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The Correct Response To Photo Hack Victim-Blamers 622

Bennett Haselton writes As commenters continue to blame Jennifer Lawrence and other celebrities for allowing their nude photos to be stolen, there is only one rebuttal to the victim-blaming which actually makes sense: that for the celebrities taking their nude selfies, the probable benefits of their actions outweighed the probable negatives. Most of the other rebuttals being offered, are logically incoherent, and, as such, are not likely to change the minds of the victim-blamers. Read below to see what Bennett has to say.

In a new Vanity Fair interview, Jennifer Lawrence calls the theft of her nude photos a "sex crime". Predictably, a good portion of the 300+ comments posted on TheVerge's article contained an element of victim-blaming -- "maybe people in her position should think twice about taking nude photos? I’m sure it could help" ; "She posted them online. Unless she is a complete rube, she should have known of the security risks" ; "Victims can be blamed for putting themselves into potentially exploitable situations. Something similar might be going to a rave without a friend." ; and more variations on things that had already been said many times ever since the original photo leak on August 31st.

These comments are mostly being met with angry backlash from other commenters, which is good. But the rebuttals themselves tend to violate the rules of logic and consistency, which is bad. And when victim-blamers can spot the flaws so easily in their opponents' logic, their own minds are unlikely to be changed.

A typical example of a weak "rebuttal" is this cartoon you may have seen shared on Facebook, in which an arrogant man lectures women, "Don't want your nude selfies to leak, ladies? Simple: don't take any! Bothered by street harassment? Don't be so eager to walk down streets." Sorry, but if the second piece of advice was meant to highlight the absurdity of the first, the analogy doesn't work -- because you kinda have to walk down streets, but nobody has to take a nude selfie.

This is a recurring theme in the "rebuttal" comments that I've seen, including those on TheVerge's article -- telling the victim-blamers that they might just as well blame themselves for the risks of walking down the street, or buying something from Home Depot ( burn! ), or having a credit card at all, or owning a valuable object that could be a target of theft. Sample comments: "by that standard... you shouldn’t have had something of value to begin with, or else you were just asking for it to be stolen" ; "Just like when you walk down the street you should be fully aware of the potential to be mugged" ; "So, we will hold you to the very same 'complete rube' test when you fall victim to identity theft or unauthorized charges to your credit cards" ; etc.

All of these "rebuttals" are committing the same logical error: they're drawing an analogy to things that you either have to do (walk down the street) or pretty-much-have to do (own a credit card, own at least one valuable object). This means the victim-blamers have such an easy response -- "Those are all things you have to do; but taking a nude selfie is different, because nobody has to do that!" So the victim-blamers are unlikely to have their minds changed by such an analogy, since their own central premise is so obvious to them: the victims chose to take the nude selfies, and the leak never would have happened if they hadn't.

So, let's respond to the victim-blamers on their own terms, by acknowledging first of all: Of course, they're right. Of course taking the selfies was an optional choice, and of course the only way to stop nude selfies from leaking, is not to take them. But this is ignoring (a) the benefits of taking nude selfies; and (b) the low risk of them getting leaked. (The fact that the pictures did get leaked, does not mean that the selfie-takers misjudged the risk of it happening; rather, it was very unlikely, but the victims got unlucky and it happened to them.)

To begin with the benefits: Jennifer Lawrence explained bluntly in her Vanity Fair interview why she took the photos: "I was in a loving, healthy, great relationship for four years. It was long distance, and either your boyfriend is going to look at porn or he's going to look at you." (Considering how easily she could have gotten away with some platitudes about how "deeply hurt" she was, and how she "thanks all her fans for her support in this difficult period" -- doesn't a quote like that make you think she's decently cool?) OK, so that's the benefit. To her boyfriend at the time, a pretty big benefit.

As for the risks, whenever someone takes a risk of a bad outcome and the bad outcome does happen, it's tempting to think that they misjudged the risks. (I'll bet that a psychological experiment could demonstrate this easily -- have test subjects read stories of people who took a risk that was known to be small, but who got unlucky and fell victim to the bad outcome anyway, and see if the test subjects incorrectly judge the risk-takers to be foolish.) But out of the millions of nude photos that are probably sent between cell phone users every month, a vanishly small proportion of them get stolen in security breaches of cloud storage. (Usually the far greater risk is that the recipient will forward the image to other people until it gets out of control.) There's no reason to think that Jennifer Lawrence and other victims of the hacking scandal underestimated the risk of the photos being stolen from the cloud. If anything, most users are probably over-estimating the risk today, while the news of the breach is fresh in their minds.

