CYBER CRIME AGAINST WOMEN BY DEBARATI HALDER
https://youtu.be/c4mtQsV9iUg
BEING A VICTIM OF CYBER CRIME COULD BE MOST TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCE FOR A WOMAN.WHY DOES IT HAPPEN?HOW DOES IT HAPPEN? WHO DOES IT? WHAT ARE THE PENAL LAWS? HOW TO MAKE USE OF THESE LAWS? THIS BLOG WILL SERVE THE PURPOSE TO SPREAD AWARENESS REGARDING THE ISSUE.PLEASE NOTE THAT EVERY ARTICLE OR COMMENT MADE HEREIN IS COPYRIGHTED AND THEREFORE, REMAINS THE PROPERTY OF ADVOCATE DEBARATI HALDER.
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
Saturday, June 2, 2018
Judges, cops and civil servants: Can they have Social media friends in reality?
CYBER CRIME AGAINST WOMEN BY DEBARATI HALDER
Image courtesy: Internet
In the fag
end of May, 2018, news channels flashed the story of Major Nitin Leetul Gogoi,
the army man who is hero to some and villain to some because of his
controversial act of tying a Kashmiri man to a jeep using him as a human shield
against the stone –pelters who were targeting army actions in Kashmir last
year. He became (in)famous to many because the clippings of his controversial
act became viral on the web. He grabbed the headlines again this month because
of his controversial Facebook friendship with a Kashmiri woman who, the media
says was trying to check in with the
Major and another person in a local hotel in Kashmir. It was reported that the
said woman had claimed that she knew the Major through Facebook and his account
was not in his real name. We know that social media including Facebook is used
for secret surveillance by the government agencies and it has positive and
negative aspects as well. Fake accounts are used by the police to detect and
trap criminals including paedophiles, fraudsters and even terrorists.
But
here, I am not actually concerned about pattern of use of social media by the
government officials. I am concerned about professional ethics of certain categories
of government servants who may not be allowed to befriend common people like
what social media offers. This category may include judges belonging to higher
and lower judiciary, government officials belonging to certain all India
services including group A and B of central services etc.
Let me
explain it broadly here:
Since
ancient times judges are considered to be of high moral and judiciary is
considered to be “an institution of integrity”. Several judgements including
K.P.Singh vs. High Court of H.P. &ors,[1]
High Court of Judicature for Rajasthan vs. Ramesh Chand Paliwal,[2]
Tarak Singh vs. Jyoti Basu,[3]
etc had established the fact that judges are expected to be like hermit, they should be honest and should
“adhere to a code of moral value”.[4]
In short, they should be inapproachable personally but approachable as an institution to
be impartial. What does this mean? Judges cannot be on par with general
individuals who may approach the institution of justice, i.e., the courts for
seeking justice. They should not make themselves individually or privately
approachable so that the possible litigants, who may approach their courts, may not influence him. It is the
principle of fair justice which to a
large extent governs the code of conduct of judges. But we need to remember
that in this era of social media, any individual can hardly be out of the net . While it is still expected that
judges should not make themselves privately approachable, I myself have loads
of Facebook friends who are in the judiciary. They share opinions, their
personal photos with their chosen friends just like any other individual. But
yes, their circle of friends may not be as big as any other common social media
user. Many of them are directly connected with the Facebook pages of District
legal services authorities, which not only spread awareness about legal rights,
but also showcase performances of the particular government offices. However, I do not have Facebook friends from
higher judiciary, but nonetheless, many of “Their Lordships” may be easily approachable because of digital messaging services like WhatsApp,
which may be used to create ‘groups’ as well.[5]
World wide this has become a cause of concern now; it has been suggested by
many that judges while in service, should try to avoid social media as this may
pull them in unnecessary trouble and make floodgates open for questioning their
integrity.[6]
But again, we can neither ignore the strong (social media) presence of judges
like Justice Markendey Katzu, former Supreme Court judge who had courted
controversy because of his blog posts, social media posts for strong criticism
of court decisions.[7]
Doesn’t this show that he may still be considered as falling in the ‘restricted
netizen’ category even as a retired judge? Probably yes because he may never be seen as a general individual who may
criticise judges and their judicial understanding of cases by virtue of his
being a judge himself who is expected to not to lower the respect the
judiciary; probably no, because he
may still use his right to speech and expression to express his displeasure for
the judgements which according to him, are not fare. But still then, he could
not be equal to general individuals: the court questioned his act towards
publishing post in social media criticising court’s decision in crucial cases
like the final verdict of the sensational case of Soumya, who was killed by her
rapist.
High level civil servants including
bureaucrats, officers of Indian Police Services etc have a high presence in the
social media too. Most of their accounts may be private accounts. But there are
several pages of their offices which may be made by their respective offices.
This actually shows that even though the government and the courts continue to
question data policy of social media companies like Facebook or Twitter, these
social media sites are very much involved in government outreach mechanisms:
for example, see the websites of certain city police offices/headquarters; all
may show their Facebook presence. http://ahmedabadcitypolice.org/, https://www.bcp.gov.in/ ,
http://www.tnpolice.gov.in/CCTNSNICSDC/Index?0 ; all may have their Facebook and
twitter pages where individuals may access for information and even to reach
out concerned police offices for immediate lodging of complaints. But private
accounts of IAS or IPS officers are not connected with these pages. This means
that they have a separate private presence in the social media. Their friends,
their posts and their photographs are their private affairs just like any other
general individual who may use social media sites for reaching out to friends. But
still, they may not be out of surveillance for their conduct in their private
social media accounts. Their children may also be held accountable for sharing
parents’ pictures which may raise questions about their integrity: erstwhile
J&K DIG Beig invited hoards of controversy when his son posted certain
pictures of his dad which raised media
storm because the posts suggested that Beig was abusing power.[8]
Even though the son removed the posts, the pictures and hashtags were made
viral and they are still available on internet.
