For explanations described higher than, the Department does not believe that it is sensible or beneficial for the Department to scrutinize each individual graphic, photo, and illustration in a recipient's publications to discern irrespective of whether these kinds of illustrations suggest, or indicate, different treatment that is not meant, not utilized, and not fairly perceived as these. Another commenter suggested that the Department demand recipients to publish all of a recipient's Title IX guidelines and strategies on their website in just one effortlessly obtainable PDF doc and located at a one web page connection. However, for the reasons explained previously mentioned, the Department believes that beneath Title IX, prohibiting recipients from making use of publications "stating" that the receiver discriminates beneath Title IX adequately advises recipients not to make these kinds of statements in publications, without unnecessarily scrutinizing recipients' publications' pics, graphics, and illustrations for a "suggestion" of discrimination where none is in fact practiced by the recipient, and in which statements in a publication do not express diverse treatment method on the foundation of intercourse. Discussion: The Department does not think that the reference in § 106.8(b)(2)(ii) to a recipient's publication as "stating" that the receiver does not treat individuals otherwise primarily based on sex instead of a publication that "suggests, by textual content or illustration" that a recipient treats folks in another way centered on sex, constitutes rejection or modification of the way that Federal courts have utilized sex stereotyping as a concept of sexual intercourse discrimination.