Yes, and some people don't like the fact that we tell the truth about, say,
the Taiwan situation (or at least we try our very best to), or the
Tienanmen Square protests of 1989.
I think it's very stupid to equate "people don't like this" to
"this is a
problem".
So yes, the situation is still unchanged, but in my opinion it is a GOOD
thing that it's still unchanged. The advertising situation on Wikipedia is
"still unchanged", but unchanged situations don't have to be bad, and in
this case I am a firm believer that the status quo is far better than what
this woman (and many image filter proposals) is proposing.
2012/2/2 Andreas K. <jayen466(a)gmail.com>
On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 7:42 AM, Yaroslav M. Blanter
<putevod(a)mccme.ru
wrote:
On Thu, 2 Feb 2012 07:35:10 +0000, "Andreas
K." <jayen466(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
A Wikimedian has just started a Facebook page
"Stop pornography on
Wikipedia"
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Stop-pornography-on-Wikipedia/307245972661745
If I read it correct, she opened a Facebook group since, as she states,
she could not find anybody on Wikipedia who would share her opinion. I do
not see why we should worry about this. There are many people with their
own agenda who could not find anybody on Wikipedia to share their agenda
and go to promote it elsewhere.
Well, it's relevant to the extent that she came across a masturbation video
while looking for something completely different. (I think she said she was
looking up "roll over".) Some people don't like that. It's a problem
we've
discussed before:
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Controversial_content/Problems
The situation is still unchanged.
A.
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