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Italy closes “Mia Moglie” Facebook group abuse

Close-up of a man looking strongly at his cell phone.

Mom Mia.

Closed last week, a painful Facebook group in Italy called “Mia Moglie” (“My Wife”) gave more than 32,000 men without permission to share intimate photos of their wives, girlfriends and even strangers.

Running since 2019, the page is full of everything from undressing shots to private sunbathing snapshots, threads with lewd comments and creepy suggestions.

After filing more than 2,000 complaints to Yuan and local police, authorities finally pulled the plug.

Thousands of images emanate, including photos taken during sexual activities and shared by partners, without women’s knowledge.

As CNN reported, Italy’s postal police officers were in charge of digital law enforcement, launching a criminal investigation that led to the page being determined to close on August 20.

“All comments will be brought in our information system,” said Barbara Strappato, deputy chief of the Rome Postal Police Department, in a statement that day.


After thousands of complaints, Italy’s “Mia Moglie” Facebook group closed, allowing 32,000 men to share intimate photos of women (usually without their consent). Wordley Calvo Stock – Stock.adobe.com

She added that the crime “from slander to the spread of intimate material without consent”.

Strappato continued: “I admit I’ve never seen such disturbing phrases in a social media group before.”

Strappato said the page was ruled before the last post was not too subtle invitation to bring the creepy vitality on the new platform – probably Telegram.

Even if Facebook plugs in, thousands of screenshots from the group may still be circulating elsewhere.

The group’s dark administrator’s name is wrapped, leaving a shockingly separate message: “We just created a new private and secure group. Goodbye and f–your moralists.”

Before the patient, shameless group (full of real human men, not robots) finally shut down, members reportedly centered around things like “if she is shy, take pictures secretly” and even “put your hands between her thighs to see if she wakes up and see if she wakes up,”

In an interview with Italian media Corriere Della Sera, a woman who found her photos had been posted in the group said: “I feel like the two are broken. I learned from my sister…some photos have been passed on the telegram. I’m afraid it will affect my children.”

The group was eventually shut down after several formal complaints against Meta, sparked by feminist and writer Carolina Caprian, with a massive social media following.


Close-up of a person using smartphone.
The group revolves around countless images, including clear photos taken during sexual activities – turning private moments into public feed for thousands of Forlin members. Konga Studio -Stock.adobe.com

According to her Instagram post, Caprio reported the group to the postal police in Italy.

Meta Italy confirmed that the group was tugged for “violating our policy on sexual exploitation of adults.”

As the post previously reported, last month, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni did not endure her dislike for Phica, a porn site that used fake photos of her and other high-profile women, including her sister Arianna, and paired with a gender-discriminatory title.

The anger was immediately, and the website’s managers pulled up the entire platform, accusing its hundreds of thousands of users of violating the rules.

Italy does have laws for revenge, but Meloni warned the publication of Corriere Della Sera, the issue has developed: “[The violating distribution] It’s no longer “revenge” and protecting our data, and our privacy is crucial in our time. ”

Under this current law passed in 2019, anyone who captures a gender-specific image may be behind at most six years.

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