Unauthorized uploads on major tube networks bypass original rights holders. Constant automated DMCA takedowns and URL fragmentation.
| Ep. | Title (English) | Core Focus | Key Findings | |-----|----------------|------------|--------------| | 1 | (The Voice of the Forest) | Rape in remote Indigenous territories (Munduruku, Pará) | 73 % of cases go unreported due to jurisdictional gaps between federal police and tribal councils. | | 2 | “Silêncio na Sala de Aula” (Silence in the Classroom) | Campus sexual assault in São Paulo’s public universities | Evidence of institutional cover‑ups; 58 % of survivors faced retaliation. | | 3 | “Praia de Sombra” (Shadow Beach) | Tourist‑zone assaults on foreign visitors in Rio de Janeiro | Cross‑border legal cooperation bottlenecks; 41 % of cases stalled at consular level. | | 4 | “Códigos de Poder” (Codes of Power) | Tech‑company “harassment‑by‑design” in São Paulo’s fintech hub | Digital evidence often destroyed; new forensic protocols introduced by the Polícia Federal in 2024. | | 5 | “Família em Ruínas” (Family in Ruins) | Intrafamilial sexual abuse in Rio Grande do Sul | 9 % of minors disclosed abuse only after a sibling’s death; need for mandatory school‑based screening. | | 6 | “A Prisão Invisível” (The Invisible Prison) | Coercive control in domestic partnerships across the Northeast | First‑ever statistical model linking financial dependence to delayed reporting. | | 7 | “Olhos na Mídia” (Eyes on the Media) | Media portrayals of rape myths in Brazilian TV and soap operas | Content analysis shows a 27 % decline in victim‑blaming tropes since 2018, yet still prevalent. | | 8 | “Rede de Vingança” (Revenge Network) | Online non‑consensual image sharing (revenge porn) | 62 % of victims never filed police reports; LRI’s new provisions have increased prosecutions by 15 % in the first year. | | 9 | “Coração de Pedra” (Heart of Stone) | Police corruption in handling rape cases in Minas Gerais | Hidden‑camera investigation uncovers systematic tampering with evidence logs. | |10 | “Renascença” (Rebirth) | Success stories: survivors turned advocates, legal victories, community‑based healing circles | Highlights the emergence of Coletivo Vidas Livres , a grassroots network now operating in 23 states. | violadas ao extremo 10
| Gap | Illustration from the Series | Current Statistics (2025) | |-----|------------------------------|---------------------------| | | Indigenous women fear retaliation from illegal loggers. | Only 31 % of Indigenous rape reports lead to a police response. | | Forensic Delays | Evidence lost in a São Paulo fintech office due to “system overload.” | Average forensic turnaround: 21 days (vs. ideal 5 days). | | Legal Representation | Rural victims rely on under‑funded public defenders. | 68 % of defendants receive private counsel; only 12 % of victims have access to legal aid. | | Psychological Aftercare | Only 2 % of surveyed survivors received trauma‑informed therapy within 3 months. | National average: 4.5 % receive any follow‑up mental‑health support. | | Data Transparency | Inconsistent case coding across states hampers national statistics. | 27 % of police departments still use legacy paper logs. | Unauthorized uploads on major tube networks bypass original