Posts Tagged ‘Internet’
Projecto COPINE: Criminosos sexuais, imagens de crianças abusadas na Internet e evitação emocional: A importância dos valores

Foto de pcgn7 segundo licença CC-BY-NC 2.0
Max Taylor; Ethel Quayle; Mary Vaughan
Agression & Violent Behaviour (2005 – in press).
“There is increasing evidence that people use the Internet to avoid negative emotional states, such as boredom, anxiety, or depression. This may be of increasing relevance for sex offenders. While the primary function of accessing the Internet for sex offenders is to obtain material that aids sexual arousal, the Internet functions to help people address some of the more immediate feelings of distress or dissatisfaction in their lives. For those with a sexual interest in children, once online offenders can then download child pornography and masturbate to such images, providing a highly rewarding or reinforcing context for further avoidance. The intensity of such behavior often has properties that offenders call ‘addictive’, with high levels of activity associated with the avoidance of unpleasant emotional states. The aim of this paper is to address issues that relate to emotional avoidance. Rather than having to exclude access to computers or the Internet, offenders, in the context of making explicit personal values and goals, might be helped to accept negative emotions and commit themselves to generating behavioral goals that will move them towards what they personally value”.
Sex offenders, Internet child abuse images and emotional avoidance: The importande of values
Relacionado
- Projecto COPINE: Modelo do uso problemático da Internet em pessoas com um interesse sexual em crianças
- Projecto COPINE: Sedução de crianças e auto-representação na Internet
- Projecto COPINE: Pedófilos, pornografia e a Internet – Questões de avaliação
- Projecto COPINE: A pornografia infantil e a Internet – Perpetuando um ciclo de abuso
- Projecto COPINE: Tipologia das imagens de pedofilia
- Projecto COPINE: Pornografia infantil, Internet e delinquência
Projecto COPINE: Modelo do uso problemático da Internet em pessoas com um interesse sexual em crianças

Foto de Lena_J segundo licença CC-BY 2.0
Max Taylor; Ethel Quayle
Cyberpsychology & Behavior, 6(1), 93-106.
“Agencies working with sex offenders are starting to see the emergence of people with a sexual interest in children who meet some of their needs through the use of child pornography, or the seduction of children, through the Internet. While CBT models dominate our understanding of sex offenders, there has been little research into the role that such new technologies may play in offending behavior. Data from the COPINE project has been used to generate a model of such offending behavior that emphasizes the role of cognitions in both the etiology, engagement with and problematic use of the Internet for those with a sexual interest in children. Such a model seeks to incorporate contemporary thinking about the role of cognitions in Pathological Internet Use, but applies this from a nonpathological perspective. This model is a first step towards providing a conceptual framework for such offending that will help inform both assessment and therapy”.
Model of Problematic Internet Use in People with a Sexual Interest in Children
Relacionado
- Projecto COPINE: Sedução de crianças e auto-representação na Internet
- Projecto COPINE: Pedófilos, pornografia e a Internet – Questões de avaliação
- Projecto COPINE: A pornografia infantil e a Internet – Perpetuando um ciclo de abuso
- Projecto COPINE: Tipologia das imagens de pedofilia
- Projecto COPINE: Pornografia infantil, Internet e delinquência
Projecto COPINE: Sedução de crianças e auto-representação na Internet

Foto de Coyote2012 segundo licença CC-BY-ND 2.0
Max Taylor; Ethel Quayle
CyberPsychology & Behavior, 4 (5); 597-608.
“This paper presents a case study of a man charged with the offense of downloading child pornography from the Internet. He had used the Internet to traffic child pornography, and, in addition, to locate children to abuse, to engage in inappropriate sexual communication with children, and to communicate with other pedophiles. Such offenses were facilitated by self-representing in Chat rooms as both a child and an adult. The case study illustrates how such offenders move through a repertoire of offending behavior and discusses the role that the Internet can play in supporting inappropriate and disinhibited sexual behavior that victimizes children through the trading of child pornography and possible child seduction. The Internet is seen to play a unique role in allowing individuals to self-represent aspects that might otherwise remain hidden or dormant”.
Child Seduction and Self-Representation on the Internet
Relacionado
Projecto COPINE: Pedófilos, pornografia e a Internet – Questões de avaliação

Foto de stuballscramble segundo licença CC-BY-NC 2.0
Max Taylor; Ethel Quayle
British Journal of Social Work, 32, 863-875.
“As yet, little is understood of the potential problems and benefits associated with Internet use, and the resulting social outcomes that may arise. This article examines issues that emerged out of a subset of nine interviews with social workers and probation officers, namely the feelings by such practitioners that they did not understand the function of the Internet for adults with a sexual interest in children. The analysis of these data is not examined in detail, rather an attempt is made to address the issues raised through a discussion of the role of child pornography, how it is accessed through the Internet and what implications this might have for assessment. The data are drawn from ongoing research by the COPINE (Combating Paedophile Information Networks in Europe) Project”.
Paedophiles, Pornography and the Internet: Assessment Issues
Relacionado
GhostNet: Investigando uma rede de ciber-espionagem

