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104 A.B.A. J. 34 (2018)
Legal Technology: Tech Companies Are Creating Apps to Combat Sexual Assault

handle is hein.journals/abaj104 and id is 870 raw text is: 






Business of Law


Proving Consent

Tech   companies are creating apps to combat sexual

assault,   ranging from tools memorializing consent

to  programs that help victims file reports with the

authorities By Jason Tashea


                  When  having sex in
      **h.       Sweden, no means
                 no and yes must be
                 explicit.
                   In May, the country's
                 Parliament passed a law
   stating that sex without consent is rape,
   making it the 10th European Union
   country to do so. Past laws required
   Swedish prosecutors to show that vio-
   lence, or the threat of it, had occurred.
   That isn't the case anymore.
     This law change is hugely signifi-
   cant, says Esther Major, senior research
   adviser at Amnesty International's
   Europe office. The burden is no longer
   on the victim to prove she fought back
   but on the perpetrator not to rape in the
   first place. It shifts the focus from the
   victim's behavior to that of the accused.
     As laws change, software developers
   believe they can leverage technology to
   bolster and prove consent.
     Launched in March, uConsent is
   an app designed to enshrine consent
   between two people.
     The app is like a digital handshake,
   says Cody Swann, CEO of Las Vegas-
   based Gunner Technology, which pro-
   duced the software.
     The app requires two people to type
   in what they consent to. If both enter
   the same information-confirmed by
   each person scanning a unique QR
   code on the other's phone-then a time-
   stamp and location tag is added, and
   the agreement is uploaded to uConsent's
   servers.
     The evening then proceeds as con-
   sented, Swann says.
     The #MeToo movement  has brought
   consent and sexual assault to the fore.
   While technologists hope to impact how
   consent and sexual assault reporting
   occur, advocates, lawyers and research-
   ers are often skeptical of technology's
   role in this sensitive space.
     In the U.S., one in five women and
   one in 71 men will be raped during
   their lifetime, according to the National

34    ABA JOURNAL DECEMBER 2018


Sexual Violence Resource Center.
Eight out of 10 victims will know their
assailant.
  For Michael Lissack, executive direc-
tor of Empowering Victims, a nonprofit
in Massachusetts, consent apps aim to
get people beyond nonverbal gestures
and fumbling statements that may or
may not indicate clear boundaries.
  To that end, his organization created
We-Consent, a consent app, and it is
developing an assault reporting tool.
  We invented an app that was not
designed to be used, says Lissack of
We-Consent. By merely knowing the
app was avail-
able, his hope
was that it
would instigate
a conversation          n       n
between two peo-       r
ple that might       . r
otherwise not       s     m h badpened.
have happened.
  However, that's
a best-case sce-      - y
nario, says Mary       -
Anne Franks, a
professor at the
University of Miami School of Law. If
you can coerce someone into having sex
with you, there is nothing to stop you
from being able to coerce somebody into
using an application that makes it seem
that you consented, she says.
  Compounding  concerns, the apps
don't reflect the fluid nature of consent.
  It assumes that all sexual experi-
ences that start out great end great,
says Erica Olsen, director of the Safety
Net Project at the National Network to
End Domestic Violence, and that's just
not the case.
  Acknowledging this problem, Swann
says he is talking with Amazon to cre-
ate a version for Alexa that would let
someone retract consent through the
voice-activated assistant.
  If sexual assault does occur, Callisto,
a nonprofit web service from San


Francisco, helps victims memorialize
the event, makes a reporting choice
and detects serial offenders, CEO
Jess Ladd explains.
  The tool allows users to upload evi-
dence and use it when they're ready.
According to Callisto's 2017 report,
campuses with the web app see stu-
dents report an assault in an average
of four months, while those with-
out the tool see reporting occur 11
months after the incident.
  No one interviewed for this arti-
cle knew whether data from a con-
sent or reporting app had been used
in a court proceeding. Research from
2012 indicates that for every 100
forcible rapes that occur, less than 6
percent will be prosecuted.
  Susan Sorenson, director of the
Ortner Center on Violence & Abuse
in Relationships and
a professor at the
University of
Pennsylvania,


thinks that, unlike consent apps,
Callisto may have staying power
because universities struggle with
campus assault.
  The systemic issue is how univer-
sities have varying degrees of integ-
rity in investigating sexual assault
on their campuses, she says. If all of
them were doing a good job, students
wouldn't see a need for this.
  Operating outside of the university,
Callisto gets around these failures,
she says.
  Franks at Miami believes technol-
ogy like Callisto is a good thing.
  The more we can encourage vic-
tims of crime, generally, to record
what has happened as soon as they
can, in as much detail as they can, the
better it is for the process all together
and for everyone, she says. U


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