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Proposal for Site/Forum Image Standards Revision

DarkGrath

The Asteraceae Knight
She/Her
VS Battles
Administrator
Human Resources
4,604
6,575
Note: This thread is staff-only. You may request permission to reply from a staff member if you believe you will have productive input on the topic.

Hello.

As the title suggests, this discussion is a proposal for a change to our present site rules regarding the standards for allowable imagery on the main site and the forum. As it is surely the elephant in the room, I’ll note briefly that this thread was precipitated by the recent controversies regarding AKM Sama’s forum profile banner, and that I have already publicly expressed strong views regarding that case. However, the purpose of this thread is first and foremost to reach a coherent and agreeable set of rules for application to all cases, not merely this one incident. And, as should hopefully be obvious, I expect that this thread will be kept to this purpose.




The relevant section being proposed for revision is the ‘Be Appropriate’ section of the Site Rules, and more precisely, the subsection/s relevant to sexual content on the site and forum:
We are trying to keep this wiki accessible to all ages, so please think twice before inserting offensive, disturbing, or disgusting texts, descriptions, or images into the profiles, and feel free to help out by changing such content.
  • Being sexually flirtatious will not be tolerated. Playing mature games, flirting, or using sexual connotations is discouraged, and in extreme cases, will result in a severe penalty.
  • Do not post links to pornographic images or videos. This will lead to an automatic ban without warning.

The first chunk of text simply states the general idea of what ‘being appropriate’ entails. This part is vague (what is ‘offensive, disturbing, or disgusting’?), but likely intentionally so – it’s a general guideline that tells people quickly what is expected of them while leaving the details of what is/isn’t enforced to the rest of the section. I think this is fine, but I will suggest a small change to it later.

The second chunk of text deals in sexual conduct, or in other words, the point at which conduct of a sexual nature is ‘not appropriate’. This part is a bit more questionable – it’s a bit narrow in scope, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it creates problems down the line – but it has been good enough as to be efficacious for past incidents of sexual conduct on the forum, so I do not intend to focus on it. I leave it here mainly if others believe it warrants a closer look in the course of this discussion.

The third chunk of text deals in sexual content, or in other words, the point at which content of a sexual nature presented on the wiki/forum is ‘not appropriate’. This is the most relevant part of the revision, as I would say the issues here are twofold: this rule is both vague and, arguably, too limited for the context that it is being applied in. Most importantly for the former is that the term ‘pornographic’ is not defined here – as far as I can tell, it is implicitly referring exclusively to hardcore pornography (content warning: it’s just a Wikipedia article on the topic, but drawings of sexual acts are present on the page), but the term is equally relevant as a definition for softcore pornography, and both of these categories can continue to be sub-divided on the basis of the severity of the explicit content – which is presumably the part of the content we actually take issue with, not merely the label. ‘Pornography’ can readily include anything from open depictions of penetration for the sake of sexual pleasure, to pin-up models in the likes of the Chica Boom magazine, depending on who you ask.

There’s only two other things we are bound by that detail anything specific related to sexual content. The Acceptable Content Rating Scale – which is more-or-less just about what types of verses can be included on the wiki, and does not say anything directly on our forum content – and FANDOM Community Guidelines, which includes a brief section regarding prohibited/nonprohibited nudity on-site.

So what we are left with is not much. Our rules are vague and very liberal with what kinds of sexual content can be displayed on the site and forum – people are reluctant to enforce matters that are not strictly outlined in the rules – and as we’ve seen, there have been disagreements on where the line should be drawn. To this end, this proposal seeks to outline what principles we should be following in regard to sexual content on our site and forum, and from there, to draft up a change to the relevant section of our rules.




Rule Proposal

Before the principles behind the rule suggestions are outlined – here is the current draft for the rule changes being proposed:
Old: We are trying to keep this wiki accessible to all ages, so please think twice before inserting offensive, disturbing, or disgusting texts, descriptions, or images into the profiles, and feel free to help out by changing such content.

New: This website is intended to be accessible to all users at or above the age of 13, so please think twice before inserting offensive, disturbing, or disgusting texts, descriptions, or images into the profiles, and feel free to help out by changing such content.
Old: Do not post links to pornographic images or videos. This will lead to an automatic ban without warning.

New: Images and videos posted onto either our website or our external forum must abide by certain restrictions on sexual content to ensure this website remains appropriate for users at or above the age of 13. Images and videos produced for the primary intent of sexual gratification in the viewer of the content are strictly prohibited on both the main site and the forum. This does not include content of legitimate artistic merit; for sexual content with primarily artistic intentions, FANDOM Community Guidelines must nonetheless be followed on both the main site and the forum.

As I outline these principles, the specific phrasings chosen for each change should become clear.

Content should be PG-13

This is hopefully an obvious and agreeable principle. Our wiki is open to all above the age of 13, as mandated by FANDOM. Thus, content on our wiki should be appropriate for people as young as 13, which we hopefully all can conclude excludes a lot of sexual content.

