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Operation Pin

Operation Pin is an alleged sting operation set up by the UK s National Crime Squad, the FBI, Interpol, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the Australian Hi-Tech Crime Centre.

Its stated aim is to identify pedophilia who are using the internet to access child pornography.

Announced on 18 December 2003, the operation is said to involve the creation and operation of a number of websites (so-called Honeypots ) purporting to offer illegal images.

While these websites will not contain child pornography images, they will be designed to look like the real thing so as to ensnare as many offenders as possible.

The websites will present visitors with a variety of options which, instead of leading to illegal images, lead to a law enforcement site that will inform them that their personal details have been recorded and that they have committed a crime. They will also be given details of appropriate helplines. It is unclear if the information recorded will be technical (for example, an IP address) or personal (for example, credit card details).

The stated purpose of Operation Pin is to cause people seeking out child pornography on the Internet to wonder whether they will find an illegal site or one operated by law enforcement agencies. It can thus be understood as psychological warfare.

It is also a controversial scheme. In the United Kingdom at least, it is an offence to advertise that indecent photographs of children are shown or distributed. If Operation Pin s websites do indeed look like the real thing , their operators will be committing a criminal offence under UK law (the Protection of Children Act 1978, section 1(1)(d)).

=See Also=

*Perverted-justice.com

=External links=

*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/3330929.stm BBC Website news article: 18 December 2003: Online dragnet to thwart paedophiles] *[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/3329567.stm BBC Website news article: 18 December 2003: Police to trap online paedophiles]