association for the U.S. cable industry,
representing cable operators serving more than 90 percent of the nation's
cable television households and more than 200 cable program networks. The
cable industry is the nation’s largest broadband provider of high-speed
Internet access after investing more than $130 billion over ten years to
build a two-way interactive network with fiber optic technology. Cable
companies also provide state-of-the-art digital telephone service to millions
of American consumers.
The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children is a 501(c)(3)
nonprofit organization. Since it was established by Congress in 1984,
the organization has operated the toll-free 24-hour national missing children’s
hotline which has handled more than 2.2 million calls. It has assisted
law enforcement in the recovery of more than 126,000 children. The
organization’s CyberTipline has handled more than 594,000 reports
of child sexual exploitation and its Child Victim Identification program
has analyzed 14,437,865 child pornography images and videos. The organization
works in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office
of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.
The National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) was founded in 1907
to help Attorneys General fulfill the responsibilities of their office and
to assist in the delivery of high quality legal services to the states and
territorial jurisdictions. NAAG’s mission is: "To facilitate
interaction among Attorneys General as peers. To facilitate the enhanced
performance of Attorneys General and their staffs." NAAG fosters
an environment of "cooperative leadership," helping Attorneys
General respond effectively - individually and collectively - to emerging
state and federal issues |