In an ideal world, we would not need to be more specific than this. However, this creates its own ambiguities. As highlighted in the precipitating case, not everyone agrees on what is or is not 13+. The concept of particular content being appropriate/inappropriate for an age range is culturally determined, and not consistent over place or time. If we are going to abide by this principle, we need to further define what is/is not appropriate for this age range. I highlight this principle not because I believe it will resolve everyone’s concerns on the case single-handedly, but because I believe it provides an agreeable base to work off of – we do not need to interject individual moral convictions into this matter if we can all agree that this is the mutual intention behind anything else we are arguing, and that we will have a satisfactory conclusion if we can say what content is appropriate for this age range.

FANDOM Community Guidelines

This is another hopefully obvious and agreeable principle. FANDOM has Community Guidelines that all wikis must follow. We obviously cannot permit any content on our wiki that does not fit these guidelines, and part of these guidelines deals in sexual content. This creates its own technicality with the forum – which is not exactly a FANDOM entity – but I hope all of us agree that the very FANDOM-adjacent nature of our forum means it should still abide by FANDOM’s guidelines. I believe it is worth disambiguating this completely for the reader, given the direct connection between the rules and the community guidelines in the case of these rules in particular.

Defining ‘Pornographic Content’

If we agree that content must be appropriate for users 13+, then I believe most of our intuitive concepts of what is ‘pornographic content’ does not fit in this category of ‘appropriateness’. But as we’ve seen, not everyone agrees on what is pornographic, so this is not useful in isolation. We need to operationalise a definition here – preferably one that best encapsulates what we can agree is not appropriate for 13+ users without including what we can agree is appropriate. This is what I would propose:
Pornographic Content’ includes images and videos produced for the primary intent of sexual gratification in the viewer of the content.

There are numerous terms that constitute the parts of this definition, which I will also outline individually:
Images and videos’ includes any form of pictorial representation of a subject.

Produced’ refers to the creation of a particular product.

Primary intent’ refers to the main function that a product was created to serve. For example, the ‘primary intent’ of a watch is to tell the time, regardless of the use of it by the owner. In the context of images and videos, this may entail (but is not limited to) artistic expression on the part of the artist or sexual gratification in the viewer of the content.

Sexual gratification’ refers to the feeling of pleasure associated with sexual acts.

Viewer of the content’ refers generically to individuals who may consume the content.

This definition is designed to capture an important quality here that I believe is integral to this case. Most of us likely agree that there is a distinction in ‘appropriateness’ between – for example – an Onlyfans explicit OC drawing and The Creation of Adam. Even if you think both should be disallowed on our wiki, you likely agree that the latter is more ‘appropriate’ than the former, even if the visual content may be largely similar.

The common theme you’ll find in people’s explanations of this is that the former is drawn with the intent of sexually gratifying the viewer, while the latter was drawn for purely artistic purposes. Not only do I think it is fair to say that some degree of artistically-intentioned content is more permissible, I would say it is essentially necessary to make it so; our wiki indexes material from artistic content, and strictly excluding profiles like Do-S on the basis of, for example, just being potentially sexually gratifying without regard for the context it is produced and used in would be shooting ourselves in the foot.

Furthermore, I believe this should be agreeable in regard to a previous principle – our 13+ restrictions. We are aware of the fact that users as young as 13 may use our site, and we are responsible for what content they are or are not exposed to on here. We cannot prevent such a user from seeking out sexually gratifying content by their own accord, but we can prevent such content from being hosted on our site or forum. I could go far into referencing research about the effect of sexual exposure on brain development and why it is harmful for younger people, but I don’t think I need to; I think we can simply agree that “We should not host content primarily designed to sexually gratify on a site for 13-year-olds” is an agreeable enough sentiment, and largely grasps why an average person would say such content is contrasted with appropriate content.

The only strong criticism I can imagine for this line of reasoning is that what is ‘primarily intended’ to be sexually gratifying may be ambiguous in some cases. Theoretically, that may be true, but in practice, I would say it essentially never is and could be handled case-by-case in the rare instance it becomes relevant. We already use almost this exact line of reasoning in regards to what verses are allowable in our Acceptable Content Rating Scale (specifically, in distinguishing what makes a verse level 3 versus level 4), and this has not created any issues in recent memory.




With these principles in mind, I will reiterate the rule changes being proposed:
Old: We are trying to keep this wiki accessible to all ages, so please think twice before inserting offensive, disturbing, or disgusting texts, descriptions, or images into the profiles, and feel free to help out by changing such content.

New: This website is intended to be accessible to all users at or above the age of 13, so please think twice before inserting offensive, disturbing, or disgusting texts, descriptions, or images into the profiles, and feel free to help out by changing such content.
Old: Do not post links to pornographic images or videos. This will lead to an automatic ban without warning.

New: Images and videos posted onto either our website or our external forum must abide by certain restrictions on sexual content to ensure this website remains appropriate for users at or above the age of 13. Images and videos produced for the primary intent of sexual gratification in the viewer of the content are strictly prohibited on both the main site and the forum. This does not include content of legitimate artistic merit; for sexual content with primarily artistic intentions, FANDOM Community Guidelines must nonetheless be followed on both the main site and the forum.

The first highlighted section is merely a small clarification. It’s more accurate to say we are open to ages 13 and up, and insinuating otherwise creates inaccurate implications about what general kinds of content are considered inappropriate.

The second highlighted section refers back to the intention of the first principle; before anything else, this website should be appropriate for 13-year-olds, and behaviour which is not appropriate for 13-year-olds should be discouraged broadly.

