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R 18+ and X 18+ restricted classifications are not permitted for free-to-air broadcast in Australia. Many R 18+ movies on DVD/Blu-ray are often edited on Free TV/cable networks, to secure an MA 15+ classification or lower. Some movies that were classified R 18+ on DVD have since been aired on Australian TV with an MA 15+ classification.
An example of a rating, which is TV-14 with all content descriptors (D, L, S, and V) Some thematic elements, according to the FCC, "may call for parental guidance and/or the program may contain one or more of the following" sub-ratings, designated with an alphabetic letter: [11] [12] D – Sexual or suggestive dialogue (not used with the TV-MA ...
A comparison of current mobile software rating systems, showing age on the horizontal axis. Note however that the specific criteria used in assigning a classification can vary widely from one country/system to another. Thus a color code or age range cannot be directly compared from one country to another. Key:
Before 2015, unlike the theatrical ratings, only three are applied to video releases and printed on labels: General Audience (G) for films previously rated G in cinemas, Parental Guidance (PG) for most PG and some R-13 or R-16 titles (with cuts for the R-ratings), and Restricted For Adults (R) for some R-13, many R-16, and most R-18 titles ...
Parental Guidance (PG) The program may contain content that is unsuitable for children , and require a parent or legal guardian to monitor. While the rating is merely an advisory that is not legally enforced, distributors/providers must prominently display this rating in marketing and/or at the start of the program.
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Final rounds of training additionally dropped 10% of text conditioning to improve Classifier-Free Diffusion Guidance. [29] The model was trained using 256 Nvidia A100 GPUs on Amazon Web Services for a total of 150,000 GPU-hours, at a cost of $600,000. [30] [31] [32] SD3 was trained at a cost of around $10 million. [33]
This content classification system originally was to have three ratings, with the intention of allowing parents to take their children to any film they chose. However, the National Association of Theatre Owners urged the creation of an adults-only category, fearful of possible legal problems in local jurisdictions.