yea but in reality no one is going to know or care. I don't think some one would go through the effort even if they could to prove some data sent over the air had the word fuck on a web page.
You are pretty badly mistaken here. People will call you out on HAM bands for much smaller transgressions than this. And some folks really do love sending complaints to FCC/whatever-your-local-authority-is-called.
It isn't about the word "fuck" or something else on a webpage but you will be breaking the restrictions on:
1) Carrying commercial (= public internet) traffic over HAM links - explicitly illegal for amateur radio service. This alone would get you busted and is trivial to prove.
2) Allowing unlicensed operators to operate HAM gear without supervision is not legal - depending on where you live, this rule is sometimes applied to a remote machine (router/server/whatever) connecting through your HAM link and thus "operating" your transmitter. This is often a grey area and very much depends on how hard the local regulator decides to throw the book at you.
E.g. in Slovenia they were using their high speed packet radio network to connect to the Internet but it wasn't legal to build something like that in Slovakia where I am from because of this rule, even back in the day when the Slovak internet was strictly non-commercial, academic network (so wouldn't break the point 1)
3) Encryption/scramblers/etc are not legal neither
So if you are planning on breaking the law, don't do it on HAM frequencies - unlike the other bands (ISM, CB, PMR ...) where you are going to get caught only if you interfere with something that someone does care about or it is a government service (police, airports, etc.), on HAM frequencies many people are actually listening and you
will get your backside busted sooner or later.
The fines are pretty juicy and even if you don't get fined, getting a surprise visit and having to show all your papers, logbook, have your gear inspected and measured with the government techs looking for the smallest problem to fine you on is not a fun experience. I know one HAM who had to go through this several times - because of an asshole neighbor not liking his antennas sending bogus complaints about interference to the regulator's office.
Not to mention that this is a pretty
attitude, especially if you have or are planing to get a HAM license.