(17-03-2013 10:09 )munch1917 Wrote: The other issue which we've barely touched upon in this discussion is what actually constitutes 'porn'.
It is my understanding that in Iceland porn has been banned for sometime, but the term is not actually defined, so the law cannot be properly enforced and hence porn mags and movies have continued to be freely available. The recent moves there against porn are more an attempt to clarify what porn is so the law can be enforced.
So who decides what is and isn't 'porn'? Will art galleries be raided and closed down for displaying nude paintings and statues? Will bookshops and even libraries be closed for daring to stock 'pornographic' literature like 50 Shades, or even Mills and Boon? What about hospitals and doctors surgeries that display graphic medical posters of the human body, will they fall foul?
It may sound silly, but we have been here before, Lady Chatterleys Lover is a famous case in english history, and I can recall in my lifetime, bookshops being raided for selling the works of Jean Genet with it's often graphic homosexual content.
'Porn' is already defined under UK law. Section 63 Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008. Following the Longhurst Campaign the government decided to act to criminalise the possession of an image of extreme pornography. An image being a still or moving image. An image is “pornographic” if it is
of such a nature that it must reasonably be assumed to have been produced solely or principally for the purpose of sexual arousal.
http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2008/4/section/63
Part of the section refers to
An image falls within this subsection if it portrays, in an explicit and realistic way, any of the following— .
(a)an act which threatens a person's life, .
(b)an act which results, or is likely to result, in serious injury to a person's anus, breasts or genitals, .
©an act which involves sexual interference with a human corpse, or .
(d)a person performing an act of intercourse or oral sex with an animal (whether dead or alive),
and i remember last year the Met Police intervening over the display of Leda and the Swan at a West End Art studio.
http://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/fe...84646.html
even though they had received no complaints from the public. So munch1917 art galleries have already been targeted.
Going off topic, the BBFC are consulting on their classification procedures with the consultation closing in around 10 days. Make your voice heard if you disagree with the R18 classification and it's restricted availability to licensed sex shops.
Should we have a standardised classification regime throughout europe.
My response was on these lines Too wide a range of classifications. Disagree with R18 rating as all adult content (violence, nudity, sex) should be rated 18 and therefore readily available to all persons 18 and over. Should not be restricted to licensed sex shops only as this disadvantages those people who do not live near such premises, not able to travel due to disability nor have a cradit card to download from a video on demand web site. The number of licensed sex shops are decreasing due to the cost of running/setting them up and also many local authorities have a policy presumption NOT to issue such licenses further restricting access.
http://www.bbfc.co.uk/what-classificatio...eview-2013
Have your say.