In cases where the benefits of an action clearly don't outweigh the risks, that's when "victim-blaming" might be appropriate, even if we don't call it that. If someone leaves their car unlocked and leaves a valuable item in plain view in the front seat, we might feel less sorry for them if they return to their car to find it stolen. But it's a logical error to blame the victim just because they took a risk; the real reason to blame them is that there's no counterbalancing benefit to leaving the car door unlocked, or failing to move the valuable item into the trunk.

By contrast, when victim-blamers say that a woman is "bringing the risk upon herself" (of harassment, or even assault) by going out in a halter top, the logically correct response is not to say that victim-blamer is "clearly" wrong. Because, again, to the victim-blamer, their own premise is obviously true: wearing a sexy outfit in public does increase your risk of harassment, and probably even of being groped or worse. The fallacy is that the victim-blamer is ignoring the benefits of that choice. A woman never knows when she might meet a guy out in public that she's attracted to, and if they hit it off, it helps to have an outfit that says, "I'm a real woman, not a moron who thinks that if I engage in pre-marital kissing then Jesus will set me on fire with a blowtorch." Wearing a halter top has its benefits, which is why some women do it.

So that's it. The correct response to the victim-blamers is not to draw false analogies to "having a credit card" or "walking down the street". The correct response is that taking nude selfies is a perfectly rational choice when the probable benefits outweigh the probable risks. That is, in fact, the only rational defense of any action, ever. But it's not getting any play, because it doesn't fit in a tweet.

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The Correct Response To Photo Hack Victim-Blamers

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  • by Pino Grigio ( 2232472 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:19AM (#48131199)

    taking nude selfies is a perfectly rational choice when the probable benefits outweigh the probable risks

    105 characters. Yes, it does fit in a tweet.

  • Straw Man (Score:5, Insightful)

    by koan ( 80826 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:20AM (#48131211)

    As commenters continue to blame Jennifer Lawrence and other celebrities for allowing their nude photos to be stolen

    No one is blaming them for "allowing their photos to be stolen" I didn't bother reading the rest if that's how you started.

    • Re:Straw Man (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gandhi_2 ( 1108023 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:30AM (#48131357) Homepage

      Too much bullshit going on.

      My advice to my son or daughter would be the same regarding photos of semen all over their faces: if you don't want people to see those photos, don't take those photos. Do not allow those photos to be taken. Do not allow them to exist.

      I don't remember all this bullshit when it was Pamela Anderson, Paris Hilton, or even Kim Kardashian.

      • by denzacar ( 181829 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:39AM (#48131493) Journal

        They were all sluts, and Jeniffer is a nice girl, she is.

        • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @12:28PM (#48132227)

          Following societies unrealistic standards most of us too sexual for proper society. Most of us have our odd fetish and are turned on by some thing.
          Sure taking pics and sending them on the internet isn't that good of an idea. However it shouldn't need to represent the overall character of the person. Unless say you want to expose to your boss and the general society things like your Google Searches, or your DNS logs, magazines, or surveillance camera of you taking a second glance at the one other person.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        In 2009, Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google, quipped "If you have something that you don't want anyone to know, maybe you shouldn't be doing it in the first place."

        Back then, the geeks and nerds complained the loudest, while most everybody else shrugged and moved on. Now the geeks aren't even telling people "don't do that". They're only telling people "don't take pictures of you doing that", but do people shrug that off as well? No, when the geeks say it, they are misogynist pigs and victim-blamers.

      • Re:Straw Man (Score:5, Insightful)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) * on Monday October 13, 2014 @12:10PM (#48131901) Homepage Journal

        if you don't want people to see those photos, don't take those photos.

        They do want people to see those photos, it's just that they want to control which people and not have them published for all to see on the internet.

        Sexuality is a big part of life, especially when you are young. Wanting to feel sexy, and to share your sexuality with others is natural. The mistake was to trust big companies like Snapchat and Apple when they said that the photos would be safe and only viewable by the people the creators selected. We are not that naive, but you have to appreciate that for most people they trust private companies to look after their private data every day, e.g. banks, health care providers, online shops, their employer etc.

