In the event that some shitbag slips through the cracks and is able to upload CSAM to the platform(s), I will receive a report with necessary information included so that I may remove it from our server(s), and obtain any information that may be necessary for law enforcement purposes; access to the media will automatically be denied through Cloudflare's infrastructure.
Nothing will change for nicecrew.tv, nicecrew.digital or our Matrix service on the user-facing side, but this is something I've been working on for a couple of months now and am happy to finally be able to implement it. If you have any questions, feel free to ask.
Yes, but access to hashes is illegal and only White listed for companies that can pay the fee, via the federal government. It is pathetic that platform operators have to ask for permissions to utilize services like these instead of building their own, but you know how it is.
Didn't Alex try to work on something to help deal with the CSAM problem a few months back... but they wouldn't work with him? Is this a different approach? I could be remembering the details incorrectly.
Glow-niggers would lose one of the tools they have to hem people up if open-source tools were allowed to be developed, and deployed. Just having logs that could be verified without intervention would be a major step forward in protecting everyone.
No pictures, just the hashes. But I understand the cat and mouse nature of it too. What I don't understand why it's something that you have to be elected to opt into it. Very bizarre.