How to practice safe sexting Amy Adele Hasinoff

People have been using media
to talk about sex for a long time.

Love letters, phone sex, racy Polaroids.

There’s even a story of a girl who eloped
with a man that she met over the telegraph

in 1886.

Today we have sexting,
and I am a sexting expert.

Not an expert sexter.

Though, I do know what this means –
I think you do too.

[it’s a penis]

(Laughter)

I have been studying sexting since
the media attention to it began in 2008.

I wrote a book on the moral
panic about sexting.

And here’s what I found:

most people are worrying
about the wrong thing.

They’re trying to just prevent
sexting from happening entirely.

But let me ask you this:

As long as it’s completely consensual,
what’s the problem with sexting?

People are into all sorts of things
that you may not be into,

like blue cheese or cilantro.

(Laughter)

Sexting is certainly risky,
like anything that’s fun,

but as long as you’re not sending an image
to someone who doesn’t want to receive it,

there’s no harm.

What I do think is a serious problem

is when people share
private images of others

without their permission.

And instead of worrying about sexting,

what I think we need to do
is think a lot more about digital privacy.

The key is consent.

Right now most people
are thinking about sexting

without really thinking
about consent at all.

Did you know that we currently
criminalize teen sexting?

It can be a crime because
it counts as child pornography,

if there’s an image of someone under 18,

and it doesn’t even matter

if they took that image of themselves
and shared it willingly.

So we end up with this
bizarre legal situation

where two 17-year-olds
can legally have sex in most US states

but they can’t photograph it.

Some states have also tried
passing sexting misdemeanor laws

but these laws repeat the same problem

because they still
make consensual sexting illegal.

It doesn’t make sense

to try to ban all sexting
to try to address privacy violations.

This is kind of like saying,

let’s solve the problem of date rape
by just making dating completely illegal.

Most teens don’t get arrested for sexting,
but can you guess who does?

It’s often teens who are disliked
by their partner’s parents.

And this can be because of class bias,
racism or homophobia.

Most prosecutors are,
of course, smart enough

not to use child pornography charges
against teenagers, but some do.

According to researchers
at the University of New Hampshire

seven percent of all child pornography
possession arrests are teens,

sexting consensually with other teens.

Child pornography is a serious crime,

but it’s just not
the same thing as teen sexting.

Parents and educators
are also responding to sexting

without really thinking
too much about consent.

Their message to teens is often:
just don’t do it.

And I totally get it –
there are serious legal risks

and of course, that potential
for privacy violations.

And when you were a teen,

I’m sure you did exactly
as you were told, right?

You’re probably thinking,
my kid would never sext.

And that’s true, your little angel
may not be sexting

because only 33 percent

of 16- and 17-year-olds are sexting.

But, sorry, by the time they’re older,
odds are they will be sexting.

Every study I’ve seen puts the rate
above 50 percent for 18- to 24-year-olds.

And most of the time, nothing goes wrong.

People ask me all the time things like,
isn’t sexting just so dangerous, though?

It’s like you wouldn’t
leave your wallet on a park bench

and you expect it’s going to get stolen
if you do that, right?

Here’s how I think about it:

sexting is like leaving your wallet
at your boyfriend’s house.

If you come back the next day

and all the money is just gone,

you really need to dump that guy.

(Laughter)

So instead of criminalizing sexting

to try to prevent
these privacy violations,

instead we need to make consent central

to how we think about the circulation
of our private information.

Every new media technology
raises privacy concerns.

In fact, in the US the very first
major debates about privacy

were in response to technologies
that were relatively new at the time.

In the late 1800s,
people were worried about cameras,

which were just suddenly
more portable than ever before,

and newspaper gossip columns.

They were worried that the camera
would capture information about them,

take it out of context
and widely disseminate it.

Does this sound familiar?

It’s exactly what we’re worrying about
now with social media and drone cameras,

and, of course, sexting.

And these fears about technology,

they make sense

because technologies
can amplify and bring out

our worst qualities and behaviors.

But there are solutions.

And we’ve been here before
with a dangerous new technology.

In 1908, Ford introduced the Model T car.