It may actually mean that these officers may not have a private life
even in social media. Gogoi in the same way, may also not have that privacy
even if he may claim that he and the woman in question personally knew each
other and this friendship was neither professional, nor was an abuse of power
for harassing the girl offline or online.
In
short, why such friendships between officers and civilians, their online
presence and activities may raise questions at all? Misuse of power to harass
and exploit civilians especially women could be one primary reason for such
enthusiasm. But in case the friendships are genuine, posts by the officials reflect
their personal and independent opinions and photographs shared in their social
media sites are personal memoire , why they should be targeted and who makes
these posts (in)famous for public and media? It is those ‘friends’ who may
knowingly or unknowingly feed the enthusiastic ‘third persons’ by sharing
/showing the private posts that may appear in their time line feeds. Remember
Merin Joseph, the young IPS officer from Kerala who being a police officer
herself, could not remain safe online? She had to encounter fake profiles with
her picture, trolls and misogynist posts even though she was sharing some posts
as a private person and not as an on duty officer. Trolls attacked her posts and albums, some of which were not for
public viewing. Privacy may be myth for these public servants especially
when they are active in their
private social media accounts. Compared
to 1990’s public servants have become more accountable now because of their web
presence. After each UPSC result declarations, the social media accounts of
successful candidates may immediately come into lime light. It works positively
because their conduct becomes more transparent to public; it works negatively
because they may slowly lose privacy being within the private social media
account. The very much private persons
suddenly come under lime light as not only the common people , but also the
media starts data mining to know them
more than what is expected to be known. One name which comes in my mind right
now is of Sandeep Nanduri, IAS, who is presently the District magistrate and collector
of Tuticorin district. He had taken over as DM and collector Tutircorin at a
very crucial time when the district was having agitation over Sterlite copper
industries plant closure issue. Nanduri’s Facebook account may reveal his activities
as a government official as well as a private individual. This may further mean
that not only he himself, but his wife may also be targeted by trolls, stalkers
and miscreants who may wish to approach him.
Untill
now there is no clear-cut code of conduct framed for restricting judges and
grade A and B officers of central government or even state government services from
using social media (except for certain
issues like restriction from spreading hatred, criticising the government in
certain key issues, leaking confidential data etc) and befriending common people. They however may have to rely
on the social media policies for data protection. But again, in such cases,
they may be held responsible for choosing their virtual friends. We should not
forget that there are instances of honey
trapping of government officials by ISI secret services; this may however show
that privacy of the government officials may easily be breached if they
themselves are not vigilant enough for their social media ‘friends’. There are
clearly two arguments which may made in this regard: (i) such government
servants may be completely barred from making themselves available to ‘public’
through their private social media
accounts , (ii) being part of digital India movement they must be
approachable to people through social media as well. However, considering the
privacy and security aspects, I feel it is high time that government makes a clear
policy as how they should be protected from predators and how they
should conduct even when they are ‘privately
public’.
Please
Note: Do not violate copyright of this blog. If you would like to use
informations provided in this blog for your own
assignment/writeup/project/blog/article, please cite it as “Halder D. (2018),
“Judges, cops and civil servants: Can they have Social media
friends in reality?”3rd June, 2018, published in http://debaraticyberspace.blogspot.com
[1]
LPA No. 163 of 2009
[3]
(2005)1 SCC 201
[5]
For example, see Maniar Gopi (2017),Vadodara:
Gujarat HC slams VMC commissioner for sending WhatsApp message to judge.
Published in India today on Semptember 8, 2017 https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/vadodara-gujarat-hc-vmc-commissioner-whatsapp-message-judge-1040341-2017-09-08
[6]
For better understanding, see Singh
Shaziah (2016), FRIEND REQUEST DENIED: JUDICIAL ETHICS AND SOCIAL MEDIA,
Published in Journal of Law, Technology & the Internet · Vol. 7 · 2016.
Accessed from https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1099&context=jolti
on 25.05.2018
[7]
For more understanding, see Vaidyanathan.A
(2017), Justice Markandey Katju Submits Apology In Supreme Court Over Post
Criticising Soumya Verdict, published in https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/justice-markandey-katju-apologises-to-supreme-court-over-post-criticising-soumya-verdict-1645845
on 06-01-2017. Accssed on 25-05-2018
,.
