US plans online portal to bypass content bans in Europe and elsewhere
370 points
by c420
1 day ago
| 81 comments
| reuters.com
| HN
https://freedom.gov
schoen
15 hours ago
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I just chaired a session at the FOCI conference earlier today, where people were talking about Internet censorship circumvention technologies and how to prevent governments from blocking them. I'd like to remind everyone that the U.S. government has been one the largest funders of that research for decades. Some of it is under USAGM (formerly BBG, the parent of RFE/RL)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Agency_for_Globa...

and some of it has been under the State Department, partly pursuant to the global Internet freedom program introduced by Hillary Clinton in 2010 when she was Secretary of State.

I'm sure the political and diplomatic valence is very different here, but the concept of "the U.S. government paying to stop foreign governments from censoring the Internet" is a longstanding one.

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pasc1878
5 hours ago
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RobotToaster
1 hour ago
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This new "portal" will most likely only allow de facto government controlled sites like X.
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Waterluvian
15 hours ago
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It’s a clear way to project soft power: make sure your message and culture can get through.
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iso1631
25 minutes ago
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Yet the US president unilaterally shut down Voice of America because he didn't like its message

Freedom of speech for me, not for thee

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Mikhail_Edoshin
8 hours ago
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And lies.
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b112
6 hours ago
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And truth.
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bayindirh
2 hours ago
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> > And lies.

> And truth.

In short, propaganda.

Propaganda (noun): Propaganda is communication that is primarily used to influence or persuade an audience to further an agenda, which may not be objective and may be selectively presenting facts to encourage a particular synthesis or perception, or using loaded language to produce an emotional rather than a rational response to the information that is being presented. Propaganda can be found in a wide variety of different contexts.[0]

[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Propaganda

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weregiraffe
27 minutes ago
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This definition is so broad it basically encompasses all communication.
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lostmsu
30 minutes ago
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And regular people talking their mind
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ekjhgkejhgk
4 hours ago
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You don't have to worry about projecting truth. The truth gets through. This is about projecting lies.
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ben_w
3 hours ago
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> The truth gets through.

It often doesn't at all, drowned amongst lies.

And sometimes it takes a lifetime or two.

It took Boris Yeltsin, who had just become the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union, actually visiting a random grocery store in Houston before he realised what the truth was:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1989_visit_by_Boris_Yeltsin_to...

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snowpid
2 hours ago
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most common people were aware of the cliff in economy between capitalist and communist states. Hence we had so many revolution and communism lost.

This was a communist apparatchik. Its like showing truth to MAGA people. Most wont accept it.

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ben_w
15 minutes ago
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> Its like showing truth to MAGA people. Most wont accept it.

Could be. That was the other example I was considering using besides Yeltsin, but I figured it would immediately get met with "no u" responses from those who, as you say, won't accept it. That makes for boring conversations where I learn nothing.

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lII1lIlI11ll
30 minutes ago
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> You don't have to worry about projecting truth. The truth gets through. This is about projecting lies.

I wouldn't be so sure. Significant part of Russian population believes that they are purging Ukraine of evil nazis, for example. Or that WW2 started on 22 June 1941.

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kalterdev
1 hour ago
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In other words, a free system is inevitably ruled by hypocrites, while in dictatorships they are rejected that opportunity. This is another variant of “in democracy, people cannot rule because they’re stupid.”

Statists, failing to admit their guilt, blame everyone but themselves.

And no, the truth does not get through, even after centuries.

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jwarden
1 hour ago
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What if the truth is that something is a lie?

Promoting truth and opposing lies are the same thing.

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backscratches
3 hours ago
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Truth does not get through.
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lucasRW
3 hours ago
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"The truth gets through."

Yeah I agree, we shouldn't be too concerned about Iran, Russia, or China, censoring the internet, the truth gets through.

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MASNeo
5 hours ago
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Worse, half-truths and half-lies.
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GoblinSlayer
3 hours ago
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That's why diversity of sources is the only way to escape censorship: you get one half truth from one source, another half truth from another source, then two halves make whole truth.
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ben_w
3 hours ago
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That's also trivial to manipulate; control the narrative, and you control the Overton window. People picking the middle of two fake options are still under the influence of whoever chose those options — just ask any stage magician.
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GoblinSlayer
2 hours ago
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Narrative is controlled by censorship.
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intended
2 hours ago
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This was the old world. In our world narrative control is not by restrictions, but by abundance. Flood the zone writ large.
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ben_w
2 hours ago
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And/or propaganda.

