• GladiusB
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    -397 months ago

    I don’t think you can unknowingly download something. Sounds like a lie to cover up. I’m not a software engineer. But I do not think it works that way unless you are downloading immense files or zips. If that’s the case it should be clearly shown with what they did download.

    • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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      7 months ago

      You just unknowingly downloaded this picture of Zoboomafoo. It is now on your storage drive in the form of a cached image file. It’s temporary, and will be removed the next time your cache is cleared if you ever do that. Otherwise, it will sit there for some time, lurking in your system. Good thing it’s only Zoboomafoo!

      Enjoy!

      • GladiusB
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        -187 months ago

        It’s on my phone?! Where?

        • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ
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          7 months ago

          In a temporary cache directory. If you’re on Android, you can clear it by going to your app settings, viewing storage usage on whichever app you used to view this, and clearing the cache. For example, the app I use for lemmy currently has 100MB in it’s cache. My Firefox app on my phone currently has 555MB is cached files. This can includes things such as web pages, JavaScript files, and the images I’ve encountered while visiting the web who knows when, I rarely clear that shit.

          • GladiusB
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            -137 months ago

            I always assumed that was cleared automatically after time.

            • @[email protected]
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              207 months ago

              It is, probably.

              But it won’t be written over with zeros, so it’s all still there until something else actually writes over it. A mobile device is flash memory, so the controller wear leveling might not get back to that spot for a bit. It might decide that spot is a bad sector and never write over it.

              • GladiusB
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                -177 months ago

                Regardless. He can’t be seeing this or downloading it unknowingly was my point. It can’t be happening in the background. If he is viewing it, it’s known.

                • @[email protected]
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                  157 months ago

                  The person in the article who apparently viewed it multiple times over a long period of time absolutely did so deliberately.

                  I think the point in sending you the image was to show that, in general, it is possible for images to be present on your computer without you actively attempting to access them. Not to say that the argument was valid in this particular case.

                  • GladiusB
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                    -67 months ago

                    Well that’s my point. Is they aren’t there just on accident. But it’s being taken as he didn’t do it. He absolutely did it. The mechanism of how that exists is clearer now, but my point still stands. He didn’t not view them causing them to be in temporary memory on accident. That doesn’t happen.

          • GladiusB
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            -87 months ago

            Nope! I’m a logistics manager.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      Sorry, but that’s just incorrect. You unknowingly downloaded a whole bunch of things just in the process of making this comment.

      This is one of the issues that has confounded people since the invention of the world wide web; from a computer’s perspective, there is no such thing as “viewing” a file. Everything is a download. The only difference is what your computer does with the file after the fact.

      If you load up a thread on a forum and someone posts a CSAM image to that thread, your compouter will download it. You don’t have to make any active choice, other than loading the thread itself, for that to happen. Same on Discord, WhatsApp, or anything else. All forms of access are downloads.

      Edit to add: None of this is relevant to this particular case since the defendant allegedly viewed the video multiple times across a period of two years, which, y’know, is in absolutely no way accidental. But it’s still important to understand the distinction because there are a lot of situations where it absolutely does matter.

      • @[email protected]
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        67 months ago

        Edit to add: None of this is relevant to this particular case since the defendant allegedly viewed the video multiple times across a period of two years,

        That… Is a relevant detail that is not in the article. That does seem to change things.

      • GladiusB
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        -137 months ago

        Oh really? I thought we just viewed it in a cloud based system and we only put it on our system if we choose to. Interesting.

        • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
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          157 months ago

          Even if that were true, how would your device display anything without downloading it first? In your example, your device is the end point for the cloud based system, which means it downloads from the cloud.

          • GladiusB
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            -67 months ago

            I don’t know enough about cloud based systems. I thought you were just viewing it. Such as all the work was done sever side and very little client side. I am not a software engineer. I just play games and have an idea of what’s going on.

            This person in question viewed it many times and that is not “accident”. Which is exactly my point.

            • @PM_Your_Nudes_Please
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              7 months ago

              In reference to cloud gaming, that’s more akin to watching a live video stream. Your device may not be doing the processing to generate the video, but it is still streaming (live downloading) the video. Whether it decides to store that video is up to the device’s settings. But it is 100% downloading the video in order to display it.

              • GladiusB
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                07 months ago

                I hear ya. I misunderstood the mechanism. I thought it was more of a pass through.

      • KillingTimeItself
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        -197 months ago

        If you load up a thread on a forum and someone posts a CSAM image to that thread, your compouter will download it. You don’t have to make any active choice, other than loading the thread itself, for that to happen. Same on Discord, WhatsApp, or anything else. All forms of access are downloads.

        you might be shitposting here, and i can’t tell. It’s served to you over the internet. Even if hypothetically, someone were to send you an encrypted file of something highly illegal (lets say classified government documents) and asked you to hold on to it. But never gave you the key, and you never bothered figuring out what it was. Even if you downloaded it knowingly, you don’t know what it is, and therefore have no reason to assume anything negative about it.