[8]
For example, see Bashaarat
Masood (2014),J&K DIG’s son posts photos of ‘Dad & I’ enjoying perks of
power, published in
http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/jk-digs-son-posts-photos-of-dad-i-enjoying-perks-of-power/
on Octiober 29,2014. Accessed on 25.05.2018
Tuesday, March 27, 2018
Making pregnancy vlog? Beware! You may be feeding the porn consumers
CYBER CRIME AGAINST WOMEN BY DEBARATI HALDER
Often it is told that womanhood comes to full circle when a
woman becomes a mother. Being a mother either
biologically or by way of adoption is indeed a unique experience because it not
only gives the joy of nurturing another life, it may make the woman more
responsible in every sense. For every
woman the phases of motherhood bring special moments. For some, these phases
may start right from the day of conceiving, for some it may start when she
decides to adopt a baby, for some it may start right from the moment of the
birth of the baby. In this digital era many couples (especially women) like to
capture the moments of motherhood by making digital photo albums or vlogs . In
India this phenomena is rapidly catching up. Pregnancy photo shoots, baby
birthing photos and videos, new born photo shoots etc are trending now a days. YouTube and Instagram are chosen platforms to upload
such videos or images. YouTube especially provides wonderful opportunity to easy creation
of amateur vlogs. YouTube users may also use specific tags for listing the
video with certain steams like pregnancy and child birth, medical learning,
fitness during pregnancy, know hows of
child births and neo natal care by new parents etc. Many of such users love to
share such vlogs or images (through other social media platforms and digital
messaging apps ) with their virtual friends and groups. I personally have come
across several of such videos and images which may have been as old as 2, 3 or
even 5 years.
But they may not bring back the good old
memories always. Pregnancy and child birthing videos and images are hugely
consumed by porn industry consumers as well. Several researches on pornography including
non-consensual and revenge porn have shown existence and growth of different sorts of porn contents which may include
black porn, older women porn, nude porn, voyeur, amateur porn, big belly porn
and preggo porn. The last one, i.e. preggo porn is actually made with women
showing different types of pregnant belly formation, sloth movement of pregnant
women with huge belly, (supposedly) movement of the baby within the belly and
the corresponding gasping or painful twitching of the body of the pregnant
woman and necessarily the breasts which may be half covered. These contents are
made by porn actors who may or may not be pregnant in real life. Generally these porn
actors may be clad in under wears right from the beginning of the video to give
an impression of real life birthing scenes. Several videos may also show women
slowly removing dresses: such videos may actually give impression that the
woman suddenly developed labour pain at home or at some place other than the
hospitals. All such videos may have similar tag lines like the original
pregnancy and birthing videos, i.e., pregnancy, child birth. The ancillary tag
line could be ‘fake’ or ‘prank’ or ‘sexy preggo’. As such, these taglines may
also pull the real pregnancy and birthing videos in the pool of sexually
consumable contents.
Getting sexual
gratification from the birthing scenes and scenes of labour pain is indeed a
sign of perversion. But what is more disheartening
is how the porn industry has grown preggo porn stream on the basis of this
perversion. If one notices the comment sections of such videos, one may see
that the woman in the video may be asked to act more accurately in the next
video, the woman may also be asked to
make videos with different pregnancy postures and sounds of pain which may
create more erotica. The producers and actors of these videos may earn a good
profit depending upon their presentation and ‘perfect’ acting. Unfortunately
the real pregnancy vlogs may also be consumed with equal ‘interest’. The new
mother may get trolled in the comment
section for her belly shape or for taking too much time to make the ‘birthing
sounds’ or ‘labour pain’ moments which may be sexually gratifying for the ‘consumers’
of the videos. Some may even get trolled for ‘wasting time’ of the viewer. Often
the creators of genuine vlogs may not get time to look into the comments which
may be extremely disturbing for any new mother. Even if the creator would have
disabled the comments, the links of the videos may still be shared with a
malicious object to consume it as porn.
While the ‘victims’ may
definitely take the matter to the websites for removing the offensive posts or
to the police and courts for taking
action against the comment maker for making obscene, sexually explicit or misogynist or (as it may happen in several cases) racist and hate comments,
the website, the police and courts and above all, the families may find hard to
prevent themselves from ‘victim blaming’ for uploading ‘those private moments’
for ‘public viewing. In remote possibility, the content may even be considered
as non-consensual porn (but not revenge porn) in case the police and the courts
decide to book the perpetrators who may have made obscene, sexually explicit or
misogynist or racist and hate comments
or who may have shared the video as porn content to others either for unethical gain or just
for the sake of sharing ‘another porn content’. The legal provisions for voyeurism
may also be applied in this regard along with provisions for making word etc
for harming the modesty of women, inappropriate representation of woman
concerned etc. But the new mother may not be saved from acute trauma and
depression which may arise from this.
Pregnancy vlogs may be
considered as unique examples of rights to expression which should not be
violated at any cost. But again, we as responsible society must work together
to prevent such wonderful moments to be destroyed by perverts and perpetrators.
Please Note: Do not violate copyright of this blog. If you would like to
use informations provided in this blog for your own
assignment/writeup/project/blog/article, please cite it as “Halder D. (2018), “Making pregnancy vlog? Beware! You may be feeding the porn consumers” 27th March, 2018, published in
http://debaraticyberspace.blogspot.com/
Saturday, February 10, 2018
Right to Love on social media on Valentine’s Day
CYBER CRIME AGAINST WOMEN BY DEBARATI HALDER
Image curtsy: Google
Come Valentine’s Day and social media and digital messaging
services like WhasApp or Snapchat are flooded by beautiful heartwarming
messages, pictures and emogies. Nonetheless, Facebook, Instagram , Whatsapp
YouTube and also some adult networking sites may see more contributions of nude
videos, revenge porn, fake avatars
as well by jilted lovers. The other type of messages that one may get to see in
these platforms are those from moral
policing groups asking people to refrain from ‘celebrating Valentine’s day’
in Facebook, Twitter and other social
media . Such message can be ‘shared messages’, can be opinions or even can be
clear threats to ‘whoever’
‘celebrates ‘Valentine’s day’.
