8 results on '"non-consensual dissemination of intimate images"'
Search Results
2. The Double Standard Toward Female and Male Victims of Non-consensual Dissemination of Intimate Images.
- Author
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Zvi, Liza
- Subjects
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GENDER role , *INTIMACY (Psychology) , *PORNOGRAPHY , *CRIMINALS , *SEX distribution , *SEX crimes , *CASE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PUNISHMENT , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *VICTIMS , *STUDENT attitudes , *DATA analysis software , *TECHNOLOGY - Abstract
Non-consensual dissemination of intimate images (NCII) is a growing problem of sexual violence with grave consequences for victims. However, despite recent criminalization and civil and legal sanctions, there is reason to suspect that the majority of NCII cases remain unreported. The reasons for that may be similar to the ones accounting for under-reporting in cases of physical sexual violence and are tied to society's attitude toward victims. Being a relatively new form of violence, psychological research on perceptions of NCII victims and offenders is scarce. The purpose of the present study was to extend the current knowledge by comparing perceptions toward female and male victims of NCII, while manipulating the victim's role in producing the intimate material. Drawing on rape research, it was hypothesized that gender stereotypes interact with victims' sex and behavior to influence the way victims are perceived. Five-hundred and thirty-nine male and female students were presented with a scenario depicting an NCII offense in which the intimate material was either self-generated by the victim (selfies) or stealth-taken by the victim's ex-intimate partner. Victim and offender sex were also manipulated. The findings indicate a differential treatment toward female and male victims of NCII, depending on their role in the taking of the intimate images. More blaming was attributed toward a female victim whose intimate images were self-taken, in comparison to all other research conditions, and negative feelings toward her were the highest as well. These blame attributions, as well as negative feelings toward female victims, were particularly high on the side of male participants. The findings are interpreted as reflecting perceptions of traditional gender roles and a double standard toward female and male sexual behavior. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Police Officer Perceptions of Non-consensual Dissemination of Intimate Images
- Author
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Liza Zvi and Mally Shechory-Bitton
- Subjects
police officers ,non-consensual dissemination of intimate images ,forensic judgments ,technology facilitated sexual violence ,online victimization ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Non-consensual dissemination of intimate images (NCII) is a major concern in many countries. The increase in the number of NCII cases and awareness of its adverse effects on victims has raised public awareness, with many states enacting legal and non-legal measures to combat this new type of violence. Yet, despite recent legislation, there is a reason to suspect that the majority of NCII cases remain unreported. Thus, research is needed on law enforcement perceptions of victims and identification of victim-blaming attitudes and factors that might affect legal decision-making. The present study addressed this issue by focusing on Israeli police officer perceptions of NCII victims and offenders: 145 police officers and 160 students, who served as a control group, were presented with a scenario depicting an NCII offense in which the stolen intimate material was either self-generated by the victim (selfies) or stealth-taken by the victim’s ex-boyfriend. In both cases, the stolen images were disseminated by the ex-boyfriend without the victim’s permission. The findings indicated victim-blaming attitudes toward NCII victims within law enforcement as well as an effect of the source of stolen images. Although officers perceived NCII as criminal and the offender as highly culpable and punishable, they engaged in victim-blaming. This was especially the case for the self-taken scenario, which elicited negative feelings and less empathy toward the victim. The relevance of emotions in legal contexts is emphasized in light of their contribution to the participants’ punitive judgments. Victim-blaming in NCII offenses and its implications are discussed, and suggestions are made for how to reduce negative and victim-blaming attitudes among law enforcement.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Police Officer Perceptions of Non-consensual Dissemination of Intimate Images.
