Zara McDermott star of Love Island and Made in Chelsea has recently confirmed that she is working closely with Refuge Charity to raise awareness of the Naked Threat Campaign which is calling for the Government to make threatening to share intimate images (revenge porn) a crime.
Zara herself experienced image based abuse during her time filming Love Island when intimate images of her were shared online without her permission. She has since used her social media platform to disclose the devastating impact this act of revenge porn had on her and to voice the need for change. Zara will also feature in an upcoming BBC documentary to discuss her experience of revenge porn.
The Naked Threat Campaign is backed by the Victims Commissioner and the Domestic Abuse Commissioner to urge the Government to use the Domestic Abuse Bill to make a simple legal change that would make a huge difference to everyday lives.
With ever changing technology, images can be uploaded and shared within seconds. Media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and WhatsApp are most popular in such quests with the ability to share images with millions of users in seconds. Disturbingly, these images are sometimes sent to the victim’s children, parents or employer and also frequently posted on pornographic sites which are then difficult to remove. We have seen many instances over the years in the media where celebrities’ phones have been hacked and storylines of such revenge porn have played out in British soap opera Coronation Street, dramas and films.
At this time, only the physical sharing of such images or films without consent in order to cause distress is a crime. This is described as “the sharing of private, sexual materials, either photos or videos, of another person without their consent and with the purpose of causing embarrassment or distress”. The offence covers images or videos showing people engaged in sexual activity which would not usually be done in public or with their genitals, buttocks or breasts exposed or covered only with underwear. It is an offence to share the material as well as posting it online. In England and Wales, the maximum punishment is two years in prison, but in Scotland, it is five years.