The question is, do we have something called Right to love? Can this right be
considered to be violated if someone
posts messages against celebration of Valentine’s day ? Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) does not specifically speak about right to love, but it flows from Article 16 (Right to marriage and family) and
Article 19 (freedom of opinion and expression). All most all countries with modern
constitution including India, UK, Singapore, US, Canada, Australia, countries
from European union including Germany, France, Spain etc do
recognize the right to choose and
communicate with dating partner,
live-in partner , same sex partners and heterosexual partners for emotional
bondage including marriage because these
countries recognize right to express opinion, freedom of speech and expression and also
right to marriage and family. While right to form family by way of live-in
relationships or homosexual
partnerships have been recognized
by several countries by way of
legitimizing the rights of children born
out of such union or adopted in such
marriages, some countries may not
recognize Live-in relationships or same sex marriages in real life .
But right to chose
emotional partners and right to communicate
to the same on cyber space are not barred by any law. For example, even when
Indian Supreme court did not apply doctrine of severability to S.377 todecriminalize same sex union and consider the rights of transgender people to
be recognized as 3rd gender people, or even when the US did not
legalize gay marriages, Facebook had
pages and groups meant for socializing and creation of emotional bonding
between LGBTQ people. Right to love is rather an
abstract idea which may be expressed when a person starts expressing the love to his/her chosen
person on a specific platform. Seen from this aspect, right to love on cyber
space may be barred only under specific circumstances, i.e., when
the same expression offends the ‘target’ person because he/she may not like to
develop any emotional relationship with the person expressing the feelings either because the relationship
falls under the concept of stalker and victim, ex lover or spouse where the
victim ex does not want to be connected with the other person anymore, or a real life acquaintance including workplace
acquaintance who had accepted to be friends with the other person expecting reasonable distance and privacy , or a stranger who may not like to be approached by way of
expressing eros. Similarly, positive reciprocation
of love on cyber space may not be offensive unless the receiver/reciprocator is
knowingly committing any mistake like that of breaking
trust of a married partner.
A person may however be deterred from exercising his/her
right to love an acclaimed criminal only when such relationship may prove to be
hazardous for the security of the nation
or for the society at large. But he/she
may not be held guilty for such love affair on cyber space when he /she can
prove his/her innocence in knowledge about the particular acclaimed criminal. He/she
may even claim compensation under
certain circumstances when such fraudulent relationship causes damage to
him/her as well. But note that I am speaking about being offended from the perspective of the receiver of the message
carrying an expression of love and not the bystanders in case such message are
posted on some one’s timelines or in a common group or in a page and it is
publicly visible. Moral policing groups against celebration of Valentine’s
day may go ahead with their propaganda of
threats of ‘devastating results’ on
the understanding that whoever exercises
right to love either by way of expressing love for some one, or by showing a status ‘in love with X’ or by even reciprocating
to such message by words or emogies or
even by thumbs up should be considered as
‘dangerous’ for the society as a whole. Some
radical groups have even come up with warning that people exercising their’
right to love’ will be straightaway married
off or they will be warned to
stop displaying (exercising their right
to) love. Understandably such
sorts of warning messages may have been made to create fear in the minds
of individuals who may belong to
orthodox patriarchal families where love marriages are not allowed or where threats of honor killings exists . Such
radical groups are targeting those
individuals who may be new generation
social media users and whose families including parents may not know their
digital whereabouts.
The question is, would such announcements by such radical
groups be considered as hate speech
or threat speech? There may be varied
opinions for this. If the statement/s show
that the commentator/s may track the
whereabouts of the persons who are
expressing their love on Facebook or any other social media on valentine’s day to commit some harm, the
speech may be considered as threat speech especially because they may indicate
violation of privacy and also intention to commit harm (even if it is arranging
marriage, which may be the ultimate the aim of the love birds). Women especially may feel threatened
because this may result in offline and online reputation damage, rape threats
(especially if it is an inter religious affair) or even grave threats
to their lives. Some , including the social
media website may consider such speech
as absolutely normal because such speech may seem to be very broad to be fitted within the meaning of hate speech or threat speech
because such speeches may be ‘general’ and may not target any specific individual,
class or community of people. But we
must not forget that online mob violence
may become extremely dangerous especially when such instigating comments or
posts are made. Concerned authorities therefore must not ignore such ‘warnings’.
But I would have been happiest would the moral policing groups
turn their attention to evils done on cyber space and send messages to the
world including possible perpetrators to refrain from creating revenge porn on the Valentine ’s Day.
In my observation I have seen that on such days several jilted lovers,
revengeful persons and stalkers may create revenge porn stuff to grossly
violate women’s reputation including rightsto privacy.
Let us join hands to prevent spreading of hate and threats
through social media. Let us grow love and not hate.
Please Note: Do not violate copyright of
this blog. If you would like to use informations provided in this blog for your
own assignment/writeup/project/blog/article, please cite it as “Halder D.
(2018), “Right to love on social media on Valentine’s Day ” 10th February, 2018,
published in http://debaraticyberspace.blogspot.com
Saturday, February 3, 2018
Why cyber bullying should never be taken as a holistic term for cyber harassment
CYBER CRIME AGAINST WOMEN BY DEBARATI HALDER
In
a recent academic conference where I was speaking on cyber bullying, I got some
‘strange questions’ as why I am not covering topics like pornography and
obscenity. To me, these questions were ‘strange’
because I was delivering lecture specifically on cyber bullying. But to the
individuals who asked the questions (and this group included academicians and practitioners
from women’s rights group as well), this seemed to be a genuine concern as why
cyber bullying does not mean cyber pornography, cyber obscenity, revenge porn,
cyber stalking or the concept of cyber harassment.
