Bottom post of the previous page:
hi,Is there a posibilty for a closed space in the CPDB for these photos, where only researchers, journalists and member have a special access? But completely hidden from public
Bottom post of the previous page:
hi,That was a photo I had found a lot of time ago.Melissadc wrote: ↑2 years ago As a member of John Masariu’s family, we have never seen this image before. While it is tough to look at, it is an important piece of our family history. It is appreciated.
I respect the thoughtfulness that has gone into the display of photos such as my grandfather’s and the groups choice not to display other more graphic ones of higher digital quality.
No.
I feel like this is the potential beginning of a discussion that belongs here.Motorsportrace wrote: ↑2 years agoThis can be a "precedent".
What should we do in such cases?
I can understand that you don't want legal troubles, but, as far as I can see, that entry didn't contain anything graphic and/or distressing.
The problem is that the entry was one of the first things that showed up when you searched for his name in Google. And that can be a problem.
Also, the accident was not posted here, but only in the CPDB.
Who are we to judge the emotions of anyone when faced with pictures that, show the (circumstances of the) death of a person. Even more so, who are we to judge these emotions when the deceased was a family member.Beyond this, I feel it's a very personal thing.
Pinterest is one of the most annoying sites on the web for that. It seems to have filled Google with rubbish search results, most of which you cannot see because you need to login to view whatever it is. And even then, there is no guarantee that the result shown actually contains the info you wanted. Usually it is unrelated.Starling wrote: ↑2 years ago Has anybody noticed Pinterest's latest ugly trend? If I google Tom Pryce in the Images section, a generic pic comes up with the cutesy caption "12 Tom Pryce ideas" or something like it. Sometimes the pic is of the accident so one hopefully knows not to click, but other times it's a normal pic and inside you find the bad ones. It must be bots, because the titles are always similar and they pop up whenever I look for something ("20 Is my cat overweight? ideas").
Also, I have a Pinterest account via Google, like on several other sites, and if I click on such an image by mistake it all ends up in my timeline, displacing pictures i did look for. I've even found my whole Tumblr page under the title "47 [insert weird topic] ideas". Is all this even legal?