That's absolutely the case. I agree with you on your first point about this being an international problem; we're certainly not naive about this being a Canadian problem. In cases like the one last week, when this huge child pornography ring was busted and our law enforcement was given the addresses--depending on what reports you read--of a number of Canadians, it's important that ISPs cooperate, but I do recognize that it's an international challenge. Some countries don't do very much against the abuse of children, if not actually promoting it.
I agree with you about doing more than just catching the bad guys. Certainly our interest is in law enforcement efforts to identify and rescue children. I raised the issue of the Privacy Commissioner and if there's a role for her office in doing some research into the responsibility or ways for ISPs, when we identify a particular child, to take the child's image off their site, or their network, at least. I agree there's so much more to be done than just what we're talking about here today. It's a huge problem. I don't want to pretend to be naive about the solutions; I think this is one part of it, but there's much more work to be done.