"The proposed changes are horrible," said Clyde DeWitt, a columnist for the adult industry news site AVN and a partner in the Los Angeles office of First Amendment law firm Weston, Garrou & Dewitt. "Now, anybody who does anything to change an image -- duplicating a video, placing it on a website -- will have to have records available and indexed for inspection."
The proposal to change the laws follows a June report from Attorney General John Ashcroft to the House Judiciary Committee on the rule, revealing that there had been no inspections at all since the regulation's enactment in the mid-'90s. (Although the regulation was approved in 1988, a series of lawsuits delayed its initial enforcement.)
With that report, Ashcroft also delivered a 26-page proposal demanding updated regulations that would take into account technological changes created by the internet.
The proposed modifications were published in the June 25 edition of the Federal Register, and the Justice Department Criminal Division's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section issued an Aug. 24 deadline for written comments.
I downloaded a little piece of software a friend recommended called Ghostbusters. This is the program that detected the worm. You can run the program to see if you have the worm on your computer but you can't clean it unless you purchase the software for $19.95. I suggest you download the software and check your computer for this worm.
mut.