The third highlighted section is nearly an exact quote of the definition outlined in the third principle. No content with the primary intent of being sexually gratifying should be hosted on our site or forum. This is essentially an extension of our Acceptable Content Rating Scale beyond what is acceptable for a verse and into what is acceptable for images/videos.

The fourth and fifth highlighted sections relate to the second principle. What is considered inappropriate by FANDOM is inappropriate on both our site and our forum, and this takes precedent over any of our other rulings.

To outline a few key examples that illustrate the application of these rules:
  • The banner which precipitated this matter will not be permitted. The artist behind the banner, Sakimichan, has attested directly to the fact that the works they produce are intentionally NSFW and marked as 18+, and a simple analysis of the content and context indicates that the primary reason the work was created was to sexualise the characters for the sake of the viewer’s gratification.
  • The image on the Do-S profile will be permitted. While tangentially similar in content to the banner, this is simply a depiction of a character in an artistic piece of media exactly as they were in the original media, and as it is in a relevant context, it does not violate FANDOM community guidelines.
  • The Creation of Adam will be permitted, with some caveats. The Creation of Adam is unambiguously artistic nudity, and not designed to be sexually gratifying. FANDOM Community Guidelines suggest classical artistic nudity is permissible so long as it is in ‘an appropriate context’. There are few situations on our pages or forum where The Creation of Adam would be a relevant image, so the allowance of this image in concept does not mean it can be posted anywhere for any reason.
  • Medical/Educational nudity will not be permitted, with some caveats. I mainly bring this up to address a very niche edge case that may have come to some other minds as well – nudity/semi-nudity which is produced for educational purposes (e.g.: a depiction of breasts in diagrams about development in puberty) unambiguously is not produced for the purpose of sexual gratification. But it’s technically not artistic either, and more importantly, FANDOM’s Community Guidelines suggest this kind of content would only be allowed if there was a clear context which warranted their display for educational merit. I cannot fathom how this would apply to our wiki. Hypothetically, if it did, it would be acceptable under these rules – but as far as I’m concerned, it never will be.




To conclude: as recent matters have alerted us to, the present rules regarding posting of sexual content on our wiki and forum are limited, and opinions differ on where the line should be drawn on what is permissible. The purpose of this thread is to offer a clear suggestion for a change to our rules in alignment with the intentions of our wiki, as well as a justification for this change, to hopefully reconcile these disagreements and provide an agreeable and detailed framework to use for future incidents.
 
I do have some doubts regarding even further borderline cases, but even now we deal in fringe cases, and one may hope that even more specific issues do not arise. I do not feel this adjustment is absolutely airtight, but I do feel it is substantially better than current regulations on the subject (as well as, to give due respect, better than I reckon I could do).

I agree with the changes without qualifier.
 
I also think that this seems like a reasonable proposal. 🙏
 
I don't like the formulation of "produced for the primary intent of sexual gratification in the viewer of the content."

This formulation will get us into not objectively decidable debates about whether some fanart of an inherently sexy character was produced to highlight the sexual nature or whether fanart of a character in an alternate costume (e.g. a bikini or a Halloween costume) has the intention of being sexually gratifying.
We avoid author intent as an argument when analyzing feats exactly because it's notoriously undecidable.
Not to mention that arguably 80% of all females in anime are designed to be sexy.

To that comes that the difference seems irrelevant to the problem to me. Whether a picture is sexy by the intention of the artist or not has no relevance to the viewer. If we are to assume some effect on them, then a sexually gratifying picture will have it regardless of whether that was its primary intent or not.

I believe we should instead set a more objectively decidable standard and focus on the content of the image, not on the intention of the artist. Personally, I think something in the direction of
"Anything that covers more than a (not extraordinarily skimpy) bikini, hides all outlines of the privates and doesn't depict any sexual actions is permissible. Anything that fails one of these criteria is not."
is a sufficient standard and way less blurry on the cut-off point.
 
I don't like the formulation of "produced for the primary intent of sexual gratification in the viewer of the content."

This formulation will get us into not objectively decidable debates about whether some fanart of an inherently sexy character was produced to highlight the sexual nature or whether fanart of a character in an alternate costume (e.g. a bikini or a Halloween costume) has the intention of being sexually gratifying.
We avoid author intent as an argument when analyzing feats exactly because it's notoriously undecidable.
Not to mention that arguably 80% of all females in anime are designed to be sexy.
I think it's valid to be concern about falling into a subjective rabbit hole, but unfortunately it is unavoidable. There's a famous phrase from the U.S. Supreme Court along the lines of "I know it when I see it" with regard to obscenity, because trying to define it in very specific terms is difficult. For instance:

Anything that covers more than a (not extraordinarily skimpy) bikini, hides all outlines of the privates and doesn't depict any sexual actions is permissible
This wording unfortunately will fail to capture the spirit of the proposal, because it's mainly addresses degree of nudity. It would be relatively easy to find provocative images where the character doesn't violate the three criteria you propose. Moreover there's still a degree of subjectivity here as "extraordinarily skimpy" is subjective.

Generally the wiki has done well with handling subjective rules. I think it'll probably handle this one well.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

As to the proposal itself, I have two things to add.

