Love & Sex Magazine

In the News (#1167)

By Maggiemcneill @Maggie_McNeill

September 1, 2021 by Maggie McNeill

The only way to guarantee that such a powerful tool isn't abused...is to never create it. - Apple in 2016

See No Evil In the News (#1167)In the News (#1167)

Moral panics really spin out of control as they age:

Spencer Elden, the man whose unusual baby portrait was used for...the...cover...of...Nirvana's Nevermind, filed a lawsuit...[pretend]ing that the nude image constituted child pornography...[despite the fact that] non-sexualized nude photos of infants are...not considered child pornography under law. [To circumvent this plain fact in order to cash in on "child porn" hysteria], Robert Y. Lewis, Elden's [shyster, fantasizes]...that the inclusion of currency in the shot makes the baby appear "like a sex worker"...[Lewis demands] at least $150,000 from each of the defendants, who include...the...original Nirvana drummer...even though he had been replaced...before the album was recorded or the cover photography shot. Elden has repeatedly recreated the pose as a teenager and adult, diving into pools to pose (with swim trunks on) on the occasion of the album's 10th, 17th, 20th and 25th anniversaries...

"A sex worker". Seriously. I reckon he's supposed to be one of those hundreds of thousands of infant hookers needed to bring the average debut age down to 13.

For Those Who Think Legalization is a Good Idea (#648)

What "legal but heavily regulated" looks like in action:

On August 11, the Nagpur police put [up] a large number of barricades completely sealing the Ganga-Jamuna area....without any prior notice or reason [thu]s drastically affect[ing] the livelihood...of over a thousand sex workers who have been living and working for decades in the area...over 100 [cops] have been [sent to swagger around] the area at all times...Sex workers in India are one of the groups that are consistently at the receiving end of...state-sponsored police brutality...[even though] the profession is not illegal...brothel areas are repeatedly raided and their workers are harassed by the police...A petition by the National Network of Sex Workers, India (NNSW) demanding "Unseal Ganga Jamuna" has been put online and signed by more than 2700 people and organisations...

License to Rape (#720)

"Search" is the most common government euphemism for "molest":

A Raleigh mother has filed a federal lawsuit against the TSA...a[fter] the[y]...violated her transgender teenager's rights by [demanding] a strip-search at the airport. Jamii Erway, 15 at the time, had a valid boarding pass [but] when [t]he [equipment regist]ered a "false positive"...a TSA [goon demanded]...to [leer at] her genitals...[and lied] "that she was not free to leave until she submitted to [the humiliation], in violation of TSA policy, the Fourth Amendment, and...the boundaries of civil and decent society"...the [goon further called the cops on the teenager]...and the[ir threatening] presence...[unsurprisingly] triggered...a...panic...[attack]. Rather than submit to the [molestation]...her mother, Kimberly Erway, rented a car and [they] drove 600 miles. The Erways seek unspecified damages and an injunction preventing such a scenario from happening again...

Cops even get their equipment to lie for them:

Michael Williams...was [locked in a cage for almost a year], accused [by cops] of killing a young man from [his] neighborhood who asked him for a ride during a night of unrest over police brutality in May...the [supposed] evidence against Williams didn't come from an eyewitness or [snitch, but rather]...from a clip of [silent] security video showing a car driving through an intersection, and a loud bang [separately] picked up by a network of surveillance microphones. Prosecutors [pretende]d...a secret algorithm that analyzed noises detected by the sensors indicated Williams shot and killed the man...ShotSpotter [claims have] increasingly been admitted in court cases...[as evidence despite the fact that] it...can miss live gunfire right under its microphones, or misclassify the sounds of fireworks or cars backfiring as gunshots. F[antasy stories written]...by ShotSpotter's employees have been used in court to [lie] that a defendant shot at police, or provide [lies about] the number of shots allegedly fired by defendants...the...system...[i]s a...black box largely inscrutable to the public, jurors and police oversight boards...[but] the company...fully admits that]... employees can and do modify the location or number of shots fired [on their own whims or] at the request of police...in the past, city dispatchers or police themselves could also make some of these changes ...

Stalkers in Blue (#987) In the News (#1167)In the News (#1167)

Once in a while, there are witnesses to the way cops act toward women:

Florida [cop]...Naci Tuzcuoglu...approached a woman singing karaoke at...[a] sports bar...[and] put his hands on her hips. The woman...t[old] him she was married and not interested [but he kep harassing her, so she]...went outside and spoke to her husband...Tuzcuoglu [followed her]...and punched the man in the face...multiple times...[while] taunt[ing him]..."I'm a cop...What are you gonna do about it?"...

Choke Point (#1150)

"Progressives" are finally deigning to notice financial discrimination vs some sex workers:

OnlyFans...has faced widespread backlash from sex workers after it announced...that it will ban sexually explicit content starting Oct. 1. Some LGBTQ OnlyFans creators say the changes could jeopardize one of their primary sources of income during the Covid-19 pandemic...

OnlyFans reversed its position the day after this article appeared, but I still featured it because it illustrates a disturbing trend I've seen lately: some "progressives" only seem to think sex workers deserve rights if they're queer (especially trans). Now, since the majority of sex workers are some flavor of LGBT, fighting for their rights will still help straight, cisgender sex workers as well. But I think it's pretty sad that some people don't think human rights are worth supporting unless they're the "correct" people's rights.

I Spy (#1161)

Straight from the horse's mouth:

Apple's own employees have been expressing alarm [about its plans to snoop in customers' phones]. The company [pretend]s reservations about the system are rooted in " misunderstandings." We disagree. We wrote the only peer-reviewed publication on how to build a system like Apple's - and...we're not concerned because we misunderstand how Apple's system works. The problem is, we understand exactly how it works...Our system could be easily repurposed for surveillance and censorship. The design wasn't restricted to a specific category of content; a service could simply swap in any content-matching database, and the person using that service would be none the wiser. A...government could, for example, compel a service to out people sharing disfavored political speech...WeChat, the popular Chinese messaging app, already uses content matching to identify dissident material. India enacted rules this year that could require pre-screening content critical of government policy. Russia recently fined Google, Facebook and Twitter for not removing pro-democracy protest materials[, and US politicians are pressuring social media companies to censor anything they declare "misinformation"]...We warned against our own system design...[an]d planned to discuss paths forward at an academic conference this month...[but] the week before our presentation, Apple announced it would deploy its nearly identical system...


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