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"Quality Standards" in the d20 System Guide

Psion said:
That aside, it is WotC's call on what image they wish to project with their trademark, not yours. And I doubt they will be calling on you to fill the position anytime soon.

So what? That had absolutely nothing to do with what I'd said. If you're just determined to be surly and a tad obtuse on this topic, you're succeeding.

I think it's pretty clear that nobody is disputing what's within WotC's purview regarding their license. We're discussing the wisdom of how they exercise that purview.

Be careful not allow heated emotions to impede calm, rational, civil behavior. Another good lesson for the boys at Hasbro.
 
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seankreynolds said:
Not so, because that would include National Geographic, the Kama Sutra, and The Joy of Sex. None of those are porn, else Waldenbooks stores across the country would be being raided by the police for selling porn (Waldenbooks sells all three of the above, as well as magazines such as Playboy and others which contain nudity and would be porn by your definition but not by the common or legal definition).

Dictionary.com defines the word pornography as: "Sexually explicit pictures, writing, or other material whose primary purpose is to cause sexual arousal."

The law.com dictionary defines it as "pictures and/or writings of sexual activity intended solely to excite lascivious feelings of a particularly blatant and aberrational kind, such as acts involving children, animals, orgies, and all types of sexual intercourse." (See also their definition of obscene, "a highly subjective reference to material or acts which display or describe sexual activity in a manner appealing only to 'prurient interest,' with no legitimate artistic, literary or scientific purpose.")

When speaking in terms of law, or of physical science, etc., it is of course quite important to use the narrowly defined definition of that word, but when the word also has a widely accepted general usage, it is important to note how it is being used. Consider how the word "theory" has dramatically different meanings in science, law, and general useage. Note how Playboy, and Maxim (and possibly the X-Men comic, and/or some but not all of your examples) fulfil the dictionary.com definition.

I also notice that you did *not* include the full law.com definition.

n. pictures and/or writings of sexual activity intended solely to excite lascivious feelings of a particularly blatant and aberrational kind, such as acts involving children, animals, orgies, and all types of sexual intercourse. The printing, publication, sale and distribution of "hard core" pornography is either a felony or misdemeanor in most states. Since determining what is pornography and what is "soft core" and "hard core" are subjective questions to judges, juries and law enforcement officials, it is difficult to define, since the law cases cannot print examples for the courts to follow. - taken from law.com's legal dictionary

Note that this speaks to the definition of pornography in law and that it differentiates between "hard-core" (often illegal) and "soft-core" (not spoken of as illegal) pornography. A wide range of material could be placed in the dictionary definition, and I do not think this harms Sigil's argument at all.
 

TiQuinn said:
In that case, I definitely hope that a more viable alternative appears for people who want to create mature products that would not be allowed under d20STL.
I'm of the opinion that a truly mature product wouln't necessarily contradict any of the new guidelines anyway. But that's a debate for another thread...

Buzz, who is looking forward to the "Love & War" (or whatever it'll be called) supplement he heard Atlas is working on way more than the BoEF.
 

The Sigil said:
And just because you think certain things AREN'T icky doesn't give you the right to demand that it NOT be called pornography or perversion.

These things are in the eye of the beholder and deciding whether or not something is pornographic is in fact a subjective call. You are as wrong and as close-minded for calling him to abandon the "porno" call as you think he is for using it.
you will note i said "the legal definition of pornography." there is still no indication that the BoEF matches that definition.

i don't care what his personal definition of the word is.

[edit]thanks SKR, for illuminating my point better than i can. :)
 
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Dictionary.com defines the word pornography as: "Sexually explicit pictures, writing, or other material whose primary purpose is to cause sexual arousal."

The law.com dictionary defines it as "pictures and/or writings of sexual activity intended solely to excite lascivious feelings of a particularly blatant and aberrational kind, such as acts involving children, animals, orgies, and all types of sexual intercourse." (See also their definition of obscene, "a highly subjective reference to material or acts which display or describe sexual activity in a manner appealing only to 'prurient interest,' with no legitimate artistic, literary or scientific purpose.")
I think the Dictionary.com definition is better, since the law.com confines the definition to writings and pictures "of sexual activity" and I think a female in a provocative pose who is not actually engaging in "sexual activity" can still be considered "porn."

