Just out of curiosity, has nobody ever yet noted / discussed here the fact that many of the pre-set user images (those fractals, I forget what they're called) resemble a Swastika?

Random examples:

http://stackoverflow.com/users/74311/josh-davis

http://stackoverflow.com/users/49942/chrisw

http://stackoverflow.com/users/145/akdom

http://stackoverflow.com/users/672/josephstyons

I guess it's just the algorithm, but it has caught my eye a number of times.

Edit: I was somewhat surprised to come back here and find the place such a mess. I thought the way I wrote it in made clear that I in no way implied any intentional background to this, and assumed a characteristic in the algorithm, and was merely surprised it has not been mentioned in some form in a community as huge as this one, because I think they do catch your eye. But well, maybe it's because as a german, I have been extremely exposed to, and made sensitive to, 3rd Reich history. I am aware of the rich and diversified history of the Swastika before 1933 and after, and with the many perfectly innocent meanings it has in Buddhism and whatnot. I was just curious, is all, and asking whether it has ever caught anybody else's eye. There's neither need to make that a big deal out of it, nor to be that rude.

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66% accept rate
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GODWIN'S LAW! GODWIN' S LAW! GODWIN'S LAW! GODWIN' S LAW! – Super Long Names are Hilarious Dec 6 '09 at 3:17
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reclaimtheswastika.com – bobobobo Dec 6 '09 at 3:31
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@random, I'm disappointed that in your edit, you didn't do something with the fact that he called the samples by your name ... :) – John Rudy Dec 6 '09 at 5:25
I give up. Needs hand-drawn swastika overlays... (with drop-shadows) – Shog9 Dec 6 '09 at 5:48
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I refuse to upvote this question, but can I give @random 10 of my rep for the triptacular psychedelic freehand swastikas? (I think this might be the first time in history someone put that particular sentence together ... ) – John Rudy Dec 6 '09 at 7:20
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Re-tagged this more appropriately – waffles Dec 6 '09 at 7:38
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Pekka is right, the quarter-segment mirroring does make a small fraction of these images (faintly) resemble a swastika. I had notices it too. Not a big problem, but I don't think this deserves this kind of ridicule either. And random's edit is really silly and unhelpful. – Henk Holterman Dec 6 '09 at 12:21
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random's edits are never unhelpful and always fun! – Ladybug Killer Dec 6 '09 at 16:00
Pekka: I'll respect your wishes to have your text left there, but I put you back on the appropriate tags. – John Rudy Dec 6 '09 at 16:46
Yes, sorry, put them back. I didn't see what you edited. – Pekka Dec 6 '09 at 16:49
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I don't mind the downvotes nor the question being closed - it wasn't that important anyway - but blatantly offensive? You've lost me here. – Pekka Dec 7 '09 at 12:22
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To anyone thinking of Nazis, you do realize that those are not Nazi Swastikas right? The Nazi Swastika takes the normal one (usually used by Buddhists, etc.), flips it around, then rotates it 45°, then colors it black and puts it in a white circle on a red field. These are all important transformations that need to be applied for it to be considered a Nazi symbol. Therefore, there is no reason for any mildly educated, non-ignorant person to give so much as a second thought to it. Hope that helps. – Synetech Aug 21 '11 at 16:39
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I think the algorithm simply creates a random square from some preset geometric primitives and then rotates the square pi/2, pi, and 3pi/2, arranging the results in the corners of a larger square. Mine was surprising when I first saw it, but I was happy since I have spent time in India and Tibet photographing them. They stimulate geometric processing in the eye that helps decompose symmetries in it's information, and are seen from cave paintings to children. It is untrue that Hindus or Buddhist use the anti-Nazi form - I've seen maybe a 70/30 spread favoring the Nazi form, but they use both. – ex0du5 Aug 24 '11 at 20:16
the pro-Nazi or anti-Nazi swastikas is a myth. Nazis used both; moreover, their flags were double-sided, so one was CW and the other - CCW. Pre-Nazi history of swastika means nothing to the victims of Nazi persecution. Any attempt to rehabilitate swastika in Western discourse is an attempt to diminish the memory of the horrors of Nazi persecution and campaigns of mass murder perpetrated under the symbol of swastika. – Will Ness Apr 11 at 11:11
@Synetech wrong. No black swastikas on golden Service Cross. Swastika is a geometric figure - a cross with 4 bent equal arms. On whatever background. All these distinctions are bogus. Whatever its history pre-Nazis, swastika is forever associated with Nazism now. – Will Ness Apr 11 at 11:18
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closed as off topic by GEOCHET, random, waffles, Ether, Troggy Dec 6 '09 at 18:29

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4 Answers

First off, it's a random hash algorithm -- they have no meaning, intent nor implied, and are abstract. Thus, you'll see whatever it is you want to see in it. For example, I see ninja throwing stars in Josh Davis and ChrisW, and laser kaleidoscopes in Akdom and JosephStyons. (And how the heck did you come up with swastikas in those latter two? I'm trying really hard and don't see them!)

Second, the swastika was and remains a sacred symbol to many cultures. For example, in my last apartment, many of my neighbors in the building had the Hindu swastikas painted on their doorsteps.

Unfortunately, the Nazis co-opted and corrupted it, and many of us who are not familiar with its historical and cultural significance elsewhere (and that included me, until just a few years ago) will permanently associate it with pure evil.

Side note: I don't know if it's been replaced in the last decade or not, but the old Allentown, PA post office's floor is decorated with them. It, naturally, predates the second World War (built in 1934). (I noticed this when I lived there, and thought it odd, but to be fair I thought just about everything in the Lehigh Valley was odd as a native Chicagoan.)

