Supporting Someone Experiencing NCDII - Compass for Non-Consensual Image Disclosure (2024)

Supporting Someone Experiencing Non-Consensual Image Sharing

Tech Safety Canada: Supporting Others

BCSTH: How to Help a Friend

Ending Violence Association of BC | Responding to a Sexual Assault Disclosure: Practice Tips for Universities and Colleges

Salal Sexual Violence Support Centre

Note: Salal provides many services, including:

  • A 24 hour crisis line
  • Text and Chat support
  • Police and Court Accompaniment
  • Counselling
  • Specific counselling and support for Indigenous survivors

Thorn: Support your Friend

Poster/One Pager: Take it Down Now

Tech Safety Canada: Image-Based Abuse and the Non-Consensual Distribution of Intimate Images

Tech Safety Canada: Technology Safety and Victim/Survivor Resources

Tech Safety Canada: Conversation Starters for Tech Safety Planning

Tech Safety Canada: Preserving Digital Evidence Toolkit

Tech Safety Canada: Tech Safety Planning Toolkit

Tech Safety Canada: Assessing for Technology Abuse

The Learning Network

Supporting Children & Youth

The Learning Network | Supporting Youth Experiencing Technology-Facilitated Sexual Violence

Kids Help Phone

Tech Safety Canada: Supporting Teens’ Experiences of Digital Dating Violence

Tech Safety Canada| Understanding Teens and Technology: Safety, Privacy, and Empowerment

Media Smarts: Resources for Parents

Media Smarts: Digital Issues Library
* (resources for youth & caregivers)

Kids Help Phone| Cyberbullying: How to support the young person in your life

Kids Help Phone: How to have an open conversation with a young person

eSafety Commissioner | The Hard to Have Conversations: Talking with Your Child about Tricky Personal Subjects

eSafety Commissioner | Sending Nudes and Sexting
*A guide for adults and caregivers that provides guidance for many scenarios. Resource helplines in this article are Australian. For a list of BC and Canadian resources see below.

Thorn: Talking to your Kids about Sextortion

Thorn: Sextortion Resources for Educators

Kids help phone: Talking to the young person in your life about sexuality

Kids Help Phone: What to do when a young person confides in you

Media Smarts| Relationships and Technology: Sexting

The Learning Network | Coercive Control During Intimate Partner Violence: What about children?

Paper | ‘Young People Just Resolve It in Their Own Group’: Young People’s Perspectives on Responses to Non-Consensual Intimate Image Distribution | Dodge and Lockhart, (2022)

Community-Specific Support

The Learning Network
*Includes a library with many tailored and specific resources

The Learning Network: Sexual Violence Against Black Women and Girls in a #MeToo Era

Toronto Metropolitan University: Hea

Toronto Metropolitan University: We are Spectacular Nebulas in Healing Journal

Toronto Metropolitan University | We Heal Together: A Colouring Book for Black Survivors

The Learning Network: Addressing Sexual Violence and Promoting the Sexual Rights of Women Labelled with Intellectual Disabilities

Disability Alliance of BC: Anti-Violence Resources (in French and English)

Tech Safety Canada: Digital Assistive Technology Toolkit

Article | The Conversation: Technology-Facilitated Abuse of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island Women
Note: This is an Australian article, but many points overlap with the Canadian Context. It may be helpful in understanding the experiences of Indigenous women and girls with technology-facilitated gender-based violence.

Tech Safety Canada: Supporting Indigenous Teens Through Digital Dating Violence

Tech Safety Canada: Tech Safety Planning Conversation Starters for Anti-Violence Workers Supporting Indigenous Survivors

Having a Safe Online Presence after Leaving Your Community

Tech Safety Canada: Tech Safety Planning Tips for Indigenous Survivors Leaving a Community

Tech Safety Canada: Tech Abuse Poster 8.5 x 11 (Inuktitut)

Tech Safety Canada: Tech Abust Poster 11 x 17 (Inuktitut)

Tech Safety Canada: Tech Safety Planning Tools in Inuktitut

Tech Safety Canada: Tech Safety Planning Tools in Spanish

Tech Safety Canada: Sécurité Technologique Canada (French Website)

Woman Act | Promising Practices for Agencies to Engage Older Women

The Learning Network: Support Rainbow Seniors! 3 things for Service Providers to Know

The Learning Network: Trans Women and Intimate Partner Violence Fundamentals for Service Providers

Government of BC: Safe Campuses BC

Some of BCSTH’s member programs provide specialized support for specific communities (e.g., people without status, Newcomer Women, Francophones, and Indigenous people), in addition to their regular services.

