See anything wrong with the ad pictured here? Without those little circles the Post drew all over it, you might not know that it's filled with forbidden words. Laws like the Fair Housing Act explicitly prohibit the use of words like "exclusive," "private," or "family-friendly," in real estate ads, because they could be intended as discriminatory code to weed out buyers based on race, gender, occupation, religion, sexual orientation, marital status or disability. In response to a number of recent lawsuits, real estate company Corcoran has now officially banned more than 200 potentially "offensive" words and installed new software blocking brokers from typing them into their ads. Unsurprisingly, the new naughty word enforcement has exasperated some in the real estate industry. Corcoran VP Christine Toes says, "By saying 'walking distance,' I would be discriminating against those who are unable to walk. Hopefully, I can still use 'close proximity to public transportation.' " Nice—way to discriminate against cyclists!