Potential-Monke wrote: » Something else to keep in mind, depending on the country, the age of consent is significantly lower than Ireland. We consider anyone under 18 to be a child and any sexual videos or photos of them would be considered child porn. However, if that person was in, for example, Sweden, the age is 15. Or 12/13 in Sudan. Honduras and Brazil are 14.List of countries by age of consent As for the alleged leak, there does appear to be a lack of concrete evidence at the moment, but cases like this can likely take years to put together. Discord shutting the server is a typical response by companies, not proof of wrong doing. As mentioned above, it could just be a case of the person breaching Discords T&C's. Only time will tell.* Simply possessing images/videos of persons underage is a crime and doesn't require a "victim", as long as the images/videos can be proven to be of underage. So if there are proven underage images/videos, the uploaded/owner of the server can be prosecuted anyway.
anewme wrote: » They have shut the server and banned 500 ppl, and will be passing the details of the 500 ppl who downloaded the images to the Gardai. That's a fair bit stronger than you are saying abov, even at the early stage.
robinbird wrote: » Sunday Times today claiming that selling porn on onlyfans is a "lifeline" for irish women and that anyone that jeopardises their income should be met with the full force of the law.
Potential-Monke wrote: » Fair enough then, didn't read up on it and only went by above comments. Seems to be more to it so.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » That doesn't make it legal.
anewme wrote: » Do you have a link to that article? Was that the exact language used?
Glebee wrote: » "Hayden said her group tracked the alleged blackmailer to New Zealand and learnt he was a 16-year-old boy. She alerted his mother. Hayden believes most users on the forums with “Irish girls” images are themselves Irish, because they ask for women by town, county or even by name. One user searching for images accidentally stumbled across his cousin’s photos. The forums included pictures of girls possibly as young as 14; videos of alleged rapes; and images taken surreptitiously as well as from Instagram and Facebook. However, Hayden said many photos were taken from OnlyFans, a website she described as a “lifesaver” for people to earn money in lockdown by sharing pictures with paid subscribers." Sunday Times did not say it, the lady being interviewed quoted it.
anewme wrote: » Looks like its bring tabled for approval tomorrow. Scope being widened.https://www.rte.ie/news/ireland/2020/1123/1179844-images-legislation/
Yurt! wrote: » Internet safety courses delivered to schools emphasize that once you put a picture or a video online, you have no way of controlling where it goes, so just don't put something online that may come back to haunt you. That grown adults are putting content of themselves naked or in various sexual scenarios are getting surprised that it has been scraped and shared elsewhere is a bit silly. If there are underage images that's a separate matter and should be cracked down upon, but the above principle still applies.
Gatling wrote: » There was a lady on the radio a few minutes ago giving it socks about the assaults on the victims of these supposed leaks ,from some alliance group who went on to say they were tracking people who share images on line including tracing and contacting the parents of a 16 year old lad in new Zealand . WTF is actually going on here , what authority do they have to do such a thing
anewme wrote: » She was Marie Hayden of the Victims Alliance Unit. It was on today FM. I was listening to it. You are being very selective in your reporting here. What you are not saying is that she came across very well
Gatling wrote: » No she came across a little mary Whitehouse , I'm tracing people and telling their mammies about something that there is Zero evidence has happened like nothing ,
anewme wrote: » She was Marie Hayden of the Victims Alliance Unit. It was on today FM. I was listening to it. You are being very selective in your reporting here. What you are not saying is that she came across very well, was very well supported by the presenters and the legislation was viewed as very welcome. It was also on the News. What you are failing to mention she pointed out that people have been abused and blackmailed and in many cases, images have been sent to family and friends. It was viewed as an abuse crime (power and control) rather than a pornography one. What it is doing is pushing the responsibility back on the perpetrator as opposed to the victim. Its stopping victim blaming. You can tell people not to put images online, but you now also tell people if you share them, you are responsible and you are in trouble and there will be reprecussions.
anewme wrote: » What you are failing to mention she pointed out that people have been abused and blackmailed and in many cases, images have been sent to family and friends.
anewme wrote: » She came across like that to you - The people who should be concerned about the legislation are those currently involved in poor conduct.
Invidious wrote: » To my mind, when a woman posts nude images to an OnlyFans account, she is knowingly sharing them with potentially thousands of strangers in return for money. If one of those subscribers then shares those images with someone else ... what is he guilty of? Copyright violation, possibly, but not abuse.
Gatling wrote: » Yes to me ,and you cannot speak for the presenters they have to be impartial But so we fake claims leading to emergency legislation that would see people face 7+ years in prison for supposedly Sharing a porn photo or videos they have paid for in the first place , Yes you could get the ****e knocked out of you on the street and your attacker get a suspended sentence , Doesn't add up at all , If there is blackmail involved there is already legislation , There is no crime here that's led to this emergency legislation being rammed through government . Are we going to see more emergency legislations rammed through for crimes that didn't happen
anewme wrote: » The presenters clearly said that the everyone would welcome the legislation. The legislation is coming whether you want it or not. Many do.
seamus wrote: » My worry is that my conflating all of these unrelated issues into one - revenge porn, child porn, exploitation, copyright - there's a risk that it will get dismissed as man-hating women wanting to make it illegal to look at a naked woman, and the very real problem of sharing private sexual material will be lost in the noise.
Gatling wrote: » According to you the majority want it odd the opinion on here seems to suggest otherwise , Amazing how a few wackos on twitter have much power to have emergency legislation rammed through government when there is already legislation to cover it
Invidious wrote: » Under what circumstances, though? To my mind, when a woman posts nude images to an OnlyFans account, she is knowingly sharing them with potentially thousands of strangers in return for money. If one of those subscribers then shares those images with someone else ... what is he guilty of? Copyright violation, possibly, but not abuse. If a woman sends a nude picture to her boyfriend under the assumption that it's a non-commercial, private, intimate image for his eyes only, and he then shares it with others without her consent ... then yes, that's abusive. The first case isn't, though.