(24-02-2013 00:49 )Digital Dave Wrote: Isn't part of the problem the fact that there have never been legally-agreed definitions of terms such as 'explicit', 'hardcore', 'XXX' etc, therefore scammers can get away with describing their products in such a way and not get busted for it when they turn out to be nothing of the sort?
Exactly. Judges take the attitude that they arent going out of their way to protect people buying illegal stuff from getting ripped off. So terms like "explicit" can be enforced, but only to the limit of what is legal on the relevant medium. If thats TV the courts turn round and say "What did you expect?"
Mr Mystery Wrote:it seems to me that Ofcom could find a channel in breach for just wording things in a way that implies something is explicit that leads to a viewer being materially misled .
But they wont. For some mysterious reason Ofcom pulls its punches and allows some leeway. Perhaps it is a threat they hold in reserve - play ball or we kill your mobile pic business? Just speculating.
Mr Mystery Wrote:This is the same Ofcom that found the Asian babes channel in breach for giving the impression that the girls were naked when in fact they had flesh toned knickers on, Ofcom said something about that in their opinion this was done to mislead the viewers into thinking the girls were nude, so found them in breach even though they weren't naked and hadn't broken any rules concerning nudity .
That was disgraceful and illustrates just how legally illiterate Ofcom are. They decide cases on what they meant to ban when they wrote the rules, not the strict letter of the rules. No proper judge would be allowed to get away with that. If I remember correctly part of the case was that the picture quality was so poor that viewers could not tell the difference. Its like issuing a speeding ticket when the speedcam is broken because the driver might have been speeding.