Facebook 1; Boob Neurotics 0

Published: December 30, 2008 at 3:58pm

Ben Elton’s Blind Faith is about a post-apocalyptic society in which people are forced to live their lives in public via podcasts, broadcasts and cameras in every room of their tiny homes, including over the marital bed.

When I read that women are now posting close-up photographs of themselves suckling their babies (I prefer the proper verb to ‘breast-feeding’) I couldn’t help but think of that book. Why on earth would any woman in her right mind want to put that kind of private time on show – to prove some kind of twisted point? Thank heavens for Facebook’s clampdown.

Reuters, 30 December

Are photographs of a mother breastfeeding her child indecent? The social networking site Facebook has sparked a massive online debate – and protests – and after removing photos that expose too much of a mother’s breast.

Facebook spokesman Barry Schnitt said the website takes no action over most breastfeeding photos because they follow the site’s terms of use but others are removed to ensure the site remains safe and secure for all users, including children. “Photos containing a fully exposed breast do violate those terms (on obscene, pornographic or sexually explicit material) and may be removed,” he said in a statement. “The photos we act upon are almost exclusively brought to our attention by other users who complain.”

But Facebook’s decision to ban some breastfeeding photos has angered some users, including US mother Kelli Roman whose photograph of her feeding her daughter was removed by Facebook. Ms Roman is one of the administrators of an online petition called Hey Facebook, breastfeeding is not obscene!, which has picked up speed in the past week after protesters organised a virtual “nurse-in” on Facebook and held a small demonstration outside Facebook’s office in Palo Alto, California.

The petition has now attracted more than 80,000 names and over 10,000 comments, reigniting the old debate about the rights or wrongs of breastfeeding in public. Organisers of the petition said some women had been warned not to repost photographs that had been removed from their pages or they would face being kicked off Facebook.

One breastfeeding mother, called Rebekah, said Facebook removed a photograph of her feeding her child. “I find it offensive that (Facebook) can remove my photo but not the close up picture of a thonged backside I (have) seen on a friend’s page or remove the “what kama sutra position are you?” quiz application,” she wrote.

Facebook, which has more than 120 million members, is standing by its decision. Mr Schnitt said the company had called many US media groups during the course of the protest to ask to place an advert related to breastfeeding that showed a woman breastfeeding her child with a fully exposed breast. None agreed. “Obviously, a newspaper and Facebook are different things but the underlying motivation for the content policies are the same,” he said.




6 Comments Comment

  1. H.P. Baxxter says:

    Same as the “I’ve just had a baby” photos. Literally. With the mother lying half naked on the hospital bed. Why? Just why?

  2. Steve says:

    I think it is a little weird to put up a photo of yourself breast-feeding on Facebook. Then again I do NOT agree with the way Facebook handled this. It is not illegal in the US (Facebook is a US corporation) to breast-feed in public, thus why should it be illegal to post a photo of oneself doing it? My guess is that someone found it offensive. I’m sure there are a lot of people who find it offensive that women should be allowed to post photographs of themselves without covering their hair. Should we pander to them too?

    If someone thinks it’s somehow cool to post a picture of themselves breast-feeding, go ahead is what I say. I’ll make my own judgment of their state of mind.

    “I may disagree with what photos you post, but I’ll defend to the death your right to post them” (sorry Voltaire!)

  3. kev says:

    Granted that these mother-geeks act in ways that differ from the norm. But what’s so offensive anyway?! I think those who take offence are by far the weirder lot.

    [Daphne – It’s not all suckling pictures that have been banned, but the highly exhibitionist ones showing bare bosoms and nipples.]

  4. kev says:

    oooooo, bare bosoms u nipples ukoll! Kemm huma psataz!

  5. janine says:

    It’s just an excuse for these women to expose their boobs and nothing else.

  6. Sybil says:

    U lid-David ta’ Michaelangelo tinsewx taghmlulu werqa __ tat-tursin!
    :p

Leave a Comment