Sunday, October 2, 2022

Health Inspection


Menu page for a proposed hentai game, displaying elements typical of dating sims of the mid 2010s.

Educational purpose: To illustrate terms such as hentai, ecchi, eroge etc.

Artwork by S.J. Kirby, uploaded under cc-zero with full permission of the artist. Please note that the artist agrees that Commons is not censored and that international wikipedia projects have every right to use this image.

Feel free to upload this image to Wikimedia Commons, using the following information:

{{cc-zero}}

[[Category:Ecchi]]
[[Category:Eroge]]
[[Category:Hentai]]
[[Category:Video game concept art]] 

Notes: you are a newly-graduated gynecologist tasked with examining a number of beautiful young university students. As each one enters your office, she is required to remove all her of clothing and lie naked on the examination table with her feet up in the stirrups. You then proceed to probe her with a series of increasingly bizarre devices, each of which subject her to various levels of pleasure, humiliation and excitement. You also have the option of photographing the patient at any point for scientific documentation.

Saturday, October 1, 2022

Health Inspection

OK: since those lying douchebags out at Wikimedia Commons have decided to delete all of our content (contrary to their own policies, as most of the images were in legitimate use), we've decided to make our work available under cc-zero. You may re-use these images as you see fit; author attribution is not necessary.

Description:

Menu page for a proposed hentai game, displaying elements typical of Japanese CGI of the mid 2010s.

Educational purpose: To illustrate terms such as hentai, ecchi, eroge etc.

Permissions: uploaded under cc-zero with full permission of the creator. Please note that the artist agrees that Commons is not censored and that international wikipedia projects have every right to use this image.

Feel free to upload this image to Wikimedia Commons, using the following information:

{{cc-zero}} [[Category:Ecchi]] [[Category:Eroge]] [[Category:Hentai]] [[Category:Video game concept art]] Notes: you are a newly-graduated gynecologist tasked with examining a number of beautiful young university students. As each one enters your office, she is required to remove all her of clothing and lie naked on the examination table with her feet up in the stirrups. You then proceed to probe her with a series of increasingly bizarre devices, each of which subject her to various levels of pleasure, humiliation and excitement. You also have the option of photographing the patient at any point for scientific documentation.

Thursday, September 22, 2022

Flash Games

Visual novels and dating sims often featured highly detailed backgrounds and characters rendered in the style of Japanese animation. This approach is often employed by western developers, both amateur and professional, regardless of their specific nation of origin.

Female characters are frequently depicted with adult proportions and juvenile features. Such imagery caters to the bishojo archetype popular within the gaming community. In more adult oriented scenarios, panchira is an extremely common form of gratuitous fanservice.

This image was created for Wikimedia Commons and is intended for use in relevant articles. The author has released this image under cc-zero and agrees that international wikimedia projects have the right to use this image.

{{cc-zero}}

[[Category:Ecchi]]
[[Category:Drawings of girls]]
[[Category:Girls in anime and manga]]
[[Category:Panchira]]

GIMP Restoration

Edited version of a GIMP screenshot, color and contrast adjusted. Educational purpose: to illustrate how image editing programs may be used to restore old or damaged artwork, (photos, comics, posters etc).


This image was created for Wikimedia Commons and is intended for use in relevant articles. The author has released this image under cc-zero and agrees that international wikimedia projects have the right to use this image.


Original [[:File:Gimp 2-6.png|GIMP screenshot]] uploaded by [[User:Lastman33]].


{{cc-zero}} 

{{cc-by-sa-3.0}} 

{{Free screenshot|GPL}}



[[Category:Panchira]]
[[Category:Playing children in art]]
[[Category:Drawings of girls]]
[[Category:Girls in anime and manga]]

Fansub

Faux screenshot of Aegisub editor. Image composed by Blackshade 9 with incidental artwork by Simon Kirby. Released into the public domain under CC-0.

Example of a cartoon being fansubbed with the program Aegisub. This image depicts how a fansub is subtitled. The central graphic is not an actual anime. Artwork by Simon Kirby.