Decoding cyber bullying:
Many
of us believe that cyber bullying is the holistic term to explain the concept of
cyber harassment. In reality it is not.
Cyber harassment or online harassment is a
holistic term which may include various types of harassments including cyber
bullying. The term cyber bullying is defined as “abuse/ harassment by teasing
or insulting, victims’ body shape, intellect, family back ground, dress sense,
mother tongue, place of origin, attitude, race, caste, class, name calling,
using modern telecommunication networks such as mobile phones (SMS/MMS) and
Internet (Chat rooms, emails, notice boards and groups)”(Jaishankar, 2009).
www.Stopbullying.gov explains cyber
bullying as “.........Cyberbullying includes sending, posting, or sharing
negative, harmful, false, or mean content about someone else. It can include
sharing personal or private information about someone else causing
embarrassment or humiliation.”
A
clear reading of the definition of Jaishankar and the explanation provided by
Stopbullying.gov would suggest that
cyber bullying includes conveying or posting of insulting, degrading, teasing, messages
in the victim’s timeline, in groups or forums etc. Bullying messages are also
conveyed through one-to one chatting mechanism. Bullying messages may typically
be like “ you are a liar”, or “you look ugly”, or “ you are worthless”, or “x
is a black spot in the team”, or “x is a big zero when it comes to trendy fashion”
etc. Presently, India does not have any cyber bullying prevention law.
However,
it would be wrong to say that cyber bullying happens to children. Adults may
also be victims of bullying, including workplace bullying.
So when does bullying turn into
stalking?
Often
people confuse cyber bullying with cyber stalking. We at Centre for Cyber
Victim Counselling had provided a functional definition of cyber stalking in
our 2010 research report which is as follows:
“In one word, when ‘following’ is
added by Mens rea to commit harm and it is successfully digitally carried out,
we can say cyber stalking has happened" (Halder &Jaishankar, 2010).
S.354D
of the Indian Penal Code (inserted via Criminal Law amendment Act, 2013)
defines cyber stalking as follows:
“Any
man who follows a woman or contacts or attempts to contact such woman to foster
personal interaction repeatedly despite a clear indication of disinterest by
such woman or whoever monitors the use by a woman of the internet, email or any
other form of electronic communication or watches or spies a person in a manner
that results in fear of violence or serious alarm or distress, in the mind of
such woman or interferes with the mental peace of such woman, commits the
offence of stalking.”
Seeing
from the above perspectives we can see several stages of cyber stalking:
The first stage of cyber stalking can be Repeated Pursuing
The second stage can be data mining and/or monitoring.
The third stage can be creating threat /fear in the mind of the victim.
Repeated
pursuing can be in the form of sending /posting messages which may not be
insulting or degrading or annoying at the beginning. This is because the
stalker (especially in case of interpersonal stalking) may not necessarily like
to insult or humiliate his ‘target’. The main aim of the stalker may be to persuade
the victim to enter into an emotional relationship where the stalker may be a
dominant figure. The messages may turn insulting or degrading when the process
reaches the third stage, i.e., when the sender wants the victim to feel
threatened. Stalking may adopt the process of cyber bullying when the victim
refuses to abide by the ‘commands’ or ‘demands’ of the stalker. The later may
then start sending insulting, annoying, degrading messages in order to create a
fear of constant harassment and defamation of the victim. Bullying therefore changes
into the phenomena of cyber stalking when the bully becomes obsessive with his victim and continues to post hurting,
degrading, insulting messages as long as the victim does not start developing a
sense of fear; when he starts monitoring his victim to see the outcome of
bullying or rather, to see how far the victim is affected by bullying.
Revenge porn and bullying
Again,
revenge porn and bullying can be completely different forms of online harassment.
Revenge porn “..........is an act whereby the perpetrator satisfies his anger
and frustration for broken relationship
through publicizing false, sexually provocative portrayal of his /her victim by
misusing the information that he may
have known naturally and that he may have stored in his computer, or may have
conveyed to his electronic device by the victim herself, or may have been
stored in device with the consent of the victim herself; and which may
essentially have been done to publicly defame the victim.”(Halder &Jaishankar, 2013).
Revenge
porn may necessarily include unethical using of images of the victim for taking
revenge and creating a fake avatar of the victim which may signify the later as
that of bad character. Unfortunately many countries including India do not have
any focussed law to prevent and punish revenge porn. However, several legal
academicians including cyber civil right activists in the US have proposed revenge porn legislations and
such proposals have been considered as legal provisions to criminalise revenge
porn. In case of revenge porn, the perpetrator may or may not include bullying
tactics to create extra humiliation to his/her victim. I have observed that in
several revenge porn cases, the perpetrator may limit his act to posting to his
own time line with a tagline indicating that the victim is of bad character, or
may create a fake avatar either in the social websites like Facebook or Twitter
etc indicating that the profile owner may solicit sex, or may upload the image
to adult networking websites where all images may be ‘consumed’ as erotica. Revenge porn and bullying may be clubbed up
only when the perpetrator posts/sends annoying, insulting, degrading messages
to the victim or to a group to humiliate the victim with the revenge porn
content, i.e., after he has already created revenge porn and wishes to
continue harassing the victim with teasing messages. However, I would still not
agree to call it cyber bullying; it would be categorised as defamation if seen
from the perspective of defamation laws. S.499 of the Indian Penal Code which states
as follows:
“Whoever, by words either spoken
or intended to be read, or by signs or by visible representations, makes or
publishes any imputation concerning any person intending to harm, or knowing or
having reason to believe that such imputation will harm, the reputation of such
person, is said, except in the cases hereinafter expected, to defame that
person. Explanation 1.—It may amount to defamation to impute anything to a
deceased person, if the imputation would harm the reputation of that person if
living, and is intended to be hurtful to the feelings of his family or other
near relatives. Explanation 2.—It may amount to defamation to make an
imputation concerning a company or an association or collection of persons as
such. Explanation 3.—An imputation in the form of an alternative or expressed
ironically, may amount to defamation. Explanation 4.—No imputation is said to
harm a person’s reputation, unless that imputation directly or indirectly, in
the estimation of others, lowers the moral or intellectual character of that
person, or lowers the character of that person in respect of his caste or of
his calling, or lowers the credit of that person, or causes it to be believed
that the body of that person is in a loathsome state, or in a state generally
considered as disgraceful.”
