Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Facebook Wants Users To Give Nude Photos To Stop Revenge Porn

IANS, 23 May, 2018 11:57 AM
    It may sound audacious to some but Facebook thinks that sharing with a trained employee of the company the intimate images that you fear might go viral in the social networking platforms can help it stop their spread, thereby protecting your privacy.
     
     
    The social networking giant on Tuesday said it was testing a reporting tool so that people who worry that someone might want to harm them by sharing an intimate image can proactively upload it, which will eventually help Facebook to block anyone else from sharing it on Facebook, Instagram, or Messenger.
     
     
    Facebook said it entered into partnership with safety organisations on a way for people to securely submit photos they fear will be shared without their consent -- images that are also referred to as "revenge porn" or "non-consensual pornography". 
     
     
    "This pilot programme, starting in Australia, Canada, the UK and US, expands on existing tools for people to report this content to us if it's already been shared," Antigone Davis, Facebook's Global Head of Safety, wrote in a Facebook post. 
     
     
    From anxiety and depression to the loss of a personal relationship or a job, the result of having most intimate moments shared without permission can be devastating for a person. 
     
     
    And while these images harm people of all genders, ages and sexual-orientations, women are nearly twice as likely as men to be targeted, Davis said. 
     
     
    "This week, Facebook is testing a proactive reporting tool in partnership with an international working group of safety organisations, survivors and victim advocates, including the Australian Office of the eSafety Commissioner, the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative and The National Network to End Domestic Violence in the US, the UK Revenge Porn Helpline and YWCA Canada," Davis added. 
     
     
    As part of this initiative, anyone who fears an intimate image of them will be shared can contact one of Facebook's partners to submit a form.
     
     
    After submitting the form, the victim receives an email containing a secure, one-time upload link. The victim can use the link to upload images they fear will be shared. 
     
     
    Thereafter, one of a handful of specifically trained members of Facebook's Community Operations Safety Team will review the report and create a unique fingerprint, or hash, that allows the social network to identify future uploads of the images without keeping copies of them on its servers. 
     
     
    Facebook said once it creates these hashes, it will notify the victim via email and delete the images from its servers within seven days.
     
     
    "We store the hashes so any time someone tries to upload an image with the same fingerprint, we can block it from appearing on Facebook, Instagram or Messenger," Davis added.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    A Beginner’s Guide to Airbnb

    A Beginner’s Guide to Airbnb
    Since it’s inception in 2008, Airbnb has grown into one of the biggest disrupters of the hotel industry

    A Beginner’s Guide to Airbnb

    British Columbia Bullish On Indian Tech Firms: Jinny Sims

    British Columbia Bullish On Indian Tech Firms: Jinny Sims
    Meet Jinny Jogindera Sims, who was born in Jalandhar in Punjab and migrated at age nine to England where she got a B.Ed degree at the University of Manchester.

    British Columbia Bullish On Indian Tech Firms: Jinny Sims

    Death Of The Password? New Web Standard Trades Passcodes For Biometrics

    "Over time I saw there was a convenience there and I was able to learn what was happening," she says.

    Death Of The Password? New Web Standard Trades Passcodes For Biometrics

    Facebook Deploys ‘Secret Police’ Led By Indian-American Sonya Ahuja To Catch Leakers

    Facebook Deploys ‘Secret Police’ Led By Indian-American Sonya Ahuja To Catch Leakers
    Mark Zuckerberg hosts weekly meetings where he shares details of unreleased new products and strategies in front of thousands of employees, the report said.

    Facebook Deploys ‘Secret Police’ Led By Indian-American Sonya Ahuja To Catch Leakers

    Twitter Appoints IIT-Bombay Alumnus Parag Agrawal As New CTO

    Twitter Appoints IIT-Bombay Alumnus Parag Agrawal As New CTO
    Twitter has appointed distinguished engineer Parag Agrawal, an alumnus of Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay (IIT-B), as its Chief Technology Officer, according to an update at the microblogging site.

    Twitter Appoints IIT-Bombay Alumnus Parag Agrawal As New CTO

    Facebook, Google Making Profits From ‘Pop-up’ Brothels: Report

    Britain’s National Crime Agency (NCA) has accused Facebook and Google of raking in profits from “pop-up” brothels on their platforms.

    Facebook, Google Making Profits From ‘Pop-up’ Brothels: Report

    PrevNext