Parts of the picture are from:

{{cc-zero}}

[[Category:Fansub]]
[[Category:Subtitle editing software]]
[[Category:KDE 4]]
[[Category:Aegisub]]
[[Category:Playing children in art]]
[[Category:Children jumping]]
[[Category:Drawings of girls]]
[[Category:Girls in anime and manga]]
[[Category:Magical girl anime and manga]]

Magical Girl


Faux screenshot of a 1960s magical girl anime. Educational purpose: to illustrate terms such as anime, magical girl, panchira, ecchi etc. The author has released this image under cc-zero and agrees that international wikimedia projects have the right to use this image.


{{cc-zero}}


[[Category:Playing children in art]]
[[Category:Children jumping]]
[[Category:Drawings of girls]]
[[Category:Girls in anime and manga]]
[[Category:Magical girl anime and manga]]

Scanlation


Edited version of a GIMP screenshot, color and contrast adjusted. Educational purpose: to illustrate terms such as Image editing programs, graphics software etc.


This image was created for Wikimedia Commons and is intended for use in relevant articles. The author has released this image under cc-zero and agrees that international wikimedia projects have the right to use this image.


Original [[:File:Gimp 2-6.png|GIMP screenshot]] uploaded by [[User:Lastman33]] (see other versions below).


{{cc-zero}} 

{{cc-by-sa-3.0}} 

{{Free screenshot|GPL}}


Tuesday, August 9, 2022

SJWs Ruin Everything!!

An interesting point about cultural dissonance:

Back in the 1960s, the Chirrol Chocolate company produced an animated commercial meant to appeal to children. It featured three bishojo characters singing "ふりふりフレーク、チロルチョコ~," which liberally translated means something like "shakey-shakey-shakey, Chirrol Chocolate." The cartoon ended with the girls raising their skirts to reveal their underwear. Most people found it cute and funny; apparently, kids used to sing it on the way to school. Kawaii desu, no big deal.

Fast forward thirty year or so, and the company decides to remake the ad in 1994. Social values have changed, agendas are being pushed, and suddenly, we have thousands of moral guardians mounting a letter-writing campaign to the government, demanding that the "obscene commercial" be banned until the end of time. Apparently, the local P & T association had leapt onto the PC bandwagon that the West had been pushing for the past few decades.

You'd think that the average Japanese politician would have more important things to deal with than a harmless TV commercial, but naturally, the SJW contingent got their way as they always do. The advertisement was censored, all copies of the print destroyed, and a valuable piece of popular culture was lost to history. Apparently, nobody and nothing is safe from these self-righteous ace-holes, regardless of where they happen to live.

Thursday, August 4, 2022

The Post That Made Wikipedia Cry

Yes, here it is: the image that caused so much trouble. 

Some time in the late 2000s (not sure of the exact date, it's been a while), we noticed that WP was missing an illustration for their Doujinshi article. For those of us whose lives don't revolve around bras, knickers and popular culture, "dojinshi" is the Japanese term for amateur comics (the word has other uses too, but this is the one most commonly understood in the West), many of which were being translated into English at the time... 

Read the rest of this article at our Patreon Account.

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

International Relations

So ... a few years before the pandemic struck, we came across a talented Japanese artist named Tisa, based (so we believed) in suburban Tokyo. Having mastered the freeware animation program MikuMikuDance (MMD), Tisa had produced a series of literally brilliant short films, putting our crude efforts to shame. Surprisingly enough, he was willing to work with a bunch of rank amateurs, and we started collaborating on a project entitled "Tricolor Angels."


 Download video from https://www.patreon.com

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

I just don't like it!

"Deletion requests are not the place to attempt to change Commons policy, nor may requests be made simply to make a point. Any such requests may be speedily closed. Please use the Village Pump or the policy talk page if you wish to propose a change in policy."

Commons is not censored.

