https://www.woodhullfoundation.org/porn-does-not-incite-violence/ Interesting article with the Woodhull Freedom Foundation.
As a nit though, I have to point out, that if something involves a "taboo", then there's a good chance that that also got coded as "violence" by this methodology (even though that is not typically what comes to mind when someone says something is "violent"). That is what critics often point out. This is mainly for #3.
Well, these "I hate porn" people are extremely disingenuous, they're often (perhaps, paranoidly) pulling things out of their asses, or misrepresenting science... a lot... (more uncommonly) to try to come to a censorious position.
Also, censorship is about the most harmful thing that could be done, and it's not useful, and that is what they're about. They're not even remotely reasonable.
I don't really want to talk about specific people there, unless I have to. They're not worth it.
https://web.archive.org/web/20240218013044/https://legislature.vermont.gov/bill/status/2024/S.289 #KOSA-like censorship bill introduced in Vermont. #AADC
https://www.freespeechcoalition.com/blog/fsc-meets-with-baroness-conducting-review-of-uk-pornography-laws The Free Speech Coalition (no, not the one you are thinking of, the other one) meets puritanical anti-porn Tory appointee* who wants to censor porn in the #UK.
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabrielle_Bertin%2C_Baroness_Bertin
A new report, in collaboration with Corporate Watch UK, outlines how Capita is paid millions of taxpayers’ ££ on cruel contracts for the UK Home Office.
From GPS tagging of refugees to social listening tools for UK police to spy on activists - their reach is in every part of British life.
Read the report: https://corporatewatch.org/capita2024
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/feb/27/britain-reputation-rule-of-law-labour-three-pledges Cannabis is not the only unjust law I would like to see struck from British law, but yes, legalizing that would be good.
https://reclaimthenet.org/avast-anti-virus-company-is-fined-for-tracking-and-selling-user-data
"Avast, a well-known cybersecurity firm, has been confronted with a $16.5 million penalty from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)."
"Contrary to the firm’s promise of guarding consumer data against tracking on the web, the FTC claimed that they’ve been acting against their word. They’ve allegedly been gathering and marketing user browsing data unbeknownst to the users, and additionally misleading them."
https://reason.com/2024/02/26/feds-target-journalist-tim-burke-with-law-intended-for-hackers/ What do you think of this case? #FirstAmendment
@freezenet Skimming it, some things jump out:
"content that advocates self-harm, disordered eating or dying by suicide or that counsels a person to commit or engage in any of those acts"
Would euthanasia fall under that?
"if it is reasonable to suspect"
From "content used to bully a child". At scale in particular, what would that mean?
It appears to conflate some erotic literature / porn with victimization, even if the person being "victimized" does not exist. There appears to be a vague "artistic" exception, but I don't think that is sufficient (and it is constrained by vague "risks").
6 1 In theory, the legislation does not appear to apply to private messaging contexts?
55 1 "The operator of a regulated service must implement measures that are adequate to mitigate the risk that users of the service will be exposed to harmful content on the service."
"91 (1) Subject to subsection 92(1), an inspector may, for a purpose related to verifying compliance or preventing non-compliance with this Act, enter any place in which they have reasonable grounds to believe that there is any document, information or other thing relevant to that purpose."
7 2 It partially allows for mandating upload filters and other such things (a "Commission" appears to be responsible for dictating this).
Those bits might be of interest, although there are probably other things in there.
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/02/eff-statement-nevadas-attack-end-end-encryption
"EFF learned last week that the state of Nevada is seeking an emergency order prohibiting Meta from rolling out end-to-end encryption in Facebook Messenger for all users in the state under the age of 18."
"Encryption is the most vital means we have to protect privacy, which is especially important for young people online. Yet in the name of protecting children, Nevada seems to be arguing that merely offering encryption on a social media platform that Meta knows has been used by criminals is itself illegal. This cannot be the law; in practice it would let the state prohibit all platforms from offering encryption, and such a ruling would raise serious constitutional concerns."
🚨🚨 The UK government is trying to give itself more surveillance powers without regard for our right to privacy
The Investigatory Powers Amendment Bill, which is currently making its way through Parliament, is the latest power grab.
Its most concerning proposals could allow the intelligence services to harvest millions of facial images and social media data.
@SirTapTap Damn it, I've seen that manga before with the marine creatures with those weird things attached to them, but the name is always slipping my mind x.x
They also conflate real content with fantasy content, rely on misleading misrepresentations of the effects on porn, and typically, people like this conflate animated violence with realistic violence, and mild "aggression" with what might more typically be viewed as "aggression". To put it simply, it is a mess, and extremely problematic.
As it turns out though, they're looking for submissions. #ukpol
Software Engineer. Psy / Tech / Sex Science Enthusiast. Controversial?
Free Expression. Human rights / Civil Liberties. Anime. Liberal.