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Graphics Censorship Education Programming

My High School CS Homework Is the Centerfold 628

theodp writes: To paraphrase the J. Geils Band, Maddie Zug's high school computer science homework is the centerfold. In a Washington Post op-ed, Zug, a student at the top-ranked Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, argues that a centerfold does not belong in the classroom. "I first saw a picture of Playboy magazine's Miss November 1972 a year ago as a junior at TJ," Zug explains. "My artificial intelligence teacher told our class to search Google for Lena Soderberg (not the full image, though!) and use her picture to test our latest coding assignment...Soderberg has a history with computer science. In the 1970s, male programmers at the University of Southern California needed to test their image-processing algorithm. They scanned what they had handy: the centerfold of a Playboy magazine. Before long, the image became a convention in industry and academia." (Wikipedia has a nice background, too.)
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My High School CS Homework Is the Centerfold

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  • CHANGE EVERYTHING! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 02, 2015 @11:27AM (#49600639)

    We demand that you CHANGE EVERYTHING! Everywhere! In every thing that you enjoy or spend time doing, you must alter it for our benefit! Fuck you and fuck your history and fuck your interests!

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 02, 2015 @11:27AM (#49600641)

    The Mesa Teapot is an outrage to hard-working lower and middle-class developers too. To use such an upper-crust elite symbol as a teapot, partially a symbol of British oppression, is offensive to me.

  • Dumb stuff (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Kludge ( 13653 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @11:29AM (#49600647)

    This is dumb. Lena headshot is the standard image for virtually every image processing publication in the past 25 years. It's just a headshot for crap's sake.
    Some people just like to complain.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      It is not a standard head shot. It is a sexualized model. If a woman is looking at you in a sexually suggestive way, you don't have to see her naked body to realize she is looking at you in a suggestive way. Twenty years of cheap digital cameras and we still have this shit. Damn.
      • 0h come on, you could say similar about the handsome/pretty models used in workstation/office furniture magazine.

      • Right! We should stop all women from looking at people in sexually suggestive ways. That will solve the problem of ... wait, what's the problem again?

      • Re:Dumb stuff (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ChrisMaple ( 607946 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @12:12PM (#49600919)

        What the devil do you want, an image of Golda Meir? Lena is looking over her bare shoulder at the camera. She looks healthy and attractive. She's even wearing a hat!

        Her mouth isn't open, her tongue isn't visible, her eyes aren't half-closed, she's not gesturing "come hither" with her finger, etc., etc.

        If that image is sexually suggestive to you, the problem is squarely between your ears.

      • I looked at the original full image. In that image, there is no part of Lena's body that is not on public display on beaches around the world.

        And - even if there were - what of it? Do the people who are offended by the image not possess the same body parts? I mean, WTF? Don't they see all of that and more, every time they bathe?

        Oh, I think I get it. They don't like their own bodies, how can we expect them to like images of bodies that are in any way similar to their own?

    • by Sloppy ( 14984 )

      I'm not saying whether it's a good idea or a bad one, but isn't the fact that it's a defacto standard, sort of the objectors' point? Yes, you're right: it's a long-established tradition, with deep roots going back to when the computer room was a total sausagefest. I can't playfully slap the secretary's ass and then get off the hook by saying, "oh c'mon, we dudes have been doing that forever! It's always been like that. Quit trying to change our culture."

      Changing the culture is an explicit part of a lot of

      • Re:Dumb stuff (Score:5, Interesting)

        by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Saturday May 02, 2015 @02:34PM (#49601667) Homepage Journal

        I'm not saying whether it's a good idea or a bad one, but isn't the fact that it's a defacto standard, sort of the objectors' point? Yes, you're right: it's a long-established tradition, with deep roots going back to when the computer room was a total sausagefest.

        That's why it's not a problem. It wasn't chosen to be offensive.

        Changing the culture is an explicit part of a lot of peoples' agenda, because nobody really likes the damn computer room sausagefest (we just don't know what to do about it, which is why I really have no idea whether or not the picture is really a problem).

