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An additional bit on why "porn censorship" (perhaps, even some themes) is bad. For context which might help in reading this, I suggest reading everything else attached to this post first.

Some points about censoring fictional content there (censorship is a bad idea):

1) It might fuel someone's persecution complex. The idea of a dangerous world where people are out to get them. Feeds anxiety, alienation. It's happened a fair bit. It doesn't actually do anything positive.

2) Someone might see someone as an idiot or crazy (that's not wrong, lol). In any case, it poisons the well as someone is not seen to be credible or competent in these matters at all.

3) It violates someone's free expression. People have these things called rights, that's important.

4) Bad people don't need it. They can still do bad things. Good people are who'd suffer.

5) It violates the Constitution. Multiple constitutions.

6) Punishing someone because they resemble someone unpleasant isn't good. Also, due process still applies, in any case...

7) Can be a coping mechanism.

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@glynmoody As these sorts of things tend to be very centralized, I could see it putting a further strain on local water stocks.

A lot of the time, "AI" doesn't add a whole lot of value for the user. There are a few uses which are cool but it probably isn't going to be a big revolution.

A little birdie tells me that I should drop the "porn isn't actually bad" science into .

Olives  
You know, this stuff still applies. QT: https://qoto.org/@olives/111516011246609826

I imagine attacking "violent porn" would probably wind up attacking BDSM, and maybe, even animated violence, even though that is probably not what someone is thinking of when saying that.

Also, there was one which coded "taboo themes" (i.e. I guess incest) as "violence", even though it's not really what would come to mind when someone says "violence" either. Also, someone almost certainly doesn't want to go and actually do that...

There was also a researcher who pointed out that anything which could be construed as "violence" would (i.e. spanking) by someone with a bone to grind.

Arguing that shutting down the Internet (or major sites) is acceptable collateral damage doesn't make a "save the children" proposal any more convincing.

Obscenity is when someone pretends they can get rid of something they don't like by writing some words on a piece of paper and ending up creating more of the problems they're pretending to solve.

When someone complains about "porn being violent", then they admit that that is what they like to go out of their way and watch.

Also, quite a few things which get blamed on "the porn" are actually general mental health issues which could be treated more normally, and crucially, without conflating it with porn.

No, Olives, instead of doing that, we can violate people's human rights, so that, uhh... Something.

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Just complaining on page 10 of a thread hardly anyone reads, on an obscure site, is a very effective way of fighting bad doll law proposals.

It is also interesting how in this culture of individual responsibility, someone might gear up to put blame onto "the porn" (even though, this can be a recipe for maximizing harm).

In fairness, it's not as if there aren't external influences, such as, say, socioeconomic conditions which might be at play.

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You know, this stuff still applies.

Olives  
Ugh... There's more puritanical nonsense, so it looks like I have to debunk that again... First off, even if online porn "might" be "problematic" t...

They're not really looking to make people's lives better, they're thinking of ways to ruin them, to implement their fucked up ideology.

Olives  
I concur with the idea that ECPAT are evil monsters.

I concur with the idea that ECPAT are evil monsters.

Olives boosted

One of the worst conflation games I saw involved:

We need to censor x.

Hey, that is censorship.

Oh, no, I'm not talking about x. I am talking about y (synonym for x).

He thinks he is "smart".

Olives boosted

If a "deepfake" suggests someone did something they never did, couldn't that be considered "defamation" (with a couple of other tests)?

Olives boosted

@Melpomene@erisly.social I think the problem with these sorts of platforms is that they then try to launder their "world view" as a sort of "how the world ought to be". People from there show up to conventions, conferences, round tables, and talk about "how they do things".

theregister.com/2007/09/25/fac
theregister.com/2007/10/17/fac
theregister.com/2010/09/12/int
To Zuckerberg, nipples are spooky, presumably because an Attorney General knocked on the door one day, and he agreed to censor "bad things". Also, as a former Google lawyer (Daphne) pointed out, these sorts of companies tend to forget why something is in place, and assume "this is the way things ought to be".

But, it could be other things. There are quite a few ways in which them doing so much can be troublesome tbh.

It's like an intersection of a PR / marketing (because they have to impressive the investors with their "tech") / media bubble.

@Melpomene@erisly.social How do you suggest distinguishing between the two?

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