        • Re:Straw Man (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Jason Levine ( 196982 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @12:32PM (#48132275) Homepage

          The mistake was to trust big companies like Snapchat and Apple when they said that the photos would be safe and only viewable by the people the creators selected. We are not that naive, but you have to appreciate that for most people they trust private companies to look after their private data every day, e.g. banks, health care providers, online shops, their employer etc.

          I think this is the key point. Except for the odd hermit, we all put our trust in private companies at some point. Do you trust your bank to watch your money for you? Do you expect that your cable company won't allow workers to look up addresses of good houses to break into? (Lots of premium channels probably means high likelihood of good stuff to steal.) Do you trust your doctor's office not to "leak" your embarrassing diagnosis to the community?

          For the most part, these private companies do live up to our expectations - at least the base minimum. There are the odd stories of abuses, but these tend to be the exception, not the rule. Someone with less technological knowledge than we have could easily think that the nude photo that their iPhone uploaded to the Apple Cloud was secured because Apple said it would only be sent to the person they chose it to be sent to. In reality, though, the security wasn't absolute.

          To make a "breaking into a house" analogy, this isn't not locking your house, but buying a lock from Home Depot without knowing that this particular lock is easily bypassed by thieves.

        • Here is the crux of the issue. Secrets are only as good as those keeping them. If you take a picture to send to your "boyfriend", you have basically told him a secret. Your secret is only as good as your boyfriend is. And when you dump him (or otherwise), and you no longer trust him, he still has your pictures and posts them up on Girlfriend Revenge (or whatever).

          In JLAW's case, her pictures were stored in the cloud. Guess what, the cloud isn't as secure as everyone is wanting. Be it bad protocols, bad pass

      • if you don't want people to see those photos, don't take those photos. Do not allow those photos to be taken. Do not allow them to exist.

        I'd like to agree with you that it's that simple, I really would. But with the ubiquity of cellphone cameras, a lot of people find the thrill to be difficult to resist. Your advice would certainly be effective, but isn't it akin to telling teenagers to abstain from sex in order to protect themselves from STIs and pregnancy? What percentage of teens will follow this advice?

        And your advice also relies on controlling the actions of others, which is notoriously difficult to accomplish with 100% effectiveness. U

        • The thrill of eating too much candy, playing in the street, and sharing needles has always been there. There is nothing new here but the general laziness of the populace in enforcing standards or taking personal responsibility. Religion, social mores, and scare-the-kids cautionary tales may be entirely made up and arbitrary, but it got mankind all the way from cavemen to what we have today.

          If you are fine with your kids doing crazy shit, sit back and sigh that you are powerless against the need to be a cool

    • You're right, I should have said

      As commenters continue to blame Jennifer Lawrence and other celebrities for "allowing their nude photos to be stolen"

      to make it clear that I was quoting the mindset of the victim-blamers, and not describing what I think.

  • by Drethon ( 1445051 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:22AM (#48131233)
    I live in a fairly good town but still don't leave my doors unlocked, EVER. I still don't expect to get blamed should I forget one day and my car gets stolen.

    Just like someone who has their digital media stolen from the cloud is not to blame and the law should back them up. However there are certain things you just do not do even if the law supports the activity. For example parking a Ferrari in a bad part of town with the doors unlocked and the keys in the ignition. The law needs to track down that car if it is stolen but the person doing this is still an idiot.
    • In your analogy your car would not be stolen. It would be copied and you would only know because you saw the guy driving it around.

      Also your car would be parked in a gated parking garage and the parking attendant was the guy who copied it and made his copy available in the public parking lot.

      Of course if you left your car unlocked and it got stolen I would most likely blame you for being so irresponsible but the attendant had elevated privileges to your car and should be held to a higher standard since
    • I'm with you, and figured I would add a bit to your points.

      These comments are mostly being met with angry backlash from other commenters, which is good.

      Ahh, nothing like open bias in an article. Down with anyone claiming personal responsibility is a factor! If you leave a 100dollar bill on your porch and a thief steals it, you were never in any way responsible for leaving the 100 dollar bill on your porch. Anyone claiming you were partially at fault should be chastised by the masses, obviously they are worthless slugs (hopefully the sarcasm is obvious).

      A typical example of a weak "rebuttal" is this cartoon you may have seen shared on Facebook, in which an arrogant man lectures women, "Don't want your nude selfies to leak, ladies? Simple: don't take any! Bothered by street harassment? Don't be so eager to walk down streets."