        It's not a problem, and I know what to do about it! In this particular case, anyway. Just add in a similar photograph of a man's face, cropped from a similar and equivalent picture of a man. People photograph men, too. Sometimes with no clothes on. Yes, I know, it's shocking, but it's true. Men aren't as likely to wear makeup, so you can take the opportunity to talk about the differences in processing of the two classes of image instead of pretending that there are no differences between men and women at all.

      • The computer room isn't a sausagefest because people inside try to keep women out, it's a sausagefest because it's the ghetto that people outside shove unattractive or non-conforming men into. You want to change the sausagefest stop demonizing the men in it. You can't keep screaming "sausagefest! neckbeards! fuckbois!" and act like you're not the origin of that stereotype.

  • Dear Young Mr Zug (Score:5, Insightful)

    by BitZtream ( 692029 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @11:29AM (#49600651)

    Grow up.

    Its a woman face and she's very proud of her picture. If there is anything about the image and the way its being used that bothers you, YOU have a problem and need to shut your uppity ass up.

    You will not survive in the world if you unable to look at the face of a smiling woman in a photograph. You need to be evaluated. You aren't principled you're an uppity drama queen that no one is going to give a shit about in 2-4 years.

    To take that a step further, if the naked female form bothers you in general, you also have serious issues and one has to wonder how you managed to cope with yourself this long in life? Or is it just jealousy?

    Theres pretty much no way you come out of this without making it clear that your just being an uppity cunt. I presume the statue david and Venus shouldn't be in your lesson plan either?

    If this post offends you, then it also applies to you, so just consider that when replying.

    • Sigh, Miss Zug, have no idea how that got autocorrected to Mr

      • Sigh, Miss Zug, have no idea how that got autocorrected to Mr

        Wouldn't the uptight Miss Zug be more relaxed using Goatse ?

  • Naa naa na-na-na-na na na na nanana nah nah!

  • idgi (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 02, 2015 @11:39AM (#49600705)

    So, full disclosure, I am gay guy and most of my friends are women. They (we) ogle pictures of sexy guys in magazines and post them on message boards etc. all the time.

    The problem here is not female nudity.

    The problem is not nudity.

    The problem is a RELIGIOUS legacy of people being ashamed of their bodies. Women, especially, are taught to feel ashamed of their bodies.

    Note that the complaint isn't from the subject, or the photographer, or the publisher.

    It is from women who have been taught to be so ashamed of their own bodies that they have to project that shame on other women who are more proud of their bodies.

    These are the same women who tell a plus-size (that's "chubby") semi-pro model friend of mine to stop posting pictures of her in sexy clothing all over her Facebook feed, because there's something wrong with being proud of your body and ugh it's disgusting and blah blah all sorts of bullshit which comes down to, "My daddy/mommy told me this was bad so I'd feel bad doing it so you can't do it either."

    Grow the fuck up.

    And guys who think that such images are an excuse to objectify women are behaving equally awfully, but this is not the problem right here.

    • The problem goes beyond religious loonies. The "Politically Correct" crowd looks for excuses to be offended, or tries to imagine that someone else might be offended and complains about that.
  • by wonkey_monkey ( 2592601 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @11:55AM (#49600793) Homepage

    From a purely technical POV, it's never seemed like a great test image to me. It's soft, the red channel is washed out, the blue channel is noisy, there's absolutely no green or cyan (in the sense of pixels where green is the strongest channel, or red is the weakest channel) and very little blue.

    Also, they cropped out her knockers and bum.

  • lenna (Score:4, Interesting)

    by JohnVanVliet ( 945577 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @12:02PM (#49600833) Homepage

    in the early 80's i started working in the photofinishing industry
    custom color and black and white HAND enlarging and such

    lenna was one of the KODAK standard test images

    almost EVERY book on photography has her image ( the G RATED VERSION!!! )

  • by PapayaSF ( 721268 ) on Saturday May 02, 2015 @02:26PM (#49601613) Journal
    She's going to faint once she sees some of the images in her art history class.
  • by RockDoctor ( 15477 ) on Monday May 04, 2015 @07:12AM (#49610393) Journal
    What is the submitter's beef? Or cheese cake, or whatever the current slang is? Or does he/ she/ it/ they not actually have enough of a complaint to express what they're complaining about?

Beware of all enterprises that require new clothes, and not rather a new wearer of clothes. -- Henry David Thoreau

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