CSAM Operation Carbon

CSAM Operation Carbon – It is described as “the involvement of a child in sexual behavior that he or she does not completely appreciate and is unable to provide informed permission to, or for which the child is not developmentally equipped, or else that violates societal rules or social taboos” by the World Health Organization (WHO).

This means that anyone who engages in child sexual assault includes someone who shows a youngster a pornographic film or befriends a child online and requests photos of, say, the child’s private parts.

What is CSAM(CSAM Operation Carbon)?

When the quantity of matching photographs does not exceed a predetermined threshold, the CSAM Detection system uses Threshold Secret Sharing to protect information about images stored in iCloud Photos.

CSAM Operation Carbon

Issue 

According to experts, India requires a suitable strategy to combat the manufacturing, dissemination, and exchange of internet child sexually offensive material (CSAM). As part of “Operation Megh Chakra” to combat the online distribution and sharing of Child Sexually Abusive Material, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) recently conducted searches throughout States and Union Territories (CSAM). CSAM Operation Carbon.

Based on the information provided by Interpol’s Singapore special team. CSAM Operation Carbon. The CBI started a similar exercise in 2021 with the codename “Operation Carbon,” and numerous people were arrested for violating the IT Act of 2000.

Megha Chakra 

As part of Operation “Megha Chakra,” the CBI searched 56 locations across 19 states and a union territory on Saturday in relation to two cases of the internet distribution of Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM), according to officials.

The CBI has filed two complaints alleging that a significant portion of Indian citizens took part in the online distribution, download, and transmission of the CSAM using cloud-based storage. CSAM Operation Carbon. The scanner has been used on more than 50 people. CSAM Operation Carbon.

The searches were carried out in Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Haryana, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Gujarat, Goa, Karnataka, Telangana, and Tamil Nadu, among others. During the raids, the agency seized the electronic devices, including mobile phones and laptops, belonging to the suspects.

Preliminary scrutiny of the devices using cyber forensic tools allegedly revealed that a huge quantity of child pornography material was stored in them. CSAM Operation Carbon. “The suspects are being questioned to identify the child victims and the abusers,” said an agency official, adding that the operation was one of the CBI-led global operations in recent times 

requires an immediate response to cases of international connections in internet child sexual exploitation.

Operation Carbon 

When the agency initiated “Operation Carbon” in November of last year, suspects were raided in 13 States and one Union Territory. The CBI subsequently registered roughly 20 cases involving more than 80 individuals.

76 venues nationwide participated in the prior operation.

The people included in the First Information Reports (FIRs) were charged with crimes under the Information Technology Act and the Indian Penal Code because they were allegedly associated with the syndicates that distributed, bought, and viewed CSAM through various social media platforms and groups. CSAM Operation Carbon.

In light of its findings, the CBI later chose to propose that numerous nations share and collect data on persons engaging in the racket under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties (MLATs). There were more than one hundred citations.

India’s Act 

In India, the Supreme Court of India interpreted Section 79(3)(b) of the IT Act to mean that the ISP must only remove or block access to illegal contents after receiving actual knowledge of the court order or after being alerted by the relevant authorities.

ISPs are therefore not responsible for any third-party information.

The petitioner in the Kamlesh Vaswani (WP(C) 177/2013) lawsuit demanded a total prohibition on pornography.

Following the court’s intervention, the advisory committee (established in accordance with Section 88 of the IT Act) instructed ISPs to disable nine (domain) URLs that housed articles that go against the Constitution’s 19(2) clause on morals and decency.

The Supreme Court is still considering the petition.

In September 2016, the IWF collaborated with the Mumbai-based non-governmental organization “Aarambh India” to develop India’s first online reporting system for the submission of photos and videos of child abuse.

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