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p*rn Pop Up Ads Could Send Teacher To Prison For 40 Years

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by gifford1967, Feb 26, 2007.

  1. gifford1967

    gifford1967 Member
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    Teacher’s p*rn conviction sparks tech debate

    Graphic images inadvertently appeared on classroom PC, Conn. woman says
    The Associated Press

    Updated: 6:29 p.m. ET Feb 13, 2007

    WINDHAM, Conn. - Until recently, Julie Amero says, she lived the quiet life of a small-town substitute teacher, with little knowledge of computers and even less about p*rn.

    Now she is in the middle of a criminal case that hinges on the intricacies of both, and it could put her behind bars for up to 40 years.

    She was convicted last month of exposing seventh-grade students to p*rnography on her classroom computer. She contended the images were inadvertently thrust onto the screen by pornographers’ unseen spyware and adware programs.

    Prosecutors dispute that. But her argument has made her a cause célèbre among some technology experts, who say what happened to her could happen to anyone.

    “I’m scared,” said Amero, 40. “I’m just beside myself over something I didn’t do.”

    It all began in October 2004. Amero was assigned to a class at Kelly Middle School in Norwich, a city of about 37,000 people about 40 miles east of Hartford.

    Amero says that before her class started, a teacher allowed her to e-mail her husband. She says she used the computer and went to the bathroom, returning to find the permanent teacher gone and two students viewing a Web site on hairstyles.

    Amero says she chased the students away and started class. But later, she says, pornographic images began popping up on the computer screen by themselves. She says she tried to click the images off, but they kept returning, and she was under strict orders not to shut the computer off.

    “I did everything I possibly could to keep them from seeing anything,” she says.

    Prosecutor David Smith contended at Amero’s three-day trial that she actually clicked on graphic Web sites.

    Several students testified that they saw pictures of naked men and women, including at least one image a couple having oral sex.

    Computer consultant Herb Horner testified for the defense that the children had gone to an innocent Web site on hairstyles and were redirected to another hairstyle site that had pornographic links. “It can happen to anybody,” Horner said.

    The defense argued that the images were caused by adware and spyware — programs that are often secretly planted on computers by Internet businesses to track users’ browsing habits. They can generate pop-up ads — in some cases, pornographic ones.

    “It’s absolutely plausible,” Ari Schwartz, deputy director of the Center for Democracy and Technology, said of Amero’s case. “It’s a huge problem.”

    But many remain skeptical, including Mark Steinmetz, who served on Amero’s jury.

    “So many kids noticed this going on,” Steinmetz said. “It was truly uncalled for. I would not want my child in her classroom. All she had to do was throw a coat over it or unplug it. We figured even if there were pop-ups, would you sit there?”

    The Federal Trade Commission has been cracking down on companies accused of spreading malicious spyware to millions of computer users worldwide. And pop-up blockers that can prevent so-called p*rn storms are now in wide use.

    Amero and her supporters say the old computer lacked firewall or antispyware protections to prevent inappropriate pop-ups.


    “What is extraordinary is the prosecution admitted there was no search made for spyware — an incredible blunder akin to not checking for fingerprints at a crime scene,” Alex Eckelberry, president of a Florida software company, wrote recently in the local newspaper. “When a pop-up occurs on a computer, it will get shown as a visited Web site, and no ‘physical click’ is necessary.”

    Smith, the prosecutor, would not say what he plans to recommend when Amero is sentenced March 2. John Newsone, a defense attorney in Norwich familiar with the case, said Amero might be spared prison or face perhaps a year to 18 months.

    Principal Scott Fain said the computer lacked the latest firewall protection because a vendor’s bill had gone unpaid. “I was shocked to see what made it through,” he said.

    But Fain also said Amero was the only one to report such a problem: “We’ve never had a problem with pop-ups before or since.”

    © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
    URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17134607/



    This case is completely insane. I can't believe the police would actually arrest someone for this, much less, that a DA would prosecute the case. I was so pissed when I read about this, that I sent an email to the Governor of Connecticut. If anyone is interested in reading more about the case you can check out this site-
    http://www.myleftnutmeg.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=5793
     
  2. Oski2005

    Oski2005 Member

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    The Jury sounds messed up to. That guy sounds like he declared her guilty for the way she reacted or failed to react to the situation which isn't what she is on trial for and I'm surprised that can't be used to go back and declare a mistrial.
     
