Thanks both! It's interesting what you've said about encountering this faerie.
The report talks about how girls are constantly bombarded with messages from boys to take pictures of their cleavage, breasts or other body parts and/or to give blow jobs or beats (have sex with) boys and it's conveyed by Blackberry Messaging in a public way (i.e. others in the group can see what's going on) but out of site of parents, teachers and other adults generally.
For example, during one of the 1 1/2 hour focus groups with 5 or 6 girls, 3 of them got messages of this kind. Girls reported they receive dozens of messages like this a day, often from the same boys. The pressure sounds quite incessant. Some feel they have to "give in" just to stop the harassment, or they know things will get worse, more threatening or others will also get involved if they don't. That just sounds so crap!
But, also, it seems many girls have internalised this idea that it's "normal" to send nude/explicit photos of yourself to a boy you like - that it's an ordinary part of a healthy relationship, that you should "prove" your love by doing this. Even when they know in their heads a boy could use the images against them later on, they genuinely believe that their boyfriend will not be like that.
Interviews with some of the boys in this report show that they don't seem to have such scruples. Even where they genuinely like the girl, they still think it's okay to share images of them with their friends at least, but wouldn't tell the girl. They also don't have qualms about "exposing" them if they split up or if they don't like a girl, and are fully aware that this is hurtful to the girls - in fact they admit doing it because they know it will hurt them, but they don't care. Despite admitting to coercing girls to send them such images, the same boys still blamed girls who got "exposed" by boys for being sluts or skets - that they shouldn't have sent the images in the first place.
What I'm also picking up from colleagues who work with young people is that they aren't doing much about this because particularly with over 16's, they are seeing this as a "choice" girls and boys "freely" make. If a girl wants to send an image, it's up to them. There seems to be a mass denial of the power and control going on in the background. So, when things go pear shaped, the finger of blame is pointed at the girls themselves for being "stupid enough" to take and send the images because they should "know" they could get circulated. What's being missed is the enormous pressure they are under to do this, and how they are have already been "groomed" to believe that sharing such images is normal (even when in the gut, it makes them feel bad, vulnerable, ashamed, etc.)
So, my worry is that emphasis will be placed on telling girls not to take and send images without considering the wider context. It's a variation on "slut shaming," imho.