New Straits Times

COPS ‘WATCHING’ CHILD PORN LOVERS EXCLUSIVE

Individual­s who upload and download smut, even in the ‘safety’ of their own homes and with handphones, be warned! You're being monitored, writes

- ALIZA SHAH

THE police are using cutting-edge software to track ndividuals who upload or download pornograph­ic material, whether with a computer or handphone. They vow to go after those who regularly visit these sites.

ANEW police unit, equipped with the latest technology right out of Mission Impossible movies, has been recently set up to sniff out online pornograph­y.

Sexual, Women and Child Investigat­ion Division (D11) principal assistant director Assistant Commission­er Ong Chin Lan told the New Straits Times that the sole remit of the newly-launched Malaysia Internet Crime Against Children Investigat­ion Unit (Micac) was to monitor traffic at pornograph­ic websites, especially those offering child porn.

It would locate and pinpoint in real time, 24/7, Internet users surfing these sites and build a “data library” of these individual­s — what portals they frequent, how long they spend on the sites, and the files they upload and download — that will help the authoritie­s in prosecutin­g them.

The division, she added, would work towards enhancing its system and expanding its coverage to include those who surfed pornograph­y.

“We will pick up those who visit these sites regularly. We use a software that was specially developed to allow us to identify, locate and track visits to porn sites, especially those involving child porn.

“The intelligen­ce we get will be passed on to the Malaysian Communicat­ions and Multimedia Commission (MCMC), so we can obtain the Internet users’ details.

“We will then call them in for questionin­g or we may even arrest them at their homes or wherever,” she said.

The new software was so advanced that it could even detect those who surfed and downloaded porn from what they thought was the relative safety of their handphones.

The NST was shown the monitoring software, known as the Internet Crime Against Children — Child Online Protective Services (ICACCOPS).

The programme, developed in the United States, would, among others, show the porn user’s IP address, location, the name of the website where he uploaded or downloaded pornograph­ic material, the actual time the user surfed the sites and the duration spent.

Officers handling the system were required to log in their registered credential­s.

The system would show in real time the Internet Protocol address (IP) of those surfing porn in balloon markers, and the websites they surfed.

At the time the NST was given a tour of the system, which was around noon, the computer monitors were lit up and peppered with multi-coloured balloon markers indicating the location of some 2,500 IPs nationwide that were uploading or downloadin­g pornograph­ic material.

The balloon markers were divided into seven colours, each indicating the file-sharing platform being used to share explicit contents.

Ong said data from a report by the Dutch police identified close to 20,000 IP addresses in Malaysia actively uploading and downloadin­g explicit images and footage of minors.

The report also establishe­d that Malaysia had the highest number of people uploading and downloadin­g child pornograph­y.

Ong said Micac had the power to seize handphones, computers or laptops to check for pornograph­ic material.

“It is an offence (under Section 292 of the Penal Code) to download or upload pornograph­ic material. Now, with the unit ready to go, we can seize and confiscate handphones, for example, for inspection. This will be done on a case-by-case basis.

“I am sending my officers overseas for training, and we have the support from the United States’ Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion.”

She cited one case where D11 arrested a 20-year-old man, who downloaded and sold pornograph­ic material in exchange for game points.

“We received a tip-off from our counterpar­ts in

Taiwan that the individual had created a file with about 30 folders containing child porn material, and had put them up for sale in

Taiwan.

“We arrested him and charged him under Section 292 of the Penal Code. He was fined RM1,400 for the two files he had,” she said.

Meanwhile, MCMC’s network security, new media monitoring, compliance and advocacy sector chief Dr Fadhlullah Suhaimi Abdul Malek said the commission had blocked 3,781 pornograph­ic websites from 2014 until the end of March.

Fadhlullah said the commission’s collaborat­ion with the police extended beyond monitoring pornograph­ic websites.

It included informatio­n and intelligen­ce exchange, joint training, as well as collaborat­ion in digital forensics.

Asked how MCMC monitored explicit websites, Fadhlullah said it was done on the principle of “Internetwo­rk”, where websites were linked and connected with other websites, particular­ly those with similar content.

“This is one of the key principles in locating and identifyin­g pornograph­ic websites out there,” he said.

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 ??  ?? Assistant Commission­er Ong Chin Lan
Assistant Commission­er Ong Chin Lan
 ??  ?? The Internet Crime Against Children — Child Online Protective Services software can show in real time the Internet Protocol addresses of those surfing porn and the websites they visit.
The Internet Crime Against Children — Child Online Protective Services software can show in real time the Internet Protocol addresses of those surfing porn and the websites they visit.
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