1. I think it might be prudent to instruct that reports pertaining to obscene content should be placed in the Private RVR forum. This has the benefit of (A) avoiding some sort of public debate about obscenity and (B) not amplifying the obscene content to the masses.

2. It might be good to add a sentence saying that imagery that focuses specifically on sexual body parts are not permitted. This may save us some of the headache of dealing with bad-faith arguments about whether pictures that are just a characters ass/boobs are "intended for sexual gratification" or not.
 
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I don't like the formulation of "produced for the primary intent of sexual gratification in the viewer of the content."

This formulation will get us into not objectively decidable debates about whether some fanart of an inherently sexy character was produced to highlight the sexual nature or whether fanart of a character in an alternate costume (e.g. a bikini or a Halloween costume) has the intention of being sexually gratifying.
We avoid author intent as an argument when analyzing feats exactly because it's notoriously undecidable.
Not to mention that arguably 80% of all females in anime are designed to be sexy.

To that comes that the difference seems irrelevant to the problem to me. Whether a picture is sexy by the intention of the artist or not has no relevance to the viewer. If we are to assume some effect on them, then a sexually gratifying picture will have it regardless of whether that was its primary intent or not.

I believe we should instead set a more objectively decidable standard and focus on the content of the image, not on the intention of the artist. Personally, I think something in the direction of
"Anything that covers more than a (not extraordinarily skimpy) bikini, hides all outlines of the privates and doesn't depict any sexual actions is permissible. Anything that fails one of these criteria is not."
is a sufficient standard and way less blurry on the cut-off point.
I don't agree with this take. To begin with, as Deagon highlighted, such subjectivity is kinda unavoidable here. But even beyond that, DarkGrath has laid out a pretty clear guideline to follow. I don't think things like mentioning how "arguably 80% of anime girls are designed to be sexy" are actually productive to the discussion. It's also, I'd say, much easier to decide if a piece of art is meant for sexual gratification than deciding authorial intent for a feat - so I don't agree with that point either. Things like facial expressions and emphasis on private body parts make that job much easier to me.

I do think Deagon's suggestions are good ones for sure, though beyond that, I agree with the revision
 
I think it's valid to be concern about falling into a subjective rabbit hole, but unfortunately it is unavoidable. There's a famous phrase from the U.S. Supreme Court along the lines of "I know it when I see it" with regard to obscenity, because trying to define it in very specific terms is difficult. For instance:


This wording unfortunately will fail to capture the spirit of the proposal, because it's mainly addresses degree of nudity. It would be relatively easy to find provocative images where the character doesn't violate the three criteria you propose. Moreover there's still a degree of subjectivity here as "extraordinarily skimpy" is subjective.

Generally the wiki has done well with handling subjective rules. I think it'll probably handle this one well.
I could clarify the "extraordinarily skimpy"-part further if desired. That's not a problem.

And I'm not sure if a "provocative image" within the suggested guidelines is a problematic image. Basically, I don't see why you think the subjectivity is unavoidable.
I don't agree with this take. To begin with, as Deagon highlighted, such subjectivity is kinda unavoidable here. But even beyond that, DarkGrath has laid out a pretty clear guideline to follow. I don't think things like mentioning how "arguably 80% of anime girls are designed to be sexy" are actually productive to the discussion. It's also, I'd say, much easier to decide if a piece of art is meant for sexual gratification than deciding authorial intent for a feat - so I don't agree with that point either. Things like facial expressions and emphasis on private body parts make that job much easier to me.
I think mentioning that plenty of designs are inherently chosen with sexual gratification in mind is relevant.
DarkGrath mentions in his examples that original designs are apparently fine, but not actually in the rule. The rule as written would also target canonical images if the design has the primary intention of being sexy, which is the case for plenty of characters.

If we say that only fanart more sexualized than the original is not permissible, then the rule should say so clearly.
However, I'm not much in favour of that, as I don't see the point in have different ideas of acceptability for each character. IMO if Do-S is acceptable then fanart of Kanzaki Kaori in the same pose and outfit as Do-S should be as well, regardless of intention.
 
I think mentioning that plenty of designs are inherently chosen with sexual gratification in mind is relevant.
Except the natural character designs aren't really made for that purpose, no. It'd be more like particular scenes (like fanservice from stripping to closer to explicit stuff) that are meant for that. I don't think we'd disallow Rias Gremory's normal character design, for instance. Of course, there are designs inherently meant for this, and we would disallow those. I think this isn't productive because it's self-evidently not what falls under what's disallowed. We can apply basic critical thinking to stuff like this. Anything can be considered sexy to anyone, but not everything is intentionally provocative.
DarkGrath mentions in his examples that original designs are apparently fine, but not actually in the rule. The rule as written would also target canonical images if the design has the primary intention of being sexy, which is the case for plenty of characters.
Her, first of all

There's a difference between a design and a particular moment. A natural, official character design usually (Keyword: usually) isn't provocative, but a scene with said character (official of not) can absolutely be. And that's more like what we're trying to address here.
If we say that only fanart more sexualized than the original is not permissible, then the rule should say so clearly.
However, I'm not much in favour of that, as I don't see the point in have different ideas of acceptability for each character. IMO if Do-S is acceptable then fanart of Kanzaki Kaori in the same pose and outfit as Do-S should be as well, regardless of intention.
And neither am I. It'd be anything meant to be provocative, from fanart to official scenes to even the rare official character design.
 