Traffic fatality rates were rising.

It was a serious problem –
it looks so safe, right?

Our first response
was to try to change drivers' behavior,

so we developed speed limits
and enforced them through fines.

But over the following decades,

we started to realize the technology
of the car itself is not just neutral.

We could design the car to make it safer.

So in the 1920s, we got
shatter-resistant windshields.

In the 1950s, seat belts.

And in the 1990s, airbags.

All three of these areas:

laws, individuals and industry
came together over time

to help solve the problem
that a new technology causes.

And we can do the same thing
with digital privacy.

Of course, it comes back to consent.

Here’s the idea.

Before anyone can distribute
your private information,

they should have to get your permission.

This idea of affirmative consent
comes from anti-rape activists

who tell us that we need consent
for every sexual act.

And we have really high standards
for consent in a lot of other areas.

Think about having surgery.

Your doctor has to make sure

that you are meaningfully and knowingly
consenting to that medical procedure.

This is not the type of consent
like with an iTunes Terms of Service

where you just scroll to the bottom
and you’re like, agree, agree, whatever.

(Laughter)

If we think more about consent,
we can have better privacy laws.

Right now, we just don’t have
that many protections.

If your ex-husband or your ex-wife
is a terrible person,

they can take your nude photos
and upload them to a porn site.

It can be really hard
to get those images taken down.

And in a lot of states,

you’re actually better off
if you took the images of yourself

because then you can
file a copyright claim.

(Laughter)

Right now, if someone
violates your privacy,

whether that’s an individual
or a company or the NSA,

you can try filing a lawsuit,

though you may not be successful

because many courts assume
that digital privacy is just impossible.

So they’re not willing
to punish anyone for violating it.

I still hear people
asking me all the time,

isn’t a digital image somehow blurring
the line between public and private

because it’s digital, right?

No! No!

Everything digital
is not just automatically public.

That doesn’t make any sense.

As NYU legal scholar
Helen Nissenbaum tells us,

we have laws and policies and norms

that protect all kinds
of information that’s private,

and it doesn’t make a difference
if it’s digital or not.

All of your health records are digitized

but your doctor can’t
just share them with anyone.

All of your financial information
is held in digital databases,

but your credit card company can’t
just post your purchase history online.

Better laws could help address
privacy violations after they happen,

but one of the easiest things
we can all do is make personal changes

to help protect each other’s privacy.

We’re always told that privacy

is our own, sole,
individual responsibility.

We’re told, constantly monitor
and update your privacy settings.

We’re told, never share anything
you wouldn’t want the entire world to see.

This doesn’t make sense.

Digital media are social environments

and we share things
with people we trust all day, every day.

As Princeton researcher
Janet Vertesi argues,

our data and our privacy,
they’re not just personal,

they’re actually interpersonal.

And so one thing you can do
that’s really easy

is just start asking for permission before
you share anyone else’s information.

If you want to post a photo
of someone online, ask for permission.

If you want to forward an email thread,

ask for permission.

And if you want to share
someone’s nude selfie,

obviously, ask for permission.

These individual changes can really
help us protect each other’s privacy,

but we need technology companies
on board as well.

These companies have very little
incentive to help protect our privacy

because their business models
depend on us sharing everything

with as many people as possible.

Right now, if I send you an image,

you can forward that
to anyone that you want.

But what if I got to decide
if that image was forwardable or not?

This would tell you, you don’t
have my permission to send this image out.

We do this kind of thing all the time
to protect copyright.

If you buy an e-book, you can’t just
send it out to as many people as you want.

So why not try this with mobile phones?

What you can do is we can demand
that tech companies add these protections

to our devices and our platforms
as the default.

After all, you can choose
the color of your car,

but the airbags are always standard.

If we don’t think more
about digital privacy and consent,

there can be serious consequences.

There was a teenager from Ohio –

let’s call her Jennifer,
for the sake of her privacy.

She shared nude photos of herself
with her high school boyfriend,

thinking she could trust him.

Unfortunately, he betrayed her

and sent her photos
around the entire school.

