Leader: What porn?

Seeing things where they just aren't...

By silicon.com, 23 August 2006 17:00

The Home Office has been rapped on the knuckles today for a radio ad which inadvertently sent listeners to a website that, it is alleged, promotes pornography.

To make matters worse the ads were intended to inform children about a website that offers advice on how to stay safe online.

The Advertising Standards Authority upheld the complaint of one listener but to be honest you'd have to have a pretty good nose for porn to follow the threads here and sniff out some smut.

The radio ad promoted the ThinkuKnow.co.uk website but the good folk at the Home Office didn't think to point out they'd opted for the ultra-modern 'u' spelling, rather than the traditional 'you'.

That was incredibly stupid. And, as a result, some listeners probably found themselves on the website ThinkyouKnow.co.uk, which apparently promoted adult content.

But to be fair to the Home Office, while the people who wrote and produced these ads were clearly fools, their actions hardly exposed anybody to porn. The site listeners found themselves on was a fairly standard parking site. You'd have to follow quite a few links before you found some porn.

That ad no more exposed people to porn than Google or Internet Explorer and suggestions to the contrary have lost any sense of perspective.

Comments

There are 3 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Tobias West

    Here here.....it's stupid that the complaint was upheld

  2. 2. jsaltz

    An abomination. No more, no less.

  3. 3. anonymous

    I was severely disappointed. No porn? What could they be thinking about, unfair I say. How hard did they have to try to get a random 'net page without porn? Total waste of effort.

    Took me ages to find porn from that link. "Singles" looked the most likely, but when I tried ""Look Sexy Naked" all I got was a cup of tea. I want my Internet subscription back.

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