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Everyday D*cks is a video in which artist Silvia Giambrone shows 46 unsolicited masturbation videos that a man had sent her for almost a year, between 2019 and 2020.

The images, accessed behind a black curtain at the MAXXI museum in Rome and forbidden to an under-18 audience, are unfiltered, deliberately disturbing, recreating the effect Giambrone experienced every time she opened her messaging app and found new content from her digital stalker. The video's audio is a collection of testimonies and voices, including the response from law enforcement, who state they "cannot do ANYTHING without an explicit threat".

Today, what can authorities do about situations like the one experienced by the artist? We note that only in 2024 did European Directive 2024/1385 on combating violence against women and domestic violence add "digital violence" to the forms of violence against women (physical, sexual, psychological, and economic), but institutions face various obstacles in taking concrete action in the event of a crime.

The Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry on femicides recently addressed this, unanimously approving the new Report on the digital dimension of violence against women on April 22, 2026.

I talk about it on SkyTG24.

May 8
at
8:34 AM
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