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+1 for the pure evil link :) – Amarghosh Dec 6 '09 at 14:25
Even with your update, I still disagree that many of them look like swastikas. Yes, some of them (due to the specific algorithm) have a tangential similarity, but there's a huge difference between those and this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Nazi_Swastika.svg. I think that if you're seeing this imagery in gravatars, you're probably looking too hard. – John Rudy Dec 6 '09 at 17:22
wrong, this is not a random algorithm. It obviously has spiral symmetry to it; obviously has 4-symmetry to it; obviously has center coinciding with the center of the square image it fills up. All characteristics that are bound to produce swastika-like images en masse. All characteristics that could have been easily changed, or not used in the first place. It would more then suffice just to move the generated image off-center to kill the effect, but Gravatar couldn't be bothered. Why, with such massive swastika apologetics as found here in the comments, why would they bother???? – Will Ness Apr 13 at 2:21
and yes, of course, the pure evil stuff is something to make light of. Very funny. – Will Ness Apr 13 at 2:26
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I think you're looking too deeply into this, I really had to screw my eyes up to see them as Swastika symbols. But anyway, what's the problem if they were? It's a commonly used symbol by many ancient and modern day belief systems, way before the Nazi's co-opted it as their moniker.

Think of them as Jainism symbols instead:

Jainism

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Cheers, I updated by question, response there. – Pekka Dec 6 '09 at 16:47
I once read that the Knights Templar used them, but apparently that was only partly correct. It wasn’t the Crusade knights that used it, but rather, the New Templars, who in 1907, used it as a symbol for Aryans (ie, the basis for the Nazi usage). Oh well. – Synetech Aug 21 '11 at 16:33
You don't get to tell the victims of Nazi persecution and mass murder campaign to think of Jainism instead. That suggestion is extremely offensive in itself. You of course are perfectly in your own right to not get offended by the main Nazi symbol and instead interpret it as a symbol of strength, joy, Sun, eternal life or the supremacy of white race, exactly as the Nazis themselves interpreted it as the symbol of life, joy and strength. All very positive things no doubt. – Will Ness Apr 13 at 2:12
@WillNess - seriously?? – Kev Apr 13 at 4:21
@Kev very much. Speaking of Great Famine, wasn't it great there was not so much obesity in Ireland at the time ?!!?! – Will Ness Apr 13 at 10:56
@WillNess - if you have a point to make then ask a new question on this site explaining your grievance. Please stop spamming the comments here with ill-founded accusations that our community is making light of Nazi persecution, which is frankly outrageous. – Kev Apr 13 at 12:23
I responded to your post here. It was you who suggested we forget the Nazis and "think ... Jainism instead" when we see swastikas. Not the "community" - which has been, though, rather dishearteningly absent here, for more than two years. – Will Ness Apr 14 at 21:53
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I'm not seeing it in those images..?

Where is the swastika here?

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This one took me a LONG freakin' time, but I finally realized that if you imagine a reversed swastika (bars bent counter-clockwise instead of clockwise), and squint really hard, and had your mind set on seeing one, then you could find one here. I still like kaleidoscope lasers, though. – John Rudy Dec 6 '09 at 3:45
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Right here -> 卍 – John Gietzen Dec 6 '09 at 7:30
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(卐 Hooray for Unicode swastikas! 卍) – John Gietzen Dec 6 '09 at 7:31
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Technically it's not a swastika, it's actually a 'Sauwastika' which is the name for the reversed swastika. – Kev Dec 6 '09 at 16:09
Agreed. Other than the first example, the rest are a stretch at best. Whenever I see shapes in this general form, I don’t think of them as Swastikas, I think of them as rotors. – Synetech Aug 21 '11 at 16:30
I am very offended by this lightheaded, cavalier, dishonest attitude towards this problem. Swastikas offend people - especially those related to victims of Nazi mass murder campaign, done under the symbol of the swastika. Yes swastika has other history preceding this; but the Nazi episode is the last, and very raw yet in memory of the victims. You don't get to dismiss it so easily. Any attempt to mainstream the swastika is the attempt to diminish the memory of the Nazi horrors perpetrated under its symbol. – Will Ness Apr 11 at 10:44
Now, about dishonesty - the visual perception kicks in on the small images. No one "sees" anything on big images, so bringing up big image is dishonest. It is the small images that are the problem, and it is the small images that show up everywhere on SE - under questions, and under answers. Gravatar uses algorithm that is bound to produce many swastika-like images, because it uses spiral 4-symmetry on square images. Either algorithm has to be changed, or simple button added allowing user to regenerate their image upon request. You just add time-tag to their e-mail when used as seed value. – Will Ness Apr 11 at 10:48
So the problem is real, and your dismissal of it is dishonest. The remedy is simple for you to implement (the "regenerate-image" button that would add new time-tag to the user's email address, sent to Gravatar). You MUST address this problem, because it is very offensive to the victims and relatives of victims of Nazi persecution. Pre-Nazi history of swastika in other parts of the world means nothing compared to this. Attempts to rehabilitate swastika in Western discourse is favorite pastime of the neo-nazis; please do not join them in this. – Will Ness Apr 11 at 10:51
case in point - here. Click on "less info" in the profile page if you must, to see the smaller image. It is clear as day swastika. CW or CCW doesn't matter, the flags used by the Nazis were always double sided - one side was CW, and the other CCW. Or look at that user's signature here, under a question they asked. Because of different color background, it is even more pronounced there. – Will Ness Apr 11 at 11:00
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Not the first one to notice it, and certainly not the last. Nothing to pay any mind to, unless you really think this site is populated by 3,000+ neo-Nazis...

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Apparently sarcasm escapes some. – Kaji Dec 6 '09 at 13:22
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