▲ | andrewpolidori 2 days ago | |||||||||||||
Your analogy falls flat because they have to connect to the website, not the other way around. You can't argue that someone requesting access to a page is the same as delivering a book into their borders. They can choose to block access but the website doesn't operate there or owe them anything. They choose to be apart of the connected network, no one forces them. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | alphager 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
This is the same thing as suing a NY newspaper in Florida because their website is accessible from Florida. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | louthy 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
> Your analogy falls flat because they have to connect to the website, not the other way around It’s not my analogy, I’m just running with it ;) But to run with it more: connecting to the website is analogous to an order. Like a person ordering a book or a patron ordering a drink at a bar. The bartender must ask for ID if they suspect the person is not of age. If a book was illegal in a location then I think it could be argued that delivering it to the location could be akin to smuggling contraband. So I don’t think your reasoning gets you off criminal liability. By the way, this is all academic. These laws won’t be enforced. It’s all nonsense. There’ll be some public knuckle wraps for the big providers, but that’ll be it. If you’re a business that falls foul of the laws, you should still adhere to them. But if you’re a small, self hosted site, nothing will happen. The uk police have no resource for something like this and so unless you’re completely egregious, I think it’s not worth worrying about. | ||||||||||||||
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