Yahoo sued over child porn site
Source: - CNET News.com
A minor and his parents have filed a $10
million lawsuit against Yahoo and a man
who once operated a Yahoo Groups site where
members traded child pornography.
The lawsuit, filed on Monday in U.S. District
Court for the Eastern District of Texas,
charged that Yahoo breached its duties by
allowing co-defendant Mark Bates and others
to share child pornography on a site, called
Candyman, that Bates created and moderated
via the Yahoo Groups service.
Yahoo spokeswomen Mary Osako said the company
had not been served and did not comment
on pending litigation.
Bates pleaded guilty in 2002 to setting
up the Candyman group site for the trade
and distribution of child pornography, the
Houston Chronicle reported at the time.
The site attracted thousands of users and
was in operation for two months before Yahoo
closed it down in February 2001.
Pornographic photos of the plaintiff--who
is using the name Johnny Doe--were taken
and posted to the Candyman site by a neighbor,
said the lawsuit, a copy of which was obtained
by Reuters.
Among other things, the plaintiffs alleged
that Yahoo was aware of the activity on
the site and that it took no action to block
or remove the pornographic images of Doe
and other children.
Attorneys familiar with cases involving
online service providers said the Communications
Decency Act generally shielded Web sites
from responsibility for material posted
by users.
"Unless the plaintiff has very concrete
proof that Yahoo knew that this group contained
child pornography, it's very likely that
Yahoo will not be liable," said John
Morris, staff counsel at the Center for
Democracy and Technology in Washington.
"We believe that they knew, and at
a minimum didn't exercise reasonable care
on their sites," said Adam Voyles,
the plaintiffs' lead attorney.
A child pornography investigation led by
the FBI and dubbed Operation Candyman targeted
Yahoo Groups users and resulted in the arrest
of more than 100 people in the United States.





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