I’m not going to name names here, because there’s multiple places doing this and also I forgot what instance I saw it on, but I’ve noticed something disturbing with the automated repost bots. You know, those bots that copy whole Reddit communities over to Lemmy with tons of automated posts? I don’t like them in general because when I reply to a post I like the OP to actually see my reply, but this issue is more ethical. It’s the automated duplication of porn from Reddit to Lemmy.
Now, I know that these models have consented to their images being shared on the internet. However, in my own personal opinion, porn models should have some amount of control over the manner in which their image is shared on a public forum. In this case, the people posting their naked bodies do not have control over how the image is shared. They can’t decide to delete it if they revoke consent later, and they can’t report creepy comments on their pictures. In most cases, they probably don’t even know what Lemmy is, and yet their images are getting search indexed and shared with people. There’s no creative control over the distribution by the person whose body is in the picture. I consider that a form of non-consensual intimate media. I don’t think these bots should be allowed to repost porn without asking the permission of the user who originally shared the media.
You’re probably thinking of the Lemmit bot and community. There’s no reason to not name and shame here.
While I find it weird, unnecessary, and kind of gross too there’s an(or there should be an) implicit understanding that everything anyone puts on the internet is there to stay, forever. Rarely ever is deleting a photo actually removing for good and your tidbit about consent isn’t quite relevant.
The vast majority of the women that are being reposted are Onlyfans models and have watermarks on their photos for this exact reason. Reposting it like this only serves as extra advertising. For real exhibitionists and people who aren’t making money off the transaction, yes it’s gross, but I don’t think you can create any universal rules to easily differentiate between the two without very heavy moderation.
It’s not just women btw. But I agree. I’m not sure whether lemmit has a system in place for takedown requests based on own personality rights. They should have that.