As
may be seen from the above, cyber harassment or online harassment therefore is
a bigger term which includes forms of harassment including cyber bullying. It is
essential to understand the differences because the terms may signify different
types of criminal or civil wrongs and as such may attract different types of punishments
by courts of law. For instance, if a victim who has encountered impersonation
(not amounting to revenge porn, but an ordinary impersonation whereby his/her
image had been used to create a profile in the matrimonial site), he/she should
not report the incident as cyber bullying to the concerned website. It should
be ‘impersonation’, meaning the perpetrator has unethically and unauthorisedly
used the personal picture and information of the victim to create harassment.
Depending upon the mens rea, nature of the profile and impact of the same on
the victim’s reputation, the police may book the offender under various
provisions under Information Technology Act and also under Indian Penal Code
for impersonation(for example, Ss 66D of the Information technology Act,
2000(amended in 2008), Ss. 416 & 417, 499, 500 IPC, etc) . In case the
victim is a woman, the police may also include provisions meant for harming the
modesty of women (S.509 IPC). Similarly, in case of stalking, the victim should
rather report the crime as stalking and not cyber bullying because the legal
provisions in India do not recognise any offence of cyber bullying, but
prescribes stringent punishment for stalking. Whereas, in other jurisdictions,
where both cyber stalking and cyber bullying are recognised as offences, both
may have different types of punishments. Further, the social media websites may
also have different reporting mechanism for cyber bullying and cyber stalking.
However,
cyber bullying still remains in a grey area from legal perspectives. More research
is needed to develop a good universal understanding which may help to demarcate
why cyber bullying be considered as Bad Speech. Further, research is also
needed to create deeper demarcation between different forms of online
harassment for the purpose of better policy developments.
Please Note: Do not violate
copyright of this blog. If you would like to use informations provided in this
blog for your own assignment/writeup/project/blog/article, please cite it as
“Halder D. (2018), “Why cyber bullying should never be taken
as a holistic term for cyber harassment” 4th February, 2018, published in http://debaraticyberspace.blogspot.com
Saturday, January 27, 2018
Help young generation to understand their duties and rights on cyber space: Model Policy Guidelines for Directing Students for Positive Use of Internet Including Social Networking Sites and Whatsapp
CYBER CRIME AGAINST WOMEN BY DEBARATI HALDER
Better late than never! Let us start 2018 with a positive note: let us teach our younger tech savvy generation how to respect women, men and people from LGBTQ groups online. I was invited by UNICEF to represent them in the West Bengal State child protection committee meet on child rights and deliver lecture on online exploitation of children on 21st November, 2017 . I delivered lecture on "Children as consumers and contributors of offensive contents online and role of POCSO Act: a Therapeutic Jurisprudential approach."
We know children are smarter than us the older generation in cyber related issues. But at the same time, it is also our duty to guide children to be more responsible while on internet. I take pleasure in sharing this model policy guidelines which was prepared by me sometimes back. This model policy guidelines may be used by schools, colleges and other stake holders
Objectives & missions of the policy guidelines: To protect children from adversities of internet and educating them for a positive use of internet and social-networking sites.
Scope of the policy guidelines: It may be used to educate children from 1st Standard to plus 2. It may also be used to provide guidance for teachers and counsellors to help children for positive usage of internet and social networking sites.
The guidelines:
1.Every school must encourage children to participate in debates or discussions on internet rights, positive and negative effects of the same. This may be made as a part of the subject of computer science, or as a part of C.C.
2.Junior students (from the age group of 4-8) must be encouraged to take part in awareness building sessions. In such sessions, the students may be shown how to handle the devices properly and why not to switch on devices without parent’s supervision or permission. For this purpose the schools can consider making small skits with the help of older children and the teachers, or use movie clippings or other audio-visual learning materials.
3.Students from the age group of 8-13 must be encouraged to attend awareness sessions where they may be taught how to use the internet for positive gain. Given the fact that many study materials and books provide internet links or pages on specific subjects, the students may be encouraged to open such sites in the presence of the teachers. Parent-teacher-student sessions must be made to sensitise parents about the positive use of internet and digital communication technology. Students may be introduced to issues including grooming by paedophiles, values of good talk and bad talk in the internet etc. Students may be slowly introduced to social networking sites. It is not necessary to direct the students to open their accounts. But the students may be asked to take part in discussions on the policy guidelines or terms and conditions that are
offered by social networking sites, email service providers etc, and then create their own accounts in the social networking sites.
