On Feb 19, 2008 12:37 AM, Steve Bennett <stevagewp(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On 2/19/08, Wily D <wilydoppelganger(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
I probably should've included that
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:How_to_set_your_browser_to_not_see_i…
this page details instructions on how not to view images, for anyone
who finds any image objection. I'm unaware of any solution for those
who find text objectionable.
I imagine you know this, but the issue is not people inadvertently
seeing images that find offensive, but people finding the
*publication* of certain images offensive. Images of Mohammed are not
some religious form of spoiler. It's a different kind of issue.
Steve
Err, this isn't really true. There are a number of interrelated
things people find offensive, including both the publication of the
images and the exposure to the images (as well as a host of other
things). While the publication of the images isn't really up for
negotiation (for instance, they'll remain on commons (where there are
currently at least 37 historic images of Muhammad)) the various levels
of exposure can be addressed more to people's satisfactions. For
instance, someone genuinely offended by the images who nonetheless
wants to work on/read the Wikipedia article can use the solutions
offered there.
Cheers
WilyD