Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Girl hangs self after her friend posts pics on FB

- Vidhi Choudhary ■ letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: A 17-year-old girl hanged herself in West Bengal’s Murshidaba­d district after intimate photograph­s of her were posted on Facebook, bringing into sharp focus the social media platform’s guidelines on “revenge porn” after at least three similar incidents over the last 10 months.

The photos were allegedly posted by her 21-year-old male friend, with whom she had a fight on Sunday evening. The West Bengal police have detained the man and are investigat­ing, Prasenjit Banerjee, sub-divisional police officer, Jangipur, said.

“We have detained the man who uploaded the photos but he has not been arrested yet as the girl’s family has not lodged any written complaint against him.

“A case of unnatural death has been registered. Postmortem was conducted on Monday and its report confirmed suicide,” Banerjee added. Officers at Suti police station said the man had faked his identity to befriend the victim. He has been made to delete the photograph­s, they said.

In the US, growing concerns about extremist content, harassment, cyberbully­ing, and the distributi­on of non-consensual pornograph­y (commonly known as “revenge porn” as such intimate images and videos are usually shared by stalkers or exes) have tested existing regulation­s in place. Many users, particular­ly women and racial minorities, say they are fed up with the toxic culture of harassment and abuse.

Facebook said its community standards strictly prohibit the sharing of non-consensual intimate images. “We remove intimate images shared in revenge or without permission as well as photos or videos depicting incidents of sexual violence. We also remove content that threatens or promotes sexual violence or exploitati­on,” the company said in an emailed statement.

Facebook wants people to use the report link if they see an intimate image that looks like it was shared without permission; it then uses photo matching technology to help thwart further attempts to share the image on Facebook, Messenger and Instagram. In addition, Facebook’s Help Center provides guidance and advice for people whose intimate images have been shared.

Last week, a 17-year-old girl hanged herself at her home in Indore and left a suicide note saying she was being stalked, sexually harassed and blackmaile­d by a man in her neighbourh­ood. The man had uploaded a picture of his by her side in one frame to suggest that they were a couple.

In Bengal, this is the second incident in four months to have claimed a life. On March 17, a 30-year-old, a mother of three, ended her life after four students, three of them minors, posted her intimate photos on Facebook.

A resident of Chandipur in East Midnapore district, the woman had lost her cellphone while picking up her kids from their school. The students who found her phone began blackmaili­ng her for sexual favours and later uploaded the photos.

In November last year, a 21-year-old girl in Odisha’s Kendrapara district committed suicide after a stalker posted some morphed pictures of her on Facebook. Tapas Mahakud of Pattamunda­i used to stalk the student.

Sociologis­t and women’s rights activist Ranjana Kumari said these cases are alarming and should be looked into.

“We need to understand what is driving this behaviour, is it the anticipati­on of the threat of posting? Or the actual act of posting that’s leading to such incidents,” said Kumari, director at Delhibased Centre for Social Research. She is also on the safety advisory board of both Facebook and Twitter. “The reaction time taken by social media platforms needs to checked. They should be quick to respond.facebook and Twitter need to tweak their strategy according to local cultural nuances to avoid such incidents. For instance, what is shameful for a girl in India might be very different from (what is shameful for one in) the West,” she explained.

“Having said that, social media platforms have created a number of protection mechanisms – protect your profile picture, choose the audience you share your content with etc.

“Users need to understand the technical support that’s available to them – report abuse, mute, block...,” added Kumari.

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? ■ Facebook said its community standards strictly prohibit the sharing of nonconsens­ual intimate images. At least three similar incidents over the past ten months have been reported.
REUTERS FILE ■ Facebook said its community standards strictly prohibit the sharing of nonconsens­ual intimate images. At least three similar incidents over the past ten months have been reported.

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