Unsolicited nudes detected and deleted by AI
Software that can detect and delete unsolicited penis pictures sent via private messages on Twitter is being developed by researchers in Seattle. The project was started after developer Kelsey Bressler was sent an unsolicited nude photo by a man. She is now helping a friend refine an artificial intelligence system that can detect the unwanted penis pictures and delete them before they are ever seen.
She said social networks could do more to protect users from cyber-flashing. "When you receive a photo unsolicited it feels disrespectful and violating," Ms Bressler told the BBC. "It's the virtual equivalent of flashing someone in the street. You're not giving them a chance to consent, you are forcing the image on them, and that is never OK."
To test and train the artificial intelligence system, Ms Bressler and her team set up a Twitter inbox where men were invited to "send nudes for science". So many volunteered their nude photos that the team has had to close the inbox.
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(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 09 2019, @04:15AM (3 children)
That's not relevant. Expression is still expression even without the intent to convey a specific message. You can do it without thinking too much about it, even though it's a way to express yourself. Or are you saying the government should literally have the power to determine what clothes you do or don't wear?
The alternative is allowing the government to ban whatever it pleases if it decides you just didn't have quite enough intent to express yourself. That just ends up with authoritarians judges deciding that whatever they deem offensive isn't covered by the first amendment (aka "I know it when I see it."), all while pretending that their profoundly subjective standards are actually objective.
So yes, the first amendment is quite broad. It can cover movies, plays, video games, porn, clothing choices, etc. But, it still doesn't cover acts that directly harm someone in a physical way.
This is especially disingenuous, since you're directly harming someone in a physical way. Making a movie is covered by the first amendment even by your own standards, but if you went around raping and murdering people while filming the movie, those actions wouldn't be protected by it. So, you know these example are absurd.
And? Getting an abortion is a fundamental right, but for bodily autonomy reasons. It should in no way be restricted.
The ones that don't involve directly harming others, sure.
The "balance" is the Constitution. Other people don't have a right to not be offended. Dick pics and someone walking around naked don't violate anyone's rights, so even under this incredibly vague (What 'balance'?) standard, they wouldn't be forbidden.
Ah, yes, the wise, wise courts that upheld Japanese internment camps, obscenity laws, the ever-expanding and all-powerful interpretation of the commerce clause used to justify the federal war on drugs, and other blatantly unconstitutional nonsense. Let's turn to them for guidance.
I mean, what the courts decide is relevant in practice, but we need to recognize that they are often wrong. And, when they are wrong, they need to be brought to heel by The People by voting in presidents and other politicians who will replace them with judges who will actually respect the Constitution.
(Score: 2) by Pino P on Monday September 09 2019, @01:17PM (2 children)
An abortion is an act that directly harms the child in a physical way.
A woman has two opportunities to exercise her bodily autonomy: first when consenting to or refusing sexual contact, and second between the first two missed periods. At some point, not directly harming the child in a physical way outweighs her bodily autonomy. This point happens somewhere between 8 weeks, when it looks more like a child than like a well-formed teratoma, and 25 weeks, when the brain shows organized waves. After 25 weeks, the child is no longer clinically brain dead, and a caesarean delivery has less chance of harming the two than an abortion.
I doubt the courts will reverse abuse of war powers, obscenity, and the commerce clause, as long as the TV news media on both sides of the aisle prevent someone who could bring about real change from gaining national name recognition.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 09 2019, @10:10PM (1 child)
Even if you think that the unborn have human rights, there is no human right to use or borrow someone else's organs, even to keep yourself alive. Therefore, women can terminate the pregnancy whenever they please, because the fetus has no right to be there. We can't force people to donate blood, organs, or anything else, so why would anyone think that government thugs should have the power to force women to remain pregnant? There is zero precedent for such a right.
And no, it doesn't matter why the woman became pregnant. Again, the only consideration is whether or not people have a human right to use other people's organs. They don't, so terminating the pregnancy is simple body autonomy. Forced birthers are trying to invent rights that do not exist in any other situation.
As long as she can terminate the pregnancy.
Yes, it will be hard to overturn these, but it's still important to take action against further rights violations.
(Score: 2) by dry on Tuesday September 10 2019, @05:49AM
Here, where there are no abortion laws, there are still limits when you can't find a Dr to do an abortion, not to mention hospital and clinic guidelines.