About this nude celebrity photos in the cloud being stolen business: I think, given the ubiquity of youthful ownership of phones with cameras, that it's probably a fair assumption in the West that about 95% of males under 25 are already the subject of a nude picture (either of all of their body or part of it), and about 70% of females. (The other gender difference being that, for men, the majority are likely self taken, but for women, more are taken by their boyfriend.) It's become so rampant that it may as well be incorporated into some sort of coming of age ritual. Perhaps at 21, everyone could have a nude shot of their choice (personality dictating how rude the choice actually is) loaded up to the national iNude service, with access available to anyone for a modest (ha! pun) fee - perhaps $1 per view, with nearly all of that going to the photo subject. Of course, how to deal with those who then save and spread the pic to others for free is something I'm not sure how to deal with - I see that the Snapchat self erasing idea is pretty easy to evade. But if we believe libertarians, if you make the cost of legitimate access cheap enough, people won't pirate. (A likely story...)
Anyway, the point of the exercise is that if society is based on an assumption that everyone can or will be legitimately viewed nude, celebrities can stop fretting so much about their secret nude photos being stolen. I guess that's assuming the photo they are worried about is a mere nude one. If it is one involving sexual activity that they did not want taken or realised - well, the fact that you were already available nude on line might make the unfairness of further intimate releases so much clearer that they are less likely to be clicked on. (And civil action against the person who released them more justified.)
As the title says, just trying to be helpful...
2 comments:
Sorry Dave, language violation....
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