![]() ![]() ![]() In 2018, the court ruled that Facebook was at fault but did not award any damages to the plaintiff. Facebook has taken down pictures posted by the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston (of Imogen Cunningham’s photographs of nude bodies), the Philadelphia Museum of Art (of a painting by Evelyne Axell in which a woman is licking an ice cream cone) and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York (of a 1917 painting of a nude woman by Amedeo Modigliani).Ī teacher in France sued Facebook after the social network deleted his account after he posted an image of Gustave Courbet’s “The Origin of the World,” a 19th-century painting in which a woman’s vagina is the focal point. Many artworks, from all over the world, have been incorrectly identified by A.I. Vienna is hardly the only city whose art has been censored online. The posters appeared across London, Hamburg, Cologne and New York City with certain body parts concealed by strips of text, reading: “Sorry, 100 years old but still too daring today.” In the end, the Vienna tourist board decided to use the rejection as an opportunity. Officials in England and in Germany deemed the images too explicit. “We wanted to know, how much can we as a society deal with nudity which was produced 100 or 110 years ago?” Mr. In 2017, the board approached several cities with a proposal to show large-scale ads featuring nude portraits by Egon Schiele, an early-20th century Austrian artist known for his sinewy depictions of the human form. It is not the first time the tourist board has taken a public stand against censorship. But after the city’s museums faced one case after another of social media sites taking down their posts, he said, “We thought, ‘What would be an alternative? What would be a channel where nudity is not an issue in and of itself?’” “It’s not an anti-technology agenda that we have,” said Norbert Kettner, the director of the Vienna Tourist Board. The social media platforms did not respond to requests for comment on the seeming contradiction of the rules and how they are enforced. Part of the reason could be that on social media, censorship is less a matter of public opinion than the sensitivity of artificial intelligence, which is used to flag content that violates a site’s guidelines. Nudity in photos of paintings and sculptures is OK, too.”įacebook’s rules allow for nudity in photographs of “paintings, sculptures and other art,” and TikTok writes that it “may allow exceptions” to its ban on nudity and sexually explicit content.ĭespite the flexibility of the platforms’ guidelines, museums and other institutions that post photos of art have found that instances of nudity have not always been deemed acceptable. Though nudity is generally not allowed on Instagram and Facebook, the platforms make some exceptions.įor example, Instagram’s community guidelines say: “Photos in the context of breastfeeding, birth giving and after-birth moments, health-related situations (for example, post-mastectomy, breast cancer awareness or gender confirmation surgery) or an act of protest are allowed. The video, which was blocked by the algorithms of Instagram and Facebook, “is a combination of details of the work and written feelings that are evoked by the painting,” said Christine Kociu, the museum’s social media manager. There’s also “Liebespaar,” Koloman Moser’s early 20th-century painting, which the Leopold Museum included in a video post celebrating its anniversary in September. Facebook removed a photo of it from the Vienna Museum of Natural History’s page several years ago for being “pornographic.” The offending artworks include the Venus of Willendorf, a 25,000-year-old limestone figurine of a woman. Instead, the board will use the adults-only site to show images of paintings and sculptures displayed in the Austrian capital that have been blocked by social media sites for nudity or sexual content. No, its account will not feature after-hours photos of employees. OnlyFans has a surprising new member: the Vienna Tourist Board.
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