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which of the following describes sensitive co...

Sensitive content is generally material that could reasonably cause distress, offence, or harm to people who encounter it, especially around topics like identity, violence, trauma, or privacy. In many policies and exam questions, it’s described as content that needs extra care, limits, or protection because of its potential emotional, psychological, or safety impact.

Core idea in one line

Sensitive content is any text, image, audio, or video that, if seen or shared without care, could upset, traumatize, offend, or endanger individuals or groups.

Typical elements of “sensitive content”

When a question asks “which of the following describes sensitive content…”, the correct option usually includes ideas like:

  • Content that may trigger strong negative emotions (fear, distress, re‑traumatization) in viewers or readers.
  • Material that could reasonably be considered disturbing, offensive, or inappropriate for some audiences.
  • Data or information that must be protected because disclosure could harm a person or organization (for example, personal, financial, or security‑related information).
  • Topics that are especially charged in relation to race, religion, gender, sexuality, disability, or other aspects of identity.

A wrong option, by contrast, would usually describe ordinary, harmless content that does not risk emotional harm, offence, or privacy/security issues.

Common categories used in policies and exams

Educators, platforms, and organizations often include examples like:

  • Violence and injury (graphic accidents, war footage, depictions of serious harm).
  • Abuse and trauma (sexual abuse, domestic violence, torture, self‑harm, suicide).
  • Hate and discrimination (racism, antisemitism, Islamophobia, homophobia, transphobia, misogyny).
  • Sexual or explicit material (pornography or highly explicit sexual content).
  • Personal and confidential data (medical records, financial details, identification numbers, highly identifying personal information).

Any option that emphasizes potential harm, distress, offence, or the need for protection/limited access is the one that “describes sensitive content” most accurately.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.