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9 votes
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Apple pulls ICEBlock from the App Store
58 votes -
imgur.com geoblocks the UK
Imgur appears to have geoblocked the UK. This is likely in response to the stupid Online Safety Act (brought in by the previous Conservative government) which requires age verification for "adult"...
Imgur appears to have geoblocked the UK. This is likely in response to the stupid Online Safety Act (brought in by the previous Conservative government) which requires age verification for "adult" content - not just porn, it's a bunch of other poorly defined other stuff too.
My guess, based on very little information because imgur don't appear to have said anything much officially at this point, is they've had a letter from Ofcom (UK telecoms standards agency) and decided an IP ban is easier than compliance and I totally understand their decision. But urgh.
I didn't have much stuff on there and it's all backed up but still. Annoying.
54 votes -
Free training today to help fight book banning
Tonight at 7 pm Central/8 pm Eastern, there is a free workshop/training to help people learn how to make book résumés for highly targeted books. These would then go on the Unite Against Book Bans...
Tonight at 7 pm Central/8 pm Eastern, there is a free workshop/training to help people learn how to make book résumés for highly targeted books. These would then go on the Unite Against Book Bans website.
Quote from the UABB website on what a Book Resume is:
Book Résumés help teachers, librarians, parents, and community members defend books from censorship. They detail each title’s significance and educational value and are easy to share with administrators, book review committees, elected officials, and board members.
Their goal is to create a process for sourcing these résumés from the community because the ALA cannot keep up with demand (and is drowning with budget cuts).
The registration link for the training is here:
https://givebutter.com/R0SVw921 votes -
Debate has erupted in Denmark over the fate of a mermaid statue that is to be removed from public view after being decried as “ugly and pornographic”
46 votes -
Google search flaw allows articles to vanish through "clever" third party censorship tactics
20 votes -
Change.org petition to Mastercard and Visa to end censorship of NSFW content
60 votes -
Steam updates guidelines and begins removing games "that may violate the rules and standards set forth by Steam’s payment processors and related card networks and banks, or internet network providers"
49 votes -
China cracks down on women who write gay erotica
33 votes -
Google is using AI to censor thousands of independent websites like mine (and to control the flow of information online)
55 votes -
SUPERHOT VR's story was removed. What?
33 votes -
Government censorship comes to Bluesky, but not its third-party apps … yet
26 votes -
Is there any source for news that hits the editing floor? That is, doesn't make the published edition?
I figure that for each new story that hits a site like Reuters, theres at least a few that don't get chosen, hitting the editing floor so to speak (like scenes of a film falling to the editing...
I figure that for each new story that hits a site like Reuters, theres at least a few that don't get chosen, hitting the editing floor so to speak (like scenes of a film falling to the editing room floor). Doe anyone know where these might be reported?
Like, an rss feed of some editor somewhere that lists the stories they passed over.
7 votes -
Repeatedly upvoting violent content on Reddit can now get you flagged
58 votes -
What’s a book that we were never supposed to be able to read?
I’m jumping off of the controversy about the release of Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman mentioned here. Regarding the question: it means that something stood in the way of that particular book...
I’m jumping off of the controversy about the release of Harper Lee’s Go Set a Watchman mentioned here.
Regarding the question: it means that something stood in the way of that particular book “getting out” but, for better or for worse, it did. This could be the author’s direct wishes, government or publisher censorship, it being found or leaked, etc.
- What are some of those books?
- Are they worth looking into?
- Does the fact that we weren’t “supposed” to read them change how we understand or appreciate them?
- If the author themself didn’t want their works published (such as Kafka), what do we have to take into account when deciding to go against those wishes?
- What do we gain/lose by respecting/ignoring those wishes?
Also, I’m open to answers that involve parts of books rather than the whole books themselves, since I know there are many books out there that were partially censored or edited and have since been restored.
22 votes -
In the US, multi-level barrage of book bans is ‘unprecedented’, says PEN America
15 votes -
1,156 questions censored by DeepSeek
37 votes -
Swearing and automatic captions
23 votes -
Feminists facing resistance in China find the funny side of things
13 votes -
Russia carves out commercial surveillance success
5 votes -
Facebook is censoring 404 Media stories about Facebook's censorship
45 votes -
EFF's Red Flag Machine: Guess why GoGuardian flagged a site
22 votes -
Wikipedia article blocked worldwide by Delhi high court
78 votes -
Brazil's top court threatens to suspend X (formerly Twitter) by Thursday night if Elon Musk does not comply with regulations
23 votes -
Judge who authorized Kansas newspaper raid escapes discipline with secret conflicting explanation
24 votes -
Has sexual content invaded too much of the internet?