Everyone can feel censorship, everyone can learn what they're punished for saying.

Propaganda, though, that can feel like learning, like personal growth and development.

If censorship comes with a stick, propaganda is a carrot.

And today, we have as much of a problem with metaphorical obesity as with literal obesity.

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intended
2 hours ago
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This assumes you have the cognitive resources to do that. Most people just switch to someone they trust to avoid exactly this. Matter of fact, that was the major advantage of the net back in the day.
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locknitpicker
2 hours ago
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> That's why diversity of sources is the only way to escape censorship:

No, it's a page out of the old fascist playbook where flooding the stage with propaganda generates enough confusion to help fascists further their hateful agenda.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paradox_of_tolerance

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account42
5 minutes ago
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Fascism means diversity of opinions, democracy means everyone is only allowed to have the opinions you want them to have?
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gdubya
5 hours ago
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Ah, a new "WTF": Worse Than False!
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locknitpicker
2 hours ago
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> And truth.

The world is yet to find a single piece of truth coming out of the Trump administration. I mean, shall we discuss how Trump claims the Epstein files exonerate him when he is reported as directly, deeply, and personally involved in every single gruesome aspect of the criminal organization?

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nomilk
13 hours ago
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It might do that too, but access to information is just so utterly critical, and exponentially moreso in circumstances where government brutally cracks down on it, as we saw in Egypt during the Arab Spring and we're seeing in Iran presently.
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exe34
5 hours ago
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Will it work when the US government is the one cracking down, banning interviews, etc?
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account42
3 minutes ago
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That is a problem with no other country caring as much about free speech, not with the US having an anti-censorship program.
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AdamN
5 hours ago
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In some cases yes. Tor for instance was created by the USG and is not easily controlled by the USG.
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NuclearPM
10 hours ago
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Access to information is dangerous when the information is controlled propaganda.
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lucasRW
3 hours ago
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That's what Iran, China, and Russia are saying too, right ? :o)
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simianparrot
7 hours ago
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Yes Europe is in a really bad spot propaganda-wise. See Germany’s latest crusade against online «hate speech» — ie. unapproved political views.
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shevy-java
6 hours ago
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That does not compute.
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raincole
6 hours ago
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It computes quite well.

> It was a 2021 case involving Andy Grote, a local politician, that captured the country's attention. Grote complained about a tweet that called him a "pimmel," a German word for the male anatomy. His complaint triggered a police raid and accusations of excessive censorship by the government.

A police raid for calling a politician a dick. Let it sink.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/germany-online-hate-speech-pros...

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generic92034
5 hours ago
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That was a overall very rarely occurring abuse of power of a politician in charge of leading local law enforcement. It was declared illegal later. And you take that as a proof for what about the whole of Germany?
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raincole
4 hours ago
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> His unit has successfully prosecuted about 750 hate speech cases over the last four years.

It's just one of the sixteen units that prosecute 'hate speech' cases in Germany.

Oh, by the way, the Chancellor himself is calling to demolish online anonymity completely: https://dpa-international.com/politics/urn:newsml:dpa.com:20...

But sure, abuse of power is so rare. Nothing to see here.

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ben_w
3 hours ago
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> > His unit has successfully prosecuted about 750 hate speech cases over the last four years.

> But sure, abuse of power is so rare. Nothing to see here.

This would make your point if those hate speech cases were all the same as your Andy Grote example.

Otherwise it's like pointing at one defendant winning a road traffic law case due to dashcam footage showing the police were making things up, as evidence that all road traffic law prosecutions are abusing power.

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shafyy
1 hour ago
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The current chancellor is also a right-conservative jabroni, so don't equate what he demands to what the German people want.
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rrr_oh_man
48 minutes ago
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> so don't equate what he demands to what the German people want

The German people elected the parliament. The parliament elected Merz. The margin was narrow, but that was the decision.

