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< Blog talk:Main | ECSA: downloading is not duplication(Difference between revisions)
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(New comment by Abassos: I'm not sure I understand the other premise either. That Ritchie and Barger stand for the proposition that downloading is required for possession of an online image. I think...)
 

Latest revision as of 16:35, February 4, 2013

I'm not sure I understand the other premise either. That Ritchie and Barger stand for the proposition that downloading is required for possession of an online image.

I think they stand for the proposition that viewing an image on a website is not possession. Because it's like looking at a painting in a museum. You and the painting are in the same place, but that doesn't mean you possess it.

However, lets say I walk up to the painting, rip it off the wall and paint clothes onto the 15th century nude. Now I've possessed it. But I haven't duplicated it.

The same thing can be done on the internet. Without downloading an image, you can digitally manipulate it. So what if you digitally painted clothes on a porn picture and reposted it. You have possessed the porn but the duplication was done to the de-porned image. Like "Work-Safe Pron"