A judge warned that exchanging naked pictures on social media has become a «hallmark of our society» as he sentenced a man for
sending revenge porn
Not exact matches
Facebook asks people to
send them their nudes so they can prevent them from being posted as
revenge porn.
And the worst part is, once you've
sent in your nudes, and strangers have seen them, Facebook is the deciding factor in whether or not they're considered
revenge porn.
The offences could see people who upload
revenge porn sent to a magistrates» court and face up to six months imprisonment and a fine of up to # 5,000.
And just last month, Facebook piloted a program in Australia that would essentially block uploads of
revenge porn — provided you
send the images to Facebook first.
Facebook is testing a new method to stop
revenge porn that requires you to
send your own nudes to yourself via the social network's Messenger app.