Platforms as Crime Scene, Judge, and Jury: How Victim-Survivors of Non-Consensual Intimate Imagery Report Abuse Online

要旨

Non-consensual intimate imagery (NCII), also known as image-based sexual abuse (IBSA), is mediated through online platforms. Victim-survivors must turn to platforms to collect evidence and request content removal. Platforms act as the crime scene, judge, and jury, determining whether perpetrators face consequences and if harmful material is removed. We present a study of NCII victim-survivors' online reporting experiences, drawing on trauma-informed interviews with 13 participants. We find that platform reporting processes are hostile, opaque, and ineffective, often forcing complex harms into narrow interfaces, responding inconsistently, and failing to result in meaningful action. Leveraging institutional betrayal theory, we show how platforms' structures and practices compound harm, and, in doing so, surface concrete intervention points for redesigning reporting systems and shaping policy to better support victim-survivors.

著者
Li Qiwei
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Katelyn Kennon
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Nicole Bedera
Beyond Compliance, Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Asia A. Eaton
Florida International University, Miami, Florida, United States
Eric Gilbert
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Sarita Schoenebeck
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States

会議: CHI 2026

ACM CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems

セッション: Social Media Discourse and Online Harms

P1 - Room 119
7 件の発表
2026-04-17 20:15:00
2026-04-17 21:45:00