      Not only is walking down the street the sam

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) * on Monday October 13, 2014 @12:15PM (#48132003) Homepage Journal

      In Japan people to leave their doors unlocked. In many places the normal way to visit someone's home is to just walk in the front door and then call out to get their attention. Delivery persons will often leave packages inside your front door. People have garages that are actually car ports without any kind of door, and store all sorts of expensive stuff on full display.

      When someone does get robbed, blame goes firmly to the low life that robbed them. I asked some people about that, saying that in the UK the victim would be blamed for making their stuff easy to steal. Japanese people were shocked. They likened it to a recent incident where a blind girl was kicked and pushed over by a cowardly attacker in the street. Naturally you wouldn't blame her for being blind.

      • by digsbo ( 1292334 )
        That's because there's a stronger monoculture in Japan, and you can actually blame individuals for making bad choices since they're part of the same monoculture. In the USA and UK, there is not a monoculture, and it's not permissible if you're in the majority to blame someone from a minority when they commit a crime. Or something like that, I feel...
  • If it were April I would say that huge mount of boring text has a point hidden somewhere inside it. Let's hope there's a piece of chocolate attached to it as well.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:24AM (#48131259)

    Stop telling children not to take candy from strangers, tell strangers not to give candy to children.
    Don't tell children to be careful when crossing the street. Tell drivers not to run over children.

    It's the same thing with these leaked images.
    Sure the hacker is in the wrong and whatever, but it's still your responsibility to keep your data secure.
    Saying "but there was a pedestrian crossing and I had the right of way" doesn't help you when you're lying in the hospital with broken bones.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      Sure, but the hack was more akin to picking the lock on the front door and kidnapping the children from their beds. So you would suggest not leaving the children unchained at night?

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        No. The hack was more like guessing the combination of your school locker, which is in a fairly public place where people have access to it and you can't monitor it.
        Additionally the combination was 1234 and your locker was full of pictures of you blowing some guy in the toilet.

  • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:25AM (#48131273)

    I had a cousin who used to wear a lot of gold jewelry. He also lived in a shitty neighborhood. Everyone used to call him crazy for it, but he ignored this, because he was fucking stupid. Of course, he got mugged, and lost all his jewelry one day (he's lucky that's all he lost).

    He was the victim of a crime.

    He was also fucking stupid.

    • by Morpeth ( 577066 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:31AM (#48131373)

      Well, don't you think he SHOULD be able to wear his gold jewelry out in public? Why should he be afraid to so?

      You're argument sounds rather similar to blaming a young woman out on the town for the night, wearing a short skirt and blaming her for getting sexually assaulted.

      That said, I think your cousin was unwise, but I think calling him 'fucking stupid' puts the focus and blame on him, instead of the pieces of excrement who assaulted and robbed him -- because they couldn't bother to earn the money for themselves and would rather prey on people.

      • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:40AM (#48131513)

        Yeah, you SHOULD be able to do a lot of things. And if we lived in an ideal world, we WOULD be able to do all those things.

        You seen any ideal worlds lately?

      • by gandhi_2 ( 1108023 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:43AM (#48131543) Homepage

        Don't you think people SHOULD be able to walk around inside the lion exhibit at the zoo?
        The blame for the crime is on the mugger, rapist, account cracker, etc.
        The blame for being stupid, in some cases, is on the victim. Life is hard. It's harder if you're stupid.
        I know we aren't supposed to talk about the girl in the skirt, but what would YOUR advice really be to YOUR daughter or son regarding sexual assault, mugging, or lion-exhibit safety?

      • by RingDev ( 879105 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:48AM (#48131593) Homepage Journal

        He made a poor choice, he ignored others' warnings, and he has to live with the repercussions of it.

        He didn't commit the crime. He wasn't "asking for it". He isn't to blame for someone else's bad behavior.

        But he's still stupid.

        He should be able to walk through his neighborhood loaded with easily fenced jewelry. Young women should be able to go to parties without worrying about getting drugged. Investors should be able to give money to financial investors without getting suckered into losing it all.

        But that's not the world we live in. And yeah, we continue to teach our kids to no steal, to not rape, to not con. But the world shapes them, and they will make poor decisions at some point in time. So we also teach them to think defensively, to keep their valuables locked up, to hang out with trusted friend, and to thoroughly investigate anyone who is advertising a 10% return in a down market.

        Making my child wear a seatbelt is not blaming him for the drunk driver that hit the car.

        -Rick

      • A young woman dressing provocative in a dangerous area where rapes are known to occur is stupid, and is partly at fault.

