Tony Sidaway wrote:
John Lee said:
Tony Sidaway wrote:
[John]
If you think an image will offend a substantial
amount of
people, link it instead of inlining, or bring up the issue on the talk
page.
Well, that's precisely what I am *not* seeing. I'm seeing a substantial
minority, nearly 40%, who are in favor of inlining. This tells me that
there is not a consensus that it's such an offensive image.>
40% of *editors*. Not readers. Big difference. People like us who have
so much time to spend on an online "open source" encyclopedia probably
have far more liberal mind sets than average folk.
What I find
difficult to accept is the argument that we should never
ever link to images because it would inconvenience the group of people
who desire to view the image with the article. I could understand this
once we get a technical solution in place,
The technical solution is in place. Nearly all modern browsers can
disable image downloads. The most we could do with a site-based system
would be to emulate the capability that already exists in modern browsers.
On a per-server basis. Big difference. I do not want to have to block
ordinary images from Wikipedia just not to have shock images thrown in
my face.
If you start
thinking like the average internet user (i.e. those
affluent middle class people who got so riled up about the Super Bowl
last year)
Only in one country. The rest of the world was left scratching its heads
and wondering what all the fuss was about. US news programs even carried
th images with the breast pixellated out, while non-US news programs
showed the incident uncensored. Please do not assume that the standards
of one country are universal.>
That may be true, but our readership is generally American. I'm not
denying a substantial portion of our patronage would not be offended,
but a substantial amount *would* be offended. If we were to link instead
of inline an image, I doubt the "non-offended" would complain, and if
they did, it would be hardly as much as the furore from the other side
were we to carry the image inline.
I don't
really buy the argument we should be forcing upon users our
choice of web browser and/or our choice of software either.
This is not part of my argument. IE is available to 95%+ of the web-using
population and it will download images or not at the user's option.
I spent four or five years of my life using IE and I've never run across
the option to block images on an individual basis. I did find the
ability to disable all images, but I should not need to throw out the
baby with the bathwater.
the idea of the
web is to
make things accessible to people easily.
A task that IE, Firefox, Opera and other browsers do very well indeed.
Agreed.
It really
sickens me to hear the kind of logic used to push the idea of
selling people on browsers other than IE via Wikipedia.
I have at no time mentioned IE; I mentioned Firefox solely in connection
with a claim by a Firefox user who didn't think his browser was capable of
being controlled in the manner that I described. I could have said
precisely the same thing about IE (except that the capability in question
comes with IE, "out of the box", no additionaly downloads required).[...]
It does? Show me then. I think I must have missed it (although I'm not
sure how).
caterpillars
(while there are a few people out there disgusted by them,
again, objecting to the picture of a caterpillar displayed for
educational purposes would have ridicule heaped on you. Objecting to a
picture of a man fellating himself? That's a different case...).
I don't believe the above for one second. Sorry, that's just silly.
I think it's just cultural. Europe and Australia have always been far
more open to these things than America and Asia. But still, I would
laugh if somebody were to tell me, "Hey, John, that encyclopedia's a
bunch of rubbish. Don't you know they have pictures of caterpillars in
the open for all to see? How disgusting!" or "Hey John, that
encyclopedia's nothing more than a dumping ground for liberal bullshit.
They actually carry pictures of naked statues like David!" I wouldn't
dare chuckle were someone to say, "Hey, that site's disgusting. I can't
believe they had the nerve to show me directly a picture of a man
sucking his dick."
A good portion of the public that has access to web browsers would be
terribly offended by a picture of a man sucking his penis. Another good
portion would be annoyed they had to view the picture, even if they
weren't particularly offended. A very small minority, on the other hand,
would be offended by pictures of caterpillars or naked art. Few would
probably even understand their position.
text. While perhaps there would be less laughter
if you objected to it
this time, there would still be quite a bit, simply because...? I don't
know. Probably a combination of the three factors I mentioned, but for
a lot of people, it's just not that offensive. Perverted, yes, but not
shockingly offensive like the autofellatio image.
*I* don't see anybody laughing, John. Also I doubt that you would find
the average person to be more shocked by a man sucking his own penis than
an eroticised little girl holding a teddy with a huge dildo.
There's a big difference: The former is a full-blown photograph with
vivid colours. The latter is an illustration. Technically, both are
equally disgusting, but in the real world where people's emotions don't
make sense, one is more offensive than the other.
Of course.
However, this group would be far larger if we made it a
common practice of displaying shockingly offensive images _by default_.
Which we do.
Which we shouldn't.
By not doing so, we limit the number of our
enemies; they are far more
likely to be right-wing wackos in a small number.
It's a little girl, John. With a dildo. And nobody has ever suggested
inlining it, much less deleting it.
[...]
Because it's emotional and mental impact is far less than the vivid and
lifelike photographic depiction of a man fellating himself.
It's not my concern so much which decisions are
made, so much as that
the decision made should be made with open eyes. Not by the editors,
but by Jimbo and the Board, who own and ultimately take responsibility
for this project.
I'm not sure if I agree with you there. While I have a distaste for
letting people other than the community of editors make editorial
decisions, perhaps they could issue a "recommendation" we could elect
to follow?
My rationale for saying it's a board decision is that clearly the
membership is not about to vote for the removal of articles that will
render Wikipedia beyond the pale for educational use. I mentioned the VfD
nomination of Donkey punch earlier; this is basically an extreme,
near-lethal physical and sexual assault described by Wikipedia as a "sex
move." They were voting 2 to 1 to keep, last time I looked.
I am not arguing for toning down our encyclopedia for educational use. I
am arguing for doing something to at least maintain some of our
reputation. Text has far less impact than a photograph.
If Jimbo does not have an appetite for a fight with the
religious right
of his country, now is the time to consider toning down Wikipedia
content. Only the board could enforce such a decision.
I'm not all too sure. If the sysops rebelled, the board couldn't
enforce the decision without forcibly closing down the website and
destroying the community.
I agree that it's a difficult decision. For me, the path of least
resistance is to permit content as extreme as Lolicon and the like, but
use a technical fix for filtering for educational purposes and provide
on-site cat-based filtering (because it's easy to do) and then the people
who are really serious about filtering and who come up against how utterly
unmanageable cat-based filtering is, well we'll tell them to do what we
do, turn image downloads off and click "load" when we want to see a
picture.
I absolutely agree. But until the devs get around to that, we *must* not
display shocking images inline. If they did not distract readers so
much, all right, but it was very difficult for me to focus on the text
of [[Autofellatio]] with the image inlined. I'm sure others experienced
the same thing. As I said, in Europe and Australia, you guys are
probably used to depictions of lifelike nudity and didn't really notice
the image, but the same cannot be said for those of us from America and
Asia.
John Lee
([[User:Johnleemk]])