This is a personal digital museum preserving and publicly sharing electrical plug and socket designs from around the world. The site demonstrates implicit respect for multiple UDHR provisions through its structural practices: explicit commitment to privacy (no cookies), respect for intellectual property through attribution requirements, and broad cultural participation through free, passwordless access to a globally representative collection. While not explicitly advancing human rights advocacy, the museum's architecture reflects quiet alignment with rights to cultural participation, education, and privacy.
Almost always when I'm in a country that does not have European (CEE) plugs and sockets, I feel uncomfortable. All CEE combinations have very solid touch protection. It's almost impossible to touch a metal pin of a plug when it's so close to the socket that it might have contact.
When I the see the "flat" style sockets plus the full-metal pins I wonder if it's just a bad feeling or if way more people gets accidentally electrocuted with that kind of plugs/socket than with our CEE types.
Grateful to the human who built this and finds it interesting enough to keep at it. A valuable resource indeed, available to all of humanity! Well done!
Due to health issues, no updates to the Plugs and Sockets website are expected in the coming months. Email contact may also be affected.
For the time being, please do not send any material that might be interesting to add to the website.
Next year, I shall make a decision about the future of the collection and website. Wait and see.
August 2025
I agree (Except British plugs which are also fine if made properly¹).
Denmark made installing CEE (the French version) sockets legal in 2011, but the only place I've seen one is a friend's house — he's German and swapped the sockets when he bought it.
¹ Hong Kong also uses British plugs, and this seems to have led some Chinese manufacturers to make non-compliant, unsafe plugs which fit — and nowadays with Amazon, AliExpress etc selling any old rubbish they are sometimes seen in Britain.
Despite being fairly careless when handling them, I've managed a fair few decades without once shocking myself.
With that being said, I would be delighted with CEE, BS or almost anything other than NEMA anything.
The 120v plugs aren't the worst thing since they usually have some good gripping points, and the 50 amp plugs usually have a handle on the back, but the 30 amp plugs typically have no finger indentation at all for gripping and I feel like my fingers are going to slip over and around every time I pull one out.
US style plugs and derivatives (and Australian, Japanese, Brazilian, etc) - all invented by Hubbell - are "good enough".
Are they objectively good? No. Do they regularly fail, cause fires, or shock people? No.
Even my kids when young understood how to grip the plug without touching the metal contacts and to this day still have not been shocked. In theory can something fall and hit the pins just right to cause a short? Sure. You could also get struck by lightning. In practice it just doesn't happen very often.
For the US/North American NEMA style there are some improvements and some clever things about them. Modern receptacles have shutter doors that stop you from putting anything into the holes unless the ground pin or neutral pin unlocks it first. Many plugs also cover the rear part of the hot/neutral with plastic so if the plug is not fully inserted there is no exposed metal.
The plugs also prevent mixing voltage and amperage. The typical two vertical blades (5-15) are for 15 amp circuits. 20 amp circuits (5-20) have one horizontal + one vertical blade. The receptacle has a T shaped slot to match - that way you can plug a low-amp device into a high-amp circuit but not the reverse.
Similarly the 240v version of this plug (6-15/6-20) has the same property: 15amp and 20amp versions. The 15 amp is two horizontal blades. The 20 amp is one horizontal + 1 vertical but swapped places compared to the 120v version. I do wish more builders installed the 240v receptacles in kitchens in the US. There is no technical reason we can't have higher power kettles and whatnot. If code required these in garages and kitchens more appliances would be available for them.
(I find it insane that Brazil continues to be dual exclusive voltage; all of North America is dual concurrent voltage. Every home/office has 120v and 240v available. In Brazil it depends on what state/city you live in - some get 120v, some get 240v. Even worse they use the same standard plug design for both so you'd better hope the plug is the right color or has the right sticker. And you can't be sure you can take electrical appliances from one city to the next! At least they should have adopted different plugs for different voltages.)
The huge advantage of these plugs is compatibility. We already have them. The cost to change designs is massive. The benefit extremely small. It just isn't worth doing.
Note: The 240v NEMA plugs I am referencing are not "dryer plugs" which are physically much* larger and designed for much higher amp loads in the 30-60 range. The 6-15/6-20 are literally identical to the standard 120v plugs but with different blade orientations. They were designed to support 240v appliances in everyday use since all of North America is dual voltage. In practice 240v is only ever used for large appliances like ovens so the 6 series doesn't get much use which is a bit of a shame.