Something I have been thinking about lately is how sexual content online seems to be proliferated and normalized much more than it used to be. I'll give a couple of examples. While I do not use...
Something I have been thinking about lately is how sexual content online seems to be proliferated and normalized much more than it used to be. I'll give a couple of examples.
While I do not use the big social media sites (Instagram, Facebook, TikTok) very often, I've seen questionable content while others are scrolling, as well as conversations both online and offline with others who do use them. Nearly all of these sites contain profiles of people who are primarily there to market an OnlyFans account or similar. And these profiles are pushed to various demographics, seemingly moreso to males.
Reddit has a very questionable history with this type of content. But outside of that, any subreddit that allows submission of photos of people will often include these models trying to promote themselves, and they frequently make it to the top of the subreddit. (Some reddit users make fun of this in subreddits such as r/UNBGBBIIVCHIDCTIICBG, which stands for "Upvoted Not Because Girl, But Because It Is Very Cool; However, I Do Concede That I Initially Clicked Because Girl").
Twitch is a livestreaming platform that primarily hosts streamers who are playing video games. Streaming other events or "just chatting" has grown in popularity, which I have no complaints about. But there has been a lot of controversy about sexual content on the platform. To address this to some degree, Twitch added a "Pools, Hot Tubs, and Beaches" category for people who are streaming in that specific context. But OnlyFans models do not stick to that category, and can easily be found in "Just Chatting." And I can personally say that regardless of how many times I select "Not Interested" on these streams, I continue to get suggestions for them.
Even generic chat applications (such as WhatsApp and Discord) are plagued with bot accounts that are either representative of an actual model or part of a scam, but in both cases, try to lure users in with sexual content.
I do want to say I have no issue with adult content when it is in the appropriate venue. Sites dedicated to pornography are completely fine for consenting adults. What I take issue with is how this content has expanded far beyond dedicated sites.
Society has reached a point where we hand off internet-connected devices to children at a very young age. Chromebooks are used in schools very early in education, and smartphones are given to kids early in life. It already seems to be common knowledge that social media use results in self-image issues in youth. These issues will likely be accelerated by social media not only showing a false image of how people live their lives but also the lengths they go to appear sexually appealing.
I'm not proposing some overreaching "save the children" censorship legislation is needed. But it's hard to imagine how this trend can be turned around. It produces a ton of clicks, which is all these user-posted content sites (and advertisers) care about. Is there anything that can be done, or is this just the new internet?
46 votes -
Inside the two-year fight to bring charges against school librarians in Granbury, Texas
20 votes -
A Chinese dissident behind a popular cartoon cat has been vexing China’s censors – now he says they are on his tail
20 votes -
Goldfish memories - most of China’s early websites have disappeared
30 votes -
Does the Dog Die? - A website for filtering movies by triggers
33 votes -
Can a movie change the law? The 1961 film 'Victim' isn't just a tense thriller, it was crafted to serve as a stealthy challenge to a British law that criminalized the very existence of homosexuals.
12 votes -
Once more with feeling: Banning TikTok is unconstitutional and won’t do shit to deal with any actual threats
24 votes -
Police bodycam shows sheriff hunting for 'obscene' books at library
54 votes -
The 2023 Hugo Awards: A report on censorship and exclusion
19 votes -
A startup allegedly ‘Hacked the World.’ Then came the censorship—and now the backlash.
27 votes -
Tools for thinking about censorship
9 votes -
The most dangerous Canadian internet bill you’ve never heard of is a step closer to becoming law
34 votes -
How Monty Python's Life of Brian moved past culture wars and censorship to become a beloved hit
31 votes -
Ending censorship applies to prison too - US prisons remain the institutions where the most censorship occurs
22 votes -
Ada Palmer on viking metaphysics, contingent moments, and censorship
15 votes -
Pittsburgh Pennsylvania children's author writes a book titled 'Banned Book', discusses censorship
12 votes -
Florida school district orders librarians to purge all books with LGBTQ characters
36 votes -
‘The love for music is still there’: saving the sounds of Afghanistan one cassette at a time
10 votes -
Opinion: The Kids Online Safety Act would harm US LGBTQ+ youth, restrict access to information and community
38 votes -
The Electronic Frontier Foundation, kiwifarms, death, harassment: a critique
58 votes -
France’s browser-based website blocking proposal will set a disastrous precedent for the open internet
49 votes -
More than thirty years after its publication, picture book Daddy's Roommate has once again found itself the target of censorship
13 votes -
The King of Jordan approved a cybercrime bill that will crack down on online speech deemed harmful to national unity
18 votes -
The cost to librarians and libraries from the US culture wars
22 votes -
Ann Patchett talks about her new book, running a bookshop, and resisting censorship
8 votes