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Podrod
3 hours ago
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Not just for Germany but apparently for the entire continent of Europe!
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joe_mamba
1 hour ago
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>It was declared illegal later.

You're missing the point. That's exactly how democratic governments cloak fascist behavior everywhere: The punishment IS THE PROCESS.

People in Germany (and the UK and other places) have to self censor because they don't want to be visited by the police and then dragged through courts for months/years, even though it eventually gets thrown out and you get to walk away innocent, you still had to suffer the entire prosecution process, which nobody wants to, so they keep their mouth shut.

The stress toll of having to go through all that annoying grind through the legal system, even though you did nothing wrong and what the government is doing will be considered illegal, is how the government preemptively keeps people in line.

>That was a overall very rarely occurring abuse of power

Very rare?! Unless there's direct consequences with actual punishment on government officials for illegally abusing the legal system on citizens just because they hear stuff they don't like, then they will keep throwing prosecutions at innocent people just to keep them in check since currently they have nothing stopping them from this abuse turning from rare to being the norm.

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rrr_oh_man
47 minutes ago
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> You're missing the point. That's how democratic governments masquerade fascist behavior: The punishment IS THE PROCESS.

YES.

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abraae
6 hours ago
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A little bit like a country's leader calling for the death penalty for a decorated pilot and astronaut who reminded service members of their duty to reject unlawful orders.
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eagleal
3 hours ago
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In Italy there's a politician named Gasparri who has made a career (30+ years) of barring himself behind Parlamentary immunity and insulting on citizens/journalists. When they respond he sues them for libel or similar asking moral damages.
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lucasRW
3 hours ago
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It does. That's why GrapheneOS left France; Signal is considering doing so to if ChatControl passes. Von Der Leyen and Breton clearly mentioned the possibility of banning X. And there are many other "signals".

But yeah we get it, there's bad censorhip (Iran, China, Russia), and there is the good censorhip, sorry, i meant "protection of children", when it's the EU. :o)

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mapontosevenths
1 hour ago
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> there's bad censorhip (Iran, China, Russia), and there is the good censorhip

I understand that you're being facetious here, but this is literally true.

Words kill people sometimes, and in the same way that my right to swing my arm stops where your nose begins your right to say whatever you want stops where my safety begins.

Or to rephrase it, nobody can have free speech at all if others are allowed to threaten your health and safety for it, which automatically implies that violent and hateful speech must be curtailed. It is a variation on the paradox of tolerance.

Yes, there is room to debate exactly where the line is, but the fact that there is a line is fairly well settled except amongst the rabid.

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frumplestlatz
1 hour ago
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You’re advocating for a censorship regime that would put me in jail for words that you happen to think are dangerous.

Ergo, your words threaten my safety.

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intended
2 hours ago
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I wish more people volunteered to moderate online communities. Especially political ones.

It’s taking way too long for normal people to realize they have a stake and imperative to be part of these communities. Speech is shaped here, and many God awful decisions have to be made at scale.

There is no cost to holding the position you stated, and no one wants to get their hand dirty, or see how the sausage is made. You have to regular decide if this comment is actually hate speech, actual debate, or someone “asking questions”. Who knows what the actual false positive/negative rates are.

The sheer amount of filters, regexes and slur lists needed to stay abreast of toxicity and hate speech are absurdism at its best.

Nothing happens without an informed citizenry. The foundations of speech online are collapsing and weak. There need to be more citizen view points from the ground, deciding how they want this domain to operate.

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ceteia
9 hours ago
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Would educating people instead and giving them more options for information, not be better than banning access to information?
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glwiththat
7 hours ago
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If educating people worked there wouldn’t be any obese people, or drunkards, or smokers, druggies, gamblers, people addicted to doomscrolling or video games or ragebait "news" or…

Education is as useful as preaching abstinence at horny teenagers instead of providing access to contraceptives

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schiffern
7 hours ago
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  >If educating people worked there wouldn’t be any [bad stuff]
I think you're confusing "works" and "works perfectly."

Education works. It doesn't work perfectly.

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pwndByDeath
6 hours ago
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Cause and correlation, education gives you options, it always comes to a choice, I know the donuts lead somewhere but I choose to eat two anyway.

Education doesn't cause good choices but it is sometimes correlated to better situations, the difference between the criminals in prison and the ones in the C suite is only education.

