Sunday, 10 August 2014

Why the UK Does Not Need a “Revenge Porn” Law


Many of us were puzzled when the UK Courts voted against having a “revenge porn” law. I mean, social media is a potentially hazardous environment to one’s personal information, especially intimate ones. Ex-lovers, taking it out against their former partners, upload explicit media for everyone in their networks to see to tarnish the reputation of the other.

And oftentimes, this particular media is spread to different websites, allowing search engines like Google to easily find the particular information due to its repeated appearance.

The “revenge porn” law will protect victims of such slanderous publicity to file litigation against their former partner.

So why would the UK courts want to stop the revenge porn law?

Well, my opinion is that today, the UK courts are facing modern terms. Terminologies like cyber bullying, revenge porn, trolling and other undesirable and hostile internet activities are yet to be integrated in the constitution. If the UK courts approve a law that uses an ambiguous word, then the law is ambiguous in itself.

The second thing is that the UK already has a co-author or co-creator agreement law. This publishing law requires that the published content online should have the approval of the two parties or else, the uploader is responsible for breaching the trust of the other owner. If they add a new revenge porn law, which has almost the same statements, then it can become a confusing constitution.

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