Jennifer was embarrassed and humiliated,

but instead of being compassionate,
her classmates harassed her.

They called her a slut and a whore

and they made her life miserable.

Jennifer started missing school
and her grades dropped.

Ultimately, Jennifer decided
to end her own life.

Jennifer did nothing wrong.

All she did was share a nude photo

with someone she thought
that she could trust.

And yet our laws tell her

that she committed a horrible crime
equivalent to child pornography.

Our gender norms tell her

that by producing
this nude image of herself,

she somehow did the most
horrible, shameful thing.

And when we assume that privacy
is impossible in digital media,

we completely write off and excuse
her boyfriend’s bad, bad behavior.

People are still saying all the time
to victims of privacy violations,

“What were you thinking?

You should have never sent that image.”

If you’re trying to figure out
what to say instead, try this.

Imagine you’ve run into your friend
who broke their leg skiing.

They took a risk to do something fun,
and it didn’t end well.

But you’re probably
not going to be the jerk who says,

“Well, I guess you shouldn’t
have gone skiing then.”

If we think more about consent,

we can see that victims
of privacy violations

deserve our compassion,

not criminalization, shaming,
harassment or punishment.

We can support victims,
and we can prevent some privacy violations

by making these legal,
individual and technological changes.

Because the problem is not sexting,
the issue is digital privacy.

And one solution is consent.

So the next time a victim
of a privacy violation comes up to you,

instead of blaming them,
let’s do this instead:

let’s shift our ideas
about digital privacy,

and let’s respond with compassion.

Thank you.

(Applause)

长期以来,人们一直在使用
媒体谈论性。

情书,电话性爱,活泼的宝丽来。

甚至还有
一个女孩与 1886 年在电报上认识的男人私奔的故事

今天我们有色情短信
,我是色情短信专家。

不是专家性交。

不过,我确实知道这意味着什么——
我想你也知道。

[这是一个阴茎]

(笑声)

自从 2008 年媒体开始关注色情短信以来,我一直在研究色情短信

我写了一本关于色情短信的道德恐慌的书

这就是我的发现:

大多数人都在
担心错误的事情。

他们正试图
完全阻止色情短信的发生。

但是让我问你这个:

只要是完全自愿的,发
短信有什么问题?

人们喜欢各种
你可能不喜欢的东西,

比如蓝纹奶酪或香菜。

(笑声)

色情短信当然是有风险的,
就像任何有趣的事情一样,

但只要你不把图片
发送给不想接收它的人,

就没有坏处。

我认为一个严重的问题

是当人们未经许可分享
他人的私人图像时

而不是担心发短信,

我认为我们需要做的
是更多地考虑数字隐私。

关键是同意。

现在,大多数人
都在考虑发短信

而根本没有真正考虑
过同意。

您知道我们目前
将青少年色情内容定为犯罪吗?

这可能是一种犯罪,因为
它被视为儿童色情,

如果有 18 岁以下的人的图像,

他们是否拍摄了自己的图像
并自愿分享都无关紧要。

所以我们最终会遇到这种
奇怪的法律情况

,两个 17 岁的年轻人
可以在美国大多数州合法地发生性关系,

但他们不能拍照。

一些州也尝试
通过色情短信轻罪法,

但这些法律重复了同样的问题,

因为它们仍然
使双方同意的色情短信非法。

试图禁止所有色情短信
以解决侵犯隐私的问题是没有意义的。

这有点像说,

让我们
通过让约会完全非法来解决约会强奸的问题。

大多数青少年不会因为发短信而被捕,
但你能猜出谁会吗?

通常是青少年不喜欢
伴侣的父母。

这可能是因为阶级偏见、
种族主义或同性恋恐惧症。 当然

,大多数检察官都
足够聪明,

不会对青少年使用儿童色情指控
,但有些人会这样做。

根据
新罕布什尔大学的研究人员的说法,在

所有儿童色情制品
逮捕中,有 7% 是青少年,他们

自愿与其他青少年发生性关系。

儿童色情是一种严重的犯罪,


它与青少年色情内容不同。

父母和教育工作者
也在对色情短信做出回应,

而没有真正考虑
太多同意。

他们向青少年传达的信息通常是
:不要这样做。

我完全明白——
存在严重的法律风险

,当然还有
侵犯隐私的可能性。

当你还是个青少年的时候,

我敢肯定你完全
按照你被告知的那样去做,对吧?