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mikkupikku
2 hours ago
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Clearly education doesn't work, so Europe must ban any speech concerning fattening foods, drinking alcohol, smoking, drugs, gambling, upsetting news and video games.

If you oppose these speech bans... Why you're as silly as a preacher telling teens not to fuck!

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shevy-java
6 hours ago
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> If educating people worked there wouldn’t be any obese people, or drunkards

This assumes that a) everyone is the same, and b) education would always work. Matthew Perry explained that this is not the case. Some people respond differently to drugs. Whether these people are educated or not, changes very little. Education helps, but not in the way as to be able to bypass physiological aspects completely.

> Education is as useful as preaching abstinence at horny teenagers instead of providing access to contraceptives

Education can still help. For instance, I decided very early on that the best way to avoid e. g. addiction is to not "give in and try once". So I never tried drugs (ok ok, I did drink a beer occasionally). This was the much simpler and easier strategy to pursue, simply via avoidance behaviour.

Thus I disagree that the premise can be "if educating worked" - people will always respond differently to drugs. And they will have different strategies to cope with something too - some strategies work, others don't work. One can not generalize this.

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GoblinSlayer
3 hours ago
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Many people believe their mind is a passive reflection of reality, thus any change that happens to mind is infallible by definition. I wonder how can they possibly resist addiction with such mindset.
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MASNeo
5 hours ago
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Oh my, that is a depressing view on the human condition.
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ceteia
6 hours ago
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But can't you then set up a system such that if a person only picks one source or a few sources, and that turns out to be bad, that it primarily impacts negatively only themselves? Letting it be their own responsibility?
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stein1946
5 hours ago
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What if educating people takes decades and lies can be prompted in a few minutes?
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joe_mamba
1 hour ago
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Then you failed at education if a prompt can undo decades of education.

And the failure of education was an intentional feature, not a bug, since the government wants obedient tax cattle that will easily accept their propaganda at elections, not freethinkers that question everything because then they might notice your lies and corruption.

It's like building a backdoor into your system thinking you're the only one who gets to use it for the upper hand, but then throw fits when everyone else is using your backdoors to defeat you.

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ffsm8
8 hours ago
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Intuitively yes, but it's possible that this is one of our biases speaking

From my memory (might be mistaken) there have been attempts to somewhat study this via polls etc, and determined that coverage via propaganda (specifically Fox News) is less helpful then randomly guessing what actually happened...

But ymmv, social studies are always hard to trust, because it's borderline impossible to prove cause and effect

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AnthonyMouse
7 hours ago
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> From my memory (might be mistaken) there have been attempts to somewhat study this via polls etc, and determined that coverage via propaganda (specifically Fox News) is less helpful then randomly guessing what actually happened...

Ironically the studies of that nature are often themselves a form of propaganda, because it's entirely straightforward to structure the study to produce your preferred outcome.

There is a well-known human bias where people use information they know to try to guess information they don't. If you're given three random people and the only thing anyone has told you about them is that one is a drug addict and then you're asked to guess which one is a thief, more people are going to guess the drug addict. So now all you have to do is find a situation where the thief isn't actually the drug addict, let the media outlet tell people which one is the drug addict, and you'll have people guessing the wrong answer a higher proportion of the time than they would by choosing at random.

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shevy-java
6 hours ago
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People need to decide on their own, so I am against censorship.
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ffsm8
2 hours ago
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In this thread, which comment gave you the impression they were in favor of censorship?

I hope it's not me, whom you responded to, because I cannot fathom how you could've gotten that impression considering my phrasing...what's up with this topic getting so many people with arguing via complete strawmen

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synecdoche
5 hours ago
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That depends on what "education" entails. If it's one source only chances of it being propaganda is high.
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whattheheckheck
9 hours ago
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For real... the species is not going to last long if a subset of it gets to control the information flow of the other part... literally unsustainable
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jasonvorhe
13 hours ago
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Then again, Egypt was definitely driven by Western agitators, as was the case Iran recently. Iran probably got Russian tech to trace starlink users during the blackout which put a target on many Western assets in Iran. I'm not saying the Iran government didn't also kill and torture independent actors nor that I support state violence (against its citizens, in this case). Just saying that any government will use violence to stay in power and to ensure regime change doesn't happen outside of whatever system the state upholds.
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ch4s3
11 hours ago
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The claim that Iranian protesters were western agitators is a pernicious lie.
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roenxi
5 hours ago
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Are you suggesting the US intelligence services are negligent in this instance? The US launched an unprovoked attack last year to try and force regime change, they look for all the world like they're about to do the same thing again this year. If they didn't have a hand in the protests, that seems like a stunning failure on the part of the US State Department to support their own policies. It'd be a lot cheaper and far less risky than the current military buildup.

