Culture Playboy image from 1972 gets ban from IEEE computer journals - Use of "Lenna" image in computer image processing research stretches back to the 1970s.


BENJ EDWARDS - 3/29/2024

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On Wednesday, the IEEE Computer Society announced to members that, after April 1, it would no longer accept papers that include a frequently used image of a 1972 Playboy model named Lena Forsén. The so-called "Lenna image," (Forsén added an extra "n" to her name in her Playboy appearance to aid pronunciation) has been used in image processing research since 1973 and has attracted criticism for making some women feel unwelcome in the field.

In an email from the IEEE Computer Society sent to members on Wednesday, Technical & Conference Activities Vice President Terry Benzel wrote, "IEEE's diversity statement and supporting policies such as the IEEE Code of Ethics speak to IEEE's commitment to promoting an including and equitable culture that welcomes all. In alignment with this culture and with respect to the wishes of the subject of the image, Lena Forsén, IEEE will no longer accept submitted papers which include the 'Lena image.'"

An uncropped version of the 512×512-pixel test image originally appeared as the centerfold picture for the December 1972 issue of Playboy Magazine. Usage of the Lenna image in image processing began in June or July 1973 when an assistant professor named Alexander Sawchuck and a graduate student at the University of Southern California Signal and Image Processing Institute scanned a square portion of the centerfold image with a primitive drum scanner, omitting nudity present in the original image. They scanned it for a colleague's conference paper, and after that, others began to use the image as well.

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The original 512×512 "Lenna" test image, which is a cropped portion of a 1972 Playboy centerfold.

The image's use spread in other papers throughout the 1970s, 80s, and 90s, and it caught Playboy's attention, but the company decided to overlook the copyright violations. In 1997, Playboy helped track down Forsén, who appeared at the 50th Annual Conference of the Society for Imaging Science in Technology, signing autographs for fans. "They must be so tired of me ... looking at the same picture for all these years!" she said at the time. VP of new media at Playboy Eileen Kent told Wired, "We decided we should exploit this, because it is a phenomenon."

The image, which features Forsén's face and bare shoulder as she wears a hat with a purple feather, was reportedly ideal for testing image processing systems in the early years of digital image technology due to its high contrast and varied detail. It is also a sexually suggestive photo of an attractive woman, and its use by men in the computer field has garnered criticism over the decades, especially from female scientists and engineers who felt that the image (especially related to its association with the Playboy brand) objectified women and created an academic climate where they did not feel entirely welcome.

Due to some of this criticism, which dates back to at least 1996, the journal Nature banned the use of the Lena image in paper submissions in 2018.

The comp.compression Usenet newsgroup FAQ document claims that in 1988, a Swedish publication asked Forsén if she minded her image being used in computer science, and she was reportedly pleasantly amused. In a 2019 Wired article, Linda Kinstler wrote that Forsén did not harbor resentment about the image, but she regretted that she wasn't paid better for it originally. "I’m really proud of that picture," she told Kinstler at the time.

Since then, Forsén has apparently changed her mind. In 2019, Creatable and Code Like a Girl created an advertising documentary titled Losing Lena, which was part of a promotional campaign aimed at removing the Lena image from use in tech and the image processing field. In a press release for the campaign and film, Forsén is quoted as saying, "I retired from modelling a long time ago. It’s time I retired from tech, too. We can make a simple change today that creates a lasting change for tomorrow. Let’s commit to losing me."

It seems like that commitment is now being granted. The ban in IEEE publications, which have been historically important journals for computer imaging development, will likely further set a precedent toward removing the Lenna image from common use. In his email, the IEEE's Benzel recommended wider sensitivity about the issue, writing, "In order to raise awareness of and increase author compliance with this new policy, program committee members and reviewers should look for inclusion of this image, and if present, should ask authors to replace the Lena image with an alternative."
 
We will never become a space faring race at this rate.

oh we will, it's inevitable as our greed and need to explore will drive us out there.

