(as a side-respons: besides being quite rude of making your point this way; it is nonsensical, because in this case it is the broadcaster (you) who decides what to leave out, and not the receiver (me). Showing everything or showing only the parts people want to see have just as much chance for bias. You could even argue that forcing people to look at pictures and make them feel uncomfortable gives them in their specific interpretation a larger bias about the topic than you can ever induce by leaving the pictures out for that same group.
Lodewijk
Am 7. September 2011 20:38 schrieb Kim Bruning kim@bruning.xs4all.nl:
On Tue, Sep 06, 2011 at 05:30:54PM +0200, Kim Bruning wrote:
On Tue, Sep 06, 2011 at 05:51:40PM +0200, Lodewijk wrote:
The question shouldn't [...] be about whether we want to offer [...] people [...] Wikipedia?
( just as a note: This "quote" is intended as an illustration of why it may be preferable to have an all-or-nothing policy for wikipedia articles, as opposed to we-hide-parts-of-the-article.
If part of a story is hidden, you can introduce very strong bias.
Obviously, it is not normally my intention to deliberately twist people's words. (Other than as an illustration here) )
sincerely, Kim Bruning
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