The rule as written would also target canonical images if the design has the primary intention of being sexy, which is the case for plenty of characters.
Most certainly not. Return to the meaning of 'primary intention' here, and how it connects to the underlying definition. The main function that an image or video of a character being depicted in artistic work has is to contribute to the artistic work. If you're arguing that the primary intention of the image/video in the medium is not to contribute to an artistic work but to sexually gratify you, then it's hard to argue you're not talking about a pornographic work.
 
I could clarify the "extraordinarily skimpy"-part further if desired. That's not a problem.
Right, we could, but unless we're delving into the point of defining skimpiness so specifically that we need calc mods do a pixel calc to determine what percentage of someone's boobs are covered (and if we do I'm making @Mr. Bambu do it), we are just going to have to leave it to the good ol' eyeball test. I think we'd still run into the problem of things like body suits that are effectively just as NSFW as what you're describing, as well as other ways of making an image provocative without specifically violating a relative nudity rule.

DarkGrath mentions in his examples that original designs are apparently fine, but not actually in the rule. The rule as written would also target canonical images if the design has the primary intention of being sexy, which is the case for plenty of characters.
I think there's a notable difference between "this character was designed for sex appeal" and "this particular image is meant to be arousing." We're not banning images that use a character's primary official outfit.

If we say that only fanart more sexualized than the original is not permissible, then the rule should say so clearly.
I'm not necessarily opposed to that, but I think it's fine to say that specific official images of a character can still violate this rule and that we should generally find the most neutral depiction of a character rather than one that amplifies or highlights the things we're trying to avoid here.
 
(and if we do I'm making @Mr. Bambu do it)
I second this
I think there's a notable difference between "this character was designed for sex appeal" and "this particular image is meant to be arousing." We're not banning images that use a character's primary official outfit.
I do largely agree here, though I think there may be a select few cases where the character's official outfit may be too much (usually, said character is just oozing sexuality, so it works well enough)
 
I informed AKM about this thread yesterday, but he has not had the time to check yet. 🙏
 
The revision is fine. The issue of subjectivity isn't much of one to me, it's pretty clear to discern in most cases when an image exists solely for sexual gratification/titillation or is just somewhat raunchy design, with plain common sense and the image's context.
 
I agree with DontTalk. And I will highlight a few problems I have with the proposal.

  • The banner which precipitated this matter will not be permitted. The artist behind the banner, Sakimichan, has attested directly to the fact that the works they produce are intentionally NSFW and marked as 18+, and a simple analysis of the content and context indicates that the primary reason the work was created was to sexualise the characters for the sake of the viewer’s gratification.
  • The image on the Do-S profile will be permitted. While tangentially similar in content to the banner, this is simply a depiction of a character in an artistic piece of media exactly as they were in the original media, and as it is in a relevant context, it does not violate FANDOM community guidelines.
The intent of the thread is to clearly define rules for what a 13-year old might see on this platform. It's double standards to say that official artworks of Do-S (who wears BDSM suit), Sorceress, Satellizer, etc. that look like this:

Slingshot_s_one_punch_man_by_cedric_dredd_da5xvf2-pre.png
Tooopen_76231916.jpg
Th1.jpg
Uytuyu.jpg
29e39f6a3adb3380626e7d92337ca405.jpg


are fine and appropriate. But fanarts made by doesn't-matter-who purely to sexualize the characters that look like this:

30784845_1653867098043632_845133642_n.jpg
37071378_1893969687315737_6123798150554583040_n.jpg
37047116_286190855271224_5921339465304899584_n.jpg
8215780ea232b9ebe1394bf764a8abbc.jpg


are not acceptable. The latter look much tamer in comparison to the former. This arbitrary line that prohibits fanarts depicting sexualized females but allows official artwork depicting much more sexualized females does not serve the purpose of protecting a 13-year old.

What DT said makes sense and I will try to explain precisely why. The problem isn't who draws the picture. The problem is what the picture shows. Any 13-year old kid on this platform can see women in bikini in their favorite anime without a problem. Bleach has a beach episode where they show women with massive boobs in bikinis. Fairy Tail has a beach episode with characters roaming with/without bikinis. Every anime worth its salt that a kid has probably already seen before coming to this platform has beach episodes and shows women in bikinis.

My suggestion would be similar to what DontTalk suggested. We can't protect a 13-year old who has already seen women in bikinis in their favorite piece of fiction by prohibiting much tamer images. What is "more" sexualized and what is "less" sexualized will always be subjective no matter where you draw the line. Hence, in my opinion, skin shown till bikini-level should be okay as long as it is not showing outlines of private parts and sexual acts.
 
What DT said makes sense and I will try to explain precisely why. The problem isn't who draws the picture. The problem is what the picture shows. Any 13-year old kid on this platform can see women in bikini in their favorite anime without a problem. Bleach has a beach episode where they show women with massive boobs in bikinis. Fairy Tail has a beach episode with characters roaming with/without bikinis. Every anime worth its salt that a kid has probably already seen before coming to this platform has beach episodes and shows women in bikinis.
I've largely explained why I do not think this is accurate.

