If it is passed by lawmakers, the Intimate Images Protection Act (Bill 12) will create a new, expedited process through the Civil Resolution Tribunal (CRT) which will result in legal decisions and orders designed specifically to stop the distribution of intimate images without consent, alongside a more traditional civil action for survivors to seek monetary damages for harms suffered.
B.C. Attorney General Niki Sharma said having intimate images shared without permission “is a betrayal that can have devastating impacts.”
“Victims are often too ashamed to come forward and those who do are met with limited, complex and expensive legal options,” she said. “We are building a path to justice for people to regain control of their private images and hold perpetrators to account.”
The bill would also require those who are found to have distributed intimate images without consent make every reasonable effort to destroy all intimate images and remove them from the Internet, and would order intermediaries like Facebook and Instagram to remove the intimate image and de-index it from their search engines.
“As our lives become increasingly digital, more people are sharing intimate images with each other. But when your intimate images are used against you, that’s a violation of trust that can be extremely difficult to overcome,” said Kelli Paddon, the province’s parliamentary secretary for gender equity. “This legislation is a critical part of our work to better support people impacted by sexualized violence.”
Daniel Reid, Harper Grey LLP
Daniel Reid, a defamation and privacy lawyer with Vancouver’s Harper Grey LLP, called the legislation “long overdue,” pointing to a 2019 Supreme Court decision (R. v. Jarvis, 2019 SCC 10) which said that privacy isn’t an “all or nothing” proposition.
“There used to be this idea that things were either public or private, and once you have shared an image with someone you had lost the expectation of privacy,” he said. “But your expectation of privacy is a nuanced thing, and this is an area in which courts and legislatures are starting to recognize the importance of privacy in a way that 20 years ago was just pretty much unmanageable.”
In 2015, an amendment to the Criminal Code came into effect which created a new offence for the non-consensual distribution of intimate images. But Moira Aikenhead, a limited-term assistant professor at the University of Victoria faculty of law, said a criminal remedy is something people don’t want to pursue for a lot of reasons.
Moira Aikenhead, University of Victoria
Reid said ensuring that intermediaries like Facebook and Instagram have a role to play is “huge.”
“It can be very tricky when you have intimate images which are on sites all over the world, as you have to bring multiple applications to get an order to take them down,” he said.
And Aikenhead said it is significant that the legislation flags a requirement that complainants have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the images — and that expectation is not lost just because a person has sent the images themselves, or has consented to limited distribution.
“The issue of what a reasonable expectation of privacy is hasn’t been clearly addressed in the criminal context,” she said. “But this legislation says doing things like sending a nude picture to a partner will not result in a wholesale loss of the expectation of privacy.”
Bill 12 has passed first reading and is currently before the provincial legislature. More information can be found here.
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