Weekend Herald

Men questioned over sex- tape suicide

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Four men are being questioned in connection with the suicide of a woman who appeared in a sex video that went viral online.

Tiziana Cantone was found dead in her aunt’s home near Naples on Tuesday, more than a year after the video spread across social media.

The 31- year- old had sent the clip to some friends, including her exboyfrien­d to make him jealous.

However, the video and her name soon found their way to the web, where the woman was mocked and abused.

The footage has been viewed by almost a million internet users.

In a bid to escape the humiliatio­n, Cantone quit her job, moved to Tuscany and tried to change her name, but her nightmare went on.

The words “You’re filming? Bravo,” spoken by the woman to her lover in the video, have become a derisive joke online, and the phrase has been printed on T- shirts, smartphone cases and other items.

After a long court battle, she recently won a “right to be forgotten” ruling ordering the video to be removed from various sites and search engines, including Facebook.

But she was also ordered to pay 20,000 ($ 30,740) in legal costs — a final “insult” that may have driven her to take her own life, according to several Italian media outlets.

“Why are these images still there? Why can people still mock and laugh at this young woman who ended her days because of this humiliatio­n that she suffered?” wrote Naples daily Il Mattino on Thursday.

Prosecutor­s in Naples have opened an investigat­ion into “incitement to suicide”. The four men are being investigat­ed for defamation.

The procession of the hearse carrying Cantone’s body was broadcast live.

Her family have called for justice and for an end to shaming. “Now we call for the justice system to act so that her death was not in vain,” they said, quoted by Italian media.

The case has sparked fierce debate in Italy on the “right to be forgotten” online.

“As a Government, there’s not a lot that we can do,” said Prime Minister Matteo Renzi. “It’s mainly a cultural battle — also a social and political battle. Our commitment is to try to do everything we can . . . Violence against women is not an ineradicab­le phenomenon.”

Two years ago, the European Union’s top court made the groundbrea­king decision to give people the “right to be forgotten” online, with internet search engines told to remove informatio­n deemed “inaccurate, inadequate, irrelevant or excessive” for the purposes of data processing, or face a fine.

In Britain, a revenge law came into effect in April last year, meaning those who share sexually explicit images without the subject’s consent could find themselves in trouble.

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