Internet Content Rating Association::: About ICRA

This resource is aimed at guiding the user through the registration of a web site and the creation of an ICRA label. For more general support enquiries please see the support pages.

Site / Branch or Page?

A whole site is just that, a whole site, accessed by a unique domain name such as http://www.icra.org. If you control a whole domain like this, then you probably want to just get a single label for the whole site. Such a label contains just the url of your site and not a specific file.

A branch of a site would then be a specific area of that site such as http://www.icra.org/support. It may be that your site – the bit you control – is actually a branch of a much larger site of which you have no direct control. This is true of some of the large internet communities for example. You’re labelling a branch, not the whole community.

You may also wish to label a specific area of your site differently from the rest. For example, you may have a chat/message board area. OK, label the whole site as NOT having this, but then add a second branch label which does declare the chat. The url in branch labels ends with the name of a directory (folder) on your site, not a specific file name.

In both site-wide and branch labels, you’ll see the term “gen true”. This is an abbreviation for “generic true” and simply means that every page whose address begins with the url quoted in the label will be rated according to that label.

If you label a single page then you’ll see the term “gen false”. This means that only the page carrying the label is rated. That label will not be applied to any other page. The url in such labels should end with a specific file name such as page1.htm.

A generic ‘branch’ or ‘ entire site’ label should not be created unless it can be legitimately applied to all documents whose URL begins with the prefix specified in the “for” option.


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The ICRA descriptors were determined through a process of international consultation trying to establish descriptors that would give reasonable international consistency. Some descriptors merit additional definitions, because of ambiguities that may arise in the process of translation and to help content providers deal with descriptors that have subjective elements.

General comments
“..images, portrayals or descriptions…” Any presentation including, but not limited to, pictures, no matter how crudely drawn or depicted, written descriptions, oral recitations, and or audio sounds.
Neutral and objective Note that each descriptor aims at being as neutral and objective as possible, which means that if a site contains depictions of for instance female breasts, that box should be checked. If on a large site, only a small proportion of the content contains certain depictions, you may want to consider labelling that section separately.
“..young children…” The ICRA international reference group strongly suggested that the categories should reflect a parents concern for young children. For many members of the expert group, young was perceived as under the age of 12.
If in doubt… …please try to see the material as you think it would be perceived by a reasonable person without any cultural, religious or other bias, when he or she is to determine whether the material is appropriate for young children. Although the descriptors aim at being neutral, there may material where classification is not obvious. Reply in a way that you feel honestly does not mislead cautious parents.
Nudity and Sexual Material
Erections or female genitals in detail, Male genitals, Female genitals, Female breasts, Bare buttocks
  –combined with
Explicit sexual acts, Obscured or implied sexual acts, Visible sexual touching, Passionate kissing.
Not only each descriptor, but the combination of descriptors describes the content. Depictions of genitals may exist in a non sexual context (e.g. naturism and nudism).
Violence
Blood and gore The portrayal of blood splashing, pools of blood on the ground, objects or persons smeared or stained with blood.
Other topics
Promotion of discrimination or harm against people: Promotion of discrimination or harm against any group or person by virtue of membership in a group or based on gender, sexual orientation or ethnic, religious or national identity.

Discrimination in this context is defined as treating differently. This is a broad category including but not limited to, advocating ethnic supremacy, gender discrimination etc. The option allows you to mark expressions to which parents may choose not to expose their children.

Material that might be perceived as setting a bad example for young children: This is a range of criteria often found in rating of film and may include a number of actions which depending on the context, could make it a concern for parents of young children. For example: picking locks, theft, urinating in public, bomb making, fraud, vandalism or violations of local customs / laws.
Material that might disturb young children: This is a range of criteria often found in rating of film and may include a number of actions which depending on the context, could make it a concern for parents of young children. For example: material intended to invoke fear, horror, suicide, threats, humiliation, psychological terror, death, suffering, pain, punishment, bullying, abandonment, dramatic accidents, [confusing elements of] irony or parody.
Chat
Chat If the site offers chat, this box should be checked unless the pages, branches or directory containing chat is labelled separately. Labelling branches or pages containing chat separately may be a good idea so children are not barred from otherwise useful material.
Moderated chat suitable for children and teens Note that this category does not say young children and includes teens. Checking this box is a positive statement that all chat that the label describes is both moderated and suitable for children. If some of the chat is unmoderated, do not check this checkbox.
None of the above This box should be only be checked if the site either does not contain chat rooms, or the page(s) or branch(es) containing chat are marked separately as containing chat.
Context
… appears in a context intended to be artistic/medical/educational… The first part of the statement refers to the intention. Classical painting and sculpture can be assumed to be intended as artistic. Material designed to teach children about sex, would qualify as intended as educational. However…
and is suitable young for children … the context descriptor also requires a (subjective) pledge that the material is suitable for young children. Material of an explicit violent or sexual nature, even if intended as artistic/medical/educational, may not be suitable for young children. This additional statement encourages caution when claiming “redeeming context”.
Example

Botticelli’s Birth of Venus contains a female breast and that box must be checked as it qualifies objectively. However, as:

  1. the intention can reasonably be assumed to be artistic, and
  2. in many cultures it is not unreasonable to assert that it is suitable for young children,

the artistic context checkbox can also be checked.

Note that if a template provider deems female breasts offensive regardless of context, they can write a rule that blocks female breasts even when appearing in a context. Or they can choose to allow “female breasts” in an artistic context, but block “erections” in an artistic context, thus allowing the Birth of Venus but blocking ancient, artistic depictions of erections. This fine degree of control is only available in templates and not directly to users of ICRAfilter which only allows context modifiers to be applied to all nudity and sexual material, or all violent material in one go.

This material … only appears in a sports related context Material that satisfy the criteria under violence, but appears only in a sports context, e.g. a site dedicated to boxing but does not contain other depictions of violence.

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