• @Rade0nfighter
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    696 months ago

    A no bullshit approach well done Norway!

    Although it seems strange that altering teeth colour is excluded.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      I guess because it’s always done, and if it was included, then people wouldn’t pay any mind to the logo, because they’d think “probably only the teeth were whitened.”

      • @[email protected]
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        6 months ago

        Might also be that simply adjusting the brightness on a photo could end up whitening teeth even if that wasn’t the goal so that would be a difficult one to enforce without going all the way to “0 changes to the image at all”.

  • @[email protected]
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    646 months ago

    The removal of elements that are not considered natural parts of the body, such as yogurt, crumbs, snot, and more, falls outside the scope of the rule.

    Non-natural parts of the body:

    • Yogurt
    • Crumbs
    • Snot
    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      The rest of that paragraph:

      However, in some cases, the picture or film must be labeled when such removal has been done. In this assessment, one must look at how extensive the removal is on, especially, the skin

      If the amount of yogurt, crumbs, or snot is extensive, then it could be considered as a natural part of the body.

      note: I wanted to add that I’m not trying to tear down this action on advertising. I think it’s fantastic and hugely important. I only fear it will be on everything and people will desensitize from it real quick. I hope then another “natural image” label gets created

        • @[email protected]
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          146 months ago

          The labeling requirements are supported by the American Cancer Society and the National Cancer Institute, many of which having been slowly adopted by the United States. Many of the chemicals have been straight up banned or substantially limited for use by companies in the EU.

          Meanwhile, in Mah (corporate) freedumb America, California has to drag us along to keep up with civil and health rights so the Boss Hoggs that would use us for straight up slaves can’t squeeze every ounce of life out of us for another dollar.

          Disney’s delegitimatizing sign should be expected because they are a soul stealing corporation, not your funny friend making this sign to troll the overbearing government. They want your money and don’t care if you get cancer. Hell, they genuinely pay to make sure people who die in their park are moved out of the park before they’re pronounced dead

          • @[email protected]
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            56 months ago

            The labeling requirements are supported by the American Cancer Society and the National Cancer Institute

            I’m surprised! I believe the ubiquity of Prop 65 warnings have desensitized us to them when they might really matter, if somehow they needed to be posted only when there was a greater need. Like I believe if you just roast a bean, you need to warn customers - like Starbucks:

            I will say I’m almost positive a national company has removed something bad from their product/packaging to avoid being forced to put a scary sticker on that would be seen by buyers nationwide. Hopefully it’s not a BPA situation where the replacement material is alleged to be worse than the original one.

            Disney’s delegitimatizing sign should be expected because they are a soul stealing corporation, not your funny friend making this sign to troll the overbearing government.

            Do you mean to say you believe Disney decided to post an optional sign? (Can’t tell exactly but think that’s what you’re getting at.)

            For the record, I believe this is not the case. Something like brass railings could necessitate the warning.

            Little further reading:

            Proposition 65 warnings now greet guests at Disneyland, drivers at California parking garages, visitors at hotels, shoppers at car dealerships and lunchgoers in fast-food lines.

            Source article is critical overall:

            More than three decades into California’s right-to-know revolution, consumers today don’t know much about the health risks posed by consumer goods. It’s nearly impossible to tell whether to put down a product bearing a warning and choose one without it — either one may present a high risk, a low risk or no risk.

      • @atomicorange
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        56 months ago

        Maybe it would be more useful if it was like a chemical hazard label. Add symbols for what kind of alterations were done, i.e skin texture removed 🫥, body shape changed 🧍‍♀️, teeth whitened 😬, etc…

  • Phoenixz
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    156 months ago

    I’d make that rule with no exceptions.

    Show me how an actual non modified person looks like with your non modified product. Any alterations? Show that label but even bigger. Make it say “we’re trying to cheat you” as a nice ring of text around it

    • @[email protected]
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      -106 months ago

      Kind of ridiculous, a photograph is already an alteration of reality. Lens perspective, physical crop, composition, exposure … Be real

      • @Duamerthrax
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        136 months ago

        How Can Mirrors Be Real If Our Eyes Aren’t Real

      • Night Monkey
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        -26 months ago

        It is ridiculous. We don’t need labels on everything. Unless you’re an idiot. Even then, would it even matter?

  • shastaxc
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    56 months ago

    In this case did they make her head 2x bigger? It seems so out of proportion

    • WIZARD POPE💫
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      36 months ago

      Might be perspective of the picture being taken from above

  • ✺roguetrick✺
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    36 months ago

    Practical effects are better than CGI anyway. Makeup artists got this covered.