Will America do it? I doubt it. The American Empire is in it's death throws so their is no will to look forward to the future. Half of America wants to go back to the 50's and the other half want to burn it to the ground because they foolishly think they will be the ones to set up the next great state in their image

Space is mankind's future but it won't be the West who goes there. The West has been eaten from the inside by the Marxist cancer and is now nothing but a shambling shell waiting to die.
 
Her shape is nice, but those tiddies look ... meh. Big nipples, saggy tiddies, nothing a boobjob wouldn't fix.

Its much easier to fix than an ugly face or pockmarked skin. What people used to call a rear vompsrtment engine, she is nicer from the back. Or well was some 50 years ago.
This is from 1972. No photoshop. All they had was physical pencils and airbrushes. There wasn’t a whole lot they could do. I reckon this lady’s skin and figure was far better than most models today.

She also probably didn’t eat, but I digress.
 
You have to expect woke in tech. So I'm gonna ignore most of it unless it's directly promoting something bad. This is just what they consider good press.

Honoring her request is the respectful thing to do. Being progressive is not bad in itself. I wish people understood the difference between respecting others and being fucking insane.
That tolerant attitude of rolling over and just expecting wokeness, and thinking progressivism isn't bad is retarded. There's no other way to put it. That's exactly 100% how we got here.
 
Meh. The IEEE has been a chinese paper mill for the last 15 years anyway.

I don't remember but I'm pretty sure that it was an IEEE affiliated conference that accepted Chicken Chicken Chicken when some researchers tried to prove how much of a papermill grift that computing research publishing has turned into.
 
Meh. The IEEE has been a chinese paper mill for the last 15 years anyway.

I don't remember but I'm pretty sure that it was an IEEE affiliated conference that accepted Chicken Chicken Chicken when some researchers tried to prove how much of a papermill grift that computing research publishing has turned into.
That's just academia in general: a papermill of 90% useless papers.
 
and its use by men in the computer field has garnered criticism over the decades, especially from female scientists and engineers who felt that the image (especially related to its association with the Playboy brand) objectified women and created an academic climate where they did not feel entirely welcome.
Shrewery intensifies
 
Feminists upset at natural male sexuality, or trannies upset with the inability to compete with nature?
 
This is from 1972. No photoshop. All they had was physical pencils and airbrushes. There wasn’t a whole lot they could do. I reckon this lady’s skin and figure was far better than most models today.

She also probably didn’t eat, but I digress.

I was talking silicone tits not photoshop. Silicone tits would have made the programming go better.
 
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Women didn't give a shit then, and they don't give a shit now because few are interested in working in that field anyways, and 99.999% of them wouldn't know the origins of that image because they don't look at ancient Playboys.
99.999% of the men wouldn't have known either before everyone publicized the origin of the image and shamed the ho for her "youthful indiscretions". The cut picture doesn't even look thotty, women don't wear a hat naked so the hat communicates "clothed". I bet if you gave the cropped photo to an AI which hasn't seen neither the original nor discussions of it, to complete, it's draw a clothed woman with WANTONLY BARE SHOULDERS.

These dumb chicks and their progressive male feminist enablers will never get rid of the fact that the web and most of the OG software was created by men, and most men are heterosexual and like how the naked female body looks.
Keeps seething, frigid holes.
Lots of rapists in A&H as usual. Your stepdad is cheating on you with roadkill.
 
Lots of rapists in A&H as usual. Your stepdad is cheating on you with roadkill.
Always remember:
While you lesbians sure hate us straight dudebros, we LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOVE you to hell and back.
As long as you're good looking that is.
Female sexuality is... malleable...
 
That's a gorgeous picture. Not only is she beautiful, but she looks both enticing and classy at the same time.
Now everyone looks like a cheapo whore.
The old Playboy centerfolds were absolutely gorgeous. Some were a lot closer to what nude art has always been than what pornography is today.

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These women have personalities and the photos have artistic composition. There's so much space between this and modern porn that it's crazy the "sex positive" culture rejects these beautiful images even while saying there's nothing wrong with watching hardcore incest scenarios.
 
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