        Just like if I wear expensive jewelery and flash it around a neighborhood known to have muggings.

        Ideally the victim is never at fault. In reality, when there are multiple choices of what to wear and which neighborhoods to walk for, the victims are not always faultless.

      • by jedidiah ( 1196 )

        Yeah. So?

        Clearly you've never experienced what it is to live in places like those. Flaunting wealth is a dangerous thing in places like those. Not keeping a low profile is a dangerous thing to do in places like those.

        Doesn't matter if it's the cops or the neighbors.

        You can either adapt to the situation or expect the whole world to change to suit you (like some idiot feminist).

        You should really stick to the suburbs if your are totally unwilling to engage in any sort of situational awareness. You are likely t

    • by tnk1 ( 899206 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:49AM (#48131601)

      This is an important distinction to make.

      Jennifer Lawrence is not at fault for her stuff being stolen. She's not a slut and she didn't deserve it. No one deserved to get her nude selfies. She has every right to get naked and nasty for her man and transmit that over the Interwebs.

      However, at the same time, it was an action that was not without risk. We should feel sympathy for her for falling prey to that risk, but what we should not do is become outraged that it is possible for it to happen.

      A lot of people are outraged that things like this can happen and want to nuke any possibility that it could ever possibly happen. This is where the line has to be drawn, both for this and for crimes like rape. We cannot have a risk-free society.

      You need to protect yourself. There are hackers and crazy animals who are rapists out there. The people who will respond to your reasoned arguments about why you should be able to put your relationship porn on the Internet, or why you should have every right to walk down the street in spandex and pasties are the very people you didn't need to worry much about in the first place. By now, they know the arguments and are complying with the reasoning.

      What I see happening is blaming all males or male hormones or the Patriarchy for women being unsafe to walk down the streets half-naked, when it isn't "males" at all, but rather people with psychological problems. I see people blaming Apple or hackers or society in general for the fact that a high value target got her nudes found and distributed, when it is actually people who get off on cracking sites and trading personal details like baseball cards on TOR who are the issue. They are the panty-sniffers of the Internet.

      Victims of crimes like this are not at fault for getting raped, but when they don't protect themselves, we don't all suddenly become accountable as a society for a problem that we can't completely eradicate without turning ourselves into a thought-controlled police state.

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:25AM (#48131279)

    On the one hand, we know why this guy took three weeks to weigh in: he wrote a f***ing essay no one will ever read.

    On the other hand, it's being published three weeks after the last person cared, so length is irrelevant, I guess.

  • that for the celebrities taking their nude selfies, the probable benefits of their actions outweighed the probable negatives

    What the hell is wrong with the author, basing his proposition on a premise that was already proven to be wrong by reality? Wasn't the leak a probable negative? Didn't it outweigh the probable positives?

  • Victim blaming? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:26AM (#48131287) Journal
    I don't think it counts as victim blaming to say, "use a stronger password next time (non-dictionary)."
    I don't think it counts as victim blaming to say, "don't stick your finger in that light socket next time."
    I don't think it counts as victim blaming to say, "don't put anything on the internet that you don't want to get spread around."

    There's a difference between teaching someone to protect themselves, and blaming someone. If you can't tell the difference, please don't reply to my post.
    • Re:Victim blaming? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by scubamage ( 727538 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:49AM (#48131613)
      Pretty much this exactly. People need to understand that online storage is essentially like having a stranger drive up to you in their windowless van, and offering to store stuff for you that you can get back anytime you want. You don't really know him. He promises "industry grade security!" on his van, and sleek curved corners on the van and maybe a recognizable fruit logo. You are taken in, and start storing your photos, your essays, your financial information, etc on his van. Except, what is industry grade security? What industry? How do you know he isn't looking at your stuff? How do you know he isn't parsing your stuff and selling that information? If you started reading warnings about this guy and his storage van on the news and online, would you still use his service? Because guess what - almost every single cloud storage company has had those warnings posted about them. It's not your fault if you fail to vet a service out, and give this guy $50 and he drives away and starts selling your stuff, you're right. But you're a dumbass for trusting someone you don't know blindly with things you don't want out in the public.
      • You go to a store to buy a storage for your valuables. You go to a big name - a national chain - because your not in the valuable storage industry. You pay your money, and your cash and affects are available to you based on the store's terms. That seems silly, right? Who stores their valuables in a business operation?

