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8 votes
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When victimhood takes a bad-faith turn. Wronged explores how the practice of claiming harm has become the rhetorical province of the powerful.
28 votes -
Join me on the path to Twilightenment
27 votes -
Poor Things’ intimacy coordinator on consent, orgies and Emma Stone
27 votes -
Dozens of Greenlandic women who say they were fitted with the contraceptive coil without their consent or knowledge are planning to sue the Danish state
26 votes -
Your Fitbit is useless – unless you consent to unlawful data sharing
74 votes -
The ESRB wants to start using facial recognition to check people's ages
44 votes -
Denmark aims to raise the age limit for the collection of personal data from children by tech giants
27 votes -
Japan to ban upskirting in sweeping sex crime reforms
11 votes -
Navigating the ethics of ancient human DNA research
1 vote -
The sticky issue of consent in street photography
11 votes -
Can data die? Why one of the internet's oldest images lives on without its subject's consent.
27 votes -
A community of 3D graphics hobbyists are making and selling avatars of real people in order to fulfill their sexual fantasies, and there's little anyone can do to stop them
11 votes -
Unwanted touch and empty consent
12 votes -
Sex without consent is rape, but the principle is lacking in many legal frameworks in countries across Europe – Denmark is seeking to change this
6 votes -
Denmark's new consent law leaves sex workers out in the cold – they are becoming increasingly stigmatized within Danish society
10 votes -
Denmark's left-leaning parties have agreed to change the country's sexual violence laws to allow sex without explicit consent to be prosecuted as rape
21 votes -
Why experiments matter and why we hate them
6 votes -
War over being nice
13 votes -
The most urgent threat of deepfakes isn't politics, it's porn
10 votes -
How one man poisoned a city’s water supply (and saved millions of children’s lives in the process)
11 votes -
‘It’s just everywhere already’: How delays in testing set back the US coronavirus response
15 votes -
Finland under pressure to criminalise lack of consent in rape laws
10 votes -
Danish government will consider tabling a bill which would define sex without explicit consent as rape
10 votes -
Med students are doing vaginal exams on unconscious, non-consenting patients
17 votes -
Inside the fight for developmentally disabled people's right to sex
13 votes -
Nova Scotia to become first in North America with presumed consent for organ donation
18 votes -
Tickling
19 votes -
Facial recognition's 'dirty little secret': Millions of online photos scraped without consent
8 votes -
War over being nice
21 votes -
Body modification – when consent is not a defence
13 votes -
How do you make a sex scene sexy? (And keep the actors safe?) Five intimacy coordinators explain their craft
8 votes -
Exploitation and coercion
Those two words and their relationship with "consent" and "freedom" fascinate me. I've sort of ruminated about it in the back of my mind for a while, but haven't sorted a lot out. It would be nice...
Those two words and their relationship with "consent" and "freedom" fascinate me. I've sort of ruminated about it in the back of my mind for a while, but haven't sorted a lot out.
It would be nice for two people to be able to make any agreement they like between each other without restrictions. "I'll do this for me and you give me that in return". If there aren't restrictions on what sort of agreement two private people make, in some sense, that can be maximum freedom.
But then exploitation and coercion come into the mix. "If you don't sign this contract, I will kill you" is a clear example of an agreement not being free. "If you don't sign this employment contract, you won't be able to afford to buy food" is still fairly clear, but a little further removed. "If you don't sign this employment contract, you'll be able to get food, but the food you can afford will be heavily processed and laden with oils and processed sugars, and you could suffer poor health in the future" is getting into a lot of grey area.
We talk a lot about minimum wage workers being exploited. It's true that most of them (almost all of them?) hate their jobs. It's also true that life necessarily requires sacrifices. I don't have a good framework for thinking about what point something becomes exploitative or unethical.
It comes up in personal relationships as well. "If you don't have sex with me, I will kill myself" is clearly abusive and manipulative. "If you don't have sex with me, I will break up with you" is slightly more removed. "If you don't quit using heroin, I will break up with you" is a little grey.
At what point is someone being coerced in a relationship vs two people acknowledging sacrifices they have to make to stay together? I don't have a good framework for thinking about this.
Further things to think about: at what point of mental illness can a person no longer ethically enter into an agreement? What about a normal person who suffers from the usual human psychological biases? At what point is it exploitative to use psychological biases when negotiating with someone? This can go all the way from the benign (ending a price in ".99") to the damaging (designing casino games with flashing lights and buzzers, etc.)
I don't expect someone to be able to give me a pat answer to this. If you think you can give me a 1-line "Exploitation is ...", I think you're probably missing something. But I am curious how other people think about these things, and what examples or what books you've found that have been helpful to you sorting things out.
13 votes -
The ethics of sex with conjoined twins
13 votes -
Schrödinger's rapist
18 votes -
Alberta privacy commissioner to investigate use of facial recognition software on Calgary malls
9 votes -
At least two malls are using facial recognition technology to track shoppers' ages and genders without telling
10 votes -
Sex without explicit consent is now rape in Sweden
12 votes -
Even in a #MeToo climate, only 28% of Canadians understand consent
5 votes