New nail polish has a secret talent: Preventing date rape

Ashley V

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Jul 31, 2014
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A new product promises to keep women safe from sexual predators, with the help of some very cool technology. "Never leave your drinks unattended" is a caution women often hear when they're heading out for a night on the town.

Now a group of entrepreneurial undergrads at North Carolina State University are helping women avoid date rape with just the tip of their finger. Their company, Undercover Colors is developing a nail polish that changes color when it detects common date rape drugs like Rohypnol, Xanax, and GHB.

Calling themselves “the first fashion company empowering women to prevent sexual assault”, the founders say they “want to shift the fear from the victims to the perpetrators”. Their idea follows hot on the heels of a crowdfunding campaign for pd.id, a portable gadget that women can use to detect drugs on cups, straws and coasters. But the great thing about Undercover Colors high-tech polish is that you won’t have to remember to put it in your purse and it’s extremely discreet.

North Carolina State has already given the students access to a campus lab and schedule 1 drugs for testing as they look for donations to develop the polish further. However, some people in the blogosphere have been critical: “What is stopping rapists from simply using other means, including the current go-to drug, alcohol, to facilitate the crime? Are you working on developing a product that will make them afraid to actually rape?” asked Maya Dusenbery, Executive Director of feministing.com.

But if the recent buzz is anything to go by they’ll soon meet their goal. The start-up already has over 32,000 likes on their Facebook page and plenty of praise from moms whose daughters are heading off to university.

Unfortunately, there’s no word yet on which colours will be available when the polish does finally launch. (You’re) Busted Blue or Gotcha Gold, perhaps?

http://www.theloop.ca/this-new-nail-polish-has-a-secret-talent-preventing-date-rape/
 

MadonnaLove

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A new product promises to keep women safe from sexual predators, with the help of some very cool technology. "Never leave your drinks unattended" is a caution women often hear when they're heading out for a night on the town.

Now a group of entrepreneurial undergrads at North Carolina State University are helping women avoid date rape with just the tip of their finger. Their company, Undercover Colors is developing a nail polish that changes color when it detects common date rape drugs like Rohypnol, Xanax, and GHB.



Calling themselves “the first fashion company empowering women to prevent sexual assault”, the founders say they “want to shift the fear from the victims to the perpetrators”. Their idea follows hot on the heels of a crowdfunding campaign for pd.id, a portable gadget that women can use to detect drugs on cups, straws and coasters. But the great thing about Undercover Colors high-tech polish is that you won’t have to remember to put it in your purse and it’s extremely discreet.


North Carolina State has already given the students access to a campus lab and schedule 1 drugs for testing as they look for donations to develop the polish further. However, some people in the blogosphere have been critical: “What is stopping rapists from simply using other means, including the current go-to drug, alcohol, to facilitate the crime? Are you working on developing a product that will make them afraid to actually rape?” asked Maya Dusenbery, Executive Director of feministing.com.

But if the recent buzz is anything to go by they’ll soon meet their goal. The start-up already has over 32,000 likes on their Facebook page and plenty of praise from moms whose daughters are heading off to university.

Unfortunately, there’s no word yet on which colours will be available when the polish does finally launch. (You’re) Busted Blue or Gotcha Gold, perhaps?

http://www.theloop.ca/this-new-nail-polish-has-a-secret-talent-preventing-date-rape/
I just read this on my Facebook …….I think its a great idea
 

Ashley V

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Jul 31, 2014
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I love the CBC's coverage of this: these men are trying to profit from rape, and the product is going to lead to victim-blaming.

http://www.cbc.ca/newsblogs/yourcom...cts-date-rape-drugs-proves-controversial.html
"Tools like Undercover Colors raise questions about the cost of profiting from rape prevention: Is this really a market we should continue to applaud entrepreneurs’ (notably male ones) tapping into?" she wrote. "Or might these resources be better allocated trying to teach people not to rape?

I wonder if the woman in that article who made that statement above would have that opinion of profiting from rape if the chemists developing the nail polish were women instead?

Does that mean this organization profits from rape prevention with this donation page?...http://www.sexualassaultsupport.ca/page-429505
 

Viggo Rasmussen

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Feb 5, 2010
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She's probably some over-educated fool.
We can have both rape prevention AND teach people not to rape, the inventors didn't take away any resources preventing this.
 

IM469

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Jul 5, 2012
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Well I guess that will beat out the nail polish I was developing for guys to give to their girls friends ... it would turn bright red when they are ovulating.
 

fuji

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Don't accept a drink that wasn't handed over by the server. Don't leave a drink unattended. Don't leave the bar other than in the company of friends.

Seems likely more effective.
 

Butler1000

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Oct 31, 2011
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Another tip is to beware bottle service. A buddy of mine is pretty damn sure it happened to him when he was with a group he was invited to join. He thinks the vodka bottle was spiked. Thankfully nothing happened to him as he was with another friend who didn't partake of that bottle.

Scary shit.
 

Art Mann

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May 10, 2010
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I love the CBC's coverage of this: these men are trying to profit from rape, and the product is going to lead to victim-blaming.

http://www.cbc.ca/newsblogs/yourcom...cts-date-rape-drugs-proves-controversial.html
Rebecca Nagle, one of the co-directors of an activist group called FORCE: Upsetting Rape Culture, agreed, writing ​
"The problem isn’t that women don’t know when there are roofies in their drink; the problem is people putting roofies in their drink in the first place."
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts