And before someone says, "Never could a angry woman lie and be manipulative as a means to an end": http://www.avoiceformalestudents.co...loyed-by-activists-as-tools-of-social-change/
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I think you mean for COMMERCIAL purposes. Certainly if I take a high resolution picture of the Eiffel Tower or a crowded restaurant at my birthday dinner, I don't have to spend the next three days either blurring out faces or tracking down each person to get permission to post it online to Facebook or Flickr or whatever.For a start you cannot post a picture of someone online without there consent, also the photographer although owning the photograph does not have the right to use that photograph in any publication online or other.
I wonder what that makes America then *FACEPALM* http://www.newrepublic.com/article/119295/revenge-porn-laws-state-map-shows-theyre-rare-usMore faggotry from England.
Is posting revenge porn an absolute dick move worthy of social shaming and contempt? Unquestionably. Do we need yet more laws expanding the grossly-distorted modern definition of "victimhood"? Absolutely not.
Don't worry, there are US states trying to ban jogapants and the sight of cameltoes is offensive.
Or over 50% of USA states have revenge porn laws. ...
Good, I'm glad I live in the UK.
I feel sorry for all you guys that have to use the revenge porn sites for your daily jerkoff.
I thought this has to do more with when an ex post a nude photo taken when both parties were both still married or dating.when you took a nude photo of yourself and shared it on an internet connected device
So while people who post this kind of crap are indeed dirtbags, the ones posted are NOT victims.
I thought this has to do more with when an ex post a nude photo taken when both parties were both still married or dating.
It does in most cases, but it still requires the technical act of what I described. The person in question either takes a selfie or consents to the taking of a nude picture, almost always with a cellphone (which is an internet connected device). So yes, they are in fact responsible for being irresponsible.
If someone is posting this stuff for revenge or extortion how is the subject in the material not a victim?
It's not that hard to take a compromising picture of someone you sleep with without their knowledge.
While these kinds of photos are now often taken using cell phones, what about when they are not taken using a cell phone but using an actual camera which is not connected online?It does in most cases, but it still requires the technical act of what I described.
While these kinds of photos are now often taken using cell phones, what about when they are not taken using a cell phone but using an actual camera which is not connected online?
If I go walking alone in the bad part of town with wads of cash hanging out of my pockets and wearing a ton of jewelry and get robbed. I'm not a victim, I knowingly made a poor decision. As described in my previous post, you share a nude, you are knowingly making a poor decision. Knowingly making poor decisions doesn't make you a victim, that makes you a moron. Some of you apparently need to learn what really being victimized is.
Those are extremely rare cases and those are the actual victims, that however is an entirely different thing. However the fact is, the gross majority of revenge port was taken with consent at one point and it is impossible to filter it.
There are other instances where the victim did not take the photo themselves. The photo or video could have been taken on the cell phone of the ex. For some reason you seem to focus only on the case where the victim took a selfie on a connected deviceFind actual examples of that and we can debate that, however we both know that's reaching as extremely few if any of the photo's in question were taken with a non connected device.
You're basically saying that if a crime is easy to commit then there is no crime. Sure poor decisions can make it easier for someone to be a subject of a crime, nonetheless the law doesn't typically make any distinction on how easy it was for a crime to be committed. The act is still criminal and subjects of those acts are still victims.
When two people are together long enough they typically know a lot about the other person. And in this day and age they tend develop a digital footprint of images, videos, financial documents, etc. I know my wife's social security number, she's willing given it to me. Does that mean I can then go and distribute it on the web?
What you and others seem to be ignoring is intent. Intent is a key element in many criminal proceedings and is often the different between a crime and not. Leaking information for the purpose of causing harm to another party is that the issue is here. Not how the information was obtained. Sure there are caveats. Did the person give permission to release the data? Was the data actually not released maliciously and compromised by hacking, etc.
Anyway, whether a person should have no expectation of privacy when he or she takes a selfie on a connected device is a subject for the court to decide.
That isn't all what I'm saying. The only point to my example was to point out if the person was an actual Victim or not. As to if it is a crime or not is irrelevant. The point being is that even if you are subject to a crime, that doesn't make you a victim if you knowingly put yourself into a stupid situation.
I've been with my wife 16 years..take a wild guess what neither of us have ever done..go on, I'll wait.
Why? because both of us are fairly intelligent individuals and understand the insecure, non private nature of the web. We don't knowingly put ourselves into a situation where personal private info would easily go out. As to your example, sure you could do it and she wouldn't be a victim. It would of course make you a dirtbag for doing so and as to the legality that is another debate.
And before someone says, "Never could a angry woman lie and be manipulative as a means to an end": http://www.avoiceformalestudents.co...loyed-by-activists-as-tools-of-social-change/
If someone stole something from you you're the victim of theft. The law doesn't typically say it's not a crime or that you're not a victim because of poor decision making. Otherwise a lot of fraud wouldn't be criminal.
If you've been married for 16 years you both have access to information on each other that if leaked could be embarrassing or otherwise cause harm. How in the world does someone with the intent of causing embarrassment or harm to another do that act and not create a victim?