Latest News Roundup - All posts tagged 'internet censorship'
Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Sexy art project is too hot for YouTube but just fine on Vimeo

Continuing its practice of sex-phobic censorship, YouTube has banned a video art project by fab contributor Drasko Bogdanovic.

The video shows Corey Kirk (pictured) in his underpants, running his hands over his skin. A Post-It note on his belly says "Mine!" The video, part of the Fearless Project, is widely available, courtesy of Vimeo and at fear-less.com

Watch Bogdanovic's video in its original form on Vimeo:

Compare that with the YouTube version below, censored to meet the site's strict guidelines:

 
Related stories: 

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Friday, May 14, 2010

YouTube backtracks, allows Calgary trans man's shirtless vid

Earlier this year, Xtra reported on how Facebook banned Calgary trans man Dominic Scaia after he uploaded a post-op chest pic. Scaia's account was eventually reinstated, and Facebook apologized. (Though Scaia still has the occasional problem with Facebook deleting his pics...)

The latest? Scaia's video of his post-op chest was removed from YouTube because of "nudity." The video-sharing site has strict policies prohibiting sexual or graphic content, and YouTube's nudity policy is vague and arbitrarily applied. 


Alex Blaze, managing editor of the Bilerico Project, got in touch with YouTube and they have now reinstated Scaia's video. "We'll be doing some additional training around these issues," YouTube told Blaze. 

Here's the video that got Scaia in trouble: 

 
Scaia's YouTube case highlights a growing problem: large gatekeepers of information have too much control over what we can and can't see. Companies like Facebook, YouTube and Apple are too tough on queer and sexy content, and when they choose to censor, it's hard to appeal their decisions.


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Monday, March 8, 2010

Bing censors sex and gay content for Arab users: report

Microsoft's Bing is censoring search results that could yield sex- or gay-related content in Arab countries, reports the OpenNet Initiative (ONI). 

 
Censored keywords include sex, porn, intercourse, breast, nude, gay, lesbian and homosexuality. See a longer list here.  

ONI says attempts to use any of the filtered keywords generates a message in Arabic or English which reads, "Your country or region requires a strict Bing SafeSearch setting, which filters out results that might return adult content."

The blanket censorship applies to some Arab countries that don't even practise social content filtering (eg sex, nudity and homosexuality), such as Algeria and Lebanon, says ONI.

Arab users can work around the censorship by using a different search engine (eg Google) or changing their location settings in Bing to a country like Canada or the US, says ONI. But censorship is the default, and users may not be aware of the options. 

"It is unclear still whether Microsoft is acting at the behest of local officials, interpreting local law, seeking to pre-empt future regulation or attempting to position the company as a good corporate citizen," says the ONI report. "The fact that they employ a single filtering policy throughout the region implies that they are following one or both of the latter approaches rather than the former."

Read the full report from the OpenNet Initiative

Read more on Xtra.ca:

 

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The Roundup

Xtra.ca's Roundup
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The Roundup is
written by Xtra's
staff reporters:

Andrea Houston
andrea.houston@xtra.ca

Natasha Barsotti
natasha.barsotti@xtra.ca

 


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