• @Comment105@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    66 days ago

    I think home photography was still pretty new 30-40 years ago, might be why some families were weirdly oversharing with baby photos? Idk.

    • @Snowclone@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      105 days ago

      I think it’s more that adults sexualizing children wasn’t considered a frequent risk, people didn’t think anyone they knew would look at babies that way. Gen X parents really shifted a lot in terms of culture in the US, under their generation child sexual abuse cases have dropped significantly, and that’s adjusting to unreported numbers.

      • @Comment105@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        13 days ago

        under their generation child sexual abuse cases have dropped significantly

        If this is true, that’s really impressive. I’ve heard how insanely widespread all kinds of abuse used to be through history, often even openly. But if the culture shift was really as sharp as this seems to suggest, I’d be worried it could go almost just as fast back in the other direction.

    • @ZoopZeZoop@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      65 days ago

      I can’t say world wide, but in the U.S., home photography was not new 30-40 years ago. I was a kid 30 year ago and I had real camera and various disposable ones over time. Maybe home videography was becoming more common 30-40 years ago, but photography had been around.

    • @Zalvala
      link
      25 days ago

      Yeah, home photography wasn’t new in the 90s, it’d been worked on for a bit.