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What can sexting teach us about privacy? | Amy Adele Hasinoff | TEDxMileHigh

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    People have been using media to talk about sex for a long time.
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    Love letters, phone sex, racy polaroids.
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    There's even a story of a girl who eloped with a man that she met over the telegraph in 1886.
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    Today we have sexting
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    and I am a sexting expert.
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    Not an expert sexter--
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    (Laughter)
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    Though, I do know what this means
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    and I think you do too!
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    (Laughter)
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    I have been studying sexting since the media attention to it began in 2008.
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    I wrote a book on the moral panic about sexting,
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    and here's what I found:
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    Most people are worrying about the wrong thing.
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    They're trying to just prevent sexting from happening entirely,
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    but let me ask you this:
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    as long as it is completely consensual, what's the problem with sexting?
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    People are into all sorts of things that you may not be into,
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    like blue cheese or cilantro.
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    (Laughter)
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    Sexting is certainly risky, like anything that's fun,
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    but as long as you're not sending any image to someone who doesn't want to receive it,
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    there's no harm.
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    What I do think is a serious problem is when people share private images of others without their permission,
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    and instead of worrying about sexting,
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    what I think we need to do is think a lot more about digital privacy.
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    The key is consent.
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    Right now people are thinking about sexting without really thinking about consent at all.
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    Did you know that we currently criminalize teen sexting?
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    It can be a crime because it counts as child pornography
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    if there's an image of someone under eighteen,
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    and it doesn't even matter if they took that image of themselves
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    and shared it willingly.
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    So we end up with this bizarre legal situation
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    where two 17-year-olds can have sex in most U.S. states,
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    but they can't photograph it.
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    Some states have also tried passing sexting misdemeanor laws,
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    but these laws repeat the same problem
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    because they still make consensual sexting illegal.
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    It doesn't make sense to try to ban all sexting to try to address privacy violations.
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    This is kind of like saying, "let's solve the problem of date rape by just making dating completely illegal."
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    Most teens don't get arrested for sexting, but can you guess who does?
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    It's often teens who are disliked by their partners parents,
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    and this can be because of class bias, racism, or homophobia.
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    Most prosecutors are, of course, smart enough not to use child pornography charges against teenagers,
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    but some do.
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    According to researchers at the University of New Hampshire,
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    seven percent of all child pornography possession arrests are teen sexting consensually with other teens.
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    Child pornography is a serious crime
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    but it's just not the same thing as teen sexting.
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    Parents and educators are also responding to sexting
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    without really thinking too much about consent.
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    Their message to teens is often just don't do it,
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    and I totally get it.
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    There are serious legal risks and of course that potential for privacy violations.
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    And when you were a teen, I'm sure you did exactly as you were told, right?
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    You're probably thinking, "My kid would never sext,"
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    and that's true; your little angel may not be sexting
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    because only 33 percent of 16 and 17-year-olds are sexting.
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    But, sorry, by the time they're older
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    the odds are that they will be sexting.
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    Every study I've seen puts the rate above 50 percent for 18 to 24-year-olds.
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    And most of the time, nothing goes wrong.
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    People asking me all the time things like,
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    "isn't sexting just so dangerous, though?
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    You wouldn't leave your wallet on a park bench.
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    You expect it's going to get stolen if you do that, right?"
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    Here's how I think about it:
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    Sexting is like leaving your wallet at your boyfriend's house.
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    If you come back the next day and all the money is just gone,
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    you really need to dump that guy.
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    (Laughter)
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    So instead of criminalizing sexting to try to prevent these privacy violations,
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    instead we need to make consent central to how we think about that circulation of our private information.
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    Every new media technology raises privacy concerns;
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    in fact, in the U.S. the major first major debates about privacy
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    were in response to technologies that were relatively new at the time.
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    In the late 1800s, people were worried about cameras, which were just suddenly more portable than ever before,
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    and newspaper gossip columns.
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    They were worried that the camera would capture information about them,
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    take it out of context, and widely disseminate it.
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    Does that sound familiar?
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    It's exactly what we're worrying about now with social media, drone cameras, and of course, sexting.
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    And these fears about technology, they make sense
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    because technologies can amplify and bring out our worst qualities and behaviors.
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    But there are solutions and we've been here before with a dangerous new technology.
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    In 1908, Ford introduced the Model T car.
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    Traffic fatality rates were rising; it was a serious problem.
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    It looks so safe, right?
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    (Laughter)
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    Our first response was to try to change drivers' behavior,
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    so we developed speed limits and enforced them through fines.
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    But over the following decades we started to realize
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    that the technology of the car itself is not just neutral.
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    We could design the car to make it safer.
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    So in the 1920s we got shatter-resistant windshields,
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    in the 1950s, seat belts, and in the 1990s, air bags.
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    All three of these areas, laws, individuals, and industry, came together over time to help solve the problems that a new technology causes
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    and we can do the same thing with digital privacy.
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    Of course, it comes back to consent.
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    Here's the idea:
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    before anyone can distribute your private information,
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    they should have to get your permission.