And I agree with you that the problem with an argument is that "he who defines the terms can easily win the argument" - I'm not going to try to continually pull out definitions of words from my backside.

So here is my definition of "pornography" - "obscene material." That drags in the definition of obscene, which I agree with - "a highly subjective... etc." For me, delineating a particular thing as "porn" is an exercise in subjective thinking... meaning it is impossible to tell someone that, "this is porn" or "this is most emphatically not porn" and somehow believe you are factually correct.

My point was not to discuss precisely what publications are and aren't pornography - my point was rather to say that "what constitutes obscene material" - usually abbreviatd to "pornography" or "porno" is a highly subjective subject by definition. As such, it is impossible to think that a particular definition or list can be agreed upon by all as "obscene." Specifically in the realm of nudity, et al, I think there is little doubt that showing of a given picture to 100 people and then asking them, "is this pornographic?" will not always elicit 100% agreement.

Please use legal definitions of words rather than your own definitions. Don't "pull a Jaros," as it were (Steve Jaros is this guy on rec.games.frp.dnd who used to get into arguments with other posters and fall back on his defense of "the dictionary doesn't define what words mean, people do, so don't use the dictionary definition of words against me when I say something"). Unless we're using a common definition of our words, we can't have a rational argument.
True enough. I'm not trying to "redefine" terms here - but I also don't want to take the time to comb through the dictionary to find the exact term for what I mean (which may not even exist). The point of the exercise above is, "one man's pornography may be another man's art" and because judging obscenity is an exercise in subjectivity, it's just as wrongheaded and obnoxious to demand that the man who calls it "pornography" be forced to refer to it as "art" as it is to demand that the man who calls it "art" refer to it as "pornography." Hopefully, subtle nuances of language aside, that point is clear. In exercises of subjectivity there can by definition be no absolute answer as to what to call a particular work. ;)

seankreynolds said:
Not so, because that would include National Geographic, the Kama Sutra, and The Joy of Sex. None of those are porn, else Waldenbooks stores across the country would be being raided by the police for selling porn (Waldenbooks sells all three of the above, as well as magazines such as Playboy and others which contain nudity and would be porn by your definition but not by the common or legal definition).
By most common definitions I know, Playboy is considered "softcore pornography" (fits the dictionary.com definition if not the law.com definition). Softcore pornography is STILL pornography, no? If you were playing Family Feud and asked "name a pornographic magazine," odds are your top three answers would be "Playboy, Penthouse, and Hustler." That, to me, means Playboy meets the "common definition" of pornography (which I assume means "the definition most people would ascribe to" but maybe this is another trick to catch me in my words by turning nuances of meaning against me).

I won't get into the Joy of Sex or Kama Sutra thing - clearly, as I mentioned, drawing an absolute line in the sand is hard - which was my point in the first place? If you can't show me the hard and fast line, don't be surprised if I say, "since this is an exercise in subjectivity with no lines - not objectivity with lines - I can label X as obscene," regardless of what the law says or not.

Not trying to pull a Jaros here, but please don't try to pull one yourself by trying to ensnare me with nuances of meaning of words taken from YOUR CHOICE of definitional sources either. ;) I have tried to be clear as to what I mean without consulting a dictionary, drawing instead from my own vocabulary to try to adequately express my thoughts. If I have used words in a manner that is technically incorrect, it is from my own inability to perfectly translate my abstract thoughts into the medium of language and should in no way reflect as imperfections in the abstract thoughts being communicated. And given that language is an imperfect method of communicating abstract thought, some leeway should be imparted on both sides to allow the abstract thought to be the issue, not minor technicalities in word choice - since language is a "lossy medium" for transferring thoughts (to use common computer parlance) from one person to another.

