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When a young Pakistani woman was gang raped in a remote village, she kept silent. But then a video of the rape began circulating online and via mobile phone. As BBC Urdu's Amber Shamsi reports, little appears to have been done to stop web users from sharing the video.
Sadia (not her real name) had thought that if she kept quiet, it might protect her from the humiliation of being known as a rape victim.
But in the days or weeks after, two versions of her ordeal began to circulate online - one lasted five minutes, the other 40 minutes.
The video showed her being raped by four men, one by one, while she pleaded for mercy. It spread rapidly through the towns and villages of Punjab.
"It was my elder brother who first told me about the video. He saw it and recognised Sadia, then came to me," Sadia's father says.
They then reported the rape, and it was easy to find the alleged culprits in that small community.
It was shared largely through Bluetooth and clips have reportedly made it on to social media websites such as Facebook.
It can still be shared. Pakistan does not have the laws to stop this from happening.
Sadia lives in a typical Pakistani village, with mud homes surrounded by fields of sugarcane and small vegetable gardens.
She is 23 but she looks much younger. Since her mother died, she has been a surrogate mother to her younger siblings.
Sadia is nervous as she speaks, clasping and unclasping her hands, breaking down and re-composing herself.
She says she was on her way to the market to buy her sister's school uniform when she was bundled into a car and threatened with a gun. She claims the four men in the car took her to a house and raped her while filming the act on a mobile phone.
"After I begged and pleaded with them, they beat me even more," she says. "They said to me that if I don't listen to them and do what they want, they'll show everyone the video, put it up on the internet, that they would hurt my brothers and sister.
"I didn't care about myself but I didn't want my siblings' future to be in jeopardy because of me. That's why I didn't tell anyone."
She is acutely aware the video is now being watched widely.
"A lot of people are watching this video for fun, they see it as something interesting."
When I came face to face with the four accused men in the police station where they were being held on remand, they hung their heads to avoid our gaze. They are currently in jail and the trial is under way.
As well as being prosecuted for gang-rape and kidnap, they have also been charged with distributing pornography for which the penalty is three months in jail.
The video is still online although police say they have been trying to get it removed. As far as the gang-rape is concerned, police say that with the video, the case is strong
But this is also a story that underscores how Pakistan's legal system has been unable to keep pace with rapid changes in society and technology.
Lawyers specialising in cyber crime say there is no specific law to force websites to take down the video, and a lack of political will and manpower means this could still be some way off.
A comprehensive cyber-crime ordinance was allowed to lapse four years ago before it could become law.
So local police and federal agents adopt a piecemeal approach when confronted with a crime like the filming and sharing of a video containing sexual violence and invoke laws pertaining to sexual harassment, defamation or criminal intimidation or basic clauses on violation of privacy gleaned from an old law called the Electronic Transactions Ordinance (ETO).
Under a new cyber-crime law (yet to be enacted by parliament), the punishment for distributing sexually explicit material will be three years - whether or not it involves violence which is dealt with under separate laws - and violation of privacy is also three years
A deputy director-general with the central Federal Investigation Agency which covers cyber crime, Shehzad Haider, says he gets about 12 to 15 cases of private videos of a sexual nature being uploaded a month - by jilted lovers and blackmailing gangs - and the numbers appear to be increasing.
"The law which was allowed to lapse was very effective because it was detailed and made the job of prosecution much easier," says Mr Haider. "We make do with the ETO because we have no choice."
Sadia has no choice either. She is now house-bound because of the shame of the public nature of her ordeal. She used to be a primary-school teacher and had been in further study.
"Some of my college professors visited me and encouraged me to complete my studies," she says.
"They say I should put it behind me, but I can't. Not until the men are punished."
How the crime came to light: Tahir Imran Mian, Social Media editor, BBC Urdu
"I have something to share with you and I hope the BBC can help the victim." That was the message attached to a video from a reader of the BBC Urdu Facebook page.
It is one the biggest and most followed pages in Pakistan and a huge number of people reach out to us for help. We are often sent graphic material, but I felt numb after seeing the shocking video so decided to investigate.
After a few phone calls and conversations, it dawned on me that people were watching and sharing this. I then found that many men in the area where the attack took place thought it was "fun" to share and watch the video.
There are several closed groups on Facebook where men can share images. Those who have access to tools and technology can take it further and blackmail victims. A mobile phone with a camera is cheap and so are the opportunities it provides to many who knowingly or unknowingly record their videos and then share them.