你可能在想,
我的孩子永远不会发短信。

这是真的,你的小天使
可能不会发短信,

因为只有 33%

的 16 岁和 17 岁的孩子在发短信。

但是,对不起,当他们长大的时候,他们很
可能会发短信。

我看到的每项研究都表明
18 至 24 岁的人的比率高于 50%。

大多数时候,没有任何问题。

人们总是问我,
发短信不是很危险吗?

就好像你不会
把钱包放在公园的长椅上,

而且你希望这样做会被偷走
,对吧?

我是这样想的:发

短信就像把钱包留
在男朋友家一样。

如果你第二天回来

,所有的钱都花光了,

你真的需要甩掉那个人。

(笑声)

因此,与其将色情短信定为犯罪

以试图阻止
这些侵犯隐私的行为,

相反,我们需要让同意

成为我们思考
私人信息流通的核心。

每一项新媒体技术
都会引发隐私问题。

事实上,在美国,最初
关于隐私的主要辩论


针对当时相对较新的技术。

在 1800 年代后期
,人们担心

突然
比以往任何时候都更便携的相机

和报纸八卦专栏。

他们担心相机
会捕捉到关于他们的信息,

将其断章取意
并广泛传播。

这听起来很熟悉吗?

这正是我们现在担心
的社交媒体和无人机摄像头

,当然还有色情短信。

这些对技术的恐惧是

有道理的,

因为技术
可以放大和展现

我们最糟糕的品质和行为。

但是有解决方案。

我们以前曾
带着危险的新技术来过这里。

1908年,福特推出了T型车。

交通事故死亡率在上升。

这是一个严重的问题——
它看起来很安全,对吧?

我们的第一反应
是试图改变司机的行为,

所以我们制定了限速
并通过罚款来强制执行。

但在接下来的几十年里,

我们开始意识到
汽车本身的技术不仅仅是中性的。

我们可以设计汽车以使其更安全。

所以在 1920 年代,我们有了
防碎挡风玻璃。

1950年代,安全带。

而在 1990 年代,安全气囊。

所有这三个领域:

法律、个人和行业
随着时间的推移而聚集在一起,

以帮助
解决新技术引起的问题。

我们可以对数字隐私做同样的事情

当然,它回到同意。

这是想法。

在任何人可以分发
您的私人信息之前,

他们必须获得您的许可。

这种肯定同意的想法
来自反强奸活动家

,他们告诉我们,
每一次性行为都需要得到同意。

我们
在许多其他领域的同意标准非常高。

考虑做手术。

您的医生必须

确保您在有意义且知情的情况下
同意该医疗程序。

这不是
像 iTunes 服务条款那样的同意类型

,您只需滚动到底部
,您就会喜欢、同意、同意等等。

(笑声)

如果我们更多地考虑同意,
我们可以制定更好的隐私法。

现在,我们只是没有
那么多的保护措施。

如果你的前夫或前妻
是个可怕的人,

他们可以拍下你的裸照
并上传到色情网站。

把这些照片拿下来真的很难。

在很多州,

如果你拍了自己的照片,你实际上会更好,

因为这样你就可以
提出版权索赔。

(笑声)

现在,如果有人
侵犯了你的隐私,

无论是个人
、公司还是国家安全局,

你都可以尝试提起诉讼,

尽管你可能不会成功,

因为许多法院
认为数字隐私是不可能的。

所以他们
不愿意惩罚任何违反它的人。

我仍然听到人们
一直在问我,

数字图像难道不是因为它是数字的,就在某种程度上模糊
了公共和私人之间的界限

,对吧?

不! 不!

