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Olives boosted

Sometimes, I wonder if an artist trying to accentuate particular parts of the body (i.e. the realism of the drawing style or interesting traits) doesn't rub a few people the wrong way.

It's not really surprising, that someone might do that for parts someone (though, maybe not everybody) might be able to get more out of (or some other reason to like that style, such as aesthetics)...

Anecdotally, with non-sexual art, I'd say there's been a bit more censorship along those lines (not really a good thing)... Then again, there's not much data to go on about censorship there.

Olives  
While I generally don't dive into this, I saw a few bad faith remarks which are so outrageous that I feel compelled to respond. First off, when tal...

@ophiocephalic To quote myself: "I still wouldn't want to burn down the Internet / sites, because of unwanted bad actors"

qoto.org/@olives/1114409064108

I think that just because a bad actor might misuse a service, it isn't proportionate to violate the rights of the other people on the service. Content scanning (or this great big centralized apparatus) is kind of like that.

It is also kind of concerning that you have these people from FB and what-not who have little to do with the fedi parachuting themselves in to tell people what to do.

@ophiocephalic The real question, and the one I think everyone should be asking is: Why do we let them get away with this?

@ophiocephalic Have you also noticed how he sits there, waits until one particular site appears to have moderation issues (and gets restricted by plenty), then "happens to do a scan" and really tries to sell that as a "fedi issue"? He could have done this at *any time* before or after.

What's reported is also not neutrally presented (i.e. all the data points) but to advance his arguments. Normally, you'd expect something like in this month, in that month, in so and so month.

@ophiocephalic David is a, pretty clear racist (he was far happier to offer the benefit of the doubt to apparent U.S.-based instances), who appears to have done that deliberately to shill his preferred scanning solution.

He also tried to make it out as if instances weren't removing "obvious child abuse", then started talking about dubious things like "pictures of the room" in the same breath (basically, he wants to get the point across that the only way to "deal with the problem" is to rely on an opaque filter list curated by a conservative NGO who promises to play nice). His arguments are self-serving. There is a lot wrong with him, honestly, and I'm not gonna go into all of it here. More recently, they've stopped relying on the "report", for talking about historic events on the fedi, and relied more on "hearsay".

qoto.org/@olives/1111915432366 He also, frequently, runs into some of the same problems I describe here. But, his focus is somewhat different. Basically, he starts talking about one thing, then in the same breath, he starts talking about other things, tries to conflate things, then weakly denies doing so, before doing it again. He is a very slippery person.

If you don't want a surveillance camera inside your toilet, that means you hate children.

Looks like Australia is shelving breaking E2EE for now.

I wasn't even going to comment on it but someone seemed so confident in these dodgy numbers, seeing something that isn't even really there. Anyway, if you're ever unfortunate enough to encounter these arguments, then you know their flaws, I guess.

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"Have you ever committed a crime?" (Probably with some dodgy definition) type questions are not useful to determine if someone is *currently* committing a crime.

Plus, other inherent weaknesses you get with looking for simple correlations.

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Also, again, it's a "mystery sample". We have no clue where it comes from. Also, involves a bad faith actor who is known to use loaded language and to twist terms.

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Also, saying that a criminal is more likely to use a privacy tool than the average person doesn't say a whole lot about non-criminals who use them.

Also, one of these measures seems to be remarkably "once a criminal always a criminal", therefore probably significantly over-estimates the number of criminals.

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While criminals probably follow the path of least resistance (i.e. they're not going to go out of their way to do things in a harder fashion for no particular reason), they're also extremely motivated and would find some way to do what they do...

His antics haven't gone unnoticed by me.

Olives  
I'm concerned Salter is advancing an anti rehabilitation argument (quite a few of his arguments are anti rehabilitation arguments and it's irritati...
Olives boosted

It's also almost certainly not a representative sample. In fact, there's no information at all on the sampling. No idea where it came from or how it was collected.

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I see the "age verification" language now (or that posted on social media), it doesn't seem to cover porn containing sites per se (although, maybe someone could twist it against them, i.e. like Germany seemed to). It is a... worrying one to have on principle, even if it is used in far fewer cases, as it is an inherently privacy intrusive measure (and might even practically prevent someone being able to access content...). In practice, it might wind up turning into de facto blocks in a lot of cases, like with Germany.

That said, I see how it might've made a tempting compromise... Ugh...

I suppose if a puritan shows up, there is this:

Firstly, even if online porn "might" be "problematic" to someone out there, it would still not be anywhere remotely near proportionate to engage in censorship, or privacy intrusive measures. Especially, as it can be important free expression to someone.

Secondly, a typical recommendation is sex education, not censorship (which is harmful in it's own ways).

Thirdly, the science isn't really showing this:

tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.108
psyarxiv.com/ehqgv/
Two studies showing porn is not associated with sexism. One carried out by German scientists, another carried out by Canadians.

qoto.org/@olives/1104622745318
American scientists carried out a meta analysis of 59 studies. They found porn isn't associated with crime. A meta analysis is a study where someone studies studies.

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/314325
Nor does it seem this is the case among adolescents (the meta analysis also points to that). Here, the minors who used more porn engaged in less sexual aggression.

psychologytoday.com/us/blog/al
qoto.org/@olives/1104002886657
There are even studies (across the United States, Japan, Finland, and more) showing that porn is associated with less crime, even among criminals.

pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/310420
While an older Dutch study showed there might be worse levels of "sexual satisfaction" among adolescents using porn, a Croatian lab failed to replicate that.

sciencedirect.com/science/arti
This is a meta analysis on sexualization in video games. It finds that studies tend to pick cut-offs where it's difficult to distinguish signal from noise. This increases the number of false positives.

There are also results which contradict the theory of sexualization being harmful. In the end, it fails to find a link between this and sexism, and this and mental well-being.

I'm usually sceptical of apparent links, as the "scientific pile on effect" (as one described it) drives people to go looking for "links" between porn and "something bad" however tenuous it might be, or methodologically flawed an approach it might be (and later, that something is debunked).

I could add it doesn't matter if they're "child-like" or "fictional children" (this is far, far more likely to hit someone good than someone bad who don't need it). If it was actual real children, I'd oppose that on ethical grounds (though, I still wouldn't want to burn down the Internet / sites, because of unwanted bad actors). This is covered above but it is also kind of common internet sense.

Saying they're more likely to be "perverts" doesn't change this and isn't relevant.

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Seeing a bad porn take (usually a "I hate porn!" take) and resisting debunking it.

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