        But lets give that place a name. Let's call it Bank of America. And lets call your storage space a safety deposit box. Now is your money and jewelry safer than in a box in your bureau? It's qu

  • WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Enry ( 630 ) <enry@@@wayga...net> on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:29AM (#48131351) Journal

    This is dumb on the level of 'blame the victim' dumb. Should everything online be a cost-benefit analysis now?

    You know who should be in trouble? The person/people who stole the photos in the first place

    If I have naked selfies printed out in my house[*] and someone comes in and steals them, I won't get "well you shouldn't have naked photos of yourself in the house". I get "hey, they stole items from you!". You don't blame the person that made the lock. You don't blame the person if they left the house unlocked. Breaking and entering is a crime. Full stop. There may be other issues if the criminal acquired a master key or picked the lock, or the lock was faulty to begin with, but the blame lies on the person that walked in without authorization and stole property.

    What I do with my personal equipment and how I store it and how it can be accessed isn't your business nor do I have to justify myself to you about it.

    [*] I do not. You are welcome.

    • This is dumb on the level of 'blame the victim' dumb. Should everything online be a cost-benefit analysis now?

      Yes.

    • by scubamage ( 727538 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:55AM (#48131667)
      Everything in life is a cost benefit analysis.
    • by gatzke ( 2977 )

      If you give nekkid pictures to a third party to keep for you and you don't even seal them in an envelope (encrypted?) is that a good idea?

      If your security to retrieve your pictures back from the third party is a single passphrase, is that a good idea?

      To some people, there is a big difference between a picture of a nekkid rear end and a full action shot. Are full detail graphic photos and movies a good idea?

  • Lawrence should have used a service that allows her to pay e.g. $10/mo extra to insure against leakage. In aggregate, such funding can be used to improve security, and when the security eventually fails, provide restitution to the person who deserves damages under the terms of the policy.

    Does such a service exist yet? If not, it probably needs to be started in a jurisdiction where States don't stack insurance regulations up the wazoo.

    All this business about fault, implied contracts, what party A or B shou

  • Bennett Haselton (Score:4, Informative)

    by koan ( 80826 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:33AM (#48131401)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    A little more about the man before he is completely eviscerated online...

  • You can sympathise and do all the wishful thinking you want.

    Doesn't alter the fact that this was incredibly stupid and/or naïve.

    I used to work in radio, and one thing I discovered very quickly is this: You don't let *anything* you wouldn't want to see in the papers out of your control. There is *always* someone ready to take advantage of an opportunity to embarrass a celebrity, just a local one.

    Folks on the Hollywood TV/film circuit? By the time they've reached that level, they should just fucking know

  • I see nothing wrong with taking the photos. But using digital seems foolish.

    There is no reason to use a cellphone camera.

    Buy a POLAROID and use that.

    Let there be nudity, but don't put it on a computer or the internet. Of course, I don't have a Facebook account because they are way too expensive (in terms of what they take from you for what they get).

    Similarly, I don't walk through Harlem dressed like Bruce Willis in Die Hard with a Vengeance.

  • by Iamthecheese ( 1264298 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:38AM (#48131473)
    It's stupid and counterproductive to blame the victims of a crime. That said, it's very useful to turn this into a fable to teach people how to prevent future occurrences. And the simplest way to explain it is to say something like, "They should have secured their data"

    To dismiss that statement outright with the phrase "victim blaming" is to throw away the ability to learn from their experiences. If what you hear is "no crime occurred" you're reading into it something that was not said.
  • ...don't blame the victim (which is generally a good policy) because their benefit/risk estimation wasn't erroneous? I don't want to blame Jennifer Lawrence (as she seems to want to blame all those cursed with natural interests) but that she would've normally seen a benefit to her actions doesn't seem to directly address blame in any sense. Perhaps this ethical argument requires a simpler "ipso facto" tacked on the end for us stupid folks which are missing the connection between benefit and blame.
    • ...don't blame the victim (which is generally a good policy) because their benefit/risk estimation wasn't erroneous? I don't want to blame Jennifer Lawrence (as she seems to want to blame all those cursed with natural interests) but that she would've normally seen a benefit to her actions doesn't seem to directly address blame in any sense. Perhaps this ethical argument requires a simpler "ipso facto" tacked on the end for us stupid folks which are missing the connection between benefit and blame.

      I don't think its so much about blame, thats something thats really being made up by the victims. Its not 'blame' to point out that what someone did was obviously dumb and risky behavior.

