[Foundation-l] Letter to the community on Controversial Content

Tom Morris tom at tommorris.org
Tue Oct 18 07:57:11 UTC 2011


On Tuesday, October 18, 2011, Thomas Morton wrote:

> On 17 Oct 2011, at 09:19, Tobias Oelgarte
> <tobias.oelgarte at googlemail.com <javascript:;>> wrote:
> > I have no problem with any kind of controversial content. Showing
> > progress of fisting on the mainpage? No problem for me. Reading your
> > comments? No problem for me. Reading your insults? Also no problem. The
> > only thing i did, was the following: I told you, that i will not react
> > any longer to your comments, if they are worded in the manner as they
> > currently are.
> >
> > Literary: I'm feeling free to open your book and start to read. If it is
> > interesting and constructive i will continue to read it and i will
> > respond to you to share my thoughts. If it is purely meant to insult,
> > without any other meaning, then i will get bored and fly over the lines,
> > reading only the half or less. I also have no intention to share my
> > thoughts with the author of this book. Why? I have nothing to talk
> > about. Should i complain over it's content? Which content anyway?
> >
> > Give it a try. Make constructive arguments and explain your thoughts.
> > There is no need for strong-wording, if the construction of the words
> > itself is strong.
> >
> > nya~
>
> And that is a mature and sensible attitude.
>
> Some people do not share your view and are unable to ignore what to
> them are rude or offensive things.
>
> Are they wrong?
>
> Should they be doing what you (and I) do?
>


I share the same attitude. I'm pretty much immune to almost anything you can
throw at me in terms of potentially offensive content.

But, despite this enlightenment, I am not an island. I use my computer in
public places: at the workplace, in the university library, on the train, at
conferences, and in cafes.

I may have been inured to 'Autofellatio6.jpg', but I'm not sure the random
person sitting next to me on the train needs to see it. Being able to read,
edit and patrol Wikipedia in public without offending the moral
sensibilities of people who catch a glance at my laptop screen would be a
feature. Being able to click 'Random page' without the chance of a public
order offence flowing from it would also be pretty nifty.


-- 
Tom Morris
<http://tommorris.org/>



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