7 comments

  • ogora 6 hours ago ago

    For those interested in a closer look, please follow this link: https://chromewebstore.google.com/detail/pureword/hmiminkceb...

  • celticninja 5 hours ago ago

    What is the aim of this? If you can be so outraged at a collection of letters, then perhaps the internet is not for you.

    • ogora 3 hours ago ago

      Those who need it will recognise its value. It appears that many today have abandoned personal restraint, mistaking obscenity for trend or entitlement.

      Even traditionally professional spaces, such as news outlets and heads of state, now use language unfit for civil discourse. This tool enables continued internet use without compromising the quality of the experience.

      Only the weak would agree with a statement like "perhaps the internet is not for you".

      I'm not of that breed. I intend to stamp my brand on the internet, just like those who use such language, even if I end up being the only PureWord user.

  • DemocracyFTW2 2 hours ago ago

    I think I'd Rather Use a Good Language Filter but That's JustMe.

    • ogora an hour ago ago

      It is not just you:

      "But know this, that in the last days perilous times will come: For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, unholy, unloving, unforgiving, slanderers, without self-control, brutal, despisers of good, traitors, headstrong, haughty, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God, having a form of godliness but denying its power ..." -- 2 Timothy 3:1–5

  • yawpitch 5 hours ago ago

    Would such an extension not allow me to replace neutral words with obscenities? Or, for example, skin color descriptions with my preferred racial epithets or gender-affirming language with anti-turning-the-frogs-gay tirades?

    I’d be more than a bit uncomfortable with using someone else’s ideas of what’s profane, but I’d also be a bit uncomfortable with the idea that there’s people browsing the same internet as me but looking through entirely different bias-conforming echo-chamber-reinforcing sunglasses.

    Just not sure how you give anyone the ability to filter out what offends them without also giving them the power to filter in what should offend them, but doesn’t.

    • ogora 3 hours ago ago

      PureWord is designed with the noble aim of restoring civility to the internet. While it comes with a predefined list of words, you, the user, can freely customise it.

      The tool is not intended for broader purposes, such as politically sensitive language, as mentioned in your example. That may be a concept for a future tool or an expansion pack.

      It does not alter the meaning of a sentence; it merely makes it more civil. Users can still hover over the replaced word to view the original.

      It is like watching a movie with the bad words bleeped out... you would still know what was said but even if you did not, the meaning of the scene is not lost.