Site explicitly aims to preserve and present material culture (plugs/sockets) from 'all over the world', directly supporting participation in cultural life.
Observable Facts
Page title describes 'Museum of Plugs and Sockets' with collection showing 'variety of plugs and sockets from all over the world.'
Museum remains open to public with 'ENTER MUSEUM' access and 'no password required.'
Site preserves cultural heritage through documentation dating back to 2009, with 'Most recent update: July 14, 2025.'
Acknowledgments and donor recognition embed community participation in cultural preservation.
Inferences
The museum's explicit focus on global material diversity directly supports UDHR Article 27's mandate for participation in cultural life.
Free, open-access structure demonstrates structural commitment to cultural participation rights across economic/social boundaries.
International scope reflects respect for cultural expressions beyond dominant Western electrical standards.
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Article 12Privacy
Medium Practice
Editorial
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SETL
-0.20
Site explicitly states 'no cookies', signaling editorial transparency about privacy protection practices.
Observable Facts
Page text explicitly states 'no cookies' in the header section.
No password required for museum access.
Page contains no obvious tracking mechanisms or third-party scripts mentioned.
Inferences
The explicit 'no cookies' statement suggests curator awareness of privacy as a user right.
Passwordless access structure indicates intentional design to protect privacy while enabling broad participation.
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Article 26Education
Medium Practice
Editorial
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SETL
0.00
Site functions as educational resource preserving and sharing knowledge about global electrical design history and standards.
Observable Facts
Page describes museum as 'displaying an amazing variety of plugs and sockets from all over the world.'
Site includes detailed acknowledgments, site map, and documentation sections supporting educational engagement.
Free access with 'no password required' enables broad educational participation.
Inferences
The museum's documentation and organization of global plug diversity serves an educational function about engineering standards.
Making the collection freely accessible removes barriers to educational participation across populations.
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Article 17Property
Medium Practice
Editorial
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SETL
0.00
Site includes copyright notice and explicit reproduction guidelines that respect intellectual property rights of creator and contributors.
Page includes explicit reproduction guidelines: 'Reproduction of images and texts is allowed if the source...and the internet address...are clearly indicated.'
Acknowledgments section credits donor contributors with {NN} type abbreviations.
Inferences
The detailed reproduction guidance demonstrates respect for both creator and contributor property rights.
Attribution requirements embedded in the site policy suggest commitment to property rights recognition.
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Article 19Freedom of Expression
Medium Practice
Editorial
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SETL
-0.17
Site explicitly welcomes comments and questions, signaling openness to receiving expressions and feedback from visitors.
Observable Facts
Page states 'Comments and questions are appreciated.'
Museum is described as open to public with 'ENTER MUSEUM' call-to-action.
Site map and links provide navigation to access information.
Inferences
The welcoming framing toward comments suggests respect for visitor expression rights.
Free, passwordless access structure supports freedom to seek and share information.
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Article 24Rest & Leisure
Low Practice
Editorial
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SETL
0.00
Museum serves as leisure and recreational resource, supporting public access to cultural and intellectual pursuits.
Observable Facts
Museum is described as displaying 'an amazing variety of plugs and sockets from all over the world.'
Site provides free, passwordless access for public leisure engagement.
Inferences
The museum's existence as a publicly accessible collection supports the right to rest and leisure through cultural engagement.
Framing as 'amazing variety' suggests appreciation of collection as recreational/intellectual resource.
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Article 29Duties to Community
Low Practice
Editorial
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SETL
0.00
Site acknowledges duties to community through formal recognition of donors and contributors to the collection.
Observable Facts
Page includes 'Acknowledgments' section noting 'donors of material are indicated with {NN} type abbreviations. Acknowledgments give full names.'
Site explicitly thanks contributors for community participation in collection building.
Inferences
The formal acknowledgment structure recognizes that the collection's existence depends on community contribution and obligation.
Attribution system reflects understanding that cultural preservation is a shared community responsibility.
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Article 20Assembly & Association
Low Practice
Editorial
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SETL
-0.14
Site includes links to other collections and forums, facilitating assembly and association with related communities.
Observable Facts
Page mentions 'Links to other collections and forums' in site navigation.
Acknowledgments section includes references to external contributors.
Inferences
Linking to external collections facilitates community connection and shared interest organization.