- Author
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Zvi, Liza and Shechory-Bitton, Mally
- Subjects
POLICE ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,SENSORY perception ,LAW enforcement ,CRIME - Abstract
Non-consensual dissemination of intimate images (NCII) is a major concern in many countries. The increase in the number of NCII cases and awareness of its adverse effects on victims has raised public awareness, with many states enacting legal and non-legal measures to combat this new type of violence. Yet, despite recent legislation, there is a reason to suspect that the majority of NCII cases remain unreported. Thus, research is needed on law enforcement perceptions of victims and identification of victim-blaming attitudes and factors that might affect legal decision-making. The present study addressed this issue by focusing on Israeli police officer perceptions of NCII victims and offenders: 145 police officers and 160 students, who served as a control group, were presented with a scenario depicting an NCII offense in which the stolen intimate material was either self-generated by the victim (selfies) or stealth-taken by the victim's ex-boyfriend. In both cases, the stolen images were disseminated by the ex-boyfriend without the victim's permission. The findings indicated victim-blaming attitudes toward NCII victims within law enforcement as well as an effect of the source of stolen images. Although officers perceived NCII as criminal and the offender as highly culpable and punishable, they engaged in victim-blaming. This was especially the case for the self-taken scenario, which elicited negative feelings and less empathy toward the victim. The relevance of emotions in legal contexts is emphasized in light of their contribution to the participants' punitive judgments. Victim-blaming in NCII offenses and its implications are discussed, and suggestions are made for how to reduce negative and victim-blaming attitudes among law enforcement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Image-based sexual abuse: Victim-perpetrator overlap and risk-related correlates of coerced sexting, non-consensual dissemination of intimate images, and cyberflashing.
- Author
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Sparks, Brandon, Stephens, Skye, and Trendell, Sydney
- Subjects
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PERSONALITY disorders , *SUBSTANCE abuse , *HUMAN sexuality , *IMPULSIVE personality , *SEXTING , *RISK assessment , *VICTIM psychology , *SEX crimes , *CYBERBULLYING , *SOCIAL skills , *SOCIAL attitudes - Abstract
The advent of technology has dramatically changed the way sexual violence is perpetrated and experienced. Understanding the context of image-based sexual abuse (IBSA) and risk factors associated with perpetration are key to effective prevention efforts. The present study explores three IBSA behaviours—coerced sexting, non-consensual dissemination of intimate images, and cyberflashing—to examine the degree of victim-perpetrator overlap and what risk factors from the extant sexual violence literature are relevant to each behaviour. Emerging adults (n = 541; 69% female, 31% male) were recruited from a local university in Nova Scotia and the broader community (not specific to Nova Scotia) and reported their perpetration and victimization experiences with the three forms of IBSA. Participants also completed measures relating to their offense-supportive attitudes, dark triad traits, sadism, sexual compulsivity, impulsivity, and substance use. Results indicated substantial victim-perpetrator overlap for non-consensual dissemination of intimate images and cyberflashing. Victim-perpetrators demonstrated a pattern of higher scores across all risk-related measures, the magnitude of which differed across IBSA behaviours. These findings suggest that the broader literature on sexual offending is relevant to understanding IBSA and fits with the wider literature that suggests overlap between victimization and perpetration. • There is considerable victim-perpetrator overlap across all three forms of IBSA, especially cyberflashing. • IBSA victim-perpetrators tend to score higher on risk factors associated with traditional forms of sexual offending. • Drug use and psychopathy appear to be higher among victim-perpetrators of non-consensual dissemination of intimate images. • Exhibitionism, offense-supportive beliefs, & sexual compulsivity are more prevalent among cyberflashing victim-perpetrators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. How a TikTok video by Finnish police is representing the victim : A Multimodal critical discourse analysis on victim blaming in Tiktok video
- Author
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Karppinen, Ruut and Karppinen, Ruut
- Abstract
The Finnish police have power and influence as they are gate keepers of the criminal justice system. Governmental crime reduction policies rely on the actions of the police and in 2020 the Finnish police made a TikTok video to warn adolescences about dangers of sexting. My thesis uses Lerner’s Just world hypothesis and Bacchi’s What’s the problem represented to be as a theoretical framework, and multimodal critical discourse analysis (MCDA) to identify how the victim is represented in the TikTok video. The analysis on the content of the TikTok video is representing the victim as culpable for the crime against him/her. When the analysis is applied to the theoretical framework, it can be argued that the instructive TikTok video bears pressing social and institutional problems and extends people’s responsibility for avoiding crime and therefore fails achieving a balanced policy between crime prevention and criminal justice response.