      The problem there is theres this culture that says the world should be safe and people shouldn't have to take any precautions and just wander through life without having to be careful in any way, that people should have a right to be stupid and unobservant and careless.

      Me, I take the opposite view; only danger can keep you

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:41AM (#48131517)

    You can be a victim and still be an idiot.

  • Rebuttal to rebuttal (Score:4, Interesting)

    by JerryLove ( 1158461 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @11:41AM (#48131519)

    "If someone leaves their car unlocked and leaves a valuable item in plain view in the front seat, we might feel less sorry for them if they return to their car to find it stolen. But it's a logical error to blame the victim just because they took a risk; the real reason to blame them is that there's no counterbalancing benefit to leaving the car door unlocked, or failing to move the valuable item into the trunk. "

    The benifit of not puttin the thing in the trunk and not locking the car is it was less effort to do and will be less effort to open the car and get to the thing aftewards.

    Much like the hacked accounts and the benefit of not using a more secure password.

    I'm worried that "victim blaming" has been redefined. It seems it might once have been "the perpitrator is excused becuase of the victim", which is not what has been said.

    I'm sure there are costs associated with banks building vaults, locking doors, hiring guards, having survellence: avoiding those costs would be a clear benefit. But if they fail at those (or if Home Depot fails to spend enough money wisely enough on securing their POS systems) we correctly fault the bank (or Home Depot) for their lack of care while still rightly villifying the person who broke in and stole the money.

    These people took risks. Those risks included taking nude photos, uploading those photos to internet-attached servers, and failing to use good security. Those risks did not apy off. This does not excuse those who hacked the accounts. It is not "victim blaming" in the classic sense either. it is rightly pointing out a lack of due care.

  • "victim blaming" is a straw-man term designed to make those so accused look foolish. Everyone understands that there are many links in the causal chain of an undesirable event. No one who points at a few ("X took nude selfie") excludes the existence of the other ("Y stole it") necessary links.

  • it's a long forgotten attribute called taking responsibility for your own actions. If someone wants to take nude photos of themselves then go for it. But don't go whining when the photos get leaked.

    How stupid can these people be?

    They take a nude photo and store it on a cellphone that can easily be compromised or stolen - mistake #1
    Then then store the photo on some "cloud service", or email it, or otherwise create copies of the photo that they can no longer control - mistake #2
    Choose weak passwords that can

    • it's a long forgotten attribute called taking responsibility for your own actions. If someone wants to take nude photos of themselves then go for it. But don't go whining when the photos get leaked.

      How stupid can these people be?

      They take a nude photo and store it on a cellphone that can easily be compromised or stolen - mistake #1
      Then then store the photo on some "cloud service", or email it, or otherwise create copies of the photo that they can no longer control - mistake #2
      Choose weak passwords that can easily be guessed - mistake #3

      These days it seems that everyone wants to be a victim. Why? Because it provides a built in excuse for fucking up. Cast the blame on someone else rather than own up to your own mistakes.

      Actually, this is nothing new. In the days before digital cameras, the "thefts" occurred at the drug store or wherever the film was being processed. It was more difficult to disseminate the stolen pictures to millions of people, but they were stolen just the same.

      As for being a victim, well, technically they are. In hind sight, was it foolish to store said photos on-line. Yes, it was, but that doesn't mean they weren't a victim. If your local bank gets robbed and you can't get accessed to your funds for a w

  • But out of the millions of nude photos that are probably sent between cell phone users every month, a vanishly small proportion of them get stolen in security breaches of cloud storage.

    But J-Law is not an anonymous nobody that only a very small number of people want to see naked.

    There's no reason to think that Jennifer Lawrence and other victims of the hacking scandal underestimated the risk of the photos being stolen from the cloud. If anything, most users are probably over-estimating the risk today

    She is not most users, she's a special case. Her risk is not the same, she's much more visible, much more desired.

    It's not just a sample of random numbers, there's value attached to these images, and the value of most user's images is much lower than the value of those who are professionally attractive. Something of greater value is obviously at a greater risk of unauthorized access than something of average value

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @12:09PM (#48131875)

    We don't call them stupid for getting their photos stolen. We call them stupid for

    1) Taking them and
    2) Putting them onto a medium that is accessible via internet.

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @12:17PM (#48132025) Journal

    Jennifer Lawrence explained bluntly in her Vanity Fair interview why she took the photos: "I was in a loving, healthy, great relationship for four years. It was long distance, and either your boyfriend is going to look at porn or he's going to look at you."

