The BBC has an article about a similar issue on a Tor exit node in Austria:
Austrian police raid privacy network over child porn http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20554788
actually it is not a "similar case" but the case of William W. that BBC reported. Though with some mistakes: the servers were not seized, the hardware (drives etc) at his home was seized, William was not charged (he says), police is just investigating. http://www.lowendtalk.com/discussion/6283/raided-for-running-a-tor-exit-acce... And so far only the police know if "images showing child sex abuse" were actually "found passing through them" as BBC writes. The warrent posted at arstechnica.net http://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/Beschluss.png mentions section 207a, para 2, 2nd case, and para 4 no 2, lit b of Austrian Criminal Code, which would be possession of a a pornographic depiction of a minor person over 14, showing their genitals in an obscene manner. (the text of the relevant section in German: http://www.ris.bka.gv.at/Dokumente/Bundesnormen/NOR40105143/NOR40105143.html) The warrent does not mention anything that refers to distribution or transport of pornographic images. So, either police and judge were not aware that it was a TOR server or they have/had a suspicion that's not related to running a TOR server. Or the made a mistake and quoted the wrong section. We simply don't know at present. regards, jutta am Samstag, 01. Dezember 2012 um 17:10 schrieb nanog@nanog.org:
The BBC has an article about a similar issue on a Tor exit node in Austria:
Austrian police raid privacy network over child porn http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20554788
## Austrian police have seized servers that were part of a global anonymous browsing system, after images showing child sex abuse were found passing through them.
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