Source: WIRED
The infrastructure for intimate partner abuse and sexual harassment has moved into accessible consumer marketplaces. Telegram groups function as distribution networks where men buy commercial spyware—tools marketed for parental monitoring or employee tracking—to surveil partners, then share nonconsensual intimate images in organized communities. The harm itself is not new, but the commodification and normalization of these tools has lowered barriers to entry: pricing is cheap, technical skill is minimal, accountability fragments across platforms and vendors claiming legitimate use cases, and network effects reward participation. For platforms and device manufacturers positioning surveillance tools as consumer products, this exposes a core problem: "legitimate uses" cannot be cleanly separated from intimate abuse. The same affordances that appeal to security-conscious parents or employers enable networked sexual violence.