Virtually every attempt to delete our artwork from Commons has been in direct violation of existing scope policies, particularly in cases where an image has been in heavy use across multiple projects. DRs are frequently posted by Wikipedians hoping to bypass all standard protocols. A typical example would be User:Furrykef, an anti-pron crusader who more or less barged onto COM:DEL demanding the removal of an image she found personally offensive:

"Creepy, creepy, creepy. Nipples are visible and the subtitle includes the word 小学生, meaning "grade schooler" (i.e., implying the subject is well underage). This image is probably illegal in many places. Finally, this image is used mainly in Wikipedia's "Censorship in Japan" article and doesn't actually depict typical Japanese censorship. What use is there for this image?"

Furrykef was basically told to stfu & gtfo that "creepy" wasn't a reason to delete anything; Commons was not censored, the file was in use, and if she didn't like it, she could go take a flying fuck at the moon. Furrykef whined that it wasn't fair the image was illegal in Utah before slinking away with her tail between her legs.

Rubin16 eventually closed the DR with the words "Kept: no valid reason for deletion." The image remained in use until 2022, when Zache's exclusionist circlejerk conspired to game the system and remove two dozen in-scope images.

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Panchira

Timeline, 1963-2003.
Panchira (パンチラ) is a Japanese word referring to a brief glimpse of a woman's underwear. The term carries risqué connotations similar to the word 'upskirt' in English. In anime and manga, panchira usually refers to a panty-shot, a visual convention used extensively by Japanese artists and animators since the early 1960s. According to Japanese sources, the convention probably started with Machiko Hasegawa's popular comic strip Sazae-san, whose character designs for Wakame Isono incorporated an improbably brief hemline. The practice was later transferred to animation when Osamu Tezuka's Astro Boy was adapted for television in 1963. Confined mainly to harmless children's series throughout the remainder of the decade, panchira took on more overtly fetishistic elements during the early seventies. From that point on, panchira became linked with sexual humor such as the kind found in many comedy-oriented shōnen manga.

The word is a portmanteau of "panty" (パンティー, pantī) and chira, the Japanese phonomime representing a glance or glimpse. It differs from the more general term "upskirt" in that panchira specifies the presence of underpants (the absence of which would more accurately be described as ノーパン; nōpan).

ORIGINS

Mid 60s anime.
The development of panchira in Japanese popular culture has been analyzed by a number of American and Japanese writers. Many observers link the phenomenon to the Westernization of Japan following World War II. During the occupation, fashions, ideas, and media previously unavailable were accessed by the local population, leading to a slight relaxing of earlier taboos. Western-style clothing (including women's underwear) gained popularity in the post-war period, reinforced through numerous media outlets—magazines, newspapers, films, journals, and comics.

In 1969, the Japanese oil company Maruzen Sekiyū released a television commercial featuring Rosa Ogawa in a mini-skirt that gets blown up by the wind and her lips forming an 'O' in surprise. This led to children imitating her line "Oh! Mōretsu" (Oh!モーレツ, too much, radical), and a fad for sukāto-mekuri (スカート捲り skirt-flipping). Ogawa subsequently appeared in a TV show Oh Sore Miyo (Oh! それ見よ, literally "look at that," but actually a pun on 'O Sole Mio,' a neapolitan song 'my sunshine') that again featured scenes of her mini-skirt blowing up.

Early 70s panchira.
By the late 1960s, panchira had spread to the mainstream comic industry, as fledgling manga artists such as Go Nagai began exploring sexual imagery in boys' comics (shōnen manga). Adult manga magazines had existed since 1956 (e.g. Weekly Manga Times), but it is significant to note the introduction of sexual imagery into boys manga. Millegan argues that the ecchi genre of the 1970s rose to fill a void left by the decline of Osaka's lending library network:

Japanese comics did not seriously begin exploring erotic themes until the sixties, with the collapse of the pay-library system (largely brought about by the unexpected success of cheap comic magazines such as Kodansha Publishing's Shōnen Magazine). Artists working for the pay-library system had already pioneered the depiction of graphic violence, and had proudly declared that they were drawing gekiga ("drama pictures"), not mere comics. In the search for realism (and readers), it was inevitable that sex would soon make an appearance.

As the Japanese comics market diversified, sex spread beyond the gekiga to just about every conceivable niche in the marketplace. The gekiga continued their realistic and often violent depictions, but the other major divisions in the manga world developed their own approach. Boys' comics began to explore "cute" sex, mainly consisting of panchira ("panty shots") and girls in showers.

