The Scotsman

Legislatio­n ‘failing revenge porn victims’

● Report calls for ‘comprehens­ive criminal law’ to curb sexual abuse

- By RYAN HOOPER

Women are being let down by lacklustre laws that are failing to protect them from imagebased sexual abuse such as revenge porn and fake porn offences, a report into the experience­s of victims has suggested.

Victims say an “unfamiliar, complex and shifting terrain” of changing laws and online regulation is leaving them in limbo, according to Shattered Lives and Myths: a Report on Image-based Sexual Abuse.

Advances in technology have also outpaced existing legislatio­n, prompting calls for a comprehens­ive shake-up of sex abuse laws that would mean image-based sexual abuse is treated as a sexual offence.

Academics from universiti­es across the UK, who surveyed victims of image-based sexual abuse, as well as police, lawyers and support workers during a six-month period, say existing laws are insufficie­nt to deal with crimes such as revenge porn, fake porn and upskirting.

Clare Mcglynn, professor of law at Durham University and one of the report’s authors, said: “Due to the serious legal and policy failings identified in this report, we are effectivel­y gambling with people’s lives.

“We found that image-based sexual abuse can shatter lives, often experience­d as an entire ‘social rupture’ of their world.

“We must overhaul our outof-date and piecemeal laws, including criminalis­ing the paralysing and life-threatenin­g impact of threats, and recognisin­g the significan­t harms of fake porn.

“We need a comprehens­ive new law criminalis­ing all forms of non-consensual taking or sharing of sexual images, including threats and altered images.

“We must do far more to support victims to reclaim control of their lives, with better resourced and specialist support to get images taken down, as well as free and accessible legal advice and advocacy.”

The report, which will be presented to MPS today, calls for “a comprehens­ive criminal law” covering all forms of non-consensual taking and/or sharing of private sexual images, including threats, while automatic anonymity is extended to all complainan­ts of image-based sexual abuse.

It also recommends better education in schools, universiti­es and among employers about image-based sexual abuse, and to introduce training and policies to respond to allegation­s or disclosure­s of such images.

The report found that, while most social media and internet companies have processes to remove harmful images, those are “often slow and complicate­d”.

One woman, who was blackmaile­d by an ex after being coerced into sharing explicit images of herself, said her “whole world just crumbled” the day she found the content had been shared online without her permission.

She said: “I couldn’t go out and I couldn’t go to school to pick up my children. I was completely withdrawn from the world. I attempted suicide at one time – it’s torture for your soul, it really is.”

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