Actress Jennifer Lawrence poses for photographers during a photo call for Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1 at the 67th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Saturday, May 17, 2014. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)

On Sunday, a hacker released stolen nude photos of Jennifer Lawrence, Kate Upton, and a number of other female celebrities. And while the incident is a lot of things -- disturbing, disgusting, a flagrant violation of privacy -- it is not altogether surprising. Not because the women somehow "had it coming" for daring to pose nude, in the privacy of their own homes, as females in society. But because we live in a culture that constantly violates women's rights to have ownership over their own bodies.

It seems every few years another “scandal” hits: A hacker obtains and releases private photos of a naked celebrity, and citizens of the world rightfully go up in arms. But more often than not, after the shock value of the incident subsides, they return to life as usual, as aggressions against the female body continue to occur every day.

The leaks that occurred on Sunday are not okay. It is not okay that a hacker stole and then released celebrities' private photographs. It is not okay that individuals are viewing and sharing these photos never intended for the public eye, perpetuating the original injustice with each click. It is not okay that, all over the world, people are taking to Twitter, Reddit, and various website commentsections to place blame on the female celebrities for taking the photographs in the first place.

There is nothing wrong or “immoral” about women taking naked photos of themselves to be distributed however and to whomever they see fit. Individual women have control over their individual bodies, period. The person behind this blatant invasion of privacy should absolutely be held responsible. But if we come together and advocate for this for a week, or two weeks, and then let the incident slowly fade from relevance, we are not addressing the larger problem at hand.

The stealing of these photos, the audience that's hungry for them, and the victim-blaming comments sweeping the web all emerge from a culture that endorses the idea that women's bodies exist for public consumption. Just look to our media landscape for evidence: Countless cosmetic and beauty ads suggest women's bodies exist only to be sexy to men. Films and television shows repeatedly use female bodies as props for male characterization, or depict them as trophies for a male hero to win at the end of his tale. Just last week, the Emmys presented Sofia Vergara's body as "something compelling to look at" while she rotated round and round on a raised pedestal. At the time, many questioned what the harm of the bit could be if Vergara was in on the joke herself. But objectification does not require a lack of consent. Regardless of whether Vergara willingly participated, the idea presented to the public was "haha, women's bodies exist to be nice things to look at, for the entertainment of others." Right now especially, it's easy to see where that logic, taken to the extreme, can go.