• aasatru
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    1724 days ago

    Reasonable people might disagree, but I think hiding art like this behind NSFW tags is an absolutely ridiculous idea brought about by hypocritical censorship policies in mainstream social media.

    Public spaces are full of naked statues. Art pieces like the birth of Venus has been accepted into the public space since forever. And now Instagram is shadow banning museums for posting pictures of traditional art? Who exactly are they trying to protect?

    At least personally, when I filter NSFW content, it’s to avoid pornography. Not to filter out art that has been accepted in the public space for centuries, if not millennia.

    • Diplomjodler
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      124 days ago

      They’re trying to protect US “conservatives” who think looking at naked people will somehow harm their children. In reality they’re just trying to prop up their inhumane backwards ideology by trying to censor anything that might question it. The disgusting thing is how successful they are with their bullshit.

    • @[email protected]
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      024 days ago

      ridiculous idea brought about by hypocritical censorship policies in mainstream social media

      No it’s not like that

      • aasatru
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        424 days ago

        Feel free to elaborate! I’m genuinely curious.

        • @[email protected]
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          24 days ago

          I was just scrolling through the timeline and accidentally opened this image in front of my friends, you know.

          But yes, I need to apologize it’s an art not something that I need to be embarrassed about.

          • Wild Bill
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            424 days ago

            I also opened this in front of my friends. Nothing happened.

          • aasatru
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            124 days ago

            No need to apologize!

            It’s not an easy question, and it’s something I think it’s good to reflect on. I think it’s fair to say that pornography has a huge impact on society, and one that is not often talked about. One such effect might be that people start seeing nudity and art differently. The public debate seems to be lagging behind, maybe as people find it uncomfortable. The ambiguous category “not safe for work” certainly doesn’t help.

            At the end of the day the line of what one is comfortable is drawn on a personal level, yet on a platform such as this it is shared internationally with no centralized authority. It’s not an easy question.