The victim often ends up being the one stigmatised.
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A thousand pounds' worth of PokΓ©mon cards, two PlayStation 5s and a hundred pairs of designer trainers.
That's just what 18-year-old Jake (not his real name) has lying around in his bedroom.
He's part of a growing number of "scalpers" - people using online bots to buy and sell in-demand items.
It's led to politicians and gamers to call for a law to ban their use.
The word was first used to describe buying up large quantities of tickets for stuff like gigs and festivals and then selling them on, pocketing the profit.
Ticket scalpers would often use bots, which are bits of computer software that can scan the internet much faster than any person.
In 2018, following a campaign that had support from artists like Ed Sheeran and The Arctic Monkeys, the UK government made using these bots to buy tickets illegal.
But using bots to buy up other in-demand items like consoles and gym equipment is still allowed by law.
Jake says he doesn't know how much money he's made from scalping - but the numbers are big.
"I honestly don't keep track. Maybe Β£10,000 since November," he tells Radio 1 Newsbeat.
It's something he's been doing for a few years, starting with buying and selling designer trainers like Yeezys and Jordans.
But now he's graduated to selling more profitable items.
"At the start when stock was limited, you could easily sell a PS5 for Β£800," he says.
That's nearly double the recommended retail price.
And it's one of the reasons why many gamers haven't been able to get their hands on new consoles such as the PS5 and the Xbox Series X since their release.
The 26-year-old dad from Cambridge has been trying to get his hands on the new PlayStation but says the whole experience has been "stressful, frustrating and painful".
He says his best mate managed to buy one at 1:45am when they went on sale but for Ryan, "most of us are in bed by then, because we've got to get up for work or we've got kids. I've got no chance in hell of getting one.
"It's just frustrating," Ryan says. "I saw someone posted a picture of 15 stacked up in their hallway selling them for Β£600 each."
Christina has been trying to buy a console for her autistic brother.
She waited in a virtual queue for nearly two hours and when she got to the front everything had sold out.
"It's pretty frustrating," she says.
The scalpers, however, say, "it's just business."
One of those is 17-year-old Sam, who's currently applying to universities.
"I am probably the only 17-year-old with no Snapchat, TikTok or Facebook," she tells Radio 1 Newsbeat.
While others her age are - as she puts it - "out breaking lockdown rules", she's chatting on Discord, an app that has become popular with bot users, where she runs a business that's earning her over Β£2,000 a month.
"I'm not a scammer," she says. "I'm an entrepreneur of sorts.
"The reality is we buy stock, we own it, we can set the price. Some of the people in these groups do this to feed their families."
"I don't sound like a very nice person," he says, "but it's business isn't it?
"Why should I be sitting in my bedroom playing video games like every other 18-year-old, not doing anything with their life?
"It's easy money, it's pocket money."
But there's a darker side to making money from flogging consoles online.
And for Sam that comes in the form of threats of violence.
"People have said I should be stabbed and left to bleed in the street," she says.
The only one she's bothered to report threatened to rape her because "it's what I deserve".
Sam says she hasn't reported the others to the police because she'd be wasting her time.
"Girls online get it all the time," she says. "When people are behind a screen with a keyboard they say all sorts."
Jake's also received threatening messages.
"A lot of them are grown men in their 30s and 40s - for all they know I could be 16 and they're threatening me."
So what's being done to help gamers like Ryan?
It's complaints like his that have led politicians to get involved, including Douglas Chapman, who's an SNP MP.
Last week he put forward something called a private members bill - which is a request for a change in the law from someone not in government - to ban bots from buying up items online. It's the second time he's done so in Parliament.
"It's not in the interest of ordinary consumers," he tells Radio 1 Newsbeat.
"If you wanted a PS5 for Christmas but you didn't get one, it's probably because of bots."
And it's the sheer amount of people who have complained that led Douglas to raise it as in issue in Parliament.
"There's nothing wrong with trying to make money," Douglas says, but there is a "moral argument" that people should be paying market price.
The government says it is "discussing other markets with relevant trade associations" in response to a petition to make scalping for items other than tickets illegal.
Sam thinks it's likely that "legislation will likely come in to ban bots" but she also thinks that "manual buying will continue".
That is - buying up stock online without the help of bots.
"You're purchasing them the same way as anyone else, then reselling a product you own," she says.
Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays - or listen back here.
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