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Thread: Revenge porn victim wants to be a voice for survivors...

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    Exclamation Revenge porn victim wants to be a voice for survivors...

    Revenge porn victim wants to be a voice for survivors... Her Nudes Got Posted Online. Now This ‘Most Hated Man on the Internet’ Revenge-Porn Victim Wants to Be A Voice for Survivors. Hunter Moore posted Danielle Green’s nudes on IsAnyoneUp without her consent. Now, she’s using a Netflix doc to bring awareness to internet harassment

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    After her nude photos were posted online without her consent, Danielle Green says she spent years in therapy recovering. Now, she hopes viewers of a new documentary skewering revenge-porn king Hunter Moore will see beyond the shock value of the unremorseful antihero to what really matters: the victims.

    “I mean, $#@! Hunter, he’s old news,” says Green, who appears in the new his refusal to take responsibility for the harm his website caused, the racket eventually caught up with him: he became the subject of an FBI investigation and served time in federal prison between 2015 and 2017 for charges related to a hacking scheme to steal photos to display on the site. In multiple interviews prior to facing charges, Moore defended his website and claimed victims should be angry with whoever submitted their photos, not with him for posting them. The filmmakers said in the documentary Moore initially agreed to participate before backing out. Moore did not respond to a request for comment from Rolling Stone.

    Green says Moore was nothing more than the embodiment of the worst parts of the MySpace-famous “scene” community at the time, a post-emo identity that spread via the social platform, characterized by a love of modern punk subgenres, spiky asymmetrical haircuts, and Hot Topic wardrobes. “He took it to the next level,” she says, “but I knew 20 guys who acted just like him.” While she says it’s been hard to relive some of her darkest days on Netflix, she’s hoping to use the attention to help the cause of other people in her position. She hopes viewers impacted by the docuseries will help people facing online abuse, including donating money to organizations that help victims, and pushing for federal legislation against revenge porn. “Where’s the call to action? What can we do now to make change? That’s what I’m trying to do: to inspire people to take action instead of like, just commenting on the internet.”

    Green knows about the fallout of Moore’s site first-hand, because her photos were posted there. In 2009, when she was 22, she says she took intimate photos of herself in a moment of desperation in her relationship with the father of her then-one-year-old child.

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    donttread's Avatar Senior Member
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    I have what may be an unusal opinion about this.
    If he took the pics or video without her consent that is a whole different matter.

    But if you consented to him taking the picture then I believe it belongs to both of you and he can do what he wants with it. Legally speaking, morally this guy is lost. Lessons learned category. But maybe, just maybe, some pics should never be taken.
    Don't take naked pics and videos and don't ever put them on the IN or a cell phone text without understanding where they might end up. Just don't.

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    Quote Originally Posted by donttread View Post
    I have what may be an unusal opinion about this.
    If he took the pics or video without her consent that is a whole different matter.

    But if you consented to him taking the picture then I believe it belongs to both of you and he can do what he wants with it. Legally speaking, morally this guy is lost. Lessons learned category. But maybe, just maybe, some pics should never be taken.
    Don't take naked pics and videos and don't ever put them on the IN or a cell phone text without understanding where they might end up. Just don't.
    That's a bit like saying if you consent to screw one guy one time then you're consenting to screw him in perpetuity. A photo might be forever but consent is not.

    I would agree it shows a lack of good judgement. It is a common issue among teenagers who are known to be stupid, and I think my generation got pretty roundly $#@!ed by the internet on a few fronts because the "rules" (consequences) were not as known or understood (my generation being the people who had MSN/AOL messenger and MySpace as pre-teens/adolescents - we grew up with it but were not born to it). It seems like "common sense" because a lot of people took it in the teeth over the years when photos or words or postings came back to haunt. The documentary in question is about a guy who existed during that time frame, from what I understand.
    FYIWDWYTM

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    carolina73's Avatar Senior Member
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    Quote Originally Posted by donttread View Post
    I have what may be an unusal opinion about this.
    If he took the pics or video without her consent that is a whole different matter.

    But if you consented to him taking the picture then I believe it belongs to both of you and he can do what he wants with it. Legally speaking, morally this guy is lost. Lessons learned category. But maybe, just maybe, some pics should never be taken.
    Don't take naked pics and videos and don't ever put them on the IN or a cell phone text without understanding where they might end up. Just don't.
    I had never heard of this site so just did a quick read. But, it sounds like he was a hacker and was stealing the pictures from phones, computers, etc...
    Let's go Brandon !!!

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