一切数字化的东西
不仅仅是自动公开的。

这没有任何意义。

正如纽约大学法律学者
Helen Nissenbaum 告诉我们的那样,

我们有

保护
各种隐私信息的法律、政策

和规范,无论它
是否是数字化信息都没有什么区别。

您的所有健康记录都已数字化,

但您的医生不能
只与任何人共享它们。

您的所有财务信息
都保存在数字数据库中,

但您的信用卡公司不能
只在线发布您的购买历史记录。

更好的法律可以帮助解决
侵犯隐私的行为,

但我们能做的最简单的事情之一
就是进行个人更改

以帮助保护彼此的隐私。

我们总是被告知,隐私

是我们自己的、唯一的、
个人的责任。

我们被告知,不断监控
和更新您的隐私设置。

我们被告知,永远不要分享任何
你不想让全世界看到的东西。

这没有意义。

数字媒体是社交环境

,我们每天都与我们信任的人分享东西。

正如普林斯顿大学研究员
Janet Vertesi 所说,

我们的数据和隐私
不仅是个人的,

它们实际上是人际关系的。

所以你可以
做的一件非常简单的事情

就是在
你分享其他人的信息之前开始征求许可。

如果您想在网上发布某人的
照片,请征得许可。

如果您想转发电子邮件线程,

请请求许可。

如果你想分享
某人的裸照,

显然要征求许可。

这些单独的更改确实可以
帮助我们保护彼此的隐私,

但我们也需要技术
公司。

这些公司几乎没有
动力帮助保护我们的隐私,

因为他们的商业模式
依赖于我们

与尽可能多的人分享一切。

现在,如果我向您发送图像,

您可以将其转发
给您想要的任何人。

但是,如果我必须决定
该图像是否可转发呢?

这会告诉你,你
没有我的许可发送这张图片。

我们一直在做这种事情
来保护版权。

如果您购买电子书,您不能
随心所欲地发送给尽可能多的人。

那么为什么不用手机试试呢?

您可以做的是,我们可以
要求科技公司将这些保护添加

到我们的设备和平台中
作为默认设置。

毕竟,您可以选择
汽车的颜色,

但安全气囊始终是标准配置。

如果我们不更多地
考虑数字隐私和同意,

可能会产生严重后果。

有一个来自俄亥俄州的少年——为了她的隐私

,我们就叫她詹妮弗吧

她与高中男友分享了自己的裸照

认为她可以信任他。

不幸的是,他背叛了她

,把她的照片
传遍了整个学校。

詹妮弗感到尴尬和羞辱,

但她的同学非但没有同情,反而
骚扰她。

他们称她为荡妇和妓女

,他们让她的生活变得悲惨。

詹妮弗开始失学
,她的成绩下降了。

最终,詹妮弗
决定结束自己的生命。

詹妮弗没有做错任何事。

她所做的只是


她认为可以信任的人分享一张裸照。

然而我们的法律却告诉她

,她犯下了
相当于儿童色情制品的可怕罪行。

我们的性别规范告诉她

,通过制作
她自己的裸体形象,

她以某种方式做了最
可怕、最可耻的事情。

而当我们假设
在数字媒体中隐私是不可能的,

我们完全注销并原谅
她男朋友的不良行为。

人们仍然一直在
对侵犯隐私的受害者说,

“你在想什么?

你不应该发送那个图像。”

如果你想
弄清楚该说什么,试试这个。

想象一下,您遇到了
摔断腿滑雪的朋友。

他们冒险去做一些有趣的事情
,但结果并不好。

但你可能
不会是那个说

“好吧,我猜你
当时不应该去滑雪”的混蛋。

如果我们更多地考虑同意,

我们可以看到
侵犯隐私的受害者

应该得到我们的同情,

而不是刑事定罪、羞辱、
骚扰或惩罚。

我们可以支持受害者
,我们可以

通过进行这些合法的、
个人的和技术上的改变来防止一些侵犯隐私的行为。

因为问题不在于发短信,
所以问题在于数字隐私。

一种解决方案是同意。

因此,下次当
隐私侵犯的受害者出现在您

面前时,与其责备他们,不如
让我们这样做:

让我们转变
对数字隐私的看法

,让我们以同情的态度回应。

谢谢你。

(掌声)