Tag: Reddit

  • The legalities of watching someone die

    The legalities of watching someone die

    There is a forum thread on the site Reddit called Watch People Die. Although the nature of this thread seems self-explanatory, many questions remain on the ethical and legal side of sites such as these.

    The forum in itself comprises of various videos uploaded by users of people’s deaths. It is assumed that these are real videos. Some are shot by mobiles, CCTV or even official footage. Most are graphic and gruesome in nature.

    reddit

    There is a section where you can search for certain types of videos, clearly laid out for your viewing pleasure.

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    What is perhaps more harrowing are the strict guidelines and rules for video submissions. The first rule is that ‘there must be a person – not an animal – actually dying in the link.’ The moderators can and will remove posts which do not fit their guidelines.

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    What are the current implications for viewers in Ireland?

    “European directives and regulations transposed into Irish law require that Internet access services are provided without any monitoring of what people are accessing by ISPs,” says Paul Durrant, chief executive of the Internet Service Providers Association of Ireland. ”This also applies to state authorities, who require a valid court order or warrant relating to specific subscriber connections to access user records or system logs.”

    So content such as this forum are not currently illegal. Should it be?

    “There are only two types of content where the content is, in itself, illegal, and users should not deliberately engage with or try to find such material online,” Durrant explains. “These are child pornography, which is illegal to knowingly obtain and possess, and incitement to hatred, which is only illegal to publish or distribute.”

    Legality aside, then, what exactly are the intentions of a forum such as this, and more importantly the purposes of those who view the content? While it is in human nature to be curious, some requests for certain videos posted by users often leave a sense of bewilderment: Why on earth would someone, for example, request a video containing flaying?

    One wonders whether there is an extreme sexual fetish at play with some users. Considering that some videos feature children it then brings us to the question of whether this forum at times crosses the line into an extreme version of child pornography.

    Niall Colgan from Hotline.ie, a site where users can report illegal material on the internet, explains, unsurprisingly, that the net ‘is extremely difficult to regulate’. As technology advances, this difficulty multiplies.

    What is left is then the idea of our rights to expression, and freedom to search whatever we feel fitting on the internet. The reddit site is a well-known one, but the forum might not be. There is a warning before you enter the forum asking if you are over eighteen years old, explicitly stating that it has ‘adult content’.

    Should sites like these stay untouched or should we be actively trying to take them down?

    – Natasha Reis

  • Twitter, Facebook, IrishTimes, the Journal.ie, where do Irish people get their news?

    Twitter, Facebook, IrishTimes, the Journal.ie, where do Irish people get their news?

    Smartphone apps are fast becoming the easiest way to source news.
    Smartphone apps are fast becoming the easiest way to source news.

    Twitter is fast becoming an important figure in the world of journalism. The social media website is at the heart of breaking news thanks to its quick and easy

    Speaking to Twitter.com, Andrew Miller, CEO of the Guardian Media group said “Twitter is the fastest way to break news now.10% of our traffic now comes from social media, and Twitter is central to its efforts”.

    There are an estimated 21 million active twitter users throughout the world. According to a survey carried out by Pew Research Centre, one in 10 American adults gets their news from twitter.

    However, the social media site still lies in the shadow of Facebook particularly here in Ireland where 49% of the population over 15 are on Facebook compared with just 11% of the population who are on twitter.

    We here at the city decided to do a survey of 100 people between the ages of 15-60, to find out if the people of Dublin use twitter on their smartphones to source news, and if not what news apps do they use.

    Of the 100 participants 25% claimed to have a twitter account which they used to get their news. 35% said that they got news from social network site Facebook, while the Journal.ie proved to be the most popular news app between the groups as 44% said they got their news from the Journals news app.

    Of those surveyed twitter was most popular for those aged 25-40 with 58% of that age group claiming to use twitter for news. Other popular news apps for this age group included the Daily Mail, Sky Sports News, Sky Sports and the Independent.

    18% of those aged between 15-25 used twitter to get news, with most claiming Facebook was their main source. Reddit, Sky Sports news and the Daily Mail proved popular amongst this age group also with 15% admitting to getting their news from Reddit while 35% used Sky Sports news and 28% using the Daily Mail.

    Twitter was least popular within the 40-60 age groups with only 2% sourcing their news from the social media site. Popular news apps among these individuals included the Irish Times, Irish Independent, RTE and the Journal.ie.

    The city.ie also took to the streets to find how the general public gather their news.

    Credits

    Reporter: Stephanie Quilligan

    Surveyors: Sara Dalton, Niamh Casey, Keelin Riley, Stephanie Quilligan

    Camera: Craig Farrell

    Production: Graham Barry