- Published
- 2021
7. Non-Consensual Dissemination of Intimate Images: An Analysis in Light of The General Data Protection Regulation
- Author
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Almeida, Érica Nogueira Soares d' and Barbosa, Ana Mafalda Castanheira Neves Miranda
- Subjects
non-consensual dissemination of intimate images ,Proteção de dados pessoais ,disseminação não consensual de imagens íntimas ,right to erasure ,right to be forgotten ,direito ao esquecimento ,direito ao apagamento ,Regulamento Geral de Proteção de Dados ,Data protection ,General Data Protection Regulation - Abstract
Dissertação de Mestrado em Direito apresentada à Faculdade de Direito The aim of this work is to analyze the problem of the non-consensual dissemination of intimate images (NCII) from a data protection perspective, investigating the possibility of applying the right to erasure under article 17 of The General Data-Protection Regulation of the EU to cases of non consensual dissemination of intimate images. To this end, we will, at first, examine the extent to which the NCII affects the right to the protection of personal data, evaluating its relationship with personality rights, and examining the non consensual dissemination of intimate images in light of the idea of contextual integrity. Then, we analyze NCII as a practice which violates the right to the protection of personal data in the context of Regulation (EU) 2016/679, examining the evolution of the right to the protection of personal data in the USA and in Europe over time, the role of consent as legal basis for data processing and its limits. Subsequently, we examine the right to erasure provided for in article 17, drawing the distinction between the right to erasure and the various meanings of the right to be forgotten. Finally, considering the fact that the images are usually published on social networks and user-generated content websites, we aim to analyze the roles of the platform user who sends the images and the platform itself in the case of non-consensual dissemination of intimate images, in order to understand who must comply with the erasure obligation foreseen in article 17 of the General Data Protection Directive. O presente trabalho pretende analisar o problema da disseminação não consensual de imagens íntimas (NCII) na perspectiva da proteção de dados pessoais, indagando sobre a possibilidade de aplicação do direito ao apagamento previsto no artigo 17.º do Regulamento Geral de Proteção de Dados da União Europeia (RGPD) às situações de disseminação não consensual de imagens íntimas. Para isso, busca-se, em um primeiro momento, compreender em que medida a NCII afeta o direito à proteção de dados pessoais, analisando a sua relação com os direitos da personalidade, e examinando a NCII à luz da ideia de integridade contextual. Em seguida, passa-se a uma análise da NCII como prática que viola o direito à proteção de dados pessoais no contexto do Regulamento (UE) 2016/679, examinando, primeiramente, a evolução do direito à proteção de dados pessoais nos EUA e na Europa ao longo dos tempos, o papel do consentimento como forma de legitimação do tratamento e seus limites. Posteriormente, examina-se o direito ao apagamento previsto no artigo 17.º, diferenciando-o das várias acepções de direito ao esquecimento. Por fim, tendo em vista que as imagens normalmente são publicadas em redes sociais ou sites de compartilhamento de conteúdo pelo usuário, busca-se analisar qual o papel desempenhado pelo usuário da plataforma que compartilha as imagens e pela própria plataforma no caso da NCII, para compreender a que sujeito compete a obrigação de apagamento correlata ao direito previsto no artigo 17.º do RGPD.
