Tag: nude photo scandal
More Than Pictures Stolen In Celeb Phone-Hacking Case

More Than Pictures Stolen In Celeb Phone-Hacking Case

OK, so about the hacking of certain actresses’ computer files and the posting of nude photos found therein:

Can we be frank?

There is, within every healthy, heterosexual man, something which, upon viewing an attractive woman clad scantily or not at all, stands a little straighter, smiles a little brighter, and breathes a quiet “Yowza” of appreciation. This is true whether the man be piggish sexist or enlightened feminist. It is true whether he be plumber, pipefitter, professor, rabbi, imam or priest. It is rumored that it is even true of that ultimate paragon of moral rectitude, the newspaper columnist.

To argue otherwise is to argue against biology. And it has always seemed to me that if an adult woman of sound mind decides — without coercion and of her own volition — to trade on her sexuality in that way, it’s her call. Granted, some of us worry about objectifying women. But we should also be wary of infantilizing them. If some actress poses in the altogether for public consumption — and some guy enjoys it — I find it hard to define that as de facto sexism, so long as the choice was hers.

Which is precisely what’s wrong, creepy, slimy and profoundly distasteful about the hacking of those files and the posting of those pictures. Jennifer Lawrence didn’t make that choice. Nor did Kate Upton, Kirsten Dunst or any of the other women whose unclothed images were stolen by unknown hackers and splashed across the Internet on Labor Day weekend by celebrity gossip Perez Hilton (he’s since apologized) and two popular message boards.

Let no one argue the women never should have taken the photos in the first place or entrusted them to digital lockboxes. To do so would come perilously close to blaming the victim for her own misfortune, something with which women who were raped were once all too familiar. So let’s be clear: These women are not at fault. No, the blame lies with the sentient filth who raided their files.

There is an obvious argument to be made here about the shrinking of private spaces in a culture of invasion. And given that there’s no shortage of women who have made the choice to pose publicly naked and that those images are available for the price of a mouse click, it is doubly reprehensible that some fungi with legs would go after women who have made different choices — and that the rest of us would provide a market for their ill-gotten goods.

It’s as if we’re telling women that no matter what decisions they’ve made about who to be and how to present themselves in this world, we will impose our own decisions upon them.

It has been a good week or two for sexism. Besides this, you had Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) sharing prize comments she’s heard from male colleagues (“Don’t lose too much weight, now. I like my girls chubby”) and a mostly female panel on Fox “News” — where else? — defending the practice of catcalling. “Let men be men,” one said, as if to be a man is to be automatically crude and unalterably boorish.

Thankfully, in the midst of all these reasons to be disheartened, the Internet also coughed up a reminder to remain hopeful about the world we bequeath our girls. Google this picture if you haven’t seen it. It shows Yasiel Puig, outfielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers, with Mo’ne Davis, the 13-year-old pitcher who was the sensation of this year’s Little League World Series. The big-league ballplayer towers over the little girl as she autographs a baseball for him.

And why not? In 2014 a girl can be a ballplayer. Or a publisher. Or an astrophysicist. Or a cop. Or a stay-at-home mom. Or, yes, a sex symbol posed without clothes. The point is, she has the ability to choose who she will be. Or at least, she should.

After all, more than pictures were stolen here.

Leonard Pitts is a columnist for The Miami Herald, 1 Herald Plaza, Miami, Fla., 33132. Readers may contact him via email at lpitts@miamiherald.com.

AFP Photo/Kevin Winter

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Celebs Nix Nude Pix: Whose Problem?

Celebs Nix Nude Pix: Whose Problem?

The FBI is looking into what millions of people are looking at: hacked photos of naked celebrities. Pictures from the formerly private collections of Jennifer Lawrence, Scarlett Johansson, Christina Aguilera and others are being posted for the world to see.

We now hear that compromising pix of Kim Kardashian are also circulating. Shocking beyond words.

Cynicism alert: These and other stars habitually thrust titillating photos of themselves before our noses. Google their names, and you will find corporate-approved images that the cheesecake censors at the old tabloids would have rejected, albeit reluctantly.

Lena Dunham, creator of the hit show Girls, has gained renown for the fairly graphic scenes of her getting “it” from all directions. She also made a video for the Obama campaign likening first-time voting to first-time sex. Now she’s urging all good people not to peek at the unauthorized celebrity pix — to respect their privacy. Please say she’s kidding.

OK. Let’s put down the knitting and look at what’s happening as real crimes, despite their salacious label of “involuntary porn.” These photos have been stolen from phones, computers and online storage sites and posted on the Web, often with ads attached. For the record, the FBI has called such leaks an “unlawful release of material involving high-profile individuals.”

Now and then they catch someone. A man who hacked Johansson’s email pictures got 10 years in prison.

Justice served, but with all due respect to Johansson’s “right to privacy,” no mildly savvy citizen of the digital era puts stuff in email they absolutely don’t want to see flashing across Times Square.

If there’s any consolation, it’s that porn is so all over the Web that we’re approaching the point where one could turn herself inside out and no one would notice.

Back on topic, a very pregnant Aguilera did happily pose for a magazine in a see-through white dress, her nipples offered for public consumption. So the chief thrill for those wanting to see more of her may be in violating her professed wish for them not to see.

These incidents are not to be confused with the far uglier activity of “revenge porn.” The nastiest cases involve an ex-lover or spouse distributing sex pix following a bad breakup. There’s also the middle ground: guys distributing nude pictures of their ladies to draw attention to their beauty (or their manly conquest).

It’s been hard to make a legal case against someone sharing the very pictures that a lover sent him. Some argue, however, for more protection against bad judgment.

“It’s very easy to blame the victim,” Mitchell Matorin, an expert in Internet law, told Vox. “It’s very easy to write this off as stupid women or men taking pictures, and to slut shame them.”

We only mildly concerned citizens marvel that anyone, above public people, would be careless enough to keep digital images they wouldn’t want flashing in Times Square. And we have been accused of blaming the victim.

OK. Let’s not blame the victim. Let’s blame the phantom hackers stealing the pictures. Let’s blame the websites (Reddit, 4chan, Twitter) letting the creeps post this stuff anonymously. And how about the websites whose operators are themselves hidden — and who, in any case, are not legally responsible for what’s posted on them, thanks to the oddly named Communications Decency Act?

Let’s blame them. Now, does everyone feel better?

We shall end with some simple pointers: Unless you’re in the business, never exchange erotic photos with a significant other or any other other. And don’t store them digitally. In fact, don’t take them.

Follow Froma Harrop on Twitter @FromaHarrop. She can be reached at fharrop@gmail.com. To find out more about Froma Harrop and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Web page at www.creators.com.

AFP Photo/Mike Coppola