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Facebook asking for nude photos to protect users

  

Category:  World News

Via:  hippocrates-of-cos  •  7 years ago  •  7 comments

Facebook asking for nude photos to protect users

Facebook is telling users to send them naked pictures they might have of themselves for their own protection.

The social network says it is part of a way to prevent someone from posting the photos online as a form of revenge porn.
The pilot program   is being tested in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada.

According to the Australia's Office of the eSafety Commissioner, "The pilot provides a portal for people concerned that an intimate image may be shared online to report it to the Office of the eSafety Commissioner who will notify Facebook to prevent any instances of the image being uploaded after the notification has been actioned."

"We've been participating in the Global Working Group to identify new solutions to keep people safe, and we're proud to partner with Facebook on this important initiative as it aims to empower Australians to stop image-based abuse in its tracks," said Julie Inman Grant, Australia's eSafety Commissioner.

Facebook says once user sends the the image via Messenger, it will use technology to create a digital fingerprint or link of the picture.

If the program works, it would mean that same naked picture will never show up on Facebook, even if a hacker or an ex tries to upload it.

"The safety and well-being of the Facebook community is our top priority," Facebook's Head of Global Safety Antigone Davis said. "As part of our continued efforts to better detect and remove content that violates our community standards, we're using image matching technology to prevent non-consensual intimate images from being shared on Facebook, Instagram, Facebook Groups and Messenger."

http://abc7chicago.com/technology/facebook-asking-for-nude-photos-to-protect-users/2623219/


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Steve Ott
Professor Quiet
3  Steve Ott    7 years ago

Who is Facebook trying to be, Homeland Security?

 
 
 
321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu
Sophomore Participates
4  321steve - realistically thinkin or Duu     7 years ago

From the link"

  • Once we receive this notification, a specially trained representative from our Community Operations team reviews and hashes the image, which creates a human-unreadable, numerical fingerprint of it.
  • We store the photo hash—not the photo—to prevent someone from uploading the photo in the future. If someone tries to upload the image to our platform, like all photos on Facebook, it is run through a database of these hashes and if it matches we do not allow it to be posted or shared.
  • Once we hash the photo, we notify the person who submitted the report via the secure email they provided to the eSafety Commissioner’s office and ask them to delete the photo from the Messenger thread on their device. Once they delete the image from the thread, we will delete the image from our servers.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
5  Buzz of the Orient    7 years ago

I'd say prevention is superior to cure, and if people pose for nude photos they get what they deserve, unless they want them for their own use and nobody else is ever permitted to see them - keep them under lock and key.

 
 

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