ACLU kills Arizona revenge-porn law

By Around the Web

(International Business Times) A federal court ordered a permanent halt in enforcement of an Arizona law that aimed to combat so-called “revenge porn” on Friday. The 2014 law was challenged in court by the American Civil Liberties Union, which represented a coalition of media interests. The suit contended the law was too broad and had the potential to encompass a range of other nude images from being published that have an intended artistic or newsworthy value.

Revenge porn is generally understood to be an intentionally malicious act in which easily identifiable nude photographs of former lovers are posted online. The Arizona law would have made it possible for people posting nude photographs to be charged with felonies, even if there was no harm intended and the photographs were not private.

Leave a Comment