![](https://seccdn.libravatar.org/avatar/008a8db3f6a813af5f8064f2be96e100.jpg?s=120&d=mm&r=g)
I know you said your questions are rhetorical and there's no need to reply, but I feel somewhat compelled to reply regardless. :-) On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 08:55:32 +0200, Per Jessen wrote:
Such guidelines should pretty clearly spell out that if content is NSFW, it doesn't belong on an openSUSE site, period, end of story.
Aren't we getting a little carried away here?
Perhaps on that front - the overriding issue is the issue that Katarina brought up, of course.
To start with, NSFW according to which culture and whose rules?
I'd say that for something like this, fairly conservative rules are what would make sense. In this case, we're talking about the objectification of women, and I think you'd be hard pressed to find a modern culture that deemed that acceptable. It's not a question of PC-ness, it's a question of being respectful - and it's a question of the image of the openSUSE project as a whole. On a personal blog, I might find it inappropriate, but it's not a personal blog that represents a product or service that I'm interested in. Pulled into a website that is official for a product or service I care very much for, though, it's totally inappropriate because the reader/viewer can take that publication to be acceptance of that as a social norm/standard, and that's what makes it objectionable from a project standpoint. Jim -- Jim Henderson Please keep on-topic replies on the list so everyone benefits -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-project+help@opensuse.org