Recent posts

#1
Video Game Lounge / Re: IYNO minecraft server!
Last post by Jayden - Yesterday at 09:48:01 AM
Is this still going?
#2
Not everyone has access to that part of the forum. Only longer-standing members similar to those that had gallery access before.
#3
Quote from: Aresy on February 07, 2026, 08:24:33 AM
Quote from: Delta on February 06, 2026, 03:20:08 PM. We still have a bit of that with our front page photo submissions, but it is much less of a surface than the gallery back in the old days.
Between the front page news widget not loading at all for like 3 months, and not knowing how to participate with that... contest? (it looks like one) because there's no explanation anywhere... Yeah, I can't tell
Everything you need to know is in here https://internationalyn.org/forum/index.php/board,117.0.html
#4
Quote from: Delta on February 06, 2026, 03:20:08 PM. We still have a bit of that with our front page photo submissions, but it is much less of a surface than the gallery back in the old days.
Between the front page news widget not loading at all for like 3 months, and not knowing how to participate with that... contest? (it looks like one) because there's no explanation anywhere... Yeah, I can't tell
#5
Pitti's Book Club / Re: What are you currently rea...
Last post by blank radar - February 06, 2026, 10:19:11 PM
Quote from: Jake15 on February 06, 2026, 09:13:29 AMi recently started reading a new book for my free time in my english class. It is called The OverStory by Richard Powers.
I am only a couple dozen pages into the book now so i dont know what to fully expect yet. So far the book has been amazingly detailed in the way it is written and describes things. The main focus of the book is life and all aspects of it, the joy, the excitement, and the tragedy. The Overstory tells many stories of many different characters and their lives through a very fast paced view of time. You read as generations of family go by and see the way we as humans work with our human nature. As well as how we often forget to appreciate the little things in life.

That is really what this book is about in my opinion. Appreciating life for what it is, the good and the bad. To have life is the greatest gift of all.
i read this a long time ago, but it made a mark. i'll have to go back to it someday
#6
That is one of the reasons we have not brought the gallery back yet. Our approval system could catch the outright inappropriate content, but not so much the stuff that fits within naturist values, but was shared without the creator's approval. With user-submitted content, that inherently becomes hard to tell unless you make the submission process extremely bureaucratic.

While I personally do not like the current state of copyright law very much (and I dislike how much of that article carried an undertone of a legalistic moral code where obeying the law is inherently the right thing to do), we are not equipped to deal with potential takedown claims against user-submitted content the same way that corporate-run social media are able to, so it was a liability we were trying to avoid. We still have a bit of that with our front page photo submissions, but it is much less of a surface than the gallery back in the old days.

Also, the whole "not policing where the content came from" had another dilemma. We try to be very protective of our own users' content where we can, e.g. keeping some areas off the forum (including the gallery, back when we ran it) away not just from public access, but also from newer members who have not been here long enough for people to get to know them. Precisely to minimize the risk of personal content getting leaked. But at the same time, we could not tell if some of the non-personal gallery photos might have originated with such a leak at some point in time, so it is also a bit hypocritical to be restrictive while still participating in leaks elsewhere.
#7
In other words, here's my reaction to the blog post:


Is this picture public domain? I don't think so.
Do I care? Not at all.
#8
Pitti's Book Club / Re: What are you currently rea...
Last post by Jake15 - February 06, 2026, 09:13:29 AM
i recently started reading a new book for my free time in my english class. It is called The OverStory by Richard Powers.
I am only a couple dozen pages into the book now so i dont know what to fully expect yet. So far the book has been amazingly detailed in the way it is written and describes things. The main focus of the book is life and all aspects of it, the joy, the excitement, and the tragedy. The Overstory tells many stories of many different characters and their lives through a very fast paced view of time. You read as generations of family go by and see the way we as humans work with our human nature. As well as how we often forget to appreciate the little things in life.

That is really what this book is about in my opinion. Appreciating life for what it is, the good and the bad. To have life is the greatest gift of all.
#9
I can't help but laugh at the "not public domain" argument... Sure, legally speaking it's not public domain but let's not pretend anyone actually cares. This brings back memories of when the EU tried to ban internet memes. It's absolutely ridiculous! If you post something online, out in public, it's extremely naive to believe that no one would copy it.