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“Cyber espionage is an issue whose time has come. In this second report from the Information Warfare Monitor, we lay out the findings of a 10-month investigation of alleged Chinese cyber spying against Tibetan institutions. The investigation, consisting of fieldwork, technical scouting, and laboratory analysis, discovered a lot more. The investigation ultimately uncovered a network of over 1,295 infected hosts in 103 countries. Up to 30% of the infected hosts are considered high-value targets and include computers located at ministries of foreign affairs, embassies, international organizations, news media, and NGOs. The Tibetan computer systems we manually investigated, and from which our investigations began, were conclusively compromised by multiple infections that gave attackers unprecedented access to potentially sensitive information”.
Tracking GhostNet: Investigating a Cyber Espionage Network
Imprensa
Projecto COPINE: A pornografia infantil e a Internet – Perpetuando um ciclo de abuso

Foto de Rudá Cabral segundo licença CC-BY-NC-ND 2.0
Max Taylor; Ethel Quayle
Deviant Behavior, 23 (4), 331-362.
“13 men convicted of downloading child pornography were interviewed with a view to understanding how these men talked about the photographs and the function such talk played in their accounts. The interviews were informed by earlier work with defended subjects and were analysed within a discursive framework. Quotations are used from the interviews to illustrate the analysis. Six principal discourses emerged within these accounts in relation to child pornography: sexual arousal; as collectibles; facilitating social relationships; as a way of avoiding real life; as therapy and in relation to the Internet. These are discussed in the context of previous research. The analysis illustrates the important role that the Internet plays in increasing sexual arousal to child pornography and highlights individual differences in whether this serves as a substitute or as a blue print for contact offences. It also draws our attention to the important role that community plays in the Internet and how collecting facilitates the objectification of children, and increases the likelihood that in the quest for new images, children continue to be sexually abused. Discourses focussing on both therapy and addiction serve to distance the respondent from personal agency, and allow for continued engagement with child pornography”.
Child pornography and the Internet: Perpetuating a cycle of abuse
Relacionado
Projecto COPINE: Tipologia das imagens de pedofilia

Foto de h-angele segundo licença CC-BY-ND 2.0
Max Taylor; Ethel Quayle; Gemma Holland
The Police Journal, 74 (2); 97-107.
“Over recent years, offences related to the production, possession and distribution of child pornography have assumed great prominence. Public attention has focussed on these crimes as being particularly repellent and deserving of both proactive policing, and when detected full and extensive investigation. Increased awareness of the problem of child pornography has been associated with a parallel recognition of the significance of the Internet as a medium for the distribution of both child pornography and the facilitation and propagation of a number of sexual offences against children. Most European countries have statutes that criminalise possession of child pornography, and it is now regarded as a serious offence in most jurisdictions, attracting significant sentences on conviction”.
Typology of Paedophile Picture Collections
Relacionado
Projecto COPINE: Pornografia infantil, Internet e delinquência

Foto de ebarrera segundo licença CC-BY-NC-SA 2.0
Max Taylor; Ethel Quayle; Gemma Holland
ISUMA, The Canadian Journal of Policy Research, 2(2), 94-100.
“Two complementary perspectives on child pornography— legal and psychological—are presented and an emergent typology for understanding the nature of such pictures on the Internet is outlined. Data from the Combating Paedophile Information Networks in Europe (COPINE) project is used to illustrate the nature of the material available to people with a sexual interest in children, where it can be found and how offenders use and are changed by the Internet. It concludes with a consideration of issues that are of concern in relation to child pornography, the Internet and offending behaviour”.
PSP – Email fraudulento contém virus informático

“Trata-se de um vírus informático, já que a PSP, obviamente, não faz qualquer convocatória por email. Esse procedimento é feito por carta registada ou pessoalmente”.
Artigos relacionados
Polícia Judiciária alerta sobre email fraudulento
A Polícia Judiciária (PJ) emitiu hoje uma nota de imprensa negando a autenticidade de um alerta sobre segurança informática que anda a circular via email.
«Chegando ao nosso conhecimento que decorre uma divulgação de um pretenso alerta emitido pela Polícia Judiciária, sobre segurança informática e que impele as pessoas a instalar um alegado programa de protecção da Microsoft. A mensagem em causa e que a seguir se exibe, é falsa e constitui, ela sim, uma quebra de segurança para os utilizadores da Internet e Correio Electrónico.

A forma utilizada pela Polícia Judiciária para a divulgação de mensagens de aconselhamento nunca é veiculada por email individual, mas sim por mensagens apostas no seu sítio de Internet ou por intermédio da Comunicação Social.
Aconselham-se, que os destinatários deste email fraudulento, a não executar os comandos que a mensagem propõe, sob pena de poderem danificar o seu sistema operativo e divulgarem dados pessoais, uma vez que se trata de um “vírus informático”.
A Polícia Judiciária já apurou que os dados de origem da divulgação estão sediados num servidor sul-americano e desencadeou os adequados mecanismos de cooperação internacional em matéria penal.
Concomitantemente desenvolve, no plano interno, outras diligências.»











