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Censorship Movies

MPAA Opposes Proposed Minnesota Revenge Porn Law, Saying It Limits Speech (arstechnica.com) 96

New Minnesota legislation is "attempting to penalize those who post explicit photos or videos of ex-lovers on the Internet without permission," reports the Associated Press. But while 27 states across America have already passed laws against "revenge porn", Hollywood's lobbying arm, the MPAA, argues that Minnesota's bill doesn't specifically require an intent to harass in their definition of the crime, which "could limit the distribution of a wide array of mainstream, Constitutionally protected material, including items of legitimate news, commentary, and historical interest," according to Ars Technica. The MPAA adds that "images of Holocaust victims, or prisoners at Abu Ghraib, or the Pulitzer-Prize winning photograph entitled 'Napalm Girl' -- which shows a young girl running screaming from her village, naked, following a Napalm attack -- could be prohibited under the terms of this legislation."

"This is the same MPAA that fiercely supported the Stop Online Piracy Act of 2012," notes Ars Technica, though "many claimed that legislation would also curtail free speech because SOPA could lead to the removal of domains that host infringing material." But the state's ACLU chapter is also opposing Minnesota's bill, according to the Associated Press, pointing out that it doesn't require an offender to be aware that they're invading someone's privacy, and arguing that "We're not doing victims of revenge porn any service by passing a law that can't be upheld in court, that will let people go free."
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MPAA Opposes Proposed Minnesota Revenge Porn Law, Saying It Limits Speech

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  • And, strangely enough, both are valid points. Is the MPAA trying to justify it's existence outside of file sharing or something?
    • by VVelox ( 819695 )

      I believe the old saying is even a stuck clock is right twice a day.

      • I seem to recall it's a 'broken clock', but of course, that whole statement is pre-digital.
        Speaking of which, I don't think a digital clock can get stuck, unless you are implying something involving body cavities. If so, can I direct you to some politicians and the housewares department?
    • Re:Odd bedfellows. (Score:5, Informative)

      by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Sunday April 03, 2016 @03:07AM (#51831311)

      Sec. 2. [604.31] CAUSE OF ACTION FOR NONCONSENSUAL
      DISSEMINATION OF PRIVATE SEXUAL IMAGES; SEXUAL SOLICITATION.
      Subdivision 1. Nonconsensual dissemination of private sexual images. (a) A
      cause of action against a person for the nonconsensual dissemination of private sexual
      images exists when:
      (1) a person has threatened to disseminate an image or has intentionally disseminated
      an image without the consent of the person depicted in the image;
      (2) the image is of an individual engaged in a sexual act or whose intimate parts are
      exposed in whole or in part; and
      (3) the image was obtained or created under circumstances in which a reasonable
      person would know or understand that the image was to remain private.

      (b) The fact that the individual depicted in the image consented to the creation of the
      image or to the voluntary private transmission of the image is not a defense to liability for
      a person who has disseminated the image without consent.

      Or not.

      • I like that "...or whose intimate parts are exposed in whole or in part..." section. So any little side boob or butt cheek could get you sued. Maybe even an ankle if they wear a burka religiously or something. Wow, talk about open to abuse!
        • by Anonymous Coward

          The point is that somebody took nude pictures with consent and it was published for all to see without consent. The intent of the law is very simple - don't publish other people's nude pictures without consent.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Calydor ( 739835 )

            Then the law should say that instead of blanket statements that are open to interpretation as required.

        • If it is a private, partially nude picture that was intended for personal use only then you have no legit right to post it anywhere.

          Get consent.

          I've always gotten consent. It is always the same conditions too... "you can show your friends but if you post it on the internet I'll kill you."

        • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

          Did you miss the "while engaged in a sexual act" part?

        • I'm pretty sure you could find a legal definition of "intimate parts" somewhere in Minnesota law, so it's not quite as bad as you say.

      • (Sorry for the title, I couldn't help myself).

        How will they prove dissemination? I would guess in 98.3% of all the cases, the person who does it is logged enough to prove they did it, because stupid people.

        But because we're talking the murky depths of human revenge, at least some people will be clever about it and go to enough effort to create reasonable doubt about who disseminated the image.

        I wonder if they will argue that possession of the image (home computer, etc) is prima facie evidence you were resp

        • by eyenot ( 102141 )

          Hmm. Interesting point.