You can use BCSTH’s member directory to find support services aligned with your needs. On the website, you can search for support organizations by region, city, and program. You can also filter out results that provide specific support services. Some of these organizations include:

Inform’Elles serves francophone women experiencing gender-based violence in BC.

DIVERSEcity Community Resources Society Supports newcomers and other diverse communities.

Progressive Intercultural Community Services (PICS) Society provides a wide range of programs and services that support new immigrants, seniors, farm workers, women and youth.

Vancouver & Lower Mainland Multicultural Family Support Services Society offer assistance to immigrants, refugees, visible minorities, and women without immigration status and children facing family violence within the Metro Vancouver area.

Nisa Foundation supports women of color, Muslim women, immigrants, refugees and those without status.

Community Supports & Resources

There are supports & resources available to those experiencing NCDII and the people supporting them. Here is a list of resources.

Support for People Impacted by Non-Consensual Distribution of Intimate Images

The Intimate Image Protection Service provides support to people in BC whose images have been shared without their consent. Available by email or phone (8:30 AM-4:30PM).

Victim Link BC is a free, confidential, and multilingual 24 hour service that provides phone, text, and email support including referrals and immediate crisis support to victims of crime. You can contact Victim Link BC even if you are not sure if you’ve experienced a crime.

Salal Sexual Violence Support Centre provides free support for survivors of sexualized violence, including survivors of technology-facilitated violence (such as NCDII). They offer a 24 hour crisis line, Text and Chat support, Police and Court Accompaniment, Counseling, and Specific counseling and support for Indigenous survivors.

The Canadian Centre for Child Protection provides immediate help and prevention education to address the victimization of children and support those who have experienced violence.

Cybertip.ca is a tipline for reporting online child sexual abuse and exploitation.

Need Help Now provides resources and support for Canadian youth who have experienced the non-consensual distribution of intimate images, luring, sextortion, or other forms of online sexual violence.

You can find a Transition House, Second Stage House, or Third Stage House near you on BCSTH’s membership directory.

Crisis Lines & Counseling

PEACE Program for Children and Youth is a counseling program for children and youth experiencing violence.

Kid Help Phone crisis line is available 24/7 by call or text.

KUU-US Crisis Line Society is a crisis phone line for Indigenous Elders, Adults, and Youth.

VictimLink BC is a referral and information service for victims of crime.

Crisis Centre BC is a crisis phone line that offers 24 hour support in many languages. You don’t need to be thinking about suicide to use this service. 1-800-SUICIDE/ 1-800-784-2433.

The National Suicide Crisis Helpline offers 24 hour support. Call or text 9-8-8 for phone or chat support.

BC Mental Health Support Line– A 24 hour line for immediate mental health support or referral. Call 310-6789 (no area code)

The Crime Victim Assistance Program may be able to help victims and their family members with expenses for victims of violent crime, such as funds for support and counseling. You can apply to the program as soon as a crime against you has taken place, even before criminal proceedings begin.

Legal Support

Society for Children and Youth BC’s Child and Youth Legal Centre provides legal support for children and youth.

Access Pro Bono Society of British Columbia offers free legal advice throughout BC.

UBC Indigenous Community Legal Clinic provides free legal services to the Indigenous community, and is located in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside.

The UBC Law Students’ Legal Advice Program provides free legal advice and representation to clients in the lower mainland.

Rise Women’s Legal Centre provides accessible legal services to self-identifying women and gender-diverse clients. They tend to have a focus in family law.

Tech Safety Support & Image Removal

Take it Down Now is an image removal service that supports survivors who were under the age of 18 when the image they are worried about was taken.

Tech Safety Canada offers Canada-wide resources on technology-facilitated gender-based violence for survivors and frontline workers

The BCSTH Tech Safety Project provides tech safety resources for survivors and anti-violence workers in BC.

The White Hatter provides resources and education on digital literacy and internet safety. They provide online resources and have a phone line for support.

Stop NCII is an image removal service for survivors over the age of 18.

Supporting Someone Experiencing NCDII - Compass for Non-Consensual Image Disclosure (2024)

FAQs

What is nonconsensual distribution of intimate imagery? ›

Definition of 'Distribution of Intimate Images Without Consent' Non-consensual distribution of intimate images occurs when a perpetrator shares explicit videos or pictures of the victim without their permission.