This definition is designed to capture an important quality here that I believe is integral to this case. Most of us likely agree that there is a distinction in ‘appropriateness’ between – for example – an Onlyfans explicit OC drawing and The Creation of Adam. Even if you think both should be disallowed on our wiki, you likely agree that the latter is more ‘appropriate’ than the former, even if the visual content may be largely similar.

The common theme you’ll find in people’s explanations of this is that the former is drawn with the intent of sexually gratifying the viewer, while the latter was drawn for purely artistic purposes. Not only do I think it is fair to say that some degree of artistically-intentioned content is more permissible, I would say it is essentially necessary to make it so; our wiki indexes material from artistic content, and strictly excluding profiles like Do-S on the basis of, for example, just being potentially sexually gratifying without regard for the context it is produced and used in would be shooting ourselves in the foot.

Furthermore, I believe this should be agreeable in regard to a previous principle – our 13+ restrictions. We are aware of the fact that users as young as 13 may use our site, and we are responsible for what content they are or are not exposed to on here. We cannot prevent such a user from seeking out sexually gratifying content by their own accord, but we can prevent such content from being hosted on our site or forum. I could go far into referencing research about the effect of sexual exposure on brain development and why it is harmful for younger people, but I don’t think I need to; I think we can simply agree that “We should not host content primarily designed to sexually gratify on a site for 13-year-olds” is an agreeable enough sentiment, and largely grasps why an average person would say such content is contrasted with appropriate content.
Beyond the practical concerns I raised (which is still relevant to our framing of the rules), there is a more directly pertinent point. Two things can be very similar in their surface-level content, but interpreted very differently by the viewer on the basis of their context. I provided an illustrative example above, but to provide another one: consider a depiction of an explicit sex scene in a series such as The Witcher, versus a depiction of an explicit sex scene in, say, a high fantasy hentai game. Both could absolutely be very similar in visual content, to the extent that it is nearly impossible to simply point to a particular thing that is/is not shown in the scene that distinguishes them - but we decidedly do not think of the two as the same. There is more to our thinking of and response to an image than simply 'what the image shows'.

It's not as helpful of an illustrative example for the main case as the former, as it's dealing with two things that couldn't be displayed by our guidelines regardless, but it is still a helpful illustration to explain why such rules cannot adequately be expressed simply by directing our focus to specific forms of visuals. If it were that simple, I would have suggested it - the reason the proposal is the way it is, is because I do not think this is a tenable approach at all. Deagonx also summarised this point well:

I think it's valid to be concern about falling into a subjective rabbit hole, but unfortunately it is unavoidable. There's a famous phrase from the U.S. Supreme Court along the lines of "I know it when I see it" with regard to obscenity, because trying to define it in very specific terms is difficult.

This wording unfortunately will fail to capture the spirit of the proposal, because it's mainly addresses degree of nudity. It would be relatively easy to find provocative images where the character doesn't violate the three criteria you propose. Moreover there's still a degree of subjectivity here as "extraordinarily skimpy" is subjective.

Generally the wiki has done well with handling subjective rules. I think it'll probably handle this one well.
It's not a matter of arguing that there are no visual differences between something that is/isn't intended to be arousing. Rather, the point is to say it is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to determine what is 'obscene' purely through a checklist of visual qualities. The many past records of debates on obscene works speak to the fact that not even major courts can agree. We won't achieve a satisfactory, comprehensive set of rules by narrowing our scope in this way - we need to tackle the underlying reasons why we interpret the content the way we do, and more precisely, why we would not be okay with displaying it to a 13-year-old. As I've argued, one of the largest reasons why we would think something is not appropriate for a 13-year-old is because it was produced specifically to sexually gratify them. The inverse would be to say something which is shown to people to sexually gratify them is appropriate for a 13-year-old, which I believe we've seen is a completely disagreeable sentiment.

I'll also add to this - while on a more limited scale, the FANDOM Community Guidelines already suggest the intention behind an image is a relevant reason to not allow it.

If you aren't sure if an image is acceptable or not, there are two questions: Is the nudity in an appropriate context? For example, an image of breasts on the Breast Cancer Wiki would be in an appropriate context, the same image on a wiki about iCarly would not. And, is the image intended to be sexual, or to arouse?
While this deals in nudity specifically, FANDOM does agree that two images of nudity - one intended to arouse, one which is not - could be allowed or disallowed on this basis. This proposal largely just fleshes out and extends the boundaries of what FANDOM has already stated.
 
I've largely explained why I do not think this is accurate.
I don't quite agree with comparing The Creation of Adam that is purely meant to be artistic in real world prospects with fictional characters. To be honest, I have nothing to say about the artistic nudity of The Creation of Adam since that has never been a problem or a point of dispute.

It does not matter if the sex scene is from The Witcher or an H-game. Sex scene is sex scene and it will be same for someone who hasn't seen either (if the overall scene is similar, of course). Similarly, a BDSM suit is a BDSM suit. If someone comes across this wiki for the first time who has not seen OPM, it won't matter to them whether they see Do-S in that suit or Fubuki. They will just see a woman in BDSM suit with almost the same features but with different hair color.