The site functions as a node in a broader network of cultural institutions and enthusiasts.
ND
PreamblePreamble
Content does not engage with preamble themes of universal dignity and fundamental human rights.
ND
Article 1Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
No engagement with equality or inherent dignity principles.
ND
Article 2Non-Discrimination
No engagement with non-discrimination principles.
ND
Article 3Life, Liberty, Security
No engagement with right to life, liberty, or personal security.
ND
Article 4No Slavery
No engagement with slavery or servitude.
ND
Article 5No Torture
No engagement with torture or cruel treatment.
ND
Article 6Legal Personhood
No engagement with right to recognition as person.
ND
Article 7Equality Before Law
No engagement with equality before law.
ND
Article 8Right to Remedy
No engagement with remedy for violations.
ND
Article 9No Arbitrary Detention
No engagement with arbitrary arrest.
ND
Article 10Fair Hearing
No engagement with fair trial.
ND
Article 11Presumption of Innocence
No engagement with criminal law fairness.
ND
Article 13Freedom of Movement
No engagement with freedom of movement.
ND
Article 14Asylum
No engagement with right to asylum.
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Article 15Nationality
No engagement with nationality.
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Article 16Marriage & Family
No engagement with marriage or family.
ND
Article 18Freedom of Thought
No engagement with freedom of conscience or religion.
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Article 21Political Participation
No engagement with political participation.
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Article 22Social Security
No engagement with social security.
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Article 23Work & Equal Pay
No engagement with right to work.
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Article 25Standard of Living
No engagement with adequate standard of living.
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Article 28Social & International Order
No engagement with social and international order.
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Article 30No Destruction of Rights
No engagement with destruction of rights.
Structural Channel
What the site does
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Article 27Cultural Participation
High Practice
Structural
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Context Modifier
ND
SETL
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Museum infrastructure—collection preservation, public accessibility, international scope—materially enables cultural participation. Free, passwordless access removes barriers; global collection reflects cultural diversity.
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Article 12Privacy
Medium Practice
Structural
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Context Modifier
ND
SETL
-0.20
Absence of cookie/tracking infrastructure represents structural respect for privacy rights. No authentication barriers to information access.
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Article 19Freedom of Expression
Medium Practice
Structural
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Context Modifier
ND
SETL
-0.17
Public museum structure with free access and invitation for communication enables visitors to seek and receive information without barriers.
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Article 26Education
Medium Practice
Structural
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Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00
Museum structure provides free public access to educational collection organized by geography and design, enabling learning participation.
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Article 17Property
Medium Practice
Structural
+0.20
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00
Website structure enforces attribution requirements: reproduction permitted only 'if the source...are clearly indicated.'
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Article 20Assembly & Association
Low Practice
Structural
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Context Modifier
ND
SETL
-0.14
Hyperlink structure connects visitors to broader community of plug/socket enthusiasts and institutions.
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Article 24Rest & Leisure
Low Practice
Structural
+0.20
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00
Open museum structure enables visitors to engage in leisure activity without cost or barriers.
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Article 29Duties to Community
Low Practice
Structural
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Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00
Acknowledgments section and donor attribution system structure community obligations into site function.
ND
PreamblePreamble
No structural signals relevant to preamble principles.
ND
Article 1Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 2Non-Discrimination
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 3Life, Liberty, Security
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 4No Slavery
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 5No Torture
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 6Legal Personhood
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 7Equality Before Law
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 8Right to Remedy
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 9No Arbitrary Detention
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 10Fair Hearing
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 11Presumption of Innocence
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 13Freedom of Movement
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 14Asylum
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 15Nationality
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 16Marriage & Family
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 18Freedom of Thought
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 21Political Participation
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 22Social Security
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 23Work & Equal Pay
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 25Standard of Living
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 28Social & International Order
No structural signals relevant.
ND
Article 30No Destruction of Rights
No structural signals relevant.
Supplementary Signals
Epistemic Quality
0.67
Propaganda Flags
0techniques detected
Solution Orientation
No data
Emotional Tone
No data
Stakeholder Voice
No data
Temporal Framing
No data
Geographic Scope
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Complexity
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Transparency
No data
Event Timeline
6 events
2026-02-27 00:24
eval_success
Evaluated: Strong positive (0.79)
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2026-02-26 22:36
eval_success
Light evaluated: Neutral (0.03)
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2026-02-26 22:16
dlq
Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Museum of Plugs and Sockets