Tumgik
#Cyber ​​Crime
narmadanchal · 3 months
Text
छेड़छाड़ हो तो पुलिस को बताएं, उपनिरीक्षक ने छात्राओं को दिया मोबाइल नंबर
इटारसी। थाना प्रभारी गौरव सिंह बुंदेला (Gaurav Singh Bundela) के निर्देश पर उपनिरीक्षक श्रद्धा राजपूत (Shraddha Rajput) ने इटारसी (Itarsi) शहर के गल्र्स कॉलेज (Girls College), एमजीएम कॉलेज (MGM College), अन्य कॉलेजों का भ्रमण कर अध्ययनरत छात्राओं की चर्चा कर महिला अपराध, बाल अपराध एवं सायबर क्राइम (Cyber ​​Crime) एवं सायबर धोखाधड़ी के प्रति जागरूक किया तथा शहर में आपातकालीन स्थिति में पुलिस…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
babaistrans · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Loving this game
3K notes · View notes
sydneighsays · 4 months
Text
Jee and V getting along (optional)
I found this audio Instagram.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
456 notes · View notes
recursive360 · 6 months
Photo
Tumblr media
(via GIPHY)
551 notes · View notes
sreegs · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
yeah ok be in the lookout for deyern-dawe
179 notes · View notes
cairafea · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
houseki no kuni brainrot doodles. ichikawa please release the new chapter soon the hnk countdown twitter account is gonna run out of pages to attach to each tweet
439 notes · View notes
m0m075 · 2 days
Text
🇺🇸🇪🇺Double standard ⚖️
Tumblr media
55 notes · View notes
notyourtoday · 10 months
Text
168 notes · View notes
gacha-incels · 15 days
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
editorial from the english version of the Hankyoreh
archive link
plain text
Before focusing on my master’s thesis, I worked for a brief period for an organization supporting victims of cyber sex crimes. My job was to put each and every case of illegally filmed footage assigned to me through a search engine and if I found that the images had been uploaded to certain sites, I would beg the operator of that site to take those images down. 
The process of searching and subsequently scrubbing illegally filmed footage probably isn’t what most people would expect. There is no advanced AI that categorizes footage based on the faces of victims, lists the sites the footage is uploaded to, and sends automated requests for the deletion of such posts. Instead, employees and volunteers divide each reported video frame by frame, put each fragmented frame through search engines, organize each site the footage is posted to on a spreadsheet, collate the sites for verification, find the site operator’s email or contact channel, and write a message that read, “This video is illegally filmed footage so we ask that you remove it from your site. If it is not removed, the South Korean government may take action against the site pursuant to relevant laws,” translate it from Korean into English and then send it to the operator.
This happened daily. Sometimes, you would have to go through 100 or 200 cases a day. I’ve assigned a nickname to this procedure: “The Illegally Filmed Footage Removal Protocol that Seems Absurdly Advanced, But Basically Follows the Same Grueling Procedures as a Sweatshop.”
The biggest challenge when fighting digital sex crimes is their overwhelming breadth and scale. It was impossible for us, as we sat in front of our computer screens, to estimate which far-out depths of the internet any of the footage had reached. 
Even if we painstakingly found 20 posts using a particular photo and saw that every post was erased, the next day we would see the photo spring up in 40 different posts. Websites distributing illegally filmed footage make various backup sites with different domains to make sure that sites are up and running even if the main site is taken down. 
Many of the sites in question have servers based abroad, so even if you sent a beseeching email citing South Korean laws, they simply could just pretend that they never saw the email.
The terror of that vast scope goes beyond distribution and duplication. While deepfake pornography has been in the news recently, photoshopping a real person’s face onto a pornographic image has been a crime for some time now.
The difference is that producing such images used to be time-consuming and technically challenging, requiring the “manual” manipulation of images. But the new tool of AI has made it easy for anyone to instantaneously create deepfakes in a dizzying variety of formats.
Another frightening aspect is that anyone with access to photographs on social media can choose victims at random. And since the images are “fakes” created by AI, the perpetrator can deliberately duck the guilt of harming a real person.
Deepfake creation has spread so rapidly because it gives perpetrators a perverse sense of power over their victims — the ability to create dozens of humiliating images of someone from photographs scraped off Instagram — while also enabling them to ignore victims’ suffering because the images aren’t technically “real.” In short, deepfakes represent a game-changing acceleration of the production cycle of sexually exploitative media.
