• otacon239@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    But does censoring a letter change anything? Does reading f*ck read any different to fuck? Does the reader get more or less offense from it?

    Censorship doesn’t really seem to accomplish much and if anything draws extra attention to the censored word. I wouldn’t have given it a second thought without it.

    Who’s benefiting?

    • toynbee@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Usually this is because they are posting to social media and many social media environments use OCR to scan screenshots for “offensive” words. If the scanner finds something it deems unacceptable, the post will get a smaller audience or might even be disallowed.

      The censoring is for the machines, not the people.

      edit: Fixed autocorrect.

    • Skua@kbin.earth
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      1 day ago

      I think the reasoning is that if it’s censored, it’s an acknowledgement from whoever did so that “this word isn’t appropriate in this context, but the text is worth sharing”

      • Cornflake@pawb.socialOPM
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        1 day ago

        That’s probably the reason it’s been censored, but I didn’t take the original screengrab so I’m not sure

        • cadekat@pawb.social
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          1 day ago

          The tip of the gun also appears censored. This is probably some misguided attempt to appease some algorithm somewhere.

    • Cornflake@pawb.socialOPM
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      1 day ago

      Frankly, I think single-letter censoring like that is silly. It really doesn’t achieve anything and nobody benefits from it