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Page Deficiencies

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  • Start of the VGT
  • The date each country joined the VGT and a link to their agreement(s)
  • Law enforcement agencies in each country that are participants of the VGT
  • the name of the task force or group within those agencies. Example U.S. FBI and U.S. HSI are part of the CEOU.
  • Yearly budget for each country as their contribution to the VGT and the total estimate budget of resources contributed to the VGT each year
  • Operations that have been conducted or fallen under the partnership of the VGT
  • Questions of law that have arisen as a result of the VGT, such as motions of law or court appeals (example is the pleas from the NCA to their judiciary in a TEI warrant to grant the warrant. Most of the affidavit application for the warrant was desperation for the warrant to be granted, not because it was valuable to stopping crime, or on it's merits, but because if the warrant wasn't granted, the NCA would face civil and criminal prosecution for their unwarranted actions they had already participated in with France as part of the ENCRO CHAT take down.
  • Number of warrants served as part of the VGT
  • Number of arrests that occurred as a result of the warrants
  • Number of convictions that resulted from those arrests

Editors and users that obtain links, press releases, court documents or Freedom of information responses in their respective countries should link the references to the page and attempt to back fill this missing information. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jiwhit01 (talkcontribs) 17:57, 1 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]


Finding sources for the various countries entry into the VGT

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  • South Korea - the following citation includes reference to an Memorandum of understanding between the U.S. FBI and South Korean federal police, this may be their entry, but a deeper dive into the translation or other government documents would be necessary.[1]

References

  1. ^ "경찰청-美 FBI MOU.."사이버범죄.정보.교육 등 실질 협력"" (in Korean). FN news. 2015-06-25. Retrieved 2019-12-12.

Untitled

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Removed references to lolicon and cartoons. It is nonsensical, given the fact that such a thing is not even illegal, in the UK at least. --Wildstar2501 11:45, 19 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Censorship

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Censorship of cartoons and persecution or artistic photos might also fall within the scope of the Virtual Taskforce work, this article should be included in the fascism section since this authoritarian group limits free speech.— Preceding unsigned comment added by Curacao2 (talkcontribs) 00:27, 18 March 2011

Edit request from 152.91.9.190, 29 April 2011

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The Wikipedia text on the Virtual Global Taskforce is out of date. Please replace the current text with the below text, which can be verified from the VGT website at www.virtualglobaltaskforce.com 152.91.9.190 (talk) 05:11, 29 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

 Done Request text removed for copyright reasons. — Train2104 (talk • contribs • count) 22:00, 3 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Edit request on 13 August 2012

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Please consider removing references to "child pornography" and instead using the term "child exploitation" or "indecent images of children" for such [electronic] material. Certainly in the UK, "child porn" etc. is not considered appropriate since not all pornography is illegal. 86.16.128.217 (talk) 19:29, 13 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Note: I have left a note at WikiProject Pornography asking them to review this edit request. BigNate37(T) 17:50, 20 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]
Closing, pending a response to BigNate37's note on WikiProject Pornography (which was posted 10 days ago). A boat that can float! (watch me float!) 12:52, 30 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Various Points

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'Fight' comes across as rather rhetorical. It might be worth trying to find another word.

'Effective' is redundant. It would not be the aim of an organisation to be anything else but effective!

Jamesthecat (talk) 23:36, 29 October 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Importance of page for Law Enforcement wikiproject

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The importance of the VGT is difficult to understate as it tests each nations' laws as well as represents one of the largest law enforcement machines ever created in human history. As an example, due to the secrecy of each government and the ability to pass off different parts of a joint operation to different government with different laws regarding privacy, right to be free from search and seizure etc. This task force is able to circumvent the laws of many countries by utilizing quid pro quo organizational architectures to search, seize and prosecute defendants all over the world.

Example 1: Country A is able to get a warrant to deanonymize or hack into a target user or server on the TOR network that country B is not able to obtain due to their laws. Country A performs the op, and then provides a Tip to Country B, that would otherwise be illegal in Country B. Country B uses the tip to prosecute, or obtain an additional warranted search in their own country to prosecute the suspect. Country A and Country B can routinely do this for each other, or in a round robin within the VGT to provide otherwise unobtainable searches.
Example 2: budgets, Different countries are willing to expend different types of resources or only resources to a certain limit. As has been seen with the KAX17 ongoing TOR attack, only a government (or combination of goverments) with the ability to spend $10 million a year could form such an attack network to infiltrate and perform fingerprinting and end-to-end attacks on the TOR network. The VGT meets the specifications that Nusenu described would be necessary to launch such an expansive and expensive type of attack on the TOR network.eximo (talk) 17:49, 1 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]