If your nude pictures making circles around the internet is crossing a boundary for you, well DON'T POST THEM ONLINE!!! It's that simple!

But of course, we still have to question the motivation of those people who copy them. Sadly, more often than not they are sexually motivated and use the pictures as a form of pronography. In that case, it's a completely different argument. It's no longer about sharing what's already publicly available, it's about violating the dignity of the subject.
#10
from corin and kevin's "our naturist life" blog, which keeps coming out with takes on the Big Relevant Questions. this one might be contentious on this forum, but it's worth a shoutout, and i generally agree with their conclusion. check it out:

Have you ever had that moment where you open your feed, scroll innocently, sipping your coffee, and then... surprise? There's your own image staring back at you from someone else's profile.

No credit. No permission. None of the original context. Just... stolen. Slapped onto a stranger's page like they found it in a bargain bin labeled "Free Bodies, No Questions Asked."

Usually others see it first. Then they notify us or tag us as they rip the offender a new butt hole.

It's a special kind of feeling. Somewhere between violated and exhausted.

And just like in the Art world... naturist photo theft in our spaces... is happening far too often.

When Posting Apparently Means "Please Steal This"
There's a myth floating around social media that once you post a photo publicly, it magically becomes "free." Free to download. Free to repost. Free to glue onto someone else's brand as if they somehow participated in your life.

Umm... no... that's fantasy. The legal equivalent of believing unicorns handle copyright law.

People love to throw around the phrase "public domain", usually without having the faintest idea what it actually means. They think "public domain" equals "I saw it online so I'm allowed to grab it." It doesn't. Public domain is a very specific legal category, and naturist photos... yours, ours, anyone's... are nowhere near it.

Public domain only happens when:
  • The creator died long enough ago that copyright expired (we're talking 50 to 100 years, not yesterday's X post);
  • The work never qualified for copyright (not a thing with photography)
  • The creator explicitly released it into the public domain. This requires a deliberate legal statement. Which we, like almost all naturist creators, have absolutely not done.
  • The copyright has expired. Copyright doesn't last forever. The exact duration depends on the country and when the work was created/published. But for shits and giggles, use the same as #1 (50 to 100 years)

So no, your naturist body does not become community property the moment you post it. Your photo does not magically turn into "general use."

And "but it's online" is not a legal argument... it's an admission of laziness.

Yet somehow, naturist images continue to be yanked off personal accounts, stripped of context, and posted on random feeds run by strangers who genuinely seem to believe the internet is one giant lost-and-found box.

And then we get the pièce de résistance: the bio that says, "Images don't belong to me. DM for removal." Ah yes, the classic "I know I'm stealing, but somehow that makes it okay if YOU do the work of policing ME."

Let's call that what it is... bullshit wearing a customer-service smile. That line is basically saying, "I know I don't have the rights to any of these images... but instead of me not stealing them in the first place, YOU can chase me around the internet asking for scraps of your own dignity back."

It's the digital equivalent of someone breaking into your house, taking your couch, putting it on their porch, and then hanging a polite little sign that says, 'If this is yours, just knock and I'll consider giving it back.'

No! You don't get to knowingly use stolen images and then pretend you're being ethical because you offered a "DM for removal" option. That doesn't make you respectful. It makes you aware you're doing something wrong and choosing to do it anyway.

Posting a photo doesn't erase copyright. It doesn't erase consent and it doesn't erase ownership. The only thing it seems to erase, unfortunately, is some people's ability to respect other naturists' boundaries.

And that is exactly the problem.

Naturism Without Consent Isn't Naturism. It's Just Creepy
Naturism is built on respect, consent, and authenticity. Those are the foundations, the cornerstones, the whole philosophical spine of the lifestyle. It's literally what separates naturism from voyeurism and exhibitionism.

But when someone steals your naturist photo and reposts it without permission?

All of those values evaporate. Your body, your story, your intent... gone.