"Subjective judgements cannot by definition be considered absolutely right or absolutely wrong, ergo the subjective judgement to call a work 'pornographic' or not cannot be considered an absolutely true nor absolutely false characterization of the work. d4 was attempting to force his subjective judgement of 'not porn' on someone whose subjective judgement was 'porn' - and it's just as morally wrong to do so as the other way around." Does that state my point in a manner in which you can agree on the meaning (even if you don't necessarily agree on the point)? ;)

EDIT: Thanks, Dr. Harry, for pointing out the full law.com definition - which does in fact cover my points.

{joking}
Now, Sean, you weren't REALLY trying to twist a definition by omitting portions that were potentialy harmful to your argument to suit your own purposes and pulling a Jaros by making the word mean what you wanted it to mean there, were you? ;)
Bad Sean! No cookie!
{/joking}

--The Sigil
 
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TiQuinn said:
Alright, so it sounds like there are a few notable OGL products out there, but the vast majority are d20. And it sounds like a shaky proposition to get your stuff into stores without the d20STL. In that case, I definitely hope that a more viable alternative appears for people who want to create mature products that would not be allowed under d20STL. I still think this is much ado about nothing right now, and hopefully that will remain the case. This has always been in the power of WotC to change or even revoke the d20 license so I really don't see much changing here...more the fear that things could change for the worse. From my standpoint, that's ALWAYS been a possibility.

What you say is probably true. That's why I describe this as a warning shot. Aside from the Sole Discretion clause, the fact that it can be applied retroactively is somewhat spooky. I'm not sure that possibility had occurred to everyone before. I may be wrong.
 

The Sigil said:
d4 was attempting to force his subjective judgement of 'not porn' on someone whose subjective judgement was 'porn' - and it's just as morally wrong to do so as the other way around.
i most certainly was not.

i never said, "Because the book doesn't match my own personal definition of pornography, no one can call it that." i said that as far as i can tell, the book does not match the legal definition of pornography as i understand it.

for the record, i don't believe i've ever stated on this thread what my own subjective definition of pornography was.

dismissing the book as pornographic, a word that does indeed have a legal definition, when said book may not actually fit that definition is wrong, IMO.

one would be equally wrong to blanketly dismiss the opinions of fellow ENWorlder Felon, simply because the word felon has negative connotations. i doubt our esteemed colleague actually fits the legal definition of a felon, and therefore to dismiss his opinion would be wrong.
 

Anubis the Doomseer said:
I think this is the best way to go - to develop a strong non-Wizards controlled, truely open-sourced "brand" for 'd20 compatible' games.

If you're interested in this, please help the FGA with OpenDie, Prometheus, and whatever else catches on.

The only way to prevent fragmentation is to have one logo used by all and controlled by a neutral party.

To discuss Prometheus, join the FGA-Prometheus group at yahoogroups.com.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FGA-Prometheus/
FGA-Prometheus@yahoogroups.com
 

The Sigil said:
I won't delete my previous posts - once words are out, you can't call them back, and I want everything I have said to remain out there for folks to see. My feeling is that everyone should see everything I say so that they don't get an "edited" version of me to somehow look "nicer." They can see me warts and all.

As usual in these sort of discussions, Sigil took the words out of my mouth. I'll put down my pitchfork now.

I owe you an apology, too, Mr. Valterra. You obviously aren't to blame for the new rules. At worst, you're only the reason they were rushed, and that's far from a safe bet.

Likewise, you seem to have had the best of intensions with the fonts. Since I haven't seen the cover, yet (I can barely find the core books in this town -- despite being in the second largest city in Iowa -- let alone a 'niche' product like BoEF).

I don't have the same passion for the material that you do -- lump me with those who don't think it should have been written -- but I certainly think you deserve the opportunity to do so. Even if the book has nothing lurid in it, I don't think it would see any use in my game, so I'm unlikely to buy it. But, if I see a copy of it, I'll thumb through it to (in)validate my concerns.

I'd also love to see a .gif of the cover and the notorious font issue. That's the only way I'll ever be able to tell for sure whether you went "too far" (IMO).
 

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