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Wikipedia May Censor Images

KiloByte joins the ranks of accepted submitters, writing "To appease 'morality' watchdogs, Wikipedia is contemplating the introduction of a censorship feature, where images would be flagged for containing sexual references, nudity, 'mass graves,' and so on. At least in the initial implementation, it is supposed to be 'opt-in.' However, with such precedents as the UK censoring artistic nudity, Turkey censoring references to the Armenian genocide or China's stance on information about the Tiananmen massacre (note that any sensitive photos, like the Tank Man, are already absent!), I find it quite hard to believe this feature won't be mandatory for some groups of readers — whether it's thanks to an oppressive government, an ISP or a school."

7 of 171 comments (clear)

  1. Tank Man photo not censored by China by Sparklepony · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just thought I should point out it's not China that's responsible for the Tank Man photo being missing from the Tienamen Square massacre article. It's good old western copyright law. The Tank Man photo is copyrighted and not freely licensed so Wikipedia can only include it as fair use. Fair use on Wikipedia is held to very strict standards; fair use images can only be used on articles where the image is otherwise indispensible. So you can find it over at Tank Man, which is specifically about the photo.

  2. NSFW by aahpandasrun · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Wikipedia definitely needs a NSFW or Not Safe for School feature at least, unless it's hidden somewhere. Certain articles like defecation go a little over the top.

    1. Re:NSFW by Kvasio · · Score: 4, Funny

      But this filter should work both ways, so one could choose to see ONLY the NSFW articles :-)

  3. In principle it's very bad by Kvasio · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It may end the "Endless (human anus) image contention" dispute.

    Damn, this was the most entertaining section of wikipedia.
    ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Human_anus#Endless_image_contention )

  4. Not censor, an opt-in filter by ediron2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I took several minutes to read this 2 days ago when I first saw the news (2 days... slashdot, what's happened to you?) and it actually looked damned uncontroversial and careful.

    First, I'd say calling this censorship is a red herring.

    Censorship = removal of information without recourse or alternative.

    Opt-in filtering = giving parents and the squeamish a way to preemptively hide images, with user-controlled overrides.

    The categories sought for filtering is also intended to be peer-managed within wikipedia, which should prevent this from becoming a tool for governmental / corporate / ISP censorship. IOW, if users guide the categorization of data (tagging images as sexually explicit, violent, etc) then a gov/corp/ISP can't 'sneak in' the censorship of an article on Turkey, Israel, Net Neutrality, Codomo, China-vs-Taiwan, China-vs-Tibet, Egyptian unrest or whatever.

    The call for comments generated by Wiki* also discussed their desire to make whatever they do overridable.

    (disclaimer: I think I've edited wiki* a few dozen times, but doubt it was anything censor-worthy).

  5. Re:Oh good, let's have a debate by mirshafie · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Choice is not censorship. As far as I can tell, Wikimedia is considering to add the option for users to block images that have been flagged as potentially offensive. Since Wikipedia covers many aspects of humanity, some of them scary, it makes sense to enable users to filter some of the more graphic aspects of this. Remember, the articles themselves will not be blocked. I think this would make Wikipedia more useful for kids that might not have the tools to deal with looking straight into another person's guts just because their reading up on surgery.

    Many other sites, such as DeviantArt, block nudity by default, and to view it you must register an account and turn the filter off. Even though this is opt-out and a bit extreme, calling the practice censorship is ridiculous.

  6. FFS. by McDutchie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Cut it out with the reactionary rhetoric already. It's an opt-in filter that allows people who so choose to read about "controversial" subjects without being confronted with graphic images of hardcore blood, gore, pornography, etc. - and there will be categories of filters, so it may even allow Muslims to read about their prophet without having to see depictions of him, without depriving others of access to those images. This seems like a good thing.