Suddenly your carefully created naturist image with comments is surrounded by hashtags and emojis you would never use, representing a philosophy it was never meant to represent, on a page run by someone who has never touched a naturist space in their life.

It's not just disrespectful.

It actively harms the credibility of naturism.

The Rise of "Naturist" Accounts That Aren't Actually Naturist
Let's talk about a growing problem: the huge number of so-called "naturist" accounts online that aren't naturist at all. These people wouldn't know naturism if it handed them sunscreen and reminded them to remove their pants.

They don't create content or participate in the philosophy. They don't care about ethics.

They care about clicks.

There are websites that apparently decided the entire internet is their personal grab-bag of free naturist imagery. They've built an entire empire on reposting stolen photos, using multiple accounts, different usernames, slightly different bios, and the exact same images they definitely did NOT take... legally.

Their business model is:
  • Use others' naturist photos
  • Pretend the photos belong to them
  • Funnel followers to their "dating" site
  • Repeat until blocked

It's like whack-a-mole, but the moles are smug and using your pictures to advertise their service.

These accounts feed the very worst misconception about naturism: that naturist bodies are public property. That nudity equals permission. That "sharing naturism" means stealing photos and repurposing them without consent.

It's harmful. It confuses newcomers. It sexualizes naturism. And it drags the entire philosophy through a ditch.

So if you see one of these aggregator accounts... don't support them. Don't follow them. Don't like the stolen images.

Naturism deserves better than being treated like a discount stock-image library for low-effort marketers.

Bodies Are Not "General Use," Even If They're Nude
Here's the thing many people seem to struggle with: being nude does not erase your rights.

Naturists do not automatically surrender consent. We do not automatically surrender ownership and we do not automatically surrender control.

Our bodies are not community property just because they were posted in a naturist context. A naturist photo shared with intention does not become free-floating content for anyone who feels like collecting images of strangers for their "aesthetic."

Naturism is about freedom, not forfeiture.

Openness, not ownership.

Autonomy, not entitlement.

So What Do You Do When Someone Steals Your Photo? (Besides Swear at Your Phone)
Your first reaction will be emotional. Loud. Possibly bilingual if you're Canadian like us. That's normal. (No... we don't speak French)

But once you've calmed down enough to type without breaking your phone: you can do something.

We've done it ourselves... multiple times recently.

Most social platforms offer copyright reporting tools. They're buried, because platforms prefer not to deal with copyright drama, but they exist. Bluesky? Awesome! Instagram? Easy. Facebook? Straightforward. YouTube? Practically a self-serve buffet of copyright options.

And then there's X.

Ah, X. The platform where trying to report copyright theft feels like being trapped in a bureaucratic escape room designed by someone who hates both creators and joy. X doesn't give you a simple "report copyright" button. You have to hunt down the DMCA form, fill out your personal thesis, attach URLs, prove your photo is yours, and then pray to the algorithm gods that someone still reads these submissions.

But here's the thing... they still work.

We've filed DMCA takedowns on X as well as on nafarious websites. It wasn't instant. It wasn't elegant. It wasn't satisfying. But it was effective. The stolen posts were removed, because they all... even X... have to follow copyright law.

So when it happens to you: Report it. Submit the DMCA. Document it. Protect your images.

You're not being dramatic. You're drawing a boundary. One naturism depends on.

Sharing Isn't the Problem. Stealing Is.
Let's clear something up before anyone gets defensive. We are not against sharing. In fact, sharing is how naturism spreads. Retweets, reposts, quote posts, links... those are all good things. That's how ideas move. That's how people discover new voices. That's how communities grow.

What we are against is copy-posting.

There's a massive difference between sharing a post and ripping the image out of it like it's a loose flyer on a telephone pole. When you retweet or repost from the original account, the creator stays attached to their work. The message and context stays intact. The person behind the body remains visible, human, and in control.

When you copy-post the image alone, all of that disappears. The creator gets erased and the photo becomes "content" instead of communication.

And suddenly, what could have been respectful sharing turns into exactly the kind of behaviour that makes naturism look unsafe.

Every major platform gives you tools to share posts properly. There is no technical excuse anymore. If you want to amplify naturism, use the built-in sharing features. They exist for a reason.

