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-   -   Damian Green's Porn Collection (https://www.thisisbigbrother.com/forums/showthread.php?t=331517)

bots 01-12-2017 10:08 AM

Damian Green's Porn Collection
 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-42151148

The rumblings about his porn collection continue to roll but to me this is a lot more complex than is being portrayed.

First off, I should clarify that i am a right leaning voter, however Mr Green is my MP and I can't stand the man personally.

2 ex police have now come out and said he had loads of porn downloaded on his computer, and while this may be the case, both have stated categorically that there was nothing illegal in it, so, why, one asks, do they feel the need to make unauthorised statements on it, after they have left the force, it wasn't illegal, and therefore was not a police matter. Its clearly meant as a smear campaign.

However, I have been with companies where if they downloaded any porn whatsoever on a company computer it was an instant dismissal, and I saw it enforced many times. But, it wasn't so much because they were downloading porn, it was because the sources of that porn were havens for viruses, trojans etc that put the companies security at risk.

With Mr Green being in a position where he is likely to have been in possession of very sensitive information, it is a matter of gross misconduct to me, and he should be given the boot, and the same should apply to anyone else found to have been doing the same.

DemolitionRed 01-12-2017 10:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bitontheslide (Post 9716257)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-42151148

The rumblings about his porn collection continue to roll but to me this is a lot more complex than is being portrayed.

First off, I should clarify that i am a right leaning voter, however Mr Green is my MP and I can't stand the man personally.

2 ex police have now come out and said he had loads of porn downloaded on his computer, and while this may be the case, both have stated categorically that there was nothing illegal in it, so, why, one asks, do they feel the need to make unauthorised statements on it, after they have left the force, it wasn't illegal, and therefore was not a police matter. Its clearly meant as a smear campaign.

However, I have been with companies where if they downloaded any porn whatsoever on a company computer it was an instant dismissal, and I saw it enforced many times. But, it wasn't so much because they were downloading porn, it was because the sources of that porn were havens for viruses, trojans etc that put the companies security at risk.

With Mr Green being in a position where he is likely to have been in possession of very sensitive information, it is a matter of gross misconduct to me, and he should be given the boot, and the same should apply to anyone else found to have been doing the same.

I agree with the points you've made. What he did in his own time, so long as its legal, which it is/was isn't anyone's business. What he does in company time is a different matter. Touring porn sites carries a high risk of downloading malicious software. He even risked being blackmailed and all that on a government computer!!
Regardless of what he was looking at, he used company time and therefore company money to get his thrills. That, by most companies, would be considered theft.

Kizzy 01-12-2017 10:22 AM

Didn't you know the teflon tories slip out of anything?...

On the note in the articlei it's interesting that they are wanting the names of all the journalists involved in the reporting of this :/

Northern Monkey 01-12-2017 10:29 AM

If it was legal stuff then I don’t see the problem.It does seem like some kind of attempt to smear him.Have these ex police been paid by someone?
It seems to me that there are people around Westminster who are using this sex allegation thing to try and take down as many of the government as possible.Or just certain people.

DemolitionRed 01-12-2017 10:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Northern Monkey (Post 9716305)
If it was legal stuff then I don’t see the problem.It does seem like some kind of attempt to smear him.Have these ex police been paid by someone?
It seems to me that there are people around Westminster who are using this sex allegation thing to try and take down as many of the government as possible.Or just certain people.

No sorry, he deserves to be smeared. He was caught with his pants down whilst ja**ing off in a parliamentary office.

I personally don't believe he deserves to lose his position but 'we' the people who employ him, deserve to know he's been a dirty boy.

The Slim Reaper 01-12-2017 10:41 AM

If a guy can't get jiggy with himself during the course of the working day, then what is the world coming to?

Do you, Damian.

Kizzy 01-12-2017 10:42 AM

Ask yourself why was the comp siezed initially?...

Before they even found porn on it, was that a smear...his guy is up to his neck in it already with a direct accusation of harassment remember?

He is bolstered by Andrew Mitchell does he have an axe to grind with the police?

Northern Monkey 01-12-2017 10:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DemolitionRed (Post 9716320)
No sorry, he deserves to be smeared. He was caught with his pants down whilst ja**ing off in a parliamentary office.

I personally don't believe he deserves to lose his position but 'we' the people who employ him, deserve to know he's been a dirty boy.

:joker:

I didn’t know that.He Possibly deserved to lose his job when he was caught sticky handed if that’s the case.

This coming out now though when he’s in government seems very dodgy to me when this was around 2008 wasn’t it?
And what are police doing talking in public about investigations.Specially since he was found to be not doing anything illegal.What’s their political motive?

The Slim Reaper 01-12-2017 10:51 AM

Find you someone prepared to get up to their necks in it.

smudgie 01-12-2017 11:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DemolitionRed (Post 9716320)
No sorry, he deserves to be smeared. He was caught with his pants down whilst ja**ing off in a parliamentary office.

I personally don't believe he deserves to lose his position but 'we' the people who employ him, deserve to know he's been a dirty boy.