Unless I suppose your interpretation of the purge of USAID, etc, by the Trump administration house-clearing a bunch of people because they failed to position assets in Iran. That'd be evidence in favour of them missing the boat on the Iran protests, I suppose. But even then, they've had a few months to get their act together and at least try something.

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ch4s3
3 hours ago
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> If they didn't have a hand in the protests, that seems like a stunning failure on the part of the US State Department to support their own policies

This is nothing but evidence free speculation. What you’re doing is undermining the validity of the protest movement and parroting the line of the Iranian government. It’s disgusting. Take this shit somewhere else.

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roenxi
3 hours ago
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It's hardly evidence-free, this stuff [0, 1, 2] has been making international news headlines for months. And the last time the US was involved in toppling Iran they used paid-for protests [3] so it is barely speculative to say they'd do again what worked last time. That is just common sense on their part. If they haven't done that, then people will be fired in the US executive for incompetence because that is the cheapest way to achieve their rather clear goals of rolling Iran's power structures. If you don't believe that they did that, who do you think is responsible for that failure on the US government's part?

It is unfortunate that the US's actions right now undermined whatever validity you feel the protests had. I certainly agree it is disgusting - and also bad for US interests so it is curious why they're doing it. Take it up with them if you have a problem with the idea, I'm not a US general or policy maker.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93Israel_war

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_strikes_on_Irani...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_military_buildup...

[3] https://theconversation.com/how-the-cia-toppled-iranian-demo... / https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1953_Iranian_coup_d%27%C3%A9ta...

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ch4s3
27 minutes ago
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None of that is evidence of the us stoking protests, and that article about the 1953 Coup is so inaccurate it’s laughable.
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GoblinSlayer
2 hours ago
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You say it as if influencers are something bad. If they spread democracy, why would they be bad?
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ch4s3
20 minutes ago
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No my point is that the idea that the protests aren’t organic is deeply fucking ignorant and gross. It’s this whole line of thinking that everything turns on US action in the world, which is how 19 year olds think after they read Howard Zin or some essay by Chomsky for the first time. It’s unserious on top of robbing a lot of brave people of their own agency.
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linkregister
11 hours ago
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Evidence to the contrary abounds regarding Egypt. Secretary of State Clinton famously rejected the popularly-elected Muslim Brotherhood government and pledged support to Mubarak. This tacit approval led him to have a successful coup against the popularly elected government.

If by "western" you meant some other power then you should be specific. Western as a term is imprecise and can be interpreted differently depending on the audience.

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locknitpicker
2 hours ago
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> It’s a clear way to project soft power: make sure your message and culture can get through.

You're talking about an administration that actively tries to censor candidates of opposition candidates through both state regulatory institutions such as the FCC and business collusion, a typical play out of the fascist playbook with state and oligarchs colluding to strong arm their political goals.

It's also the same administration who is actively involved in supporting other dictatorial regimes and destabilize Europe, including with very explicit and overt threats of war of invasion to annex territories.

It's also the same administration that is clearly a puppet administration controlled by another totalitarian regime - Russia.

There is no soft power in this stunt. Only further self-destructive actions to further kill the US's relevance as an European ally.

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Helmut10001
3 hours ago
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This is somewhat counterintuitive: The US is the only country I know where most newspapers and government services use strict geoblocks to prevent me from accessing US sites in Europe. Conversely, I've never had any problems accessing European sites from the US. I know this is for a different set of reasons (likely GDPR cookie law or similar), but it's funny that anyone thinks blocks like this are relevant. Most people I know use VPNs these days to make their traffic appear to come from whatever country they need.
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herbst
3 hours ago
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This. I regularly face geo blocks from American websites. Like literally at least once a week. It's very common for whatever reason for smaller US shops, newspapers any size and other random sites.
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pjc50
3 hours ago
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And imgur has geoblocked the UK, which is extremely annoying as it was the reddit image host of choice.

