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Woman's Hour

Deep fakes, Female membership on Boards, Exploring Antarctica

Woman's Hour

BBC

Society & Culture, Health & Fitness, Personal Journals

4.22.9K Ratings

🗓️ 8 January 2025

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A new law change has made the creation of explicit deepfakes illegal, with those found guilty facing up to two years in prison. Nuala McGovern is joined by Durham Law Professor Clare McGlynn to hear more about what this means, and Channel 4's Cathy Newman, who was a victim of deepfakes herself, gives her thoughts.

Author Clare Whitfield joins Nuala to discuss her novel Poor Girls. The title of the book refers to the young, working class women of the 1920s who were destined for a life in service unless they took other, less respectable, opportunities. Like joining real-life all female criminal gang The Forty Elephants, who were famous for their sophisticated shoplifting scams and their hard-partying ways.

Victoria Melluish is a listener who wrote to us to highlight women working in environmentally hostile environments and to encourage more women to get out in the field. Victoria is currently employed as a marine mammal specialist and expedition guide on a cruise expedition ship. She says, 'I’m 30 and I work in the Arctic and Antarctic, and I often get asked how I manage having endometriosis while driving Zodiac boats around glaciers and marine megafauna.' Nuala speaks to her about her work.

Private businesses in Norway are now required by law to have more women sitting on their executive boards. In 2008, the country became the first in the world to introduce a 40% gender quota for the boards of listed companies. In 2023, the Norwegian parliament decided to extend the quota to private firms, with a deadline of 31st December 2024. Nuala is joined by Hege Rødland, founder of Matae AS, a recruitment company and Linda Litlekalsoy Aase, CEO of Bremnes Seashore Group, to discuss how successful it has been.

Presenter: Nuala McGovern Producer: Emma Pearce

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

In 2024, we were here for the gritty ones.

0:04.8

The adrenaline was building up in me.

0:06.7

With gripping true prime podcasts, people can shock you all the time.

0:11.3

Dead man running.

0:12.5

The word was out.

0:13.9

A wanted man may have staged his disappearance.

0:17.0

Intrigue to catch a scorpion.

0:19.0

Scorpion actually really does look scary.

0:21.2

I mean, how do you get through that feed?

0:23.1

And how are we going to get near him?

0:24.5

And gangster.

0:25.6

It was an organised hit in the middle of his heartland territory.

0:29.8

The Best of 2024 is here.

0:32.2

Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:35.7

BBC Sounds, music, Radio, Podcasts.

0:40.3

Hello, this is Neula McGovern, and you're listening to The Woman's Hour podcast.

0:45.2

Hello, and welcome to the programme.

0:47.4

The government is going to make creating sexually explicit deep fake images a criminal offence.

0:54.0

We're going to hear more in a moment with Channel 4's Cathy Newman, who will speak about her sexually explicit deep fake images, a criminal offence.

0:58.4

We're going to hear more in a moment with Channel 4's Cathy Newman, who will speak about her experience of being deep faked and also the potential impact of this new law.

1:03.3

Also, many of Norway's businesses must now have at least 40% of women on their boards.

1:08.3

The deadline to implement it was January 1st, 2025. So we're going to hear how they're getting on with it and also how businesses reacted to that change. We'll also go to Antarctica. A listener got in touch with us who wanted to share her experience as a marine mammal specialist at the end of the earth. We're going to hear about

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