While this deals in nudity specifically, FANDOM does agree that two images of nudity - one intended to arouse, one which is not - could be allowed or disallowed on this basis. This proposal largely just fleshes out and extends the boundaries of what FANDOM has already stated.
Author intent is pretty hard to gauge. One could say that Do-S is overly sexualized by the Author himself and hence should not be allowed. But a fanart of Do-S which is slightly less sexualized should be allowed. Characters with massive boobs or revealing clothes are always intentionally added in any anime or comic. The piece of fiction would have worked fine even if those characters weren't sexualized, but the authors do so intentionally. This has been a point of dispute with the MHA author in reality. Intentionally or not, Tsunade in a bikini should be treated the same as Rangiku in a bikini, irrespective of whether the Author drew one and not the other. For a lay-person who hasn't seen Naruto and Bleach, it will be only a woman with big boobs in bikini.

The only metric that is most objective here is the amount of skin shown (with some additional checks described above). If Ryuko can show underboobs, She-Hulk should be able to too. A lay-person with no knowledge is only going to see underboobs irrespective of their skin color. If they are going to be offended by underboobs, it won't matter if it is canon or not. If they deem Ryuko's underboobs appropriate, then they would be fine if She-Hulk is wearing the same dress.
 
The only metric that is most objective here is the amount of skin shown (with some additional checks described above). If Ryuko can show underboobs, She-Hulk should be able to too. A lay-person with no knowledge is only going to see underboobs irrespective of their skin color. If they are going to be offended by underboobs, it won't matter if it is canon or not. If they deem Ryuko's underboobs appropriate, then they would be fine if She-Hulk is wearing the same dress.
This is decidedly not true. Two images showing the exact same amount of skin - in this case, a depiction of someone in a dress with an underboob - can be taken as drastically more or less sexual depending on the other elements that constitute the image and the context of the image. Framing our rules on the basis of 'portion of skin shown' attempts to make it as reliable as possible, but in the process, completely loses the validity of the metric. This would be like diagnosing people with depression purely on whether they say the words "I am depressed" in an interview with them - you have perfect reliability, but you're not even measuring what you're trying to anymore.
 
This is decidedly not true. Two images showing the exact same amount of skin - in this case, a depiction of someone in a dress with an underboob - can be taken as drastically more or less sexual depending on the other elements that constitute the image and the context of the image.
That's true. But my example had to do with similar images with only swapping the characters. It's to point out one would be a fanart and the other won't, and that distinction doesn't quite address the problem.
 
Personally, where NSFW official outfits/designs are concerned, I am mostly of the opinion that we should only be using them when required. If a character like Do-s is hard to display in any capacity without it delving into the territory of being NSFW, I accept the reasoning that her official page really can't exist without crossing that line to some degree.

However, I think that this isn't a great reason to allow someone to have a Do-s profile picture here on the forum unless they're using a headshot.

Everyone should be able to use the forum and participate in discussions without stumbling upon softcore hentai or imaged that would be NSFW. I don't think it's necessarily a bad thing to be stricter on the forum than on the Wiki where instances of NSFW images are only occurring when character design basically demands it.
 
Personally, where NSFW official outfits/designs are concerned, I am mostly of the opinion that we should only be using them when required. If a character like Do-s is hard to display in any capacity without it delving into the territory of being NSFW, I accept the reasoning that her official page really can't exist without crossing that line to some degree.

However, I think that this isn't a great reason to allow someone to have a Do-s profile picture here on the forum unless they're using a headshot.

Everyone should be able to use the forum and participate in discussions without stumbling upon softcore hentai or imaged that would be NSFW. I don't think it's necessarily a bad thing to be stricter on the forum than on the Wiki where instances of NSFW images are only occurring when character design basically demands it.
I'll note that the proposal doesn't make this form of separation between what is allowable on the forum and what is allowable on-site. But with a detailed justification, I would at least hear out a suggestion for an addendum to the proposal along these lines.
 
I don't like these suggestions of things like basing this rule on "skin visibility" and the like. It comes off as trying too hard to create an "objective" metric to base it on, but in doing so it sacrifices being comprehensive.
 
I'd like to say the following (Garath allowed me here)
I would like to point out that yet again the images AKM sent are either ones not used by the wiki or are used in the strictly practical purpose of showing a character on a profile. The fanarts, meanwhile, have no such purpose and exist soley for perverted reasons. There's exactly 0 reason for the usage of sexual fanarts unless you simply want to show off sexual content which feels a bit exhibitionistic, no? If it serves no purpose, it shouldn't be used recreationally.
Additionally there's the fact that common users are already mostly not allowed these liberties. Waifu threads were banned due to getting too freaky. Rules should reflect things that are being enforced, no?
Finally there's the issue with the fact that only at most 2-3 people on this wiki would benefit from this rule NOT passing. Meanwhile there's a far greater amount of people who aren't satisfied with the current allowance of this type of sexual content.

TL;DR: we should ban sexual content unless it is used for a practical reason like profile making. Nobody wants to see it outside of these situations except for like 2-3 people on the entire wiki. It is something that common users can't do already and thus it should be made a proper rule.
 
I don't like these suggestions of things like basing this rule on "skin visibility" and the like. It comes off as trying too hard to create an "objective" metric to base it on, but in doing so it sacrifices being comprehensive.
Additionally then you can just post someone in a skin-tight suit who is even more inappropriate than the semi-nude drawings to get around the rule.
 