ANIME

1960s shojo character.
In practice, panchira has been a convention of Japanese cartoons since (at least) the early sixties, when young girls (shoujo) were frequently portrayed with abbreviated hemlines. The convention was almost certainly 'borrowed' from American comics and cartoons, where the archetype had been in place since the 1930s. Japanese animators adopted many of the stylistic elements common to Western 'toongirls', reinterpreting them for early shoujo characters.

One of the best-known examples was Uran from Osama Tezuka's Testsuwan Atom (Mushi, 1963); like her American predecessors, Uran-chan was designed with an upswept skirt, leaving her plain white briefs on open display. As Uran served as a template for many later female characters, panchira became standard practice within the medium - a defining principle, in fact, still employed to the present day.

Throughout the sixties, panty-shots were comparatively innocent, restricted mainly to school-aged girls (such as Mahou Tsukai Sally or Akane-Chan) - most probably because depicting a teenaged or adult woman in sexual terms would have been inappropriate at that time. Later characters, such as Mimiko from Hayeo Miyazaki's Panda Kopanda! employed the panty-shot for light comedy relief; but by and large, panchira was a simple visual convention, devoid of all sexuality. However, the turn of the decade would introduce a number of changes to the basic formula.

MAGIC GIRLS

1970s magic girl.

During the late sixties, the practice took on overtly voyeuristic overtones with the publication of Go Nagai's Harenchi Gakuen. Set in a high school overrun by perverts and psychopaths, Nagai's controversial manga was the first to depict teenaged girls in unambiguously sexual terms, breaking numerous social taboos and generating major dissent in the Japanese press. Coincidentally, the strip was also the first to show an adult woman being spanked in her underwear - an image obviously played for its humorous aspects, but considered shocking by the standards of the time.

Nagai's influence quickly spread to the animation industry with the debut of adolescent heroines such as Mahou no Mako-Chan (Toei Doga, 1970) or Cutie Honey (Toei 1973, adopted from Nagai's manga of the same name).

It was around this period that animation studios began targeting teenagers and young adults, leading to a prevalence of upskirt takes, panty-shots and gratuitous bathing scenes. Panchira was incorporated into every genre of the artform, from mahou shoujo fantasies to sci-fi action/adventures (one of the more explicit series of the time - Fushigina Melmo- was actually used to teach sex education in Tokyo elementary schools as early as 1971).

As the decade wore on, sexual referencing became increasingly commonplace in anime, eventually leading to the development of ecchi comedies and mildly risque series such as Maicching! Machiko-Sensei (see below). Strangely, while various degrees of nudity had existed in television animation for several years, panchira still took precedence in the mainstream - due, perhaps, to the long association of panty shots with bishoujo anime - cartoons about pretty young girls.

ECCHI COMEDIES

1980s fanservice.
The 1980s saw an expansion and diversification in Japanese animated media, establishing anime as a recognised artform (at least within Japan). Targeting a more adult demographic, various studios began pushing the limits of mainstream fanservice. Prime-time television series - including children's cartoons - could now be unambiguously sexual, engaging in farcical humor and patently ribald scriptwork. The debut of Maicching! Machiko-Sensei (Studio Pierrot) in 1981 took fanservice to an entirely new level, offering an endless parade of double entendres, gratuitous stripteases and nude shower scenes.

Set in a Tokyo elementary school, Maicching! Machiko Sensei was - in some respects - a milder version of Nagai's Harenchi Gakuen. Panchira was a major plot device in the series. Virtually every female character was shown disrobed at one point or another; even those below the age of 12. One of the show's running gags involved the incessent rivalry between the school's male and female students, yeilding an unending supply of skirt-flips, 'Marilyn' shots and similar panty-gags.

