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  • Hi, I'm the victim of an online consent violation.

  • It might seem like a weird wording to you,

  • but I really hope by the end of this talk

  • that consent is going to be a central tenet

  • of how you speak about online rights.

  • So let's start, what happened to me?

  • In 2011, I woke up, and I couldn't enter my email or Facebook.

  • By the time I gained access into it,

  • I realized that I have been a victim of what is right now called revenge porn.

  • But let's walk through what happened to me.

  • At some point, a person decides that they will violate my consent.

  • They break into my email, they steal my private material,

  • they publish it online,

  • and then a site starts profiting off of it,

  • all against my consent, most of it illegal.

  • Now we call it revenge porn.

  • Because we call it that,

  • you might know what I'm talking about is graphic material.

  • For a long while,

  • I also thought that this was bad because it was graphic material.

  • I thought I felt shame and I felt pain, because it was graphic.

  • But I realized, when I looked around me,

  • that loads of people were publishing graphic material,

  • were participating in graphic acts, and they were fine.

  • It was not a problem for them, but it was a problem for me.

  • I realized that it was a problem because I hadn't consented,

  • because it was against my will,

  • that it was not about the content of the material,

  • but about the relationship that I had with the material.

  • This revealed to me some issues with how we talk about consent,

  • and especially, how we talk about privacy and online rights.

  • Right now, when we talk about privacy and online rights,

  • we use the word private material.

  • Private material refers to...

  • yeah, no one actually really knows what private material is.

  • Is it our address, is it our name, is it our phone number, what is it?

  • We use it all the time.

  • Governments, journalists all talk about this private material,

  • but none of us really knows what it is.

  • And it's really important,

  • because it seems that a lot of people do worry about surveillance,

  • you've all heard about the NSA, you've all heard about Edward Snowden,

  • and you've probably heard of people like me.

  • All these things are related, it all about internet rights.

  • When we talk about privacy, we put the focus on the nature of the content,

  • but the problem is, private content is different to everyone.

  • Everyone has a different relationship with different types of content.

  • I want to switch our conversation from privacy to consent.

  • Every individual's right to consent needs to be in focus.

  • We cannot, from a normative standpoint, say

  • which type of content should be able to be published,

  • or surveilled, or taken in, and which shouldn't.

  • There is no such rule to make that apply to all.

  • We can't have powerful people

  • [drawing] a line between public and private material, and saying,

  • "OK, we decide that you can publish a person's phone number."

  • Or "We decide that you could publish

  • a picture of a person without asking them."

  • Because we all have different relationships to privacy.

  • We need to put the focus on the individual rights to consent.

  • There are different reasons why this matters.

  • The primary one to me is the democratic one,

  • because who are the people who are victimized,

  • when we use a norm to define something for everyone?

  • It is the people who are already on the margins,

  • and who are already vulnerable.

  • It is young women for example, like it was for me,

  • who live a life with marginalized sexual options.

  • Sex is used to shame young women,

  • and if that happens in real life,

  • it's going to be used on the Internet as well.

  • It is people who are victims of homophobia, or transphobia,

  • who are already vulnerable in society.

  • These are the people who need their privacy most.

  • So when we talk about privacy from a normative standpoint,

  • what we do is we marginalize people who are already vulnerable,

  • and we deny rights to the people who need them the most.

  • This is a democratic issue,

  • and if we do not focus on the individual's right to consent,

  • we are going to end up reproducing the same systems of oppression

  • that we have in the real world.

  • Consent of the individual is a central democratic point of the Internet

  • and I'm going to tell you, none of us have the right to consent today.

  • None of us has the right to say,

  • "I want to decide what is collected off from me,

  • and what I want to decide what is published."

  • That is what I found out, and it is a democratic problem.

  • Even though I am a known activist now,

  • I will never have the right to have those old pictures taken down of me,

  • because we haven't decided that it's a right yet.

  • I don't have a right to consent and neither does anyone on earth.

  • This is a huge democratic problem.

  • We need to create awareness.

  • This loose word privacy that none of us really knows what means

  • has made it extremely difficult for people to relate to these things.

  • We hear this talk of privacy all the time,

  • it's always like, "Oh, internet privacy,

  • they are looking up your private information,

  • we find out that the American government can find our metadata,"

  • - what is metadata, no one really knows -

  • This has created apathy:

  • we all care about our online rights, but we don't know enough about it.

  • Why?

  • I think the word is privacy, it's gotten twisted out of hand:

  • First of all,

  • we made it sound like if a person demands online rights and strict online privacy,

  • we call them an outlier,

  • we say, "What do you want to hide?

  • What is that it's so weird that you think people are going to find about you?

  • Why do you want privacy so much more than anyone else?"

  • This is a mistake.

  • Wanting online privacy and wanting the right to consent

  • should be everyone's basic right.

  • That's because we use the word privacy,

  • we make it sound as if it's keeping secret,

  • as if someone who wants privacy is an outlier,

  • someone doing something a little shoddily, a little weird.

  • If we use the word consent,

  • it's something that everyone can relate to,

  • everyone will relate to the need for consent.

  • I think we all have a pretty regular life, but we all also want the right to consent.

  • We say, like for example, "I'm a political activist."

  • That makes me vulnerable in one way, I don't want my address to be public.

  • For some people, they wouldn't mind, but I do mind.

  • I we shift the conversation to consent,

  • we make it much more easier for people to understand

  • what's actually happening with their information online.

  • I think that's important.

  • Also, like I talked about before, there is the democratic issue.

  • There is the issue of not focusing on consent,

  • making people on the margins even more vulnerable.

  • Meaning the people who [question] the top of the status quo,

  • people who question sources of power,

  • people who do stuff that makes them vulnerable,

  • who challenge norms.

  • We need these people,

  • we, as a collective, should protect them and protect their rights.

  • If we form a powerful standpoint,

  • make a normative judgment about what privacy is

  • we make these people extra vulnerable, and we don't want that.

  • We want an Internet that is more progressive,

  • that is more collectively embracing of people who challenge the status quo,

  • and who makes the world a better place in and outside the Internet.

  • That's why we need to focus on consent

  • and not on a construction of abstract privacy as we do now.

  • Consent should be our focus, because we want a better world,

  • and we want the Internet to be a driver of a better world.

  • If we don't focus on consent,

  • it will be at the cost of political dissidents,

  • it will be at the cost of sexual and gender minorities,

  • it will be at the behest of racial and ethnic minorities,

  • people who are already vulnerable.

  • Every individual should have the right to consent,

  • and we don't right now.

  • This is extremely important.

  • It's not about privacy, it's not about keeping secret,

  • it's about getting to decide

  • what is front stage and what is back stage.

  • It's the central part of what it means to be human.

  • There is no difference between real life and the Internet anymore,

  • these things are the same,

  • and of course, we should have the same rights online.

  • Even if it's difficult, it's a fight that it's worth fighting,

  • because then we make an Internet that is even better

  • than the real life that we have right now.

  • Thank you very much.

  • (Applause)

Hi, I'm the victim of an online consent violation.

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TEDx】從復仇色情學起。網絡權利就是人權|艾瑪-霍爾滕|TEDx多瑙因斯爾 (【TEDx】Learning from revenge porn: Online rights are human rights | Emma Holten | TEDxDonauinsel)

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    Pedroli Li 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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