2013-09-192013-09-192013http://hdl.handle.net/11212/736http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/Delivery.cfm/SSRN_ID1365986_code63732.pdf?abstractid=1365986&mirid=1This contribution sketches some contours of the landscape of sex, minors, and crime in cyberspace, illustrated by a varied casuistry of case-law emerging in the Netherlands. It discusses exposure to indecency, self-representation, viewing child porn online, grooming, and webcam sex abuse. It also highlights four types of boundaries - of nations, age, consent, and decency - in this landscape, that pose challenges to regulators, because in cyberspace, borders have a tendency to shift and blur. This implies that a debate is needed on the regulatory tilt of cybersex policy, which needs to take into account the co-evolution of technology, society, and regulation, and the need for empirical research and theoretical reflection.Child welfareExploitation -- InternetExploitation -- child pornographyInternetInternet -- safetyPornography -- InternetSex, Kids, and Crime in Cyberspace: Some Reflections on Crossing Boundaries