Almost all instances don’t wants nsfw on their site. So I opened this site to fill the pussy. I mean gap.

Activate NSFW for your account

To see NSFW content, you should activate “Show NSFW content” checkbox at your account settings.

Should we change the domain?

Some guy said the domain is very obvious. He may be right. What do you think about it? Poll link. If yes, any recommendations?

Edit: It seems like most people don’t care about domain. So I’m not changing it. Maybe in the future if Lemmy let us, we can mirror the instance on other domain.

Communities

community list

https://lemmynsfw.com/communities/listing_type/Local/page/1

  • @natico
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    -61 year ago

    deleted by creator

    • @WallsToTheBalls
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      101 year ago

      This is terribly pedantic. NSFW is concise, to the point, identifiable, and most importantly-searchable.

    • @FreezingInFuckingHell
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      71 year ago

      The Dark Side (of lemmy).

      On a serious note tho, NSFW is really just a term that’s come to encompass all things porn when used in a context like this. It’s not really a super technical term, but generally speaking anything NSFW is really just an umbrella term for all things lewd!

      (LewdLemmy?)

      • @yayMA
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        81 year ago

        wait, LEWMY?

    • @blackbelt352
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      41 year ago

      NSFW is an acronym that has been around for multiple decades and pretty clearly communicates the kind of content you’re going to see/hear. It’s a solid baseline that most people are going to have a rough approximation of what they’re going to see.

      Every company has a handbooks and guidelines for what is appropriate in an office setting and for the most part are pretty consistent in what is and isn’t appropriate across the vast majority people’s work experiences (ignoring that management probably doesn’t want people wasting time on social media anyway). If you wouldn’t keep it on your desk at work, or say it to another employee without getting sent to HR.

      Don’t forget a lot of online terminology originated because computers used to be pretty much exclusively the domain of corporations, government orgs, and colleges like 30-40 years ago.