this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2025
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Okay, but you do understand that most people don't work in an environment where that would be considered at all acceptable right?
I'm not sure. Most people are in China and India and I know little about their office culture.
It's not much different from western cultures, though india does have a problem with sexism in (and outside of) the workplace. But are you really arguing demographic semantics to avoid the point at hand?
As I said, I regularly seen bikini picture and the like on office computers, so yes, I think it's acceptable in "western culture". Maybe not in some of the more puritan countries or large corporations, but in general, yes.
Also the term NSFW isn't defined by what is literally allowed at workplaces, so the entire argument is pointless. It's a tag for porn and gore. Bikini pictures aren't porn.
It's... literally "Not Safe For Work". There's no formal definition, let alone one beyond "not safe to have at work". It was a usenet appelation applied to content you don't want your boss seeing you browsing, it's never evern been explicitly about porn? It's not exactly hardline censorship to want tagging guidlines to be followed. At the moment, /all is the best way to find new communities to subscribe to. It's not unreasonable to ask people not to complain about the content they find there, but since this is the one single content filter common to lemmy, it's also not unreasonable to ask people to use it?
Despite what the letters literally stand for or where it's from, it doesn't actually mean that (anymore). If it did for most people almost any media would be "NSFW". Most people would get in trouble for watching a movie or playing video games at work, regardless of content. That's obviously a useless definition.
Since it was popularized on reddit and other social media the tag now defacto means porn/gore. That's how the vast majority of people uses it and that's how I think it should be used.
And of course people can complain. But well, sometimes the complain might just fall on deaf ears. And in the case if demanding bikini pictures be tagged as NSFW, I think rightfully so.
But it's never stopped meaning that, though? It's still extremely commonly used to tag that sort of content, and I don't know why you're starting to insist that words don't mean the things they say.
The situations in which you're watching any alternative media in a workplace setting are potentially fraught with reprimand, though. "You're there on work time being on your phone is literally theft" and all that hyperbolic corpo BS. But during times you can be on your phone, it's still broadly less acceptable to be watching "haurhi jiggles up and down [nightcore] [bigtits]" videos than it would be watching generic videogame content.
The literal meaning of the phrase is useless, since what is safe at a workplace varies drastically with the workplace. It's also relevant in a lot of other settings that aren't work, like browsing your phone on public transport or at school. It's also very common for phrases to have a different meaning from the literal meaning of the individual words. I'd say that's even the case for most phrases. When you say it's raining cats and dogs there aren't actually cats and dogs falling from the sky. In this case the actual "work" aspect isn't relevant.
What the tag does signify is that the following content might be disturbing or inappropriate in certain situations so you can be aware before opening it. And bikini pictures don't warrant that warning, even if some workplaces have a policy against it.