What is an intimate image? ›

We define an “intimate image” as an image that is either sexual, nude, partially nude, or of toileting. These types of images show something that is inherently personal, private and intimate.

What is an intimate image in Canada? ›

An “intimate image” is defined in the Criminal Code. An “image” includes a photo, film or video recording (physical or digital). The image must be intimate in nature, meaning that the person depicted is either naked, exposing their genital, anal area or breasts, or is engaged in explicit sexual activity.

What is the intimate images Protection Act in Alberta? ›

Alberta's Protecting Victims of Non-Consensual Distribution of Intimate Images Act says that it is a tort to distribute an intimate image of another person knowing that the person did not consent to the distribution, or if you are reckless about determining whether or not the person depicted consented to the ...

What is the Unauthorized Disclosure of intimate images Act? ›

The basic elements of this cause of action are: (1) an intentional disclosure or threat to disclose; (2) a private; (3) intimate image; (4) of an identifiable individual; (5) without the consent of the depicted individual; (6) by a person who has the requisite awareness that: (a) the depicted individual did not consent ...

What is considered illegal imagery? ›

Any person who intentionally views or knowingly possesses or controls any book, magazine, pamphlet, slide, photograph, film, videotape, computer depiction or other material depicting a child under the age of 18 years engaging in a prohibited sexual act or in the simulation of such act commits an offense.

Is revenge p*rn a crime? ›

California has specifically outlawed "revenge p*rn." In California, it is a crime to post or otherwise electronically distribute a digital image of another person in order to harass, cause fear in, or lead to injury of that person.

Is sending unsolicited pictures harassment? ›

That's because it makes the interaction between the sender and you sexual without your consent, which is sexual harassment. An unwanted nude can show a male, female or transgender body, or part of their body (like a 'dick pic'). It can arrive via a direct message, text, AirDrop, Nearby Share or email.

What is the private use exception rule? ›

What is the Private Use Exception Rule (PUER)? In 2001, the Supreme Court of Canada created the PUER. PUER states that it is not illegal for two consenting people (including those under the age of 18) to possess or carry a naked/nude photo of one another.

Is sharing intimate pictures without permission illegal? ›

Under California law, it is a serious offense to knowingly distribute, or aid in the distribution of, intimate images without the explicit consent of the person involved. This violation of privacy is taken seriously and carries severe penalties. Conviction can lead to imprisonment and other legal ramifications.

What is image privacy rights? ›

Privacy and publicity rights protect the ability of a person to control the commercial use of their image, and to prevent unauthorized or intrusive uses of their image. These rights stem from state, not federal, law.

Is it illegal to post a picture of someone without their permission in Canada? ›

It is a very flexible privacy law, leaving it's interpretation open to the courts. This means that publishing a photo of a person, without their consent, may be considered a breach of privacy. Though since the law is flexible, it could be argued that as little as taking a photo of a person is a breach of privacy.

What is threatening to distribute intimate image? ›

91R Threaten to record or distribute intimate image

is guilty of an offence. : Maximum penalty--100 penalty units or imprisonment for 3 years, or both. (b) intending to cause that other person to fear that the threat will be carried out, is guilty of an offence.

What is it called when someone shows you their private parts without consent? ›

Indecent exposure is when someone shows their genitals to another person for sexual pleasure and/or to scare or upset them. It is sometimes known as 'flashing'.

What is distributing obscene material? ›

Section 1465 of Title 18 prohibits anyone from knowingly transporting in interstate or foreign commerce or interactive computer service any obscene book, pamphlet, picture, film, or phonograph recording, for the purpose of sale or distribution.

What is considered obscene images? ›

As used in this chapter, the following definitions apply: (a) "Obscene matter" means matter, taken as a whole, that to the average person, applying contemporary statewide standards, appeals to the prurient interest, that, taken as a whole, depicts or describes sexual conduct in a patently offensive way, and that, taken ...

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Nathanial Hackett

Last Updated:

Views: 5388

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (72 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nathanial Hackett

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: Apt. 935 264 Abshire Canyon, South Nerissachester, NM 01800

Phone: +9752624861224

Job: Forward Technology Assistant

Hobby: Listening to music, Shopping, Vacation, Baton twirling, Flower arranging, Blacksmithing, Do it yourself

Introduction: My name is Nathanial Hackett, I am a lovely, curious, smiling, lively, thoughtful, courageous, lively person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.