Can you please elaborate on how someone can retroactively revoke their consent for you to possess pictures that were given to you?
Consent is ongoing, not retroactive. In this instance, revoking consent could be as simple as something like, "Now that we are breaking up, I'm no longer comfortable with you possessing intimate pictures of me."
You are basically saying anyone who’s ever had consensual sexual images sent to them is a potential RAPIST, depending on how the sender feels months/years after matter. They can convert what had previously been a consensual sexual encounter into something damaging and illegal. This is essentially time traveling back in history and removing consents, a nudes TERMINATOR if you will.
That's a huge leap that you're intentionally exaggerating. Not every non-consensual interaction is rape. In
@Inkandtatts example, if my vehicle is stolen (ie, I didn't consent for someone to take my vehicle), that's decidedly not rape and neither is possessing intimate images without consent. Also, ongoing consent also has nothing to do with changing the past.
Also how does the alleged victim of this retroactive consent, know that these images were saved?
How can they go after "control" of their images to a person that screenshotted them but never published them?
Again, not retroactive consent, ongoing consent. Someone has a right to change their mind and no longer consent to what is actively taking place. That has nothing to do with changing the past.
I believe there are certain apps like Snapchat that inform the sender if their image is saved / screenshoted. Outside of that, the sender may require legal / lawful action to confirm the possession of images. This is a moral debate though, not a legal one.
- If you agree that these images can be saved then you will also have to agree that the consent is also given for users to save these images.
No, I do not have to agree to that. Just because something can happen doesn't mean that consent was given. In your prior example, just because someone can be assaulted doesn't mean they consent to being assaulted. This is ludicrous.
So where is the "control"?
You said earlier the recipient has a moral obligation to delete said images.
If the recipient has the moral obligation it seems like its recicpients choice, not the person that sends them.
Your debate is a moral and ethical one. If you're not interested in hearing arguments surrounding moral obligations, ask different questions.