          You could stick to simple pathology (i.e. "a led to b led to c") and say that if only two known people were supposed to have the data (the insemination video, in your example, presumably only to be owned by the egg-bearer and the sperm-donor) and if one of those people is charging illegal dissemination of the data, then it must be the other person who did the deed.

          So even if the charged person used darkwebz, deleted the logs of the logs of the LOGGING of logging's log log, and found a

          • by swb ( 14022 )

            You could stick to simple pathology (i.e. "a led to b led to c") and say that if only two known people were supposed to have the data

            And only Jennifer Lawrence and her boyfriend were supposed to have her selfies, too.

            And not a day goes buy where there isn't a story on Slashdot where there isn't some new security vulnerability on PCs, whether its Lenovo exploiting firmware to install their spyware, phone-home vulnerabilities, you name it. And none of this counts the hacking of services which might automatically back up data you didn't even *want* to disseminate into the ye olde cloud.

            And then there's anybody else with physical access, th

            • by eyenot ( 102141 )

              Do you read an entire comment before you barge in with a rebuttle? I was offering a counter-point not to support it but to shoot it down in later sentences. Sheesh!

        • This is for cases where you have some evidence.

          The same as all the other laws.

          Strange rabbit-hole to fall down, considering that.

      • Great research. I'm thinking that the MPAA is using this to set up lawsuits for celebrity stalkers and paparazzi. The law is for individuals involved in a relationship, of sorts, and the MPAA link refers to the celebs having their pics circulated, but not for revenge purposes. Hmmm.
        • Great research. I'm thinking that the MPAA is using this to set up lawsuits for celebrity stalkers and paparazzi.

          Not useful for paparazzi. A "reasonable person" would not know or understand that a picture they took at work, from a public place, that has a history of being legal, "was to remain private."

          It might be useful for leaked or stolen sex tapes, though. But those already have a clear cause of action. But that probably is their PR motive; PR aimed at the actors themselves who feel violated.

          • by tacarat ( 696339 )
            You're right. I misreadTFA. "The Cyber Civil Rights Initiative, a group dedicated to combating online abuse and harassment, said the MPAA's position is a "callous disregard for the victims of this gratuitous and unjustifiable form of voyeurism." "Adding an “intent to harass” requirement would mean that the people who distributed the private, intimate photos of celebrities, including Hollywood star Jennifer Lawrence, would be free to do so with impunity because they were merely providing
            • I don't assume they're competent, so I'm not placing much value in the actual effect telling us anything about their motives. I'm assuming that they got involved to try to make the law "stronger" because of people like Jennifer Lawrence. I'm assuming they had some conversation with a celeb that went like, "Will you help us make statements against pirating?" "My pictures were pirated, and they were very personal and their release caused me harm, what are you doing about my problem? Why should I want to help

  • by zenlessyank ( 748553 ) on Sunday April 03, 2016 @03:03AM (#51831303)
    Stick figures good enough for illustrations? Also, playing atheists advocate, shouldn't the camera know when it's going to be party to a crime??
  • by kuzb ( 724081 ) on Sunday April 03, 2016 @03:44AM (#51831351)

    ...or does the MPAA get more and more batshit insane with every passing year?

    • by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Sunday April 03, 2016 @05:44AM (#51831507)

      They are not insane. They are just acting as any company is expected to: Every action they take is towards the goal of maximising their profitability. They oppose this law, not out of free speech concerns, but because it could get in the way of exploiting celebrity scandals for money in future.

      • I see it, now. I was trying to figure out what their angle was, but you put it rather plainly.

        This law would basically guarantee that there would never be another paparazzi photo of some starlet skinny dipping or sun tanning, ever, ever again.

        It doesn't matter that there's no intent to do emotional harm to the subject of the rag photo. They did not give consent and obviously since they are celebrities, and since that means they can make a lot of money from every picture taken of them, they would never in a

        • It's a badly-written law, one driven by good intentions but sure to have unintended consequences. The MPAA may be doing the right thing on this occasion, but only because it happens to be in their self-interest.

          Personally I think the world just needs to get over this ridiculous obsession with catching a glimpse of someone naked. Yes, it's a breast. Plenty of those on the internet already, nothing special about yours.

