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From first appearances, this doesn't appear to make sense- U.S. authorities typically do not sieze contraband found in forigen countries directly, but rather allow the resident country to handle the problem due to the theory of international soverignty. Therefore, the information here appears suspicious at first glance as to accuracy, and is therefore challanged. 108.201.29.108 (talk)
Hi, I don't know all the legal details, but quoting from one of the articles about the transfer -- The original operators of the sites had stored them on servers in a European country, but that country’s police allowed Australia’s Task Force Argos to move the website to Australia. The legal framework in Australia made it easier to keep the site’s abuse forum running as part of a clandestine police operation.. If you think there's something in the wikipedia article that is unsupported by the available evidence please let me know, however I can't make a call based on my knowledge of international law, nor based on yours. --Nanite (talk) 17:14, 25 January 2018 (UTC)[reply]
The proposal is to move or split this page to Operation Artemis. Arguments for:
The investigation, operation, and prosecution which all fall under Artemis make up a a greater portion of the article.
Many people are likely not interested in visiting a page named after a CSAM page. As a point of fact, the U.S. government has used search results of merely searching for the page in 404(b) evidence in it's prosecution of people. Searching/browsing for Operation Artemis is far safer than searching/browsing child's play
The move will likely need to be a techical move, as there is already a military Operation Artemis, however, it receive only a 100th the daily traffic that this article receives, thus, this article should receive preference, and that article should be moved to Operation Artemis (military operation) Place a request on the Wikipedia:Requested moves/Technical requests after April 8th 2024 if the issue is not controversial.