For as long as this statement is present to the site's rules and regulation,
Jacob wrote...
To clarify, lolicon posted on the forums will not be allowed anymore. This is in no way due to it being illegal in the United States (which it is not). It is something that is against the terms of service of our ad company. Without our ad company FAKKU would not exist. The ad company we currently use results in the most money, so I will not be dropping them over something like this.
Strictly speaking, the term refers only to prepubescent girls (that look to be under the age of 12). If you go around labeling topics and uploads as "loli" they will also be removed. Discussion and posting non pornographic pictures of lolis is fine. Flat chested and "loli type" girls are fine, just nothing that is clearly loli.
This is not something that is up for debate, this is just the way it will be from now on. Trust me I would rather it be different, but we need the ad company for FAKKU to stay online. If there are any rich people out there that are upset about this, feel free to send us tons of money to pay for the servers and we will remove this rule.
I approve of this post.
Regardless of age, if the appearance of a character looked like from the age bracket of 0 to 12, It can be considered as lolicon.
WHAT THE FUCK IS A LOLICON???
Lolicon (ãƒãƒªã‚³ãƒ³?), also romanised as lolikon or rorikon, is a Japanese portmanteau of the phrase "Lolita complex". In Japan, the term describes an attraction to underage girls (whether prepubescent, pubescent, or post-pubescent) or an individual with such an attraction. It is also commonly used when referring to lolicon manga or lolicon anime, a genre of manga and anime wherein childlike female characters are often depicted in an erotic manner, in an art style reminiscent of the shÅjo manga (girls' comics) style. Outside Japan, "lolicon" is in less common usage and usually refers to the genre.
The phrase is a reference to Vladimir Nabokov's book Lolita, in which a middle-aged man becomes sexually obsessed with a twelve-year-old girl. It was first used in Japan in the 1970s and quickly became used to describe erotic dojinshi (amateur comics) portrayals of young girls.
Laws have been enacted in various countries, including in Japan, which regulate explicit content featuring children or child-like characters. Parent and citizens groups in Japan have organized to work toward stronger controls and stricter laws governing lolicon manga and other similar media. Critics say that the lolicon genre contributes to actual sexual abuse of children, while others say that there is no evidence for this claim. Studies of lolicon fans state that lolicon fans are attracted to an aesthetic of cuteness rather than the age of the characters, and that collecting lolicon represents a disconnect from society
-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lolicon