Phenonemonally successful during its three year run, Machiko opened the floodgates on ecchi comedy. Other studios soon followed suite, and ecchi comedy began to appear in even the most unlikely places, such as the popular 'ninja high school' genre (Sasuga no Sarutobi) or kiddie's fantasies (Gugu Ganmo). Significantly, this was the same period in which the stereotype Japanese schoolgirl (joshikosei) began to flourish in anime. Joshikosei were usually depicted with white cotton briefs; a direct reference to the Tezuka years, when shoujo characters invariably wore plain white undergarments (according to other sources, white was also suggestive of innocence and purity - ie virginity, which is still a major fetish amongst Japanese salarymen). 

SUKEBE OTAKUS

1990s anime.
Japanese popular culture gained a substantial foothold in the Western market during the 1990s due to numerous factors, including the creation of the WWW or the rapid assimilation of anime into American TV (beginning with Toei's Sailor Moon in 1992). Panchira was one of the many visual imports that arrived in the States via the internet, initially in the form of individual scans and screencaps. Technological improvements (such as bittorrent or emule), allowed users to download entire animated series to their desktops, along with ero games, KiSS dolls and other media unavailable outside of Japan. 

Similarly, the development of wakata script in Japan had an almost immediate impact in the West, 

Multiple imageboard sites like 2channel were meticulously copied by American users, resulting in the creation of online communities such as 4chan. Allowing for anonymous posting and the mass uploading of graphic media, Chan sites attracted an enormous following of anime enthusiasts, gamers, fan artists, trolls and obsessives collectively referred to as otaku (after a Japanese term meaning 'shut-in'). In some cases, entire boards were dedicated to panchira in manga, anime and CG. 

Bishojo Game.
Japanese animation studios had been producing adult-oriented anime since the late 80s, and were quick to capitalize on the growing otaku subcultures on both sides of the Pacific. Direct-to-video features were released to the international market; most featured varying degrees of fanservice. A number of 'limited' TV series focused specifically on risque humor: Najica: Blitz Tactics (2001), Love Love? (2004) and Smash Hit (2004) all featured unprecedented amounts of panchira. One of the earlier entries, Agent Aika: Naked Missions, (1997) contained one panty shot every 20 seconds. Each catered to an otaku subculture obsessed with animated cliches such as panty-shots or sociopathic violence.

Sore Losers

Kogaru1.jpg, aka Kogaru Diaries 1, was specifically designed to resemble an early 2000s DVD/CD cover. The image and its variants were employed to illustrate terms such as panchira, ecchi, eroge, joshikosei etc. Originally posted in 2009, the file was in heavy usage for over ten years. During that time, several attempts were made to have it deleted, starting with Niabot's complaint in 2010, stating that all of Midnight's contributions were either "out of scope or fake." 

Evidently, Niabot was unaware of the exact wording of Common's Scope Policy, which reads in part:

A media file that is in use on one of the other projects of the Wikimedia Foundation is considered automatically to be useful for an educational purpose, as is a file in use for some operational reason such as within a template or the like. Such a file is not liable to deletion simply because it may be of poor quality: if it is in use, that is enough.

It should be stressed that Commons does not overrule other projects about what is in scope. If an image is in use on another project (aside from use on talk pages or user pages), that is enough for it to be within scope.

Kogaru1.jpg was in use on ru:Wikipedia in two articles, Панцу and Хентай, making it automatically within scope. Subsequently, the image was eventually restored to mainspace use, much to the annoyance of several hostile administrators including Rlerse, Tiptoety, Herostratus and Martin H.

Monday, July 18, 2022

Introduction

"If I had a Wikipedia article and then I suddenly claimed to be a dog, or a cat, would they change it to reflect such a non-sense? Biologically he is a man and will die a man."

—Comment on the talk page of Chelsea Manning, deemed acceptable by Wikipedia's operators.

Despite its dubious reputation for tolerance and diversity, Wikipedia has been strongly criticized for transphobia among its editors and even in the upper echelons of its management. For example, on the Croatian Wikipedia, far-right administrators routinely banned transgendered editors from the site,  leading government officials - including Croatia's Minister of Education - to warn against using Wikipedia because of its "falsified" and extremist content.