Sharing builds community. Stealing destroys trust.

And naturism, more than most spaces, survives on trust.

If You Are One of These Accounts Thinking You Are Actively Promoting Naturism...
Let's have a heart-to-heart.

And by "heart-to-heart," we mean: let's talk frankly about a very specific type of account that loves to insist they are "helping naturism grow" while running a profile made entirely out of stolen photos.

If you are one of these accounts... the ones posting images of naturists you've never met, never asked, never credited, and never respected... we need you to hear this clearly:

You are not promoting naturism. You are promoting your account.

And worse... you're doing it at the expense of the very people you claim to be supporting.

If the bulk of your content comes from screenshots, downloads, and Google searches, you're not building a naturist community. You're building a scrapbook of other people's bodies without their consent. It's not activism. It's not education. It's not representation.

It's theft wrapped in a motivational hashtag.

You don't get to call yourself a naturist advocate when you can't even be bothered to uphold the first and most basic naturist value: respect.

Respect for privacy. Respect for consent. Respect for authenticity.

You know... Nature's Big Three.

And here's the thing you might not realize: when you post stolen naturist images, you're not just violating copyright laws... you're actively discouraging real naturists from sharing their lives publicly.

You're making women feel unsafe. You're making newcomers afraid to participate. You're reinforcing the stereotype that nudity equals "public property."

You're helping the very people who sexualize and fetishize naturism, because your account looks exactly like theirs.

So no, you're not "promoting naturism." You're undermining it.

If you really wanted to support naturism, you would show your own naturist life (or at least your own body). Share original content. Respect creators. Ask permission. Uplift naturist voices instead of stealing them.

Naturism doesn't need more faceless aggregator accounts reposting strangers' bodies.

Naturism needs people who actually live the philosophy.

If you're taking from the community but giving nothing back except a link to your site or a feed full of other people's photos... don't kid yourself. You're not a naturist advocate.

You're just another content pirate wearing a fig leaf.

And Yes... Some Naturists Don't Care Where Their Images End Up
We know there are naturists who genuinely don't care where their photos end up. They'll shrug, say "Use it anywhere," and move on with their day. And that's their choice.

But their comfort level doesn't override ours or anyone else's.

And let's be clear... we're not naïve. We know this is happening constantly, right under our noses. Images get taken, reposted, scraped, recycled, and fed into accounts and websites we would never voluntarily associate with. We see it every week.

That's exactly why we watermark our images with "ournaturistlife.com". Not because it prevents theft (it doesn't). But because if one of our photos is going to wander somewhere we didn't send it, at least it carries a breadcrumb trail back to what naturism actually is.

If our images are going to travel without permission, they can at least take the truth with them.

We care.

And caring isn't controlling... it's boundaries.

Which, last time we checked, is a core part of naturism.

If You're Really a Naturist... Act Like One
At the end of the day, this issue isn't really about copyright law... though the law is firmly on the side of the creator. And it isn't only about stolen images, though that's certainly the loudest symptom.

This is about the heart of naturism: consent, respect, honesty, and autonomy.

You cannot build a naturist community by trampling the very values that define it. You cannot claim to support naturism while stealing the bodies of naturists. You cannot say you're promoting the lifestyle while refusing to live it. And you absolutely cannot expect people to take naturism seriously if some of its loudest "representatives" are running accounts built entirely on theft, mislabeling, and entitlement.

There is nothing authentic or honest about stealing someone else's image and pretending it belongs to you. There is nothing free about taking other people's boundaries and tossing them aside.

If naturism is going to thrive, it needs people who model the values that drew us here in the first place... not people trying to grow an audience on a foundation made of stolen skin.

If you see a naturist photo you love, enjoy it. Maybe even share it... from the original post. But don't take what isn't yours. Don't pretend ownership you don't have and call exploitation "promotion."

Naturism is better than that and naturists are better than that. The future of this philosophy depends on all of us being better than that.

If you truly care about naturism... live it. Respect it. Protect it.

And above all, remember: people and their bodies are not public domain.

Not anywhere.

Not ever.