The moral and ethical dilemma of screenshotting nudes

Bread.

Gold Member
At the core of the debate is the idea of whether it is morally and ethically wrong to screenshot nudes.
For the purposes of this debate this does not involve the sharing of these explicit images. Only the screenshotting.

While some may argue that screenshoting is an invasion of privacy and a breach of trust, others contend that consent and context play crucial roles in determining the morality of such actions.

Those who believe it is wrong to screenshot nudes may argue that doing so violates an individual's right to privacy. That saving these intimate images without consent can lead to emotional distress, blackmail, or even revenge porn. Respecting boundaries and maintaining trust are fundamental principles in any relationship; therefore, capturing and storing explicit images without permission undermines these values.

On the other hand, people who screenshot nudes argue that context matters significantly. If explicit images are shared willingly within a consensual relationship with a full understanding that theses images may be preserved for personal reasons, then taking screenshots may not necessarily be unethical.
 
When you send a picture you are already consenting on it going to the user.

Does that mean i can say i dont want my picture saved after the fact that ive already consented to sending it to the user? Once ive sent it is no longer my picture, it is the recipients. It is then the users moral dilemma on whether he wants to respect and maintaining my privacy and trust.

Its like if you give a bum some money and then tell him what he can or cant buy with said money, after youve already gave it to him and its his money.

That is far different then telling the bum, im going to give you money but here is what you can or cant use it for, do you still want it?

Thoughts? Crybabies?
 
Once ive sent it is no longer my picture, it is the recipients.
Donald Trump GIF by Election 2016


The copyright belongs to the taker of the picture and therefore yes they do still own it and can control what is done with it
 
i guess it really depends what country you're talking about...or even state...in canada we have the concept of continual right to remove consent...which means that you can say no at any point in any sexual situation. I don't know if there's any case law for it yet...but i would assume that it would apply in this situation also...and rightly so...
 
Donald Trump GIF by Election 2016


The copyright belongs to the taker of the picture and therefore yes they do still own it and can control what is done with it

Seems like you in fact do not have control over something if the person you send it can control whether to screenshot or it not.
 
Seems like you in fact do not have control over something if the person you send it can control whether to screenshot or it not.
It could equally be said that any debate or discussion is completely pointless just because someone can do something. Perhaps also read your own starting line...

At the core of the debate is the idea of whether it is morally and ethically wrong to screenshot nudes

To be fair, oh stale one, you'd make a good politician
 
So if you send a nude to your boyfriend or girlfriend and he captures without notifying you whos fault is it
 
thats basically the gist of the opposing argument. There is usually no contractual verbiage when you send one. So if you willingly send one is it the other persons fault for screenshotting it ?

Remember we are not talking about sharing or republishing the image. Just screenshotting it for whatever personal reason or preference.
 
if i send someone nudes, i pretty much expect & assume that they saved them one way or another 🤷🏼‍♀️
 
A couple of thoughts on this debate topic...

I'm in agreement with @StubleU that consent is ongoing, and that should apply not just to intimate situations, but also to intimate pictures.

I'm also in agreement with @Inkandtatts that the owner of an image is the one who took the picture / who the picture is of, so they still have a say in what happens with it once it is distributed.

I also think though that realistically, there is a degree of risk when distributing anything to someone else, and when distributing an intimate image, that should be taken into consideration by the sender. Considering this is a debate topic surrounding moral and ethical dilemma on the recipient's end and not one of risk on the sender's end, I'm not going to factor this into my formal answer.... Which is:

I do not believe it is morally wrong for the recipient to screenshot an intimate image if the person who took the picture / who the picture is of consents to it. That being said, if at any time the sender revokes consent and no longer feels comfortable with the recipient having possession of the image, the recipient has a moral obligation to remove the image from their possession.
 
A couple of thoughts on this debate topic...

I'm in agreement with @StubleU that consent is ongoing, and that should apply not just to intimate situations, but also to intimate pictures.

I'm also in agreement with @Inkandtatts that the owner of an image is the one who took the picture / who the picture is of, so they still have a say in what happens with it once it is distributed.

I also think though that realistically, there is a degree of risk when distributing anything to someone else, and when distributing an intimate image, that should be taken into consideration by the sender. Considering this is a debate topic surrounding moral and ethical dilemma on the recipient's end and not one of risk on the sender's end, I'm not going to factor this into my formal answer.... Which is:

I do not believe it is morally wrong for the recipient to screenshot an intimate image if the person who took the picture / who the picture is of consents to it. That being said, if at any time the sender revokes consent and no longer feels comfortable with the recipient having possession of the image, the recipient has a moral obligation to remove the image from their possession.
Hypothetically speaking they may have legal recourse over control of the image but realistically they do not have control.
Just go look at how many celebrity sex tapes exist. Once these images are released their is little to "control".

As to your formal answer:

Are you saying its morally okay for the recipient to screenshot it so long as he is given explicit consent to screenshot it?
or
Are you saying its morally okay for the recipient to screenshot it because the person has already consented by sending it
 
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