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    This idea of affirmative consent comes from anti-rape activists
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    who tell us that we need consent for every sexual act.
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    And we have really high levels of consent in other areas.
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    Think about having surgery.
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    Your doctor has to make sure that you are meaningfully and knowingly consenting to that medical procedure.
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    This is not the type of consent with like an iTunes terms of service
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    where you just scroll to the bottom and you're like agree, agree, whatever.
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    (Laughter)
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    If we think more about consent, we can have better privacy laws.
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    Right now we just don't have that many protections.
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    If your ex-husband or your ex-wife is a terrible person,
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    they can take your nude photos and upload them to a porn site.
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    It can be really hard to get those images taken down
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    and in a lot of states, you're actually better off if you took the images of yourself
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    because then you can file a copyright claim.
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    (Laughter)
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    Right now if someone violates your privacy, whether that's an individual or a company or the NSA,
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    you can try filing a lawsuit, but you may not be successful
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    because many courts assume that digital privacy is just impossible
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    so they're not willing to punish anyone for violating it.
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    I still hear people asking me all the time,
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    "isn't a digital image somehow blurring the line between public and private because it's digital, right?"
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    No, no!
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    Everything digital is not just automatically public.
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    That doesn't make any sense.
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    As NYU legal scholar, Helen Nissenbaum, tells us,
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    we have laws and policies and norms that protect all kinds of information that's private,
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    and it doesn't make a difference if it's digital or not.
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    All of your health records are digitized
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    but your doctor can't just share them with anyone.
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    All of your financial information is held in digital databases
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    but your credit card company can't just post your purchase history online.
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    Better laws could help address privacy violations after they happen,
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    but one of the easiest things we can all do is make personal changes to help protect each others' privacy.
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    We're always told that privacy is our own sole, individual responsibility.
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    We're told, "Constantly monitor and update your privacy settings."
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    We're told, "Never share anything you wouldn't want the entire world to see."
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    This doesn't make sense.
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    Digital media are social environments
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    and we share things with people we trust all day, every day.
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    As Princeton researcher, Janet Vertesi, argues,
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    our data and our privacy,
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    they're not just personal, they're interpersonal.
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    So one thing you can do that's really easy is just start asking for permission before you share anyone else's information.
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    If you want to post a photo of someone online, ask for permission.
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    If you want to forward an email thread, ask for permission.
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    If you want to share someone's nude selfie, obviously, ask for permission!
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    These individual changes can really help us protect each others' privacy,
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    but we need technology companies on board as well.
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    These companies have very little incentive to help our privacy
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    because their business models depend on us sharing everything with as many people as possible.
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    Right now, if I send you an image, you can forward that to anyone that you want.
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    But what if I got to decide if that image was forwardable or not?
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    This would tell you, "You don't have my permission to send this image out."
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    We do this kind of thing all the time to protect copyright.
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    If you buy an ebook, you can't just send it out to as many people as you want,
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    so why not try this with mobile phones?
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    What you can do is we can demand that tech companies add these protections to our devices and our platforms as the default.
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    After all, you can choose the color of your car, but the airbags are always standard.
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    If we don't think more about digital privacy and consent, there can be serious consequences.
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    There was a teenager from Ohio.
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    Let's call her Jennifer for the sake of her privacy.
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    She shared nude photos of herself with her high school boyfriend thinking she could trust him.
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    Unfortunately, he betrayed her and sent her photos around the entire school.
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    Jennifer was embarrassed and humiliated,
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    but instead of being compassionate, her classmates harassed her.
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    They called her a slut and a whore and they made her life miserable.
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    Jennifer started missing school, and her grades dropped.
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    Ultimately, Jennifer decided to end her own life.
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    Jennifer did nothing wrong.
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    All she did was share a nude photo with someone that she thought that she could trust.
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    And yet, our laws tell her that she committed a horrible crime equivalent to child pornography.
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    Our gender norms tell her that by producing this nude image of herself, she somehow did the most horrible, shameful thing.
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    And when we assume that privacy is impossible in digital media, we completely write off and excuse her boyfriend's bad, bad behavior.
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    People are still saying all the time to victims of privacy violations,
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    "What were you thinking?
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    You should've never sent that image."
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    If you're trying to figure out what to say instead, try this:
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    imagine you've run into your friend who broke their leg skiing.
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    They took a risk to do something fun, and it didn't end well.
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    But you're probably not going to be the jerk who says,
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    "Well, I guess you shouldn't have gone skiing then!"
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    If we think more about consent, we can see that victims of privacy violations deserve our compassion,
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    not criminalization, shaming, harassment, or punishment.
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    We can support victims, and we can prevent some privacy violations
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    by making these legal, individual, and technological changes.
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    Because the problem is not sexting, the issue is digital privacy
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    and one solution is consent.
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    So the next time a victim of a privacy violation comes up to you,
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    instead of blaming them, let's do this instead:
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    let's shift our ideas about digital privacy and let's respond with compassion.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
What can sexting teach us about privacy? | Amy Adele Hasinoff | TEDxMileHigh
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
14:46

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