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Facebook is trying to combat "revenge porn" by encouraging users to submit their nude photos to a pilot project, designed to prevent intimate images from being shared without consent.
Adults who have shared nude or sexually explicit photos with someone online, and who are worried about unauthorised distribution, can report images to the Australian government's eSafety Commission.
This identifier is then used to block any further distribution on Facebook, Instagram and Messenger as a pre-emptive strike against revenge porn, a common method of abuse and exploitation online.
A Facebook spokesman said Britain, Canada and the United States are also expected to take part in the project.
Inman Grant said that if successful, the Facebook trial should be extended to other online platforms.
Australia is among the few world leaders making efforts to combat revenge porn.
A recent survey by the commission showed one in five women in Australia, aged 18-45, who’s suffered image-based abuse, with Facebook and its Messenger app accounting for 53 percent of revenge porn, followed by Snapchat at 11 percent then Instagram at 4 percent.
Research by Melbourne's Monash University earlier this year found people were falling prey to abusive behaviour on a "mass scale", and that men and women were equally likely to be targeted.
(This article has been published in an arrangement with PTI.)
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