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Twitter Will Ban Revenge Porn and Non-consensual Nudes 114

AmiMoJo writes: Twitter has changed its rules to state it will forbid users from posting revenge porn and non-consensual nudes on its service. In the private information section of the site's policy list, the company added that users "may not post intimate photos or videos that were taken or distributed without the subject's consent." Twitter seemed to indicate that it would use some combination of automated and manual checks to decide whether a reported post is revenge porn or not before removing the post. "We will ask a reporting user to verify that he or she is the individual in question in content alleged to be violating our policy and to confirm that the photo or video in question was posted without consent." There will be an appeal process too.

In February, reddit made a similar rules change after the site was embroiled in controversy for allowing the posting of stolen nude celebrity photos in 2014. Banning "involuntary pornography," reddit urged victims to e-mail the site with details so administrators could remove the offending posts.
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Twitter Will Ban Revenge Porn and Non-consensual Nudes

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    How do they prove it if the face is censored or missing?

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      They should send an uncensored nude picture of themselves to twitter admins to prove that the body matches their face, and a scan of a photo-id to prove their identity.

    • I'm not sure why you were modded down, because that's a pretty valid point. Heavy-handed bans will be too difficult to defend against.
  • by Minwee ( 522556 ) <dcr@neverwhen.org> on Friday March 13, 2015 @12:31PM (#49250635) Homepage

    Will they start by taking down all of those naked pictures of that poor blue bird?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The blue bird consented.

  • Reddit (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bhcompy ( 1877290 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @12:42PM (#49250717)

    In February, reddit made a similar rules change after the site was embroiled in controversy for allowing the posting of stolen nude celebrity photos in 2014. Banning "involuntary pornography," reddit urged victims to e-mail the site with details so administrators could remove the offending posts.

    Not quite. They only banned the practice for females(in practice). Males who petition to have their pictures to be removed have been ignored. SC2 streamer Destiny posted earlier this week about how reddit refuses to take down his leaked revenge nudes(which are still stored on reddit's servers as someone with a particular beef with Destiny has added the images to a custom CSS for a subreddit) and refuses to discipline those that continually post it.

    This is similar to Gawker's avid posting of Hulk Hogan's stolen sextape versus their denouncement and refusal to host images of the leaked female celebrity nudes, known as the Fappening.

    • Where are my mod points? Insightful!

      More and more, I am beginning to believe that we either make ourselves comfortable with the fact that all information of any kind WILL flow through these digital lines, or we oppress ourselves with biased rules and unfair restrictions on freedom of speech.

      I think we can adapt our expectations to the new paradigm. But it will take a lot of time and testing of our pre-set inhibitions and impulse to hide to adapt our culture to the information age in such a way that
    • Re:Reddit (Score:5, Insightful)

      by pla ( 258480 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @12:52PM (#49250789) Journal
      They only banned the practice for females(in practice)

      "In practice", they haven't done anything, for two simple reasons:

      1) The victim needs to complain, and most will never even notice, and
      2) It takes 15 seconds to make a throwaway account, and hours or even days for someone to notice, complain, and get a response; then, 15 seconds later...


      I fully expect Twitter to have the same level of success.
      • Re:Reddit (Score:5, Informative)

        by bhcompy ( 1877290 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @12:58PM (#49250825)
        I don't disagree, but the different levels of enforcement are very evident. Entire subs were locked/deleted for the celeb nude leaks, and users were banned with posts removed within minutes to hours during the height of the leaks. Conversely, the guy I referenced has reported numerous times about a single user that continually harasses him and posts his nudes with no results. Policies like this should at least have the appearance of being fairly enforced. You can say best effort, but if you put in no effort, as is evident here, it becomes a question of fairness and agenda.
        • Could it be that in one case, it was celebrity photos, and quite high risk getting hit by a horde of lawyers?

          • It may be, but it's still about uneven application of sitewide rules. Why not just create a rule of no unauthorized celebrity content? If the idea is to avoid litigation, then that's the most obvious choice
            • Why not just create a rule of no unauthorized celebrity content? If the idea is to avoid litigation, then that's the most obvious choice...

              Could be bad for business. You get too restrictive, and some competition might pop up.

        • Sounds like a pretty good case for a damages lawsuit, he should contact a lawyer and sue them into oblivion. There is also the harassment, and you could maybe get one of those new cyberbully laws used against the person.

      • 1) The victim needs to complain, and most will never even notice, and 2) It takes 15 seconds to make a throwaway account, and hours or even days for someone to notice, complain, and get a response; then, 15 seconds later...

        Not only that, if Twitter enforces its rules the way they are stated, i.e.:

        may not post intimate photos or videos that were taken or distributed without the subject's consent [emphasis added]

        That "or" is crucial. Amost always, commercial nude photography pays the model (and of course it's consensual), but in exchange for pay, the photographer or company paying for the pictures retains all copy and distribution rights.

        What that means, is that the photographer or company -- i.e. the copyright holder -- can distribute those photos without consent of the model, yet perfectly legally. Not only is it legal, it's the way it'

        • by j-beda ( 85386 )

          1) The victim needs to complain, and most will never even notice, and
          2) It takes 15 seconds to make a throwaway account, and hours or even days for someone to notice, complain, and get a response; then, 15 seconds later...

          Not only that, if Twitter enforces its rules the way they are stated, i.e.:

          may not post intimate photos or videos that were taken or distributed without the subject's consent [emphasis added]

          That "or" is crucial. Amost always, commercial nude photography pays the model (and of course it's consensual), but in exchange for pay, the photographer or company paying for the pictures retains all copy and distribution rights.

          What that means, is that the photographer or company -- i.e. the copyright holder -- can distribute those photos without consent of the model, yet perfectly legally. Not only is it legal, it's the way it's usually done.

          I warned when Reddit tried to do this that they were going to get themselves in hot water if they tried to enforce their rules as written. I now have to say the same about Twitter.

          Probably all of these sites retain the ability to limit what you may post, regardless of your ownership of the content. If Reddit wants to ban images of left handed Antarticans, they are prefectly able to do so, even if I own all rights to the images. They are not required to permit anything they do not want to.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Because feminists don't care about men. It stopped being about equality 20+ years ago.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      I googled this Destiny guy and the first thing that came up was a story about him posting revenge nudes of his girlfriend. Do you have a link to his complaint?

    • Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)

      Don't you know? Feminism is about equality, you horrible misogynist pissbaby neckbeard dudebro fuckboy shitlord. Women are just more equal than men.

  • I recently posted a non-consensual photo of my newborn daughter, taken as she was brought out of the womb. Everybody congratulated us (for the baby, and for the photo, which was a great shot ;-) ).

    I somehow doubt Twitter would have an issue with her image.

  • When they are at it they will also provide a free service to lock all the barn doors. In fact it will be automated. Any time anyone lodges a police complaint about their horses being stolen, twitter see the complaint in FBI database in real time, and it will spring into action and send shock troopers to lock the doors of their barns as soon as possible.
  • Hmm... Revenge porn you said? Do you have sample links?

  • by jmcvetta ( 153563 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @03:22PM (#49252023)

    Twitter - come for the banality, stay for the censorship!

  • So, subjects in photographs other than the rightsholder now have veto power over when those works are displayed? We're just a couple court cases for anyone tagged in an unflattering Facebook photo to demand it be deleted from the Internet entirely, not just untagged.

  • Twitter should have a way to disable picture tweets altogether. One main reason I left facebook was the meme spam.
  • While it could be a coincidence, but it seems that these policies seem to share too many similarities in timing and direction.

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