Naked girl picture causes unrest in Wiki-land

A picture of a naked girl, aged around 11-years-old is causing a major stir thanks to its appearance on Wikipedia. The picture has been deemed pornographic by British legal advisers to the Internet Watch Foundation. This has led several Internet Service Providers to being forced to ban access to the page - and in some instances to prevent anyone contributing to Wikipedia via that ISP. Furthermore, Wikipedia has refused to remove the offensive picture on the grounds it does not censor user-generated content.

The picture is actually a cover of an album from the German rock band, the Scorpions and it caused a problem when it was originally released in 1976. Yes, this picture is 32 years old and you'd have been able to see it at record fairs up and down the country for dozens of years now.

However, it is potentially offensive to many people and likely to be of interest to paedophiles. However, they have been able to freely get hold of this picture for decades without anyone intervening. All they needed to do was visit a record store.

Here's the problem. Firstly, there's a culture clash. In Germany nudity is much more acceptable. You will see people strip off their clothes in the parks in summer, then after their lunch break, get dressed again and go back to the office. Even childhood nudity does not carry such a negative reaction there as it does in the UK.

Secondly, Wikipedia is being disingenuous. They do censor material - or at least rely on volunteer editors and a complaints process to remove offensive material. To suggest you cannot censor material because of the lack of censorship on the Internet is to treat us all like idiots.

And the clarion calls from bloggers commenting on this case suggesting that the ban should be lifted so that the freedom of the Internet can be maintained is just nonsense.

You see, offensive material is offensive if someone is offended. If just one person is offended, the material is offensive. In other words, if just one reader of the Wikipedia article is offended by the image, the page is offensive - whether or not the people at Wikpedia, or the volunteer editors, agree. The chances are that in the UK and in the USA many more people would find the image offensive than in Germany or other countries where child nudity is less negatively perceived.

The argument is about culture as much as it is about offence. But the lesson we can all learn from this is the need to focus on the audience of a web site and see what you publish through their eyes. Wikipedia's weak defence is pandering to a minority - those vocal bloggers who are more concerned with so-called freedom of speech than truly connecting with an audience.

When the record cover was originally published it was almost immediately changed in countries where the naked image was offensive. In other words, 32 years ago the publishers (Polydor Records) saw the sense in seeing things through their audience's eyes. It appears that all these years later Wikipedia has not learned to do the same.

And if you don't do the same on your web site - see things constantly from your readers' perspective - you too risk offending them and losing them as readers or customers. Never, ever lose sight of the fact that you are talking to people who see and perceive things differently to you. Wikipedia has to realise that - soon.

Also posted on www.grahamjones.co.uk

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  1. 1. At 8 Dec 2008 10:50, Philip Sheldrake wrote:

    I haven't seen the album cover in question, nor do I have any intent on searching it out. I have a Led Zeppelin album with a naked girl on it, under 16 years of age, from the 1970s. And of course the world's art galleries are filled with such images.

    The IWF is a wonderful organisation, and long may they continue to do their work and show global leadership, but part of the process of their continuing to excel is for the boundaries of their work to be tested and for the masses to respond.

    I'm interested, would you take this post down if I told you I thought it was offensive? I'm the only one who has to think it so by your definition, and you appear to suggest that such offense is sufficient for its removal or censorship. I believe the IWF attempts to establish a more representative framework than this, based on the morals of today's (Western European) society as a whole.

    This comment refers to an earlier version of the text.

  2. 2. At 8 Dec 2008 20:19, Graham Jones wrote:

    If someone finds anything offensive it is offensive. That doesn't mean I would take a site or page down, but it means I would certainly consider it. Anyone reporting offence is an indicator of potential mismatch with the audience and therefore should be considered.

    Indeed, this now appears to be what has happened as Wikipedia (who claim not to censor things) have now removed the image from the page.

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Posted 8 Dec 2008
Last edited 8 Dec 2008
Latest revision: 2


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