According to the eSafety Office, if a Facebook user in Australia is concerned about an intimate image spreading online, they fill out a form, then send the image to themselves using Messenger.
Once Facebook is notified, they use image-matching technology to access and tag the image to prevent anyone from sharing it on their platforms. The measure is designed to block users from sharing a photo before it can do harm.
Kath wrote:I'm so glad I got to live my 20's in relative privacy. There's some FB employees applying for jobs in the new "send porn for safety," department.
According to the eSafety Office, if a Facebook user in Australia is concerned about an intimate image spreading online, they fill out a form, then send the image to themselves using Messenger.
Once Facebook is notified, they use image-matching technology to access and tag the image to prevent anyone from sharing it on their platforms. The measure is designed to block users from sharing a photo before it can do harm.
I'm a subcontractor for Zuckerberg, all of you can just send your nudes to me. I have a secure system aND many large accounts such as EQUIFAX...... you have nothing to worry about.
GrumpyCatFace wrote:The level of Stupid involved on all sides here, is breathtaking.
Meaning you think this feature is neato?
Meaning that people are sending nudes and losing track of them in the first place. Then Facebook designers thinking that this is a good idea. Then people actually sending nudes to Facebook, where they will lose track of them.
This is painting a giant bullseye on Facebook, to hackers everywhere.