4.Students from the age group of 14-17 may be encouraged to open accounts in the social networking sites and add their parents and teachers in their friend circles. They may be encouraged to create their own safety rules and privacy rules and discuss about them with younger students in class debates or awareness sessions. Students may also be encouraged to access informative pages in the social networking sites for gaining more knowledge.
5.It is important to teach students about rational coping mechanisms if and when they accidentally fall victims of cyber crimes. They must be taught how to use the safety tools to protect themselves, when and how to contact the principals, teachers and parents.
6.Schools must arrange for workshops on guiding students for positive usage of internet, which may include sessions on copyright violations as well. In such workshops, students may be encouraged to express their thoughts. Such workshops may be conducted with the police personnel, cyber crime experts, and NGOs as resource persons.
7.Senior students (from the age group of 16-18) may be encouraged to create their own blogs or vlogging sites either on their own or as group effort to show case positive usage of internet.
8.However, it must be noted that this policy guideline should not be used if the schools wish to use it as the sole guideline for separate types of offences. The author offers to cooperate with the schools to build up unique policy guidelines on the basis of this model policy guideline depending upon the need of every organisation. It is hoped that if the above guidelines are adopted, crimes targeting children by children and adults may be curbed.
* This model policy guideline was first published in http://www.cybervictims.org/moderlpgccvc.pdf by Dr. Debarati Halder.
Better late than never! Let us start 2018 with a positive note: let us teach our younger tech savvy generation how to respect women, men and people from LGBTQ groups online. I was invited by UNICEF to represent them in the West Bengal State child protection committee meet on child rights and deliver lecture on online exploitation of children on 21st November, 2017 . I delivered lecture on "Children as consumers and contributors of offensive contents online and role of POCSO Act: a Therapeutic Jurisprudential approach."
We know children are smarter than us the older generation in cyber related issues. But at the same time, it is also our duty to guide children to be more responsible while on internet. I take pleasure in sharing this model policy guidelines which was prepared by me sometimes back. This model policy guidelines may be used by schools, colleges and other stake holders
Scope of the policy guidelines: It may be used to educate children from 1st Standard to plus 2. It may also be used to provide guidance for teachers and counsellors to help children for positive usage of internet and social networking sites.
The guidelines:
1.Every school must encourage children to participate in debates or discussions on internet rights, positive and negative effects of the same. This may be made as a part of the subject of computer science, or as a part of C.C.
2.Junior students (from the age group of 4-8) must be encouraged to take part in awareness building sessions. In such sessions, the students may be shown how to handle the devices properly and why not to switch on devices without parent’s supervision or permission. For this purpose the schools can consider making small skits with the help of older children and the teachers, or use movie clippings or other audio-visual learning materials.
3.Students from the age group of 8-13 must be encouraged to attend awareness sessions where they may be taught how to use the internet for positive gain. Given the fact that many study materials and books provide internet links or pages on specific subjects, the students may be encouraged to open such sites in the presence of the teachers. Parent-teacher-student sessions must be made to sensitise parents about the positive use of internet and digital communication technology. Students may be introduced to issues including grooming by paedophiles, values of good talk and bad talk in the internet etc. Students may be slowly introduced to social networking sites. It is not necessary to direct the students to open their accounts. But the students may be asked to take part in discussions on the policy guidelines or terms and conditions that are
offered by social networking sites, email service providers etc, and then create their own accounts in the social networking sites.
4.Students from the age group of 14-17 may be encouraged to open accounts in the social networking sites and add their parents and teachers in their friend circles. They may be encouraged to create their own safety rules and privacy rules and discuss about them with younger students in class debates or awareness sessions. Students may also be encouraged to access informative pages in the social networking sites for gaining more knowledge.
5.It is important to teach students about rational coping mechanisms if and when they accidentally fall victims of cyber crimes. They must be taught how to use the safety tools to protect themselves, when and how to contact the principals, teachers and parents.
6.Schools must arrange for workshops on guiding students for positive usage of internet, which may include sessions on copyright violations as well. In such workshops, students may be encouraged to express their thoughts. Such workshops may be conducted with the police personnel, cyber crime experts, and NGOs as resource persons.
7.Senior students (from the age group of 16-18) may be encouraged to create their own blogs or vlogging sites either on their own or as group effort to show case positive usage of internet.
8.However, it must be noted that this policy guideline should not be used if the schools wish to use it as the sole guideline for separate types of offences. The author offers to cooperate with the schools to build up unique policy guidelines on the basis of this model policy guideline depending upon the need of every organisation. It is hoped that if the above guidelines are adopted, crimes targeting children by children and adults may be curbed.
* This model policy guideline was first published in http://www.cybervictims.org/moderlpgccvc.pdf by Dr. Debarati Halder.
Please
Note: Do not violate copyright of this blog. If you would like to use
informations provided in this blog for your own
assignment/writeup/project/blog/article, please cite it as “Halder D. (2018),
"Help young generation to understand their duties and rights on cyber space: Model Policy Guidelines for Directing Students for Positive Use of Internet Including Social Networking Sites and Whatsapp", published
in http://debaraticyberspace.blogspot.com on 28-01-2018
Tuesday, October 17, 2017
#MeToo : Tales of victimisation in real life as well as on internet
CYBER CRIME AGAINST WOMEN BY DEBARATI HALDER
Way back in 2012 my sister gave me some Hollywood
magazines which she was reading in her long flight to India. These are the
tit-bits for any reader who would like to know what is happening with the lives
of film stars and celebrities who mesmerise us on screen. I got to see how
several film stars of West including Hollywood were affected by voyeurism by
enthusiastic fans and profit making photographers. Indeed these fans and
photographers may make huge money because of a huge group of consumers: the common
cine lovers. Soon there was more news about celebrity hacks; their gym photos,
private holiday photos, private moment photos, private bathing photos were
leaked online and by the time one or two victims could get back to the police;
the world knew about their private lives. The positive point to think over this
issue is, several women film actors had taken such online privacy infringement seriously
and either took the matter to the police or had filed law suits against gossip
magazines or channels who unethically published their private photos or videos.