  3. MR. MEOWGI

    MR. MEOWGI Contributing Member

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    Wow. When my wife was teaching some kid got on her cpu and accidentally got p*rn up on the screen. Schools and parents are ****ed up.
     
  4. Jeff

    Jeff Clutch Crew

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    I say we ban all books, magazines, computers, phones, fax machines and...on second thought, perhaps all children should have their retinas sterilized before reaching school age. That way, they'll never have to see anything that might damage them.

    :rolleyes:
     
  5. Drewdog

    Drewdog Member

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    Cant you just CTRL+ATL+DEL and lock your computer???

    :confused:
     
  6. Cannonball

    Cannonball Member

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    Agreed. Sometimes I watch Dateline or 20/20 (or whatever) when they have stories that cover crimes and trials. And they always interview jury members and I'm dumbfounded by thought process of some of these people. They factor things into their decision making that as juror you're not supposed to. "If I was is his situation I would have reacted differently." So that makes him guilty? The guy said he'd throw a coat over the screen. Good idea. But if she's not tech savvy and p*rn keeps popping up and she's scrambling to close all the windows, she's probably jittery enough to overlook the obvious like turning off the monitor.

    I certainly don't know all the details, but it's hard to to fathom how 12 people could say that beyond a reasonable doubt, she intentionally showed p*rn to children. I dont' know how the prosecution could prove it wasn't spyware when they didn't even check the freakin' computer and the principal of the school admits it lacked adaquate firewall protection.
     
  7. MR. MEOWGI

    MR. MEOWGI Contributing Member

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    My wife wouldn't know that. She knows how to use a search engine and use email and that's about it.

    But still teachers are there to teach. Not babysit, enforce the law, be a cpu wiz, protect kids from boobies etc. We expect too much.
     
  8. gifford1967

    gifford1967 Member
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    I've worked in schools for many years and you are describing a level of computer sophistication that is way beyond most teachers.

    There are many things she could have done, the most simple being- just pull the plug, but that doesn't mean she should be sent to prison because she was the victim of p*rn pop up ad technology.
     
  9. GRENDEL

    GRENDEL Member

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    That is one messed up story

    from reading piece I get the feeling the teacher is telling the truth
     
  10. pirc1

    pirc1 Member

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    I think the jury system is so outdated that it needs to be reworked.
     
  11. Drewdog

    Drewdog Member

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    Well I was thinking that most computers at schools would have the basic ability to lock their computer when they are away. Just like they would have to log in every morning with their username and password.

    I dont know... My mom isnt computer savvy by any means (she is a teacher) but she knows to lock her computer when she is away. I was thinking that was kind of common sense.
     
  12. AroundTheWorld

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    This is just ridiculous.
     
  13. Master Baiter

    Master Baiter Member

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    Start button + L is faster ;)
     
  14. Lil Pun

    Lil Pun Member

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    The sad thing is some people may see this as a viable option.
     
  15. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    Negligence for leaving the computer available to the kids on the part of the teacher. She's guilty. :eek:

    Negligence on the part of the school district, principal, and local techie dude for not protecting against this sort of stuff. :(

    Punishable, yes. Forty years? I don't think so. :mad:
    Someone's about to make A LOT OF MONEY off schools... ;)
     
  16. MR. MEOWGI

    MR. MEOWGI Contributing Member

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    Kids are not supposed to use computers? The kid is guilty, not the teacher.
     
  17. AMS

    AMS Member

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    ridiculous.
     
  18. rockbox

    rockbox Around before clutchcity.com

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    The majority of Jurors are r****ds because most smart and reasonable people can get out jury duty.
     
  19. Austin70

    Austin70 Member

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    A kid plays with a teachers computer and gets her in trouble with p*rn. She may get 40yrs and a teacher has sex with a student, and they get at the most 5 years in jail.
     
  20. Sishir Chang

    Sishir Chang Member

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    Unfortunately that wasn't an option:

    The people who think she is guilty must not surf the Internet much or have email. I mean even on work accounts that I almost never use I still get p0rn spam on those.

    If I was her defense attorney I would get that computer and set up an internet connection into the court and go to the exact same website the kids saw and show the jury how on website will redirect someone to a p*rn site and fill up with p*rn pop ups.
     

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