- Published
- 2020
8. The comparative legal analysis of a Criminal Offence under Article 143/6 of the Criminal Code of Republic of Slovenia ('Revenge Pornography')
- Author
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Lango, Melanija and Šepec, Miha
- Subjects
kibernetsko kaznivo dejanje ,non-consensual dissemination of intimate images ,social networks ,udc:343.254:004.056.53(043.3) ,zasebnost ,maščevalna pornografija ,revenge porn ,privacy ,privolitev ,socialna omrežja ,information technology ,cybercrime ,informacijska tehnologija ,soglasje ,consent ,nekonsenzualna objava intimnih fotografiji - Abstract
Maščevalna pornografija je pojav, star najverjetneje vsaj toliko, kot je stara fotografija, svoj razmah pa je doživela z razcvetom interneta in socialnih omrežij. Za izrazom maščevalna pornografija se skriva nekonsenzualno objavljanje intimnih slik, ki so jih posamezniki sicer posneli s soglasjem, a vendar z implicitnim pričakovanjem, da bodo te slike ostale zaupne. Enostaven dostop do interneta in hitra ter anonimna možnost delitev fotografij na različnih spletnih platformah, skupaj s popularizacijo delitve intimnih fotografiji in posnetkov med zaljubljenci, sta prav gotovo prispevala k popularizaciji tega kibernetskega kaznivega dejanja. Na žrtvi objava takšnih fotografij in posnetkov pusti globok pečat, velikokrat imajo žrtve tudi hude psihološke in socialne posledice (izgubijo službo, prijatelje), nekatere storijo celo samomor. Nekontrolirano širjenje teh slik, ko se pojavijo na internetu, je zagotovo eden izmed bolj problematičnih aspektov, poleg tega žrtve nimajo ustreznih vzvodov in sodnih poti, s katerimi bi to širjenje lahko učinkovito zaustavile. Čeprav je izraz maščevalna pornografija popularen, je lahko zavajajoč, saj storilci niso vedno motivirani z maščevanjem. Nekatere motivira želja po dobičku, druge razvpitosti ali osebna zabava, nekateri pa sploh nimajo posebnega razloga za objavo. Večplastnost in kompleksnost tega kaznivega dejanja sta razloga, da so različne države ubrale različne pristope h kriminalizaciji. Na prvi pogled se morda zdi, da je kriminaliziranje tega dejanja relativno preprosto, a ko popraskamo pod površje, hitro naletimo na pravne praznine v različnih pravnih ureditvah po svetu. S pomočjo primerjalnopravne analize pridemo do zaključka, da je najboljši način za izboljšanje kazenskopravne zakonodaje za to kaznivo dejanje zapolnjevanje vrzeli, če nanje naleti praksa oz. nanje opozori stroka. »Maščevalna pornografija« bo namreč kot kibernetsko kaznivo dejanje vedno korak pred zakonodajalcem, naloga zakonodajalca pa je predvsem ta, da je pozoren na spremembe na področju informacijske tehnologije in ostaja dovolj kritičen do sebe in odprtih vprašanj, ki jih zakonodaja še ni uredila. Revenge pornography is a phenomenon at least as old as the invention of photography. Its popularity has grown with the rise of the Internet and social networks. The term revenge pornography refers to non-consensual dissemination of intimate images taken with the consent of an individual but with the implicit expectation that these images will remain private. Easy Internet access and the possibility of a simple and anonymous photo sharing on various online platforms, along with the popularization of sharing intimate photos among lovers, has done its fair share in popularizing this phenomenon. Revenge pornography may leave devastating and long-lasting consequences on the victims many feel severe psychological effects, lose their jobs, friends, in some cases even commit suicide. Once these images reach the Internet, they often spread uncontrollably. Victims often lack the appropriate leverage and litigation to stop the spreading of the photos online effectively. The term revenge porn, although popular, can be misleading, as perpetrators are not always motivated by revenge. Some act out of a desire for profit, notoriety, fun, there are even some who do it just for a thrill of it. Revenge poronography is a complex and multifaceted crime this is the reason different countries have taken distinct approaches to criminalize this phenomenon. At first glance, it may seem that criminalizing it relatively straightforward, but when scratching the surface, we quickly find legal gaps in almost all legal systems. Comparative legal analysis leads us to conclusion that the best way to improve criminal legislation is to amend it if we encounter any gaps along the way. The perpetrators of revenge pornography as it is a cybercrime will always be one step ahead of the legislator. The legislator's task is, above all, to pay attention to changes in the field of information technology and to remain sufficiently critical and especially attentive to the open questions not yet regulated by the legislation.
- Published
- 2019
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