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I think this resonates with some because the line is unclear. I've had boobs show up on my work machine before when I followed innocent seeming links. Heck, last week one of my new twitter followers was porn spam that had a full frontal nude as a profile pic.

Where I live prostitution is legal (though I personally find it rather icky). I don't know what my response would be to co-workers looking up info on a brothel at work, but it wouldn't be to call the police.

When I worked at SAP of all places, on their list of entertainment venues in the area of the headquarters, one of the links on the intranet wiki was to a gay club that has dark rooms. If an SAP employee in the contested jurisdiction clicked on that link, would they be a felon?

This guy was clearly over the line, but I'd find it hard to say exactly where it is. If what he did made him a felon, I'd be hard pressed to say where the line is between him and the cases above. Since only one of the "nasty" activities that he committed was illegal (and that not even universally in the US) it is chilling that the legal system was rigged to find a way to convict him on a serious count that was put in place for entirely different reasons.




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