[Foundation-l] Letter to the community on Controversial Content
Andrew Crawford
acrawford at laetabilis.com
Wed Oct 12 14:15:19 UTC 2011
On Wed, Oct 12, 2011 at 10:44 AM, Thomas Morton <
morton.thomas at googlemail.com> wrote:
>
> You've confused "a fact" with factual.
I've confused the adjective form with the noun form of "fact"? I'm quite
sure that I have.
*The judge convicted Abby of killing Betty, saying that the overwhelming
> evidence indicated manslaughter.*
>
> The latter is factual, and contains facts & opinions.
>
It contains facts about opinions - it does not itself express an opinion. It
is both factual, and a fact.
But this is really irrelevant to the problem at hand
Definitely!
> - because we are not
> talking about presenting a factually different piece of prose to suit an
> individuals preference
Although that is true, it doesn't make any difference. There is information
content in an image - if there wasn't, we wouldn't need any. Making a
decision to use or not to use an image is an editorial decision, and in some
cases it could enhance or detract from the neutrality of the article.
> Removal of, say, a nude image on the Vagina article does not bias or
> detract
> from the information.
Then we can solve the problem by removing the image completely, since the
article would be completely unaffected by it.
Cheers,
Andrew (Thparkth)
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