On Wed, Oct 19, 2011 at 8:10 PM, Jussi-Ville Heiskanen <cimonav...@gmail.com> wrote: > I've said this before. I would like to not look at women with > humongously oversize breasts (And yes, Dolly Parton, this means you > too) or women with perfect teeth whitened to porcelain level shine, > smiling with their teeth. If you must smile, do it with the lips, not > the teeth. But am I going to get that from wikipedia. No chance. > Should I get that from wikipedia. Emphatically no. As offensive as I > find huge bazoomba-lollobrigidas, they should be served to me and to > everyone else on wikipedia. Because we don't hide huge bosoms on > wikipedia. Period.
Let's not pretend that there's no difference between this sort of preference and a preference for not seeing medical things, or for not seeing nudity, or for not seeing things that are religiously offensive, or for not seeing PTSD triggers or whatever. It's not a black and white issue, and we need to exercise some common sense and praxis. You need to weigh the administrative burden of maintaining categorisation (along with any other consequences of offering personal opt-out to individual classes of images, such as interface clutter and, yes, the potential for use by totalitarian regimes) against the participatory benefits afforded by giving readers more choice about what they see. Because images are high impact, they are good candidates for personal, opt-in content filtering. There are certain classes of image that allow us to attack 90% of the problem – that is, nudity that causes embarrassment at work and in public places, gore and bodily functions that 90% of the general public are offended by, and triggers for medical conditions such as PTSD or vasovagal conditions. I don't think anybody is suggesting we run around and identify every last image that could possibly offend anybody. Sure, there's no *qualitative* difference between things that offend 90% of the general public and some arbitrary thing that you make up that offends you. But there sure as hell is a quantitative difference, and any nuanced perspective on this argument should have an understanding of this. In my opinion it's worth giving a simple way for people to avoid 90% of the things that they might be offended by. -- Andrew Garrett Wikimedia Foundation agarr...@wikimedia.org _______________________________________________ foundation-l mailing list foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org Unsubscribe: https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/foundation-l