It's going to be a weird set of content on this website. Are they going to livestream La Liga sports?

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kjksf
3 hours ago
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Which US newspapers and which governments websites?

I happen to write this from Poland and I don't recall a single newspaper being geo blocked here. Not nyt, not washington post not anything I've ever accessed.

And didn't see US gov website geo blocked either.

So I ask again: which newspapers and which gov websites?

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Helmut10001
3 hours ago
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I don't browse US newspapers that often, but I regularly observe blocked ones, particularly smaller ones. Non-deterministic, e.g.: New York Daily News, Chicago Tribune, Baltimore Sun, Dallas Morning News, Virginian-Pilot. Beyond that, a lot of CA and San Francisco Government and local utility services are geo-restricted (which I think, from a security standpoint, makes at least somewhat sense..).

Btw. asking once is enough ^^

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rmccue
2 hours ago
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Nexstar's stations blocked access from European IPs, providing a 451 Unavailable for Legal Reasons response code; Nexstar are the largest TV station owner in the US, so a large number of sites for local affiliates were unavailable. I think other networks (Sinclair) may have also one so.

Here's a HN thread about it: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27854663

(I worked with Nexstar and experienced this directly. Looks like this may have changed recently.)

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Aloisius
14 hours ago
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Didn't Doge gut the USAGM?
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awwaiid
10 hours ago
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Yep! Maximally closed as much as possible under the law. They also shut down other programs which aim to sidestep propaganda (including US propaganda), though some of those are starting to come back. Radio Free Asia, for example, https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific/radio-free-asia-s...
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thenthenthen
9 hours ago
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Thanks for the link. This should be indeed understood in the context of stations like Radio Free Asia, Voice of America etc.
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adrian_b
2 hours ago
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"has been" => "had been" (since a few days ago)
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throwaway24778
2 hours ago
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I suppose COPPA is a form of internet censorship we help children bypass?
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reactordev
15 hours ago
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It goes deeper than that. The U.S. Government funds it, discourages other nations from using it, and spies on all web traffic as a result of it.

Almost 80% of communications go through a data center in Northern VA. Within a quick drive to Langley, Quantico, DC, and other places that house three letter agencies I’m not authorized to disclose.

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Aurornis
12 hours ago
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> Almost 80% of communications go through a data center in Northern VA

Nobody who understands the scale of the internet could possibly believe this is true.

Routing internet traffic through a geographical location would increase ping times by a noticeable amount.

Even sending traffic from around the world to a datacenter in VA would require an amount of infrastructure multiple times larger than the internet itself to carry data all that distance. All built and maintained in secret.

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n2d4
11 hours ago
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He was likely referring to the claim that 70% of the internet flows through Loudon County, Virginia, where AWS us-east-1 is located, although the more accurate number is probably somewhere around 22%.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudoun_County,_Virginia#Econo...

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RajT88
9 hours ago
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Every cloud provider worth talking about is there too. Both public and sovereign/gov data centers.

And of course all the privately owned ones too. It is bananas. Not just because of government either - low ping times to the biggest population center of North America.

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reactordev
11 hours ago
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Just because your client is in Switzerland and your data center is in Germany, doesn’t mean a data center in Virginia doesn’t have a copy.

https://youtu.be/JR6YyYdF8ho

That was 14 years ago…

We have MUCH more capabilities today.

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petcat
11 hours ago
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The datacenter is in Utah, not Virginia.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utah_Data_Center

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ascorbic
5 hours ago
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It's referring to us-east-1
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petcat
1 hour ago
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Sure, but the specific NSA datacenter that stores copies of every piece of data that transits the internet is in Utah, not Virginia.
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reactordev
11 hours ago
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That’s cold storage
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petcat
11 hours ago
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Right, where the copies are stored.
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Aurornis
11 hours ago
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Do you have a single actual source for anything you’re saying about this happening today?

