Facebook is trying to combat “revenge porn” by
encouraging users in Australia to submit their nude photos to a pilot project
designed to prevent intimate images from being shared without consent.
Adults who have shared nude or sexually explicit
photos with someone online, and who are worried about unauthorised
distribution, can report images to the Australian government’s eSafety
Commission.
They then securely send the photos to themselves
via Messenger, a process that allows Facebook to “hash” them, creating a unique
digital fingerprint.
This identifier is then used to block any further
distribution on Facebook, Instagram and Messenger as a pre-emptive strike
against revenge porn, a common method of abuse and exploitation online.
“We’re using image-matching technology to prevent
non-consensual intimate images from being shared,” said Antigone Davis,
Facebook’s head of global safety.
A Facebook spokesman said Britain, Canada and the
United States are also expected to take part in the project.
“It removes control and power from the perpetrator
who is ostensibly trying to amplify the humiliation of the victim amongst
friends, family and colleagues,” eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant told
AFP.
Inman Grant said that if successful, the Facebook
trial should be extended to other online platforms.
“The precedent already exists for the sharing of
child exploitation images and countering violent extremism online, and by
extending to image-based abuse we are taking the burden off the victims to
report to multiple online platforms,” she said.
Australia is among world leaders in efforts to
combat revenge porn.
Its eSafety Commission launched an online portal
last month, allowing victims to report cases where their photos have been
shared on the internet without consent. The commission then works with websites
and search engines to have them removed.
A recent survey by the commission showed one in
five women in Australia aged 18-45 suffered image-based abuse, with Facebook
and its Messenger app accounting for 53 percent of revenge porn, followed by
Snapchat at 11 percent then Instagram at four percent.
No comments:
Post a Comment