Searching for a Farang: Collective Security among Women in Pattaya, Thailand
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2510.13162v1
- Date: Wed, 15 Oct 2025 05:25:55 GMT
- Title: Searching for a Farang: Collective Security among Women in Pattaya, Thailand
- Authors: Taylor Robinson, Rikke Bjerg Jensen,
- Abstract summary: We report on two months of fieldwork in a women's centre in Pattaya, and interviews with 76 participants.<n>Our findings show how women in Pattaya, often working in the sex and massage industries, perceived relationships with farang men as their best.<n>We situate our work in emerging digital security scholarship within marginalised contexts.
- Score: 2.406359246841227
- License: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
- Abstract: We report on two months of ethnographic fieldwork in a women's centre in Pattaya, and interviews with 76 participants. Our findings, as they relate to digital security, show how (i) women in Pattaya, often working in the sex and massage industries, perceived relationships with farang men as their best, and sometimes only, option to achieve security; (ii) the strategies used by the women to appeal to a farang involved presenting themselves online, mirroring how they were being advertised by bar owners to attract customers; (iii) appealing to what they considered `Western ideals', the women sought out `Western technologies' and appropriated them for their benefit; (iv) the women navigated a series of online security risks, such as scams and abuse, which shaped their search for a farang; (v) the women developed collective security through knowledge-sharing to protect themselves and each other in their search for a farang. We situate our work in emerging digital security scholarship within marginalised contexts.
Related papers
- The Everyday Security of Living with Conflict [11.606544364381405]
We offer a different approach to engaging with and understanding security in such contexts.<n>We do so through three vignettes from our field research in Colombia, Lebanon and Sweden.<n>We conclude by setting out a call to action for security researchers and practitioners to consider such lived experiences in the design of security technology.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-06-11T10:18:21Z) - Can't See the Forest for the Trees: Benchmarking Multimodal Safety Awareness for Multimodal LLMs [56.440345471966666]
Multimodal Large Language Models (MLLMs) have expanded the capabilities of traditional language models by enabling interaction through both text and images.<n>This paper introduces MMSafeAware, the first comprehensive multimodal safety awareness benchmark designed to evaluate MLLMs across 29 safety scenarios.<n> MMSafeAware includes both unsafe and over-safety subsets to assess models abilities to correctly identify unsafe content and avoid over-sensitivity that can hinder helpfulness.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-02-16T16:12:40Z) - Linkage on Security, Privacy and Fairness in Federated Learning: New Balances and New Perspectives [48.48294460952039]
This survey offers comprehensive descriptions of the privacy, security, and fairness issues in federated learning.
We contend that there exists a trade-off between privacy and fairness and between security and sharing.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-06-16T10:31:45Z) - A Safe Harbor for AI Evaluation and Red Teaming [124.89885800509505]
Some researchers fear that conducting such research or releasing their findings will result in account suspensions or legal reprisal.
We propose that major AI developers commit to providing a legal and technical safe harbor.
We believe these commitments are a necessary step towards more inclusive and unimpeded community efforts to tackle the risks of generative AI.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-03-07T20:55:08Z) - "Un-Equal Online Safety?" A Gender Analysis of Security and Privacy
Protection Advice and Behaviour Patterns [6.09170287691728]
We conduct an online survey with N=604 U.K. participants, to elicit SP advice source preference and usage of SP methods and technologies.
We find evidence of un-equal SP access and participation.
Advice from intimate and social connections (ISC) is more prevalent among women, while online content is preferred by men.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-05-05T16:50:35Z) - Can Workers Meaningfully Consent to Workplace Wellbeing Technologies? [65.15780777033109]
This paper unpacks the challenges workers face when consenting to workplace wellbeing technologies.
We show how workers are vulnerable to "meaningless" consent as they may be subject to power dynamics that minimize their ability to withhold consent.
To meaningfully consent, participants wanted changes to the technology and to the policies and practices surrounding the technology.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-03-13T16:15:07Z) - Tainted Love: A Systematic Review of Online Romance Fraud [68.8204255655161]
Romance fraud involves cybercriminals engineering a romantic relationship on online dating platforms.
We characterise the literary landscape on romance fraud, advancing the understanding of researchers and practitioners.
Three main contributions were identified: profiles of romance scams, countermeasures for mitigating romance scams, and factors that predispose an individual to become a scammer or a victim.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-02-28T20:34:07Z) - "STILL AROUND": Experiences and Survival Strategies of Veteran Women
Software Developers [53.5211430148752]
We conducted 14 interviews to examine the experiences of people at the intersection of ageism and sexism.
We identified 283 codes, which fell into three main categories: Strategies, Experiences, and Perception.
Several strategies we identified, such as (Deliberately) Not Trying to Look Younger, were not previously described in the software engineering literature.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-02-07T19:26:15Z) - Gender bias in magazines oriented to men and women: a computational
approach [58.720142291102135]
We compare the content of a women-oriented magazine with that of a men-oriented one, both produced by the same editorial group over a decade.
With Topic Modelling techniques we identify the main themes discussed in the magazines and quantify how much the presence of these topics differs between magazines over time.
Our results show that the frequency of appearance of the topics Family, Business and Women as sex objects, present an initial bias that tends to disappear over time.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-11-24T14:02:49Z) - Saudi Arabian Parents' Perception of Online Marital Matchmaking
Technologies [7.401703219078597]
This work aims to investigate how Saudi Arabian parents view the utilization of technology by their young adults to seek potential spouses online.
We report our findings of interviews conducted with 16 Saudi Arabian parents.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-10-19T18:35:22Z) - What prevents Finnish women from applying to software engineering roles?
A preliminary analysis of survey data [9.781973111840552]
Finland is considered a country with a good track record in gender equality.
This paper focuses on the problems that some women face in obtaining software engineering roles.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-02-05T16:03:25Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.