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Ask HN: Is an IP address sufficient cause to suspect people of CP possession?

3 pointsby LatencyKillsalmost 11 years ago
It is becoming more and more common for the legal system to rely on IP addresses as a basis for identifying criminal activity. Is there a better way? http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/22/nyregion/dozens-arrested-in-new-york-state-child-pornography-investigation.html

3 comments

J_Darnleyalmost 11 years ago
No. It might be becoming more common but an IP address does not identify a person. You need to search a suspect&#x27;s possessions before you can have any evidence. It might be reasonable for the police to use this lead to obtain a physical address then search for CP but an IP address along should not be sufficient.<p>Thankfully courts are beginning to realise this fact in regards to copyright infringement. [1]<p>[1] <a href="https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20140122/07375025953/court-dismisses-copyright-lawsuit-noting-ip-address-is-not-enough-evidence-infringement.shtml" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.techdirt.com&#x2F;articles&#x2F;20140122&#x2F;07375025953&#x2F;court...</a>
runjakealmost 11 years ago
An IP address (which is matched to a specific &quot;customer&quot; MAC address or login name. ISPs do log this stuff.) is enough for probable cause and a search warrant. The law enforcement agency then executes a search warrant and finds evidence, and the case is further built off of this. If the case goes to trial, the IP address is a mere stepping stone in the prosecution&#x27;s case, and not much more.
sp332almost 11 years ago
Suspect, sure. Convict, hopefully not.