1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
suzubelle-chan
dreamboatsandtrenchcoats

Instead of saying motherfucker you can just say Oedipus

m-ignon

Half our generation wouldn’t even understand that

reclusivewanker

yes you are right the thousands of notes on this post prove how ignorant our generation is. only you are intelligent. you are the chosen one.

nodaybuttodaytodefygravity

only real Ancient Greek kids would understand

akupitiyo

reblog if ur a tru 650BC kid

Source: dreamboatsandtrenchcoats
suzubelle-chan
wsswatson

it’s so fucking weird when straight people are like “CAN MEN AND WOMEN EVER BE JUST FRIENDS?” because so many of my friends are queer women and we manage to hang out without it turning into an orgy so maybe it’s just that straight men have a hard time seeing women as people rather than just things to have sex with ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

gravepainter15
marieluc76:
“ gjmueller:
“ upworthy:
“ If your nude photos are posted online without your permission, Microsoft and Google want to know. For years, most victims of revenge porn — people who have had their nude photos shared online without permission...
upworthy

If your nude photos are posted online without your permission, Microsoft and Google want to know.

For years, most victims of revenge porn — people who have had their nude photos shared online without permission — basically couldn’t do anything about it.

According to one study, over 50% of all adults engage in sexting, and 70% admit to having received a nude photo online or over the phone.

And yet, despite the fact that we all (or at least more than half of us) do it, there’s still this weird, persistent, harmful notion that if your naked pictures get leaked or shared maliciously by an ex online, it’s your fault for taking them in the first place.

It’s completely backward, but sadly, the law seems to at least kind of agree.

As of September 2014, New Republic found, putting someone else’s illicit photos online without their consent was illegal in just 16 states, though laws have been proposed in more states. Not only is it typically impossible to prosecute the perpetrator, they note, it’s impossible to legally compel websites to take the images taken down most of the time.

But thankfully, Microsoft and Google — which operate two of the biggest search engines on the web — don’t think it’s your fault. And they’re finally saying “Enough is enough.”

gjmueller

Here’s how to report a non-consensual image posting on Bing.

And here’s how to do it on Google.

marieluc76

Boost!

Source: upworthy