I’m well aware of the historical surveillance programs. I’m asking for a source for all of your claims about what’s happening today regarding 80% of internet traffic.

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mc32
11 hours ago
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That claim makes no sense in today's world. For over a decade, the likes of Youtube, Netflix and short form video make the majority of throughput. Why in the world would anyone want to monitor known catalogs of content? Most of which are delivered by POPs in data centers distributed all over the world.
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reactordev
11 hours ago
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https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c93dnnxewdvo

As for traffic, I can’t cite numbers, you’ll just have to trust me when I say it. I can’t give you packet breakdown or IP4 vs IP6. To have that discussion requires a secret clearance at least.

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nozzlegear
9 hours ago
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You have clearance enough to imply that these things are going on but not enough to actually prove anything? Surely the requirements of your clearance would come with some basic terms like "don't use winks and nudges to implicate us in vast conspiracies on public forums," or the far more simple "don't mention this to anyone."
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IAmGraydon
11 hours ago
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Let’s be serious for a minute here. If you’re claiming to have secret clearance on an Internet forum, you don’t.
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eagleal
3 hours ago
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mwilliaams
10 hours ago
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You may be surprised how cavalier some people are about their clearance.
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dmoy
10 hours ago
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Secret is also like... really common to have. 5 million people or whatever.
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cookiengineer
8 hours ago
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> Nobody who understands the scale of the internet could possibly believe this is true.

Neither would anybody have believed that 8 out of 10 hard drive chips can contain any rootkits. Yet, here we are, and the insanity of it is that we've found lots of malware attributed to EQGRP, and the Snowden leaks (from the perspective of Booz Allen) have confirmed it.

You should read up on quantum routing.

They don't have to route through any specific location if they can just infiltrate the routers of your neighbors. Any data packet from the originating server will arrive slower at your location than the data packet of your neighbor. In that scenario TLS becomes pretty useless if the CA itself is also exchangeable, because you can't rely on TCP or UDP. Ironically the push for UDP makes it much easier to implement in the underlying token ring architectures and their virtual routing protocols like VC4 and later.

That's how the internet and a star topology (or token ring topology on city level) was designed.

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reactordev
1 hour ago
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I wish I could upvote this more than once.
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Henchman21
12 hours ago
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Never tapped a port, eh?

Edited to not be so flippant: I work in HFT/finance where recording all traffic is required I think by law and definitely for one's own sanity. We're able to maintain nanosecond trades while capturing ALL the traffic. It has zero impact on the traffic. This is normal, widely used tech. Think stuff like Ixia passive taps and/or Arista Metamako FPGA-based tap/mux devices.

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Aurornis
12 hours ago
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> Never tapped a port, eh?

I have. I have a background in high speed networking.

Have you ever paused for a moment to consider how much infrastructure would be required to send 80% of data on the internet across the country and into a single datacenter in Virginia?

If you've worked in HFT, you can probably at least start to imagine the scale we're talking about.

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reactordev
11 hours ago
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It’s not a single data center, it’s about 200 of them.
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Aurornis
11 hours ago
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Just minutes ago you said this:

> Almost 80% of communications go through a data center in Northern VA

Where are you getting this new 200 numbers? Share a source please.

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Mtinie
10 hours ago
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https://broadbandbreakfast.com/dateline-ashburn-data-centers...

“Loudoun County currently has 199 data centers, with another 117 in development, according to Michael Turner, vice chair of the board of supervisors transportation and land use committee and Ashburn’s district supervisor.”

https://virginiabusiness.com/loudoun-county-advances-changes...

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jen20
11 hours ago
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I have no data or information on the topic, but the use of English was fine for the apparent intended meaning:

"Almost 80% of communications go through a data center in X"

Does not mean that all traffic goes through a single data center in X. Just that it goes through one of potentially many data centers that happen to be in X.

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coliveira
8 hours ago
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You're right. It's fantastic to see how English comprehension is decaying, even in groups that supposedly are smarter than average. There's a fast decaying tendency in language comprehension overall, and I can only point to the fact that much of the new generation is unable and unwilling to read even a single book.
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reactordev
11 hours ago
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One of…

Ashburn, VA is the data center capital of the world.

When you type and hit submit, even on this site, your data will hit one of those data centers.