        The semantic technicality here, is that download is 99.99% of the time used to refer to an action where the user explicitly grabs a copy of something, you computer doesn’t automatically “download” something, in the form that the user downloads the something. This is called caching for a reason. Hell even download caching, is just caching used for an active download.

        Download itself is also a network terminology, referring to incoming data, moving to you, also known as RX and TX in shorter form. But even that is only a referential term, and merely refers to where and how the data is flowing, rather than what it actually means for it to be downloaded. Because someone else, could upload illicit materials to your network, and under your description, that would also count as “you downloading it” regardless of whether it gets put anywhere in your network, or if it just gets bounced back or whatever.

        you also use the term loading, which is incongruent with downloading, so i’m curious whether you think loading and downloading are the same, or different, if you are, again just shitposting.

        • @[email protected]
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          7 months ago

          Download itself is also a network terminology, referring to incoming data, moving to you, also known as RX and TX in shorter form.

          This is just about the only correct statement in this rambling mess of a comment. Yes, downloading means that data is moving to your system.

          So, given that fact, how do you imagine that your web browser displays an image without downloading it? How does the data comprising the content of the image end up on your system in order for the web browser to render it without traveling to it from the server; ie, being “downloaded”?

          • KillingTimeItself
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            -137 months ago

            So, given that fact, how do you imagine that your web browser displays an image without downloading it? How does the data comprising the content of the image end up on your system in order for the web browser to set it without traveling to it from the server; ie, being “downloaded”?

            like i said it’s all semantic. In this case, download is almost certainly being used to describe a scenario where the original image was sent in whatsapp, and then downloaded to the phone locally, and found on the phones filesystem. Otherwise we would not be using the term download here. That could be a language barrier thing i suppose. But in the contexts of what it’s implying, i doubt it.

            likewise, i could just as easily argue that everything you “post” on the internet is actually an upload, and as a result, you upload every interaction you have on the internet, however it’s only contextually used to describe something like “uploading a youtube video” where there a very clear contextual meaning presented. Same thing with download, people download games, but listen to the music or “stream” it from spotify, it’s technically downloading, but it’s actually not.

            Going by the contextual, and colloquially referred to definition of “download” (hell the article linked literally says “he watched it for two years” so try to semantic that one out) download in isolation, is the flow of traffic to you, from somewhere else, downloading, downloaded, or a download, that verb usage of it, as opposed to an adjective usage of it, is completely different. The article does not say “download” it says “downloaded, downloading” and any potentially related forms of that word refer to the act of download, of which is being locally and explicitly stored on your device. The only instance where this wouldn’t apply is if he didn’t download it (notice the verb form usage) and it was actually cached by whatsapp, and that somehow lead to him being arrested.

            Which is a possibility, but is also a completely different scenario.

            • @[email protected]
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              57 months ago

              likewise, i could just as easily argue that everything you “post” on the internet is actually an upload, and as a result, you upload every interaction you have on the internet

              Yes. Again, that’s literally what is actually happening.

              You keep throwing out these statements like “Oh, well if that’s true then we might as well also say this is true” and then “this” turns out to be just the most banal shit.

              I genuinely don’t think you even know what it is you’re trying to argue here. You’re either so down in the weeds of some bizarre semantic sophistry that you’ve lost track of daylight, or you’re arguing points that no one else was disagreeing on while acting like you’ve just dropped the Pentagon Papers.

              Either way, I really can’t be bothered anymore. I’ve tried my best, but it’s like trying to teach a pigeon to read.

              • KillingTimeItself
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                17 months ago

                You keep throwing out these statements like “Oh, well if that’s true then we might as well also say this is true” and then “this” turns out to be just the most banal shit.

                I genuinely don’t think you even know what it is you’re trying to argue here. You’re either so down in the weeds of some bizarre semantic sophistry that you’ve lost track of daylight, or you’re arguing points that no one else was disagreeing on while acting like you’ve just dropped the Pentagon Papers.

                i literally started this entire thread off based on semantic technicalities, why are we acting like this ISN’T what im talking about? Nobody should be shocked by this. I didn’t come to argue the legality of holding CP because if i did, it would be very short, it’s illegal, plain and simple, that’s how the law in the US works.

    • @Demdaru
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      7 months ago

      Noooope, whatsapp by default downloads images and videos sent to you. I know cuz I have to disable it on my device and clean the downloaded shit from my grandpa’s device. Grandpa does want it to keep downloading.

      Edit: Fixed spelling. Misclicked almost evert N with B, lol

      • @[email protected]
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        27 months ago

        More to the point, anything which displays an image from a remote source has to download the image in order to do so. Whether or not you choose to store that image somewhere permanently, it was still downloaded either way.

      • GladiusB
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        17 months ago

        Does it? I have never used that app. Ok seems more likely then.