I disagree with the proposal in the OP based on what AKM has said.
What AKM says tries to force an objective metric onto something that's inherently going to have subjectivity to it, and it's not at all productive to allow provocative pfps, banners, and the like when we already crack down on similar topics as is (like threads, as Arceus has mentioned). I don't consider that a good reason for disagreement, and frankly I don't see this change as anything less than an inherent good
 
What AKM says tries to force an objective metric onto something that's inherently going to have subjectivity to it, and it's not at all productive to allow provocative pfps, banners, and the like when we already crack down on similar topics as is (like threads, as Arceus has mentioned). I don't consider that a good reason for disagreement, and frankly I don't see this change as anything less than an inherent good
That's cool, I'm not trying to convince you that the proposal in the OP is inherently bad. I'm just voicing my disagreement on it if it comes down to votes.
 
And I'm trying to let you know that you're supporting a bad premise and hopefully convince you of that, because your vote is very important and I would rather not have such an important vote going against an inherent good
 
I don't know yet how I could be convinced of that. I don't think any of the example images are offensive, disturbing, or disgusting, nor do I think that anything on the level of what is in AKM's signature or banner constitutes a grave danger that we need to shield the eyes of our users from.

Is the fanart "sexualized"? Sure, I can see that. Is it explicit? No; I wouldn't say so. I think we should only be limited by the extent that FANDOM limits us.
 
This is a website filled with minors and stuff like that is art that is clearly designed to be provocative (which is frequently marked as 18+, so you know, not for minors). It's absolutely in our best interest to not allow users to have pfps and banners like that. It's absolutely not a difficult rule to follow, and I highly doubt it's anything but inherently good.
 
Additionally then you can just post someone in a skin-tight suit who is even more inappropriate than the semi-nude drawings to get around the rule.
As long as the suit doesn't show any outlines of privates or nipples (which is part of what the rules would restrict), I see 0 problem with that. Canonical battle suits of Asuka Langley Sohryu or Kallen Kozuki would feature such designs and I don't see any reason they would be offensive.

I'd like to say the following (Garath allowed me here)
I would like to point out that yet again the images AKM sent are either ones not used by the wiki or are used in the strictly practical purpose of showing a character on a profile. The fanarts, meanwhile, have no such purpose and exist soley for perverted reasons. There's exactly 0 reason for the usage of sexual fanarts unless you simply want to show off sexual content which feels a bit exhibitionistic, no? If it serves no purpose, it shouldn't be used recreationally.

Finally there's the issue with the fact that only at most 2-3 people on this wiki would benefit from this rule NOT passing. Meanwhile there's a far greater amount of people who aren't satisfied with the current allowance of this type of sexual content.

TL;DR: we should ban sexual content unless it is used for a practical reason like profile making. Nobody wants to see it outside of these situations except for like 2-3 people on the entire wiki. It is something that common users can't do already and thus it should be made a proper rule.
Restricting the freedom of others just because you personally aren't interested in something isn't a good argument.

And if the need of a canonical artwork for a wiki profile is important enough to outweigh any perceived harm of these images, then the harm must be practically null. Which, incidentally, is what I would say. That they are simply not harmful.

Additionally there's the fact that common users are already mostly not allowed these liberties. Waifu threads were banned due to getting too freaky. Rules should reflect things that are being enforced, no?
The rules would obviously apply the same for anyone. Whether that impacts the threads depends on whether they conflict with the rules on being flirtatious and stuff otherwise. I have 0 problem with a thread that posts bikini fanart.

Ironically, that these threads existed speaks against your made-up statistics of only 3 people having an interest in these things. Heck, there is a 19 page thread of users determining which characters have the largest bust size for each tier, which is open to this day.
 
I'll note that the proposal doesn't make this form of separation between what is allowable on the forum and what is allowable on-site. But with a detailed justification, I would at least hear out a suggestion for an addendum to the proposal along these lines.
Essentially, I think it comes down to justification. We can justify putting Do-S's picture on her profile because that's her character design. But on a forum, I think it's reasonable to expect that users are not putting BDSM in their profile pictures or banners, even if it is official art. We can't really justify that beyond simply saying "well I want to and it doesn't bother me so others should just deal with it." We wouldn't accept that justification for other types of behavior and I think NSFW images shouldn't be accepted either. We all just want to talk about characters and debate powers, and the bar of entry to participation here shouldn't be "being okay with or doing one's best to ignore NSFW images."

In other words, if we are going to use images that we wouldn't be comfortable looking at in the presence of polite company, we should have a substantive reason for it. Like: "This is a profile for this character and that's literally what she looks like." Not "I think the best expression of my personality for this forum is a nearly completely naked dominatrix." To be honest I don't think we should strain ourselves as much to philosophize about it. I've seen comments referencing one's personal threshold of offense/discomfort/disgust which seems like a poor standard. I am not personally offended by the kinds of jokes people make on Discord, but there's a reason we don't accept them here regardless of our personal discomfort or lack thereof.

It's just better to foster an environment where people aren't forcibly exposed to such things, and while there are scenarios where it cannot be avoided (like profiles of those characters), our profile and banner pictures are not such a scenario. The vast majority of users have entirely unobjectionable PFPs and that's a reasonable expectation.
 
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