    Somehow that doesn't sound like a loving healthy relationship. It sounds like a relationship based on sex and mutual attraction.

    • Somehow that doesn't sound like a loving healthy relationship. It sounds like a relationship based on sex and mutual attraction.

      By what corruption do you assume that those are mutually exclusive? It's perfectly normal to be in a loving, healthy relationship with someone you're attracted to and want to have sex with. If Ms. Lawrence wanted her boyfriend to think of her when the separation grew unbearable, then that's between her and her boyfriend. There's nothing remotely unhealthy or unusual about that.

  • by sideslash ( 1865434 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @12:25PM (#48132177)
    At the end of his wall of wordiness, Bennett writes:

    A woman never knows when she might meet a guy out in public that she's attracted to, and if they hit it off, it helps to have an outfit that says, "I'm a real woman, not a moron who thinks that if I engage in pre-marital kissing then Jesus will set me on fire with a blowtorch."

    My wife chooses to dress modestly in public, as do lots of women in my circles, both religious and non-religious. To me, none of their outfits communicate that they are "morons".

    Feminism -- You're Doing it Wrong.

  • by Dcnjoe60 ( 682885 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @12:45PM (#48132455)

    It's not about victim blaming, but instead learning from their experience to keep it from happening to you. The discussion isn't about what kinds of pictures should I or should I not have the right to take of myself.

    Coeds living in college dorms have the right to enjoy the fresh air by opening a window. But, if that same coed is on the ground floor, that probably isn't a wise thing to do. How do we know this -- because in the past, it has led to very negative consequences. Are they to blame, no. In an ideal world, nothing bad would happen if one lived on the ground floor and left the window open or saved nude pictures of yourself on an online service.

    But we don't live in an ideal world. That's why we don't let children play in the playground without supervision. That's why our houses and cars have locks. It's why we use passwords and encryption on files. We are not in an ideal world and there are less than noble people who will take what they want and hurt others in the process.

    As such, this isn't about blaming the victims whose pictures were hacked. It is a wake up call that the security needed to keep private things private isn't at a level to guarantee safety. As such, like the coed on the ground floor, it is better to voluntarily give up a small right to protect ones self from having somebody else harm you. For those who have already been harmed by this, maybe their story will keep somebody else from being harmed. It's not about blame -- it's about learning to protect yourself.

  • by roc97007 ( 608802 ) on Monday October 13, 2014 @12:54PM (#48132577) Journal

    > and of course the only way to stop nude selfies from leaking, is not to take them.

    Um, no. That's one way, but not the only way.

    As to the benefit vs risk argument, I guess it depends how much it means to you to have your selfies made public. If you're a kardashian, it's a *feature*. If you're Jennifer Lawrence, perhaps it's an embarrassment, (until she does her first full frontal in a film, and then those frames will be all over the internet) but if she really feels that strongly about it (a "sex crime"? Seriously?) then she should think about (a) take your nudies, but NOT WITH A PHONE, you dope! It's not like you've NEVER HEARD of a celeb's phone getting hacked. Look we know you're smart enough to read a script. You should be able to figure out that phones are not secure. (b) The security of "the cloud" is inversely proportional to the value of the data. That your nudies (which were fairly tame, by the way. And a little grainy. Consider moving out to the patio.) would be a prime target for hackers pretty much goes without saying.

    What it comes down to, is this: You don't secure the crown jewels with a $3 novelty lock. Depending on cell phone security to keep nekkid photos of Jennifer Lawrence private is exactly the electronic equivalent of a $3 novelty lock securing the pr0n equivalent of the crown jewels. You don't blame the victim for the crime, but you can point out that the victim did not use security appropriate for the value of the object.

    Compared to most of us, Lawrence is loaded. She could afford to have a pr0n assistant (I can already see people lining up for that job) who's sole purpose is to distribute her nudies to whomever she's dating, with appropriate NDAs signed, in a secure fashion.

    To wit: Take the photos with a real digital camera, not a phone. Put the physical media in a patched-up, antivirus-protected PC, encrypt the photo, send it via a secure, non-well-known email provider, then destroy the original. Educate the recipient on the value of security and the pain he will experience if he lets it get out.

    If that's too much to do, then either don't take nude selfies, or lower your privacy expectations. Don't run around with your pants down and complain that everyone is screwing you.

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