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18-Year-Old Model Edits Her Instagram Posts To Reveal The Truth Behind The Photos
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18-year-old Social media influencer Essena O’Neill has been making thousands of dollars modeling on Instagram and sharing her pictures with almost 580,000 followers, but all that has changed. The Australian deleted 2,000 photos from her account and changed the name to “Social media Is Not Real Life.” She has since re-captioned many of the remaining photos to reveal the “truth” behind them, and launched a new website, “Let’s Be Game Changers.”
“Without realizing, I’ve spent the majority of my teenage life succumbing to social media addiction, social approval, social status, and my physical appearance,” O’Neill wrote in an October 27th Instagram post. “Social media, especially how I used it, isn’t real. It’s a system based on social approval, likes, validation in views, success in followers. It’s perfectly orchestrated self-absorbed judgment.”
Essena bluntly talks about the negative effects of social media, encouraging young girls to view the pictures posted on Instagram as not real and staged. Her goal is to prove to people that life isn’t as portrayed on social media today but rather more straightforward and not so unrealistically glamorous.
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An intelligent young woman with the audacity to go against society's mainstream. She's beautiful and fierce.
Nah she's pretty dense if she was originally buying into seeking out other people's approval.
I watched her video in which (near the end) she is begging for money to support her because she now has no income because she has stopped modelling. Well what did you expect? If you want to be able to pay your rent, here's an idea - GET A JOB like everyone else has to do if they want to get through life.
I think a large fear that she had was that she had spent so much of her life focused on making money through social media that she can't exist without it. She needs to start over and find a career, and get a job, but she has nowhere to start. I don't like the idea of asking the internet for money either, but I'm not going to condemn her for needing a little help to get started on a career path that won't make her miserable.
really hope it isn't but it smells like a publicity stunt to me.. internet made me lose faith in even the faintest hope of anything being real.
I get you, it certainly feels so unreal most of the time. But maybe we should give this kind of acts a chance of being true. I see it as a girl who opened her eyes and in her unhappiness tried to change something, and tried to show people what she is trying so hard to change. Of course she probably hopes to get publicity, but this time in a good and changing way. From what she says, I feel like she already had that other kind of publicity at first, and really didn't enjoy it. Own opinion tho, I totally respect yours too ^ :)
An intelligent young woman with the audacity to go against society's mainstream. She's beautiful and fierce.
Nah she's pretty dense if she was originally buying into seeking out other people's approval.
I watched her video in which (near the end) she is begging for money to support her because she now has no income because she has stopped modelling. Well what did you expect? If you want to be able to pay your rent, here's an idea - GET A JOB like everyone else has to do if they want to get through life.
I think a large fear that she had was that she had spent so much of her life focused on making money through social media that she can't exist without it. She needs to start over and find a career, and get a job, but she has nowhere to start. I don't like the idea of asking the internet for money either, but I'm not going to condemn her for needing a little help to get started on a career path that won't make her miserable.
really hope it isn't but it smells like a publicity stunt to me.. internet made me lose faith in even the faintest hope of anything being real.
I get you, it certainly feels so unreal most of the time. But maybe we should give this kind of acts a chance of being true. I see it as a girl who opened her eyes and in her unhappiness tried to change something, and tried to show people what she is trying so hard to change. Of course she probably hopes to get publicity, but this time in a good and changing way. From what she says, I feel like she already had that other kind of publicity at first, and really didn't enjoy it. Own opinion tho, I totally respect yours too ^ :)

18-year-old Australian model shocked to see her nude photo from 2 years ago on porn website
Posted on 29 August 2016 | 47,897 views | 4 comments
Ms Tiahna Prosser, 18, had become another in a growing number of young women across the country specifically named in an online chat forum by users seeking sexually explicit images of her.
Two weeks after learning she had been named on the forum, she was appalled to discover that a nude image of her had been posted on the site. It was apparently taken two years earlier by someone she knew, but never did she imagine it would turn up so long afterwards on a porn website.
Discussing her experience, Ms Prosser, a bodybuilder and model with a strong online following, said it was "like I had been sold".
"It's just horrible especially when they want it of you specifically - that's when it's really disturbing," she told Queensland's Courier-Mail newspaper.
Ms Prosser decided to go public after it was revealed last week that more than 2,000 images of women - including students from more than 70 schools - had been circulated on the site.
Police reportedly had initially claimed that they could not act because the site was based offshore. Then on Aug 19, they revealed that it had been shut down.
"Wherever material such as this is identified, the (Australian Federal Police) will continue to work closely with its domestic and international partners to determine appropriate courses of action," a spokesman told The Sunday Times.
The revelations about the site - whose name and location have not been published - come as concern grows in Australia and abroad about the risks of sharing revealing information and images online. There has been a growing push to specifically outlaw "revenge porn", or sharing intimate images of people - without their consent - to humiliate them.
The states of Victoria and South Australia have specific criminal laws targeting revenge porn, but a parliamentary inquiry in February recommended national legislation. Victims in other states are currently restricted to relying on other laws such as bans on online harassment.
In a sombre warning to parents, Detective Senior Sergeant David Miles, an officer in the state of Queensland, warned that it was becoming a "normal" practice for young people in Australia to share explicit images of themselves.
Most children older than 12, he said, now have a smartphone or tablet and they start by sharing "selfies" but this "normally progresses" to sharing revealing and sexually explicit images. Typically, the images are shared with friends or boyfriends, but the teens often fail to consider that the photos could later be widely circulated.
"Parents give these devices to their children and don't really understand the power that these kids have in their hands," he said.
"They (young people) don't understand that this imagery is then available and is promulgated on the World Wide Web. Once it is out there, it is there forever."
Schools across Australia have been advising students to be careful about what they text or post online. Experts have also urged parents to use the revelations about the site to speak to their children about online safety.
"Yes, it's embarrassing, awkward and almost something parents put in the 'too hard' basket and don't address it," a cyber-safety expert and former police officer, Ms Susan McLean, told the Southern Star newspaper last Thursday. "This is the perfect opportunity (to) sit down with your children and have a conversation, not in an accusatory or demeaning way, but just showing them 'look what happens'."
The offending photo-sharing site, which was set up in December last year, apparently allowed users to ask for pictures of students and teenagers from specific locations or schools across Australia.
Many of the images were reportedly taken by former boyfriends or partners or had been posted online but not necessarily for public consumption. Some images included names of the girls and encouraged users of the site to give ratings.
The federal Office of the Children's eSafety Commissioner said some photos were not authentic and had been photo-shopped, using a girl's face with another person's body. It referred The Sunday Times to its online advice to victims of revenge porn and privacy breaches. It says on its website that victims should "Google your name to check what else might be out there" and try to prevent specific images appearing in search results by creating "lots of new, positive content with your name attached".
"Remember you haven't done anything wrong," the website says.
"The person who shared your photo or video is in the wrong and they should feel ashamed and embarrassed… not you."
Get a copy of The Straits Times or go to straitstimes.com for more stories.
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SPH Digital News / STOMP / Copyright (c) 2019 Singapore Press Holdings Ltd. Co. Regn. No. 198402868E.

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