"Hugh" Dierker writes: "Remember,
there is no definition of pornography, but, "I know it when I see it". Spam
looks like porn to me."
Au contraire Mr. Dierker, there is a very clear definition
of pornography.
Pornography:
1. Pictures, writing, or other material that is sexually
explicit.
2. The
presentation or production of this material.
Not only is there a definition, but it's pretty
much universally considered a "dirty" business fraught with all sorts of
distasteful and disagreeable situations, persons and
practices.
Though I must admit, I'm not at all surprised by
your comment, especially that it was you who made
it.
"Pornography is
the attempt to insult sex, to do dirt on it."
-D. H.
Lawrence (1885–1930), British author. Pornography and Obscenity
(1930; repr. in Phoenix: The Posthumous Papers of D. H. Lawrence, pt. 3,
ed. by E. McDonald, 1936).
"Pornography is literature designed to be read
with one hand."
-Angela Lambert (b. 1940), British journalist. Independent on
Sunday (London, 18 Feb. 1990).
Sotiris Sotiropoulos
Zoning. History is full of the notion of putting the "dirty" stuff in
a special zone.
The tenements outside the colliseum, Pegale district, Canal Street and it
does not end with porn. Lepper colonies, prisons, Mexico City's dump,
China towns from Cholon to SF and the Mauritians in Paris. Perhaps ghettos, and
cult retreats and do not forget nudist colonies, and Vegas. If most of the
places in Asia did not have special districts you could not find your way to a
church, - oh yes, we have church zoning in most of the US. And I
suppose it works.
In my little adopted home town we basically zoned AEEs (adult entertainment
establishments) into outlying boulevards. Urban sprawl happened and the
land became valuable to developers and the shops got eminant domained and the
land rezoned for churches and schools and "residential". Oh not all was
lost, you can still find streets where crack and hookers are there for a slow
moving car. The trouble there is that now it is not acknowledged by the
establishment and crime permeates the barrios like a wildfire.
Make no mistake, knocking pornsites out of dotcom is akin to taking a
womens lingerie shop on mainstreet. You are going to be taking ones
property and you had better make damn sure you have a good due process
involved. And then you also better decide if seeing Janet's teats is worse
than excluding books from your public library simply because JFK was in fact
doing Marilyn.
It is funny but the xxx is also an integral part of globalization.
The difference between creating a melting pot of all or segregating your culture
and spices in order to preserve the unique flavors and tastes. Try Mole', it is
good, as is a good chicken curry Cous Cous but I like chocolate and
Couscous all by themselves sometimes. Paella may even be a better example.
One needs a carrot and a stick in helping porn find a safe niche.
Someone once said "if you build it they will come". As gambling seems to
have found safe haven venues, perhaps there is a country that has absolutely no
prohibition or restrictions on pornography and they could host such a site. Oops
that could never happen because the big bad countries that talk so bad
about porn make the most revenue off of it. What was Castro thinking
when he closed off the golden spicket known as the Havana Night Life?
Remember, there is no definition of pornography, but, "I know it when I see
it". Spam looks like porn to me.
Stephane Bortzmeyer
<bortzmeyer@xxxxxx> wrote:
On
Tue, Mar 23, 2004 at 09:12:22PM -0800,
Jeff Williams
wrote
a message of 32 lines which
said:
> Seems to me in the .xxx specific case, depending on how it
is
> handled, it would be a good idea to have such a sTLD.
Read
RFC 3675 ".sex Considered Dangerous" first.