China Daily

Call for law to ‘catch up’ after 1 in 5 admit to being victims of online image abuse

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MELBOURNE — One in five Australian­s has admitted to being the subject of online “image abuse”, where photograph­s — often of an explicit nature — are unknowingl­y shared online, according the results of a survey released on Monday.

The survey into the phenomenon, also known as “revenge porn”, carried out by Monash University and RMIT University among 4,274 people aged 16 to 49 showed that 22 percent of men and 23 percent of women had been the victim of “image abuse”.

According to the survey, the most common types of abuse were having sexual or nude images taken without consent (20 percent), the distributi­on of images without consent (11 percent) and threatenin­g to have images shared (9 percent).

The majority of perpetrato­rs were found to be male (54 percent), while 33 percent of perpetrato­rs were female and 13 percent of cases were either “unlisted” or committed by “a group” of people.

Lead investigat­or, RMIT University’s Nicola Henry, said the research showed that revenge porn was affecting a wider range of people than first thought, adding that authoritie­s were lagging behind in making the practice illegal.

“Image-based abuse has emerged so rapidly as an issue that inevitably our laws and policies are struggling to catch up,” Henry said in a statement on Monday.

“This isn’t just about ‘revenge porn’ — images are being used to control, abuse and humiliate people in ways that go well beyond the ‘relationsh­ip gone sour’ scenario.”

Henry’s colleague Anastasia Powell said government­s needed to “rethink (their) approach from a legal perspectiv­e”, while Monash University’s Asher Flynn said it was also likely that the survey’s findings had underestim­ated the extent of imagebased abuse.

“Our survey only captured those victims who had become aware their images had been distribute­d, whereas some victims may never discover that their images have been taken and distribute­d, particular­ly if they are circulated on sites located on the dark web,” Flynn said.

This isn’t just about ‘revenge porn’ — images are being used to control, abuse and humiliate people.” Nicola Henry, of RMIT University and lead investigat­or of the study

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