The first one has gone to court. That’s how it will be
reported. As if it’s contained. As if it’s unusual. As if it’s something new.
It isn’t. This is just the first one that made it far enough
to become inconvenient.
There are already thousands of these images circulating.
Probably more. Most of them will never be traced back to anyone. Most of the
people in them will never even know they exist. That’s the part no one seems to
sit with for very long.
You don’t need photos anymore.
You don’t need access.
You don’t need permission.
You just need a face.
A school photo.
A social media profile.
A picture taken from ten rows back at a sports day.
That’s enough.
From there, it’s just time and intent.
William Yeates isn’t a freak (well he is a freaking pig). He’s just early. That’s what
makes people uncomfortable. It would be easier if he was something extreme.
Someone obviously dangerous. Someone you could point to and say — that’s the
problem right there. Isn’t he hideous!! Just like Quasimodo!
But he’s not. He looks normal. A normal kid going about his
business! But I hope his name keep getting tossed around! I intend to name and shame him every chance I get!
He’s exactly the kind of person these tools were always
going to land in front of. Curious. Bored. Disconnected from consequence.
And surrounded by a culture that already treats women’s
bodies as something to be used, shared, altered, consumed. The technology
didn’t invent that. It just removed the last bit of effort.
There’s a quiet assumption that the law will catch up. It
won’t. Not in any meaningful way. By the time one case makes it through court,
thousands more have already occurred. This process is too slow; the tools are
too easy. How the hell can you regulate something that takes minutes to produce
and seconds to distribute.
You can only react to it. After the fact. When the damage is
already done. And the damage is strange, because it’s easy to dismiss. It is
real in every way that matters.
Reputation is real. Humiliation is real. Loss of control is
real.
And the image - fake or not - will always move faster than
the truth. The uncomfortable reality is that we’ve crossed a line that doesn’t
reverse. Faces are no longer private. Once an image of you exists anywhere
online, it can be used. Altered. Rebuilt into something else entirely.
You don’t get a say in that anymore. That part is already
over.
So, this case won’t be the last. It won’t even be close. It’s
just the first one that someone couldn’t laugh off, deny, or quietly delete. The
first one that became visible. And once something becomes visible, people start
paying attention.
Briefly.
Until the next one.
And there will be a next one. There is always a next one!