Josh foolishly believes that because porn was once for sale it cannot possibly be called revenge pornography. A quick Google search tells you this isn't the case.
The two screenshots you provided do not substantiate the argument you're making. "Consent" here means the individual depicted consented to the sexual act being made public the first time it was made public, as opposed to it being intended only for private use. Say, if Lidl DMs me a dickpic, I still cannot make it public because it was meant for private use, as Lidl sent it to me only (whether
I consented to being sent that is another legal matter, and Lidl
is breaking the law if he doesn't obtain my permission before sending me that dickpic). Now, if Lidl posts his dickpic openly on KF for all to see
before sending it to me, then I can take it, re-post it here or link to it on KF and critique his member, because, by posting it on KF, Lidl consciously and intentionally made his member public,
even if he did later send it to me privately. Sex work intended for mass production and distribution - in other words, commercial pornography - is not the same thing something that was meant purely for personal use. If you want to make the argument that KF doesn't distinguish between the two, you are free to make that argument, but I don't think intentional whores with whores' regret get to violate everyone's fair use rights, just because they're personally and post hoc embarrassed about having done sex work. Furthermore, SJWs that purport to stand up for sex worker's right insist that sex work is just like any other type of work and that we need to stop kink shaming sex workers by treating them different from other workers. But if sex work is just like any other *creative* work - and porn makers have consistently argued this, that their smut is a form of creativity - why would it be more embarrassing for the public to critique someone's sex work as opposed to all their other public creative work? By singling out sex work for censorship you are reinforcing the idea that sex work is substantially different from other creative work. Sorry whores, you don't get to have your cake and eat it.