The Internet can be a hostile and hateful place, especially for women, girls, racial and ethnic minorities, the LGBTIQ+ collective and other marginalized communities, who are more likely to abuse their online images.
These sexual abuses include the unseee -consistent exchange of intimate images (also known as "pornnganza", a registered term that suggests that a surviving person deserved a remuneration or gave his consent to do pornography), Deepfakes (image manipulation using artificial intelligenceor automatic learning) and Upskirting (take unseeled images below a skirt or dress).
All of them are forms of digital violence, which are frequent, repetitive, perpetual and generalized.The consequences of these violations of privacy, dignity, autonomy and rights of people are devastating.
That there is no doubt, even when this violence is committed in the virtual world, fear, anxiety, loss of self -esteem and the feeling of impotence are very real and lasting.
Misoginia and digital violence are a generalized violation of human rights, but technological companies and political leaders give more value and protection of copyright than to the rights of human beings on the Internet.
Those who violate copyright face legal sanctions and the rapid withdrawal of content by digital platforms;People who survive digital violence, meanwhile, face barriers and have few legal rights.
Therefore, the UNFPA lays Bodyright, a new copyright for the human body.It requires that the images of our bodies receive the same respect and online protection as the copyright that are given to music, films and even corporate logos.
Reclama tu bodyright… y acabemos con la violencia digital.