I call this “positive” because these women had defied the common understanding
that approaching the police or the courts for online harassment including
sexual harassment like leaking of private photos or videos is nothing but
publicity stunt. Unfortunately in India several female film stars including upcoming
film stars or serial actors also fall prey to the same sort of victimisation and
when they turn towards the police or the courts, many a times, it is seen as
publicity stunt: not to forget, their Western counter parts also do go through the
same. But at the same time, I have not found many Indian women film stars and
serial actors who took the matters of online sexual victimisation as seriously
as their Western counter parts ( I addressed this issue in my article “Celebrities
and cyber crimes: An analysis of the victimisation of female film stars on the
internet” http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/1450-6637/2016/1450-66371604355H.pdf
).
But women actors may be the most ‘exploited’
species among working women: consider the blunt, straight forward speech of
Madona during Woman of the year award in 2016. Social media channels were
flooded with comments, emogies and thumbs ups praising her for boldly
expressing how she had been sexually violated in real life and how she
continues to be violated online at present. Why she had to be the victim of
sexual violation? Apparently it is because of the presence of ‘God fathers’ in
the workplace who may coerce the women to enter into a non-consensual sexual
relationship which would ensure continuous job protection. For the last couple
of days, several female actors from Hollywood have started protesting against
such sexual exploitation with #metoo . The campaign had been so strong and
viral that it has touched almost all continents and millions of women who may
have been sexually victimised or violated either by way of penetrative sexual
assault or by non-penetrative sexual assault or by sexual harassment in workplaces,
public places as well as in their homes, have opened up about their
victimisation.
India has also been touched by
#MeToo campaign. Several women have expressed their solidarity by pasting on
their time line the following lines:"Me
too... If all the women who have been sexually harassed or assaulted wrote 'Me
Too' as a status, we might give people a sense of the magnitude of the problem.
Please copy/paste.". This was originally shared by actress Alyssa Milano
and others as a protest against sexual victimisation by Harvey Weinstein, a
noted producer-distributor who had been
ousted from Motion Picture Arts and Sciences on 15th October, 2017.
Most of my 900 friends on Facebook
who had been sporting #MeToo in their profile time lines for past 72 hours had
been sharing several forms of victimisation; most common is definitely sexual
gazing at public places and work places. I had posted in my time line about
online sexist comments and pornographic stuff
including misogynist posts which I often get to see in my message box (thanks
to continuous privacy ‘tactics’ that I practice for my Twitter and Facebook timelines, I do not
get to see such violating and victimising stuff in my time-line except on rare occasions).
Several of my friends and acquaintances have simply shared the “metoo” message to show their solidarity with the cause, which
I am sure, has definitely affected them, but they may not be feeling comfortable
to openly express the same. Two posts however have actually attracted my
attention even though they do not speak about cyber sexual victimisation or
workplace victimisation : one by Sauranshu Sinha from Delhi and the other by
Dr. Kalki Subramaniam from Pondicherry. The latter, a transgender activist and
a trans-woman herself wrote a poignant note using #metoo. A part of her message
(which is open for public) reads as follows “.........................................Around
the world, every transgender woman, and in India almost every cis/transwoman
goes through this brutal, uncouth, insensible torture. No more can they do it
to me today. I stand tall and strong. Yet, i must say I was a victim too.”
Sinha is the first man I noticed who wrote about his experience of being sexually
violated when he was a 6th standard student. A part of his message
(which is open for public viewing) using #metoo stated that while he was travelling
in a bus, a man touched him inappropriately and opened his zip to show Sinha his
private parts (translated from Bengali). Sinha was a victim of sexual
exploitation as a young boy who shared his solidarity with #metoo.
I know several of my friends,
women and men who did not share their own experiences or neither shared #metoo,
would have been victims themselves at one or other point of time. There are
several individuals who may probably never understand that even comments like “hi
sexy” or “wanna talk, reply back” may also be victimising especially when the receiver
feels insulted, hurt, alarmed or feels his/her modesty has been harmed. There are
several victims of online sexual harassment who may never speak up about their
bitter experiences due to fear of more exposure. Thousands of women may remain
silent even when their friends are marching along with #metoo to expose the
sorts of victimisation they had gone through and alert the society. Yet, I welcome #metoo campaigners. When people
dare to share, there remain positive chances for the policy makers and law-makers
to executors to note the pain. Let us hope that #metoo brings a change not only
in the mindsets of people, but also in the process of implementation of laws. We
need to understand that women who had been victimised and turned up to share
their experiences, should get due protection and respect from all of us. Let us
unite to defy sexist misogynist trolls from making #metoo and all of us victims
again.
Please
Note: Do not violate copyright of this blog. If you would like to use
informations provided in this blog for your own assignment/writeup/project/blog/article,
please cite it as “Halder D. (2017), "#MeToo : Tales
of victimisation in real life as well as on internet, published in http://debaraticyberspace.blogspot.com
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