Brazil is home to over 200M people, the majority of which have access to the Internet. Over 11M Brazilians live in favelas, or informal settlements with no outside government regulation, often ruled by narcos or militias. Victims of intimate partner violence (IPV) in these communities are made extra vulnerable not only by lack of access to resources, but by the added layer of violence caused by criminal activity and police confrontations. In this paper, we use an unintended harms framework to analyze the unique online privacy needs of favela women and present research questions that we urge tech abuse researchers to consider.
翻译:巴西有超过200万人口,其中多数人可以上网,超过1,100万巴西人居住在贫民窟,或无政府管制的非正规住区,通常由毒枭或民兵统治。这些社区亲密伴侣暴力的受害者特别脆弱,不仅因为缺乏资源,而且因为犯罪活动和警察对峙导致暴力增加。在本文中,我们使用一个意外伤害框架来分析贫民窟妇女独特的在线隐私需求,并提出我们敦促技术虐待研究人员考虑的研究问题。