Was he actually caught doing what you refer to, or is that imagination working overtime?:joker:
If he was caught in the act then fair enough, reprimand him.
I would be interested to know how many people worked in the office at the time, if it was possible anyone else had the ability to thumbnail/visit porn sites.
If he has not broken any laws and it was low key porn I don't see the reason to sack him.:shrug:

arista 01-12-2017 01:24 PM

From 2008, New Labour were in power then.
The Police seem to not be sure.

Ref D.P. BBC2HD

Kazanne 01-12-2017 01:31 PM

He is over 18 and although it's frowned upon by some he has done nothing wrong and nothing millions of others dont do, I don't see the story here really.He might be deemed a dirty old bastard but seems he is a legal one.

Kizzy 01-12-2017 01:43 PM

And the unsecure connections involved? to a device with sensitive information?

Seems davis is getting jittery... good two flying monkeys with one stone, get gone!

David Davis has come to the defence of Damian Green, indicating that he might resign if the first secretary of state were forced to quit as a result of the Cabinet Office investigation into inappropriate behaviour.

The Brexit secretary believes his cabinet colleague is the victim of a police vendetta and has made it clear to Theresa May that he would be willing to leave the government if he felt Green had been unfairly treated.

The threat emerged only hours after a former Metropolitan police detective came forward with fresh claims implying that Green himself had been viewing pornography found on his workplace computer when police raided his Commons office in November 2008.

https://www.theguardian.com/politics...acked-unfairly

Oliver_W 01-12-2017 02:01 PM

Usually when people get fired for downloading porn at work, it's not "we are morally against porn, therefore you are fired", it's "a lot of these websites can give the computer an STD viruses which can compromise information or ransomware, you have put confidential details and a company asset in danger, therefore you are fired."

I'm not certain, but I would guess that an MP would have resources to access blue websites which have no danger or malware, or possibly have ways to bypass the dangers these might have. I would bet at the very least, there's something to this end a parliamentary computer would have that the average office computer wouldn't.

Kizzy 01-12-2017 02:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Oliver_W (Post 9716562)
Usually when people get fired for downloading porn at work, it's not "we are morally against porn, therefore you are fired", it's "a lot of these websites can give the computer an STD viruses which can compromise information or ransomware, you have put confidential details and a company asset in danger, therefore you are fired."

I'm not certain, but I would guess that an MP would have resources to access blue websites which have no danger or malware, or possibly have ways to bypass the dangers these might have. I would bet at the very least, there's something to this end a parliamentary computer would have that the average office computer wouldn't.

:joker::joker: he's not bloody james bond it was a dell laptop from 2008.

Oliver_W 01-12-2017 02:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kizzy (Post 9716579)
:joker::joker: he's not bloody james bond it was a dell laptop from 2008.

Well, sure. But that doesn't mean he couldn't have special software, or (ahem) backdoors into websites.

Kizzy 01-12-2017 04:09 PM

Ah, that's why he's worried, he's up to his neck in it...

'Christopher Galley had approached Green’s then boss, David Davis, who was the shadow home secretary, saying he was a committed Conservative and was willing to leak material.

Davis introduced Galley, who was then working in immigration, to Green, who was the Tory immigration spokesman. Galley, later on in a police interview, said he had wanted a “parliamentary job” with the Tories. Green repeatedly promised to “try to find something” but said “he wanted as much information as possible to damage them”, Galley said.'

https://www.theguardian.com/politics...icer-bob-quick

joeysteele 01-12-2017 04:52 PM

It is stated it is legal the content he had.

What I find odd is it is on a computer at his place of work stored on his log in details.
What concerns me is he states he did not download and store it, so who did.

Who else would have access to his work related comp and his access details.
These are questions he should answer and if he cannot and does not know,that should worry him as much as anyone.

I have little time for him really but this in itself is likely nothing he legally needs to worry about.
Morally however,considering his high status in govt at this time,in light of the other issues being looked into concerning him too, what he has stored may become indicative of his 'thinking and other dubious actions'.

If anything of substance as to allegations are found to have foundation.

michael21 01-12-2017 08:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nutcracker Sweet (Post 9716542)
He is over 18 and although it's frowned upon by some he has done nothing wrong and nothing millions of others dont do, I don't see the story here really.He might be deemed a dirty old bastard but seems he is a legal one.

I don't know the full story but did the police raid his office and then found the porn why was there a police raid

Cherie 01-12-2017 09:00 PM

Viewing porn at work is generally a sackable offence

smudgie 01-12-2017 09:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Candy Cane (Post 9717192)
Viewing porn at work is generally a sackable offence

But then their offices are like little home from homes.:shrug:
Waiting about to go for lunch, or get their mugs on PMQs.:joker:

michael21 01-12-2017 09:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Candy Cane (Post 9717192)
Viewing porn at work is generally a sackable offence

So viewing football :fist:

MTVN 01-12-2017 09:06 PM

I find it weird that former police officers are allowed to publicly reveal what they found on material that was seized as part of a police investigation

smudgie 01-12-2017 09:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MTVN (Post 9717207)
I find it weird that former police officers are allowed to publicly reveal what they found on material that was seized as part of a police investigation

I believe the police officer involved is now under investigation for this.

michael21 01-12-2017 09:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NanaChristmas (Post 9717208)
I believe the police officer involved is now under investigation for this.

Not sure what there is to investigation he the guy as monk says


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