Those images spread far too fast for the handful of employees at nonprofits to keep up with. Facing such a vast challenge, permanent employees began to drift away, and their positions were once again filled by people on short-term contracts.
Lee Jun-seok, a lawmaker with the Reform Party, said during a meeting of the National Assembly’s Science, ICT, Broadcasting and Communications Committee that the 220,000 members of a deepfake channel on Telegram was an “overblown threat” and estimated that, given the percentage of Korean users on Telegram, only about 726 of the channel members are actually Koreans.
But what does it matter whether there are 220,000 Koreans on the channel or just 726?
Let’s suppose there aren’t even 726, but just 10 people in the group — they could still produce 220,000 deepfakes if they set their mind to it. Those images would then be copied and circulated beyond their point of origin and around the world, perhaps remaining permanently in some dark corners of the Internet without ever being deleted.
That’s the nature of sex crimes in the digital age.
So assuming that the criminal potential of this technology remains the same regardless of whether the channel has 220,000 members, 726 members or even just 10, I can’t help wondering what Lee thinks would be an acceptable number of deepfake purveyors that would not constitute an “overblown threat.”
36 notes · View notes
sadlynotthevoid · 3 months
Text
It's sad that most fics with the Accidental Vigilantism tag are only BNHA fics.
Like, I want to see Jason "I don't know what being normal is" Todd go around doing lowkey and not so lowkey hero/vigilant stuff while thinking he's just being a good neighbour.
Maybe when he was a kid a neighbour helped him or saved him and went like "we're all from the Alley, we have to help ourselves. That's what neighbours are for" and he ran with it. And maybe Bruce did told him not to use Robin movements because he's Bruce Wayne's son and that's sus, but he took it too literary. Like, "helping is okay as long as I don't act like Robin" and later on he keeps with this.
Except now he's not Jason Todd-Wayne anymore, he's just Jason Todd from the next door. It's not strange if he can fight a bit, right? (He doesn't have idea what a bit is like).
More than once he ends up taking down a hideaway of a traffic ring as himself and doesn't think twice of it. He just saw someone being dragged into a van so he followed them. By feet? Why yes, he runs in his free time. Why didn't he call the police? This is Crime Alley, in Gotham. What police? How did he deal with all those guys by himself? Muscles and Home Alone shenanigans.
His vigilant identity is only safe because people either believe he doesn't have one or he's other cape. There're bets going on about which one he is.
Once, he's at college when an enormous sculpture starts falling down almost crushing a bunch of students. Almost. A moment Jason is there, talking with his friends, the next he's holding the thing from reaching the floor by its legs. What? He's a big guy and works out a lot.
Tall, dark hair, bright blue-ish eyes and Strong? That day 'Superman' is added to the list.
28 notes · View notes
intersectionalpraxis · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
Purposely, intentionally, and continuously destroying infrastructures in Gaza -from schools to hospitals, refugee camps, and WHOLE neighborhoods right to the ground. And posting about it... bombing buildings dedicated to education and hospitals and killing civilians indiscriminately are war crimes.
63 notes · View notes
brightgoat · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Buddy cop trope
Everette, green Addi, belongs to @pukeseven
For context: the pink is named ‘Scroll’, and he’s popular food mascot and cannibalistic serial killer.
705 notes · View notes
cyber-phobia · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
As promised Showman with a SWORD!! How did he get it? Who knows. Shigaraki would like to know so that he can decay the person.
97 notes · View notes
crystal-criminal · 15 days
Note
[ " I WON'T FORGET WHAT YOU DID TO MY BRETHREN. CONSIDER THIS A WARNING, CRIMINAL. " ]
-@blackrockunit0021
"Oh trust me little bitch. I'll continue to destroy every last one of ya! Don't think you're intimidatin' or anythin'."
17 notes · View notes
ruvviks · 6 days
Text
Tumblr media
his name is ulysses and he's kinda lame | [x]
9 notes · View notes
ms-boogie-man · 2 months
Text
Ahem…
You know, if these comprehensive cyber attacks are such a threat and problem, then the WEF should not do them to us
Listen to this asshole👇🏼. He is threatening you, us
youtube
Easy, peasy, dirty kneesy yo!
Angie/Maddie🦇❥✝︎🇺🇸
19 notes · View notes