        • This law would basically guarantee that there would never be another paparazzi photo of some starlet skinny dipping or sun tanning, ever, ever again.

          And that would mean the end of civilization as we know it.

          I mean, is that what it takes to get you off? Has no one told you about PornHub? I mean, what the fuck, dude? Your stressing over the possibility that you may never see another nude starlet paparazzi photo. Don't you realize that now most starlets post naked selfies on Twitter? Or is it a special pl

        • This law would basically guarantee that there would never be another paparazzi photo of some starlet skinny dipping or sun tanning, ever, ever again.

          I think you missed the part where it said Minnesota, which is eclipsed, if you'll pardon the pun, by only the moon in terms of either celebrity population, or paparazzi waiting there to take photos of them.

          • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
            Yeah, like the porn maker who was extradited from CA to FL because the porn he made in CA and sold it in CA and it violated FL law, so they extradited him to FL to prosecute him? It doesn't matter where the law is, all 50 states laws apply to someone who never leaves his home. So say the states and the feds. But because it was "porn" the conservatives were happy to see the law applied poorly.
      • Actually, their interest is a bit baffling. They're not the ones who capitalize off of those scandals, at least not directly, and there are already exemptions from privacy expectations for public figures anyway.

    • They aren't. The ones giving in to them are.

      It's much like when you have a spoiled child. At first, the child's demands are simple and maybe even reasonable. If the child sees it gets away with them, they mount until they reach the point where the average, sane person can only shake his head and wonder how the fuck that spoiled little brat thinks he can get away with asking that.

      It's not the child that is insane. It's the parents.

      Or, to get back from the analogy, the law makers caving in to those bullshit d

  • Copyright law is already too biased towards producers. They are behaving like spoilt little children and need their toys to be taken away. Seriously, they get enough (more than enough) already.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It's not just the bigcreators. There is a whole industry of false copyright claiming companies that steal popular videos on Youtube, allowing them to remove the video from the original channel, monitize it, collect revenue, all before the original owner eventually gets it back after spending weeks fighting the corporate piss-taker. Once they win their own content back, they never any monies made by the thief, even though google know exactly what was paid over what period; and google never penalise these cro

  • by loonycyborg ( 1262242 ) on Sunday April 03, 2016 @05:14AM (#51831455)
    Isn't harassment already illegal? Whether it happens via internet or via newspapers is irrelevant..
  • MPAA wanting something because of free speech. That's like Facebook claiming a change is over privacy concerns, Republicans claiming that they want it to protect the poor, Democrats claiming it is to save taxpayer money or Comcast claiming it's to spur healthy competition.

    In other words, an enough transparent blatant lie to ask for the real agenda.

    • by dissy ( 172727 )

      In other words, an enough transparent blatant lie to ask for the real agenda.

      That should be obvious. With the way the law is currently written, any actor could claim after a movie is made that they changed their mind and no longer want to be depicted (either in that way, or even at all) and once that change of mind is stated publicly, the MPAA just broke this law and will be held accountable to it.

      They want their actor contracts to stay just as one sided and enforceable as they are right now.

      They do not want the actor to have the ability to simply claim "I changed my mind" to turn

    • what's so hard to understand? any law that impedes the shekel flow to the MPAA is bad; any law that protects or increases it is good

  • It's most unexpected that MPAA has suddenly flipped to a mens-rea-matters position on speech issues. This is the same organization that purchased DMCA's anti-circumvention provisions, where zero fucks are given as to the reasons for breaking DRM: it was considered intolerably bad, no matter why you'd be doing it.

    Unexpected and very late, but nevertheless encouraging. We can all assume that this drastic 180-degree change of heart by MPAA is going to be accompanied by them purchasing a DMCA repeal.

  • "Napalm Girl" ? Her name is Kim Phuc, she lives in Vancouver (Canada). Apparently the role of "Editor" has devolved to that of "Janitor" at modern news-related media.

    • by rhazz ( 2853871 )

      photograph entitled 'Napalm Girl'

      They were referring to the photo, not the girl herself.

  • This is all about the scum paparazzi who take snapshots of actresses or famous women as they get out of cars or swimming its a huge business and i am sure the MPAA represents the trolls paparazzi. That is my theory why they are doing what they are doing.
  • The MPAA is saying, "Hey, don't outlaw this... we can make money selling this shit!"

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