„Scunthorpe-Problem“ – Versionsunterschied
[ungesichtete Version] | [ungesichtete Version] |
Inhalt gelöscht Inhalt hinzugefügt
K →Other examples: rv tagging |
→Origin and history: I don't see the relevance specifically of "romansinsussex" |
||
Zeile 4:
The problem was named after an incident in 1996 in which [[America Online]]'s dirty-word filter prevented residents from the town of [[Scunthorpe]], [[North Lincolnshire]], [[England]] from creating accounts with AOL, because the town's name contains the [[substring]] ''[[cunt]]''. Years later, [[Google]]'s filters apparently made the same mistake, even when residents searched for local businesses with ''Scunthorpe'' in the name. Residents of [[Penistone]], [[South Yorkshire]], experienced problems because the town's name includes the substring ''[[penis]]'', while [[Lightwater]] in [[Surrey]] suffered similarly because its name contains the substring ''[[twat]]''.<ref>http://news.com.com/2100-1032_3-5198125.html CNET article on the Scunthorpe Problem.</ref>
[[Pornography]]-filtering programs intended to protect children may fail to discriminate between sites that have ''[[sex]]'' in their titles because they carry explicit content and those
Problems can also occur with the words ''[[socialism]]'' or ''[[socialist]]'' because they contain the substring ''[[Cialis]]'', the brand name for an [[erectile dysfunction]] medication commonly advertised in [[spam (electronic)|spam]] e-mails. A similar problem can occur with the word ''specialist'', typically blocking mailed [[resume|résumés]] and other material including job descriptions.<ref>http://www.pekingduck.org/archives/002371.php Example of a website that blocks the substring Cialis.</ref>
|