Not Safe for Work: Difference between revisions

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* Not quite on topic, but [[George Macdonald Fraser]]'s novel ''[[The Pyrates]]'' mentions a three-tier rating system upper class British girls had for upper class British boys (apparently referring to danger to one's virginity) that included, in ascending order of peril, Not Safe At Vauxhall, Not Safe In Sedan Chairs and Not Safe Anywhere.
* Not quite on topic, but [[George Macdonald Fraser]]'s novel ''[[The Pyrates]]'' mentions a three-tier rating system upper class British girls had for upper class British boys (apparently referring to danger to one's virginity) that included, in ascending order of peril, Not Safe At Vauxhall, Not Safe In Sedan Chairs and Not Safe Anywhere.
** There is still a tiered rating system in this era.
** There is still a tiered rating system in this era.
* Author [[Susie Bright]] [http://susiebright.blogs.com/susie_brights_journal_/2007/03/so_what_do_you_.html suggests NSFP]: Not Safe for Prudes.
* Author [[Susie Bright]] [https://web.archive.org/web/20130514003100/http://susiebright.blogs.com/susie_brights_journal_/2007/03/so_what_do_you_.html suggests NSFP]: Not Safe for Prudes.
* SFW: Safe For Work. Generally used to inform the web user who may be wary about clicking on a link that it is safe.
* SFW: Safe For Work. Generally used to inform the web user who may be wary about clicking on a link that it is safe.
** The website "How F***ed is the T?", which uses live data to determine average subway wait time, has a "SFW version" called "How's the T?", where descriptions such as "The Red Line isn't very f***ed" are changed to "The Red Line looks just fine".
** The website "How F***ed is the T?", which uses live data to determine average subway wait time, has a "SFW version" called "How's the T?", where descriptions such as "The Red Line isn't very f***ed" are changed to "The Red Line looks just fine".