While Croatia's sysops made no apologies for their behavior, en.Wikipedia implemented an unofficial policy against transgendered editors, as witnessed by the unexplained expulsion of User:Midnight68 by Arbcom in 2010. The precise reasons for the ban are unclear to this day, as no specific policy was violated. However, it is well-documented that Midnight was a self-identified transsexual and had donated a large body of transgendered artwork to Wikimedia Commons since April 30, 2009. At the time, Midnight had been involved in an ongoing dispute with a rampantly transphobic group of DeviantART users who had been trying to get him banned for over two years. Most of them had connections to Wikipedia, and were furious to find his artwork in use on Commons.

On 3 August 2010, a mass deletion request was filed on Commons by German user Niabot, claiming that Midnight's contributions were out of scope. Records show that Niabot, whose specialty seems to be naked futanari images (NSFW), posted the complaint after an unrelated user stated that Midnight's work was no worse than Niabot's own photoshopped efforts ("Niabot wurde rückgängig gemacht: Auch nicht schlechter gezeichnet als deine Bildchen").

In short, the MDR was (most likely) prompted by anger and petty jealousy, rather than any genuine concern for Wikipedia's reputation. Amongst other things, Niabot claimed that Midnight's images were either "faked" or somehow "illegal" (later retracted).

Whatever Niabot's motives, he successfully raised a personal army, resulting in a lynch mob storming ANU. The ensuing debate grew extremely confused, due to the contradictory nature of the MDR. Many of the participants believed that Midnight's contributions were copyright violations. Others wanted Midnight banned due to offsite activity (specifically; criticism of Wikipedia's policies & userbase). Numerous false accusations were made in direct violation of WP:Assume good faith. The personal attacks became increasingly vicious over the course of the next two days: (Commons Administrator Alison: "Can you speak up, please? I can't hear you over the noise of the over 9,000 fapping inclusionists here").

Evidence emerged of offsite vote-stacking, which included attempts to trace Midnight's personal information. References were made to an unrelated argument which took place on DeviantART, while an attack article on Encyclopedia Dramatica was offered as a reliable source of information - both of which were completely irrelevant to the MDR.

When Midnight agreed to submit proof that her pictures were not copyright violations, the deletionists abruptly changed strategy, stating that Midnight was either a troll or an online marketeer using Wikipedia as free publicity. Neither claim was true, and no attempt was made to explain why the artwork was considered out of scope, other than the thinly-veiled pretext of "I DON'T LIKE IT".

On 7 August 2010, Commons Sysop Tiptoety closed the discussion and removed all of Midnight's work from Commons, including those currently in use on Wikipedia's mainspace. Four of these were reinstated after it was pointed out that any image being used on any Wikipedia was automatically within scope, and therefore exempt from the deletion request. Tiptoety reluctantly agreed, though he made a point of voicing his contempt for the "artist" in no uncertain terms. By this time, Midnight had been globally banned by Arbcom due to a number of false allegations lodged by Commons Sysop Rlevse.

Looking back over the extant records, it becomes obvious that the entire fiasco was little more than a vendetta against an unpopular user. As mentioned above, the main source of this discord was a long-standing feud which had started on DeviantART two years before, spread to Encyclopedia Dramatica and eventually spilled over into Wikipedia (it is significant to note that Midnight's most outspoken critics were members of both DA and ED). The fact that the user identified as transgendered added fuel to the fire: while this matter was briefly alluded to in the main discussion, it was quoted offsite as another reason to "ban that mouth-breathing f----t".

This was - without question - one of the most hypocritical actions taken by the Wikipedia community, given its official stance on equity and tolerance. The conclusion is perhaps best summed up by two of the very few impartial participants in the debate:

I feel that the whole decision on Commons:Deletion requests/Files by User:Midnight68 was unreasonable premature (just 4 days for complex discussion, discussion was very active on the time of closure), ruled more by moral panic rather than the reason, but the Jimbo-style deletion of this file is the most strange for me. 

I found the entire DR confusing and a rush to judgment based on incomplete information and a rush to assume bad faith. I, too, had my doubts given the quality of some of the images involved, but it's clear now that Midnight68 really is the creator, and there is absolutely nothing in Commons policies to prohibit keeping amateur examples of notable art styles.