The few exceptions are government networks and China.

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iso1631
16 minutes ago
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So you're saying my french ISP tunnels all traffic from my hotel to my office through to America?

Or are you saying that the NSA has a hidden tap on the equipment without my ISP knowing. How does that traffic get from the ISP router to the NSA?

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suhputt
12 hours ago
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the time it takes for light to travel from los angeles to virginia is 12 - 16 ms, round trip is 30ms lets say - that is a noticeable delay, and it could be easily disproven that 80% of traffic is literally routed through VA

now.. could they just copy the traffic and send it to VA on a side channel? probably?

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metadat
11 hours ago
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And how useful would this information be? srcIP:port_dstIP:port pairs with almost all traffic encrypted. Pretty boring from a sigint pov.

Instagram, YouTube, misc Web traffic, and torrents, with a side of minutae.

I'm certain the three letter agencies yearn for the days before letsencrypt was de facto.

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rtkwe
8 hours ago
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There is the small possibility that the NSA has found cracks in some of the popular cyphers and could actually make sense of the encrypted data. It's not completely out of the question, their cryptanalysis has been shown to be ahead of the public best efforts in the past. They demonstrated it back in the 70s with DES S-boxes hardening them against a technique no one publicly knew about until the 80s.
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NGRhodes
11 hours ago
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i used to work, 15 years ago, on a (permissive, not covert) monitoring service for a UK national public service, the NHS spine core. We used switches to mirror ports and capture traffic in promisciouse mode on a few dozen servers split across a few datacentres that all the traffic went througg. We had certs installed to decode https. We could get enough hardware to do this step easily, but fast enough storage was an issue, we had 1 petabyte of usable storage across all sitesn that could hold a few days of content. We aimed to get this data filtered and forwarded into our central Splunk (seperate storage) and also into our bespoke dashboards within 60s. We often lagged...
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iso1631
12 minutes ago
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You can only decode those https certificates if you are mitming them (and have a compromised certificate)

A copy of the certificate and private keys won't help thanks to the magic of Diffie–Hellman, you can't passively (assuming you haven't got a practical quantum computer)

Your company will have deployed root certificates to devices and run as a MITM. This is standard corporate firewall behaviour.

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rtkwe
8 hours ago
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The point they were making was that you could tell via ping times if the traffic was literally being routed through VA unnecessarily because the extra unavoidable light speed delay that extra distance would add between a user and the server if they weren't already very near to VA. Could be mirrored via the type of monitoring you're talking about but that'd only get you mostly encrypted traffic unless the 90s cypherpunk paranoia turns out to have been true.
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wasabi991011
12 hours ago
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But you are only tapping your own data that's already passing by you not? Not 80% of the internet that has nothing to do with you.
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recursive
15 hours ago
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Speed of light establishes certain latency minima. Experimental data can falsify (or not) at geographical locations far enough from VA.
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dboreham
12 hours ago
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"Going through" doesn't necessarily imply store and forward. It could be tapped elsewhere and shipped to WVA. fwiw the idea of running a network in order to tap it is hardly new. The British operated largest telegraph network in the world in the 1800's for that reason.
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Aurornis
12 hours ago
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You think there's an entire shadow infrastructure across the United States or world that carries 80% of all internet traffic all the way to VA?

It would have to be several times larger than the internet infrastructure itself due to the distances involved.

All built and maintained in secret?

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coliveira
8 hours ago
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You just don't have imagination. Google, just by itself, controls 89% of the traffic in the Internet. And we know that the government can get any information they want from them, without even asking too much. If you combine this with other major companies operating very close to the US government, it is probable that more than 95% of the web traffic outside China that is easily within reach of these sinister 3 letter organizations.
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Henchman21
12 hours ago
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No. That isn't required at all. Fundamentally you lack understanding of how this happens. Yes, there is some port duplication. Yes it costs money. But it is not anywhere near as onerous as you assume.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_641A

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Aurornis
12 hours ago
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> Fundamentally you lack understanding of how this happens. Yes, there is some port duplication. Yes it costs money. But it is not anywhere near as onerous as you assume

No, I understand networking hardware quite well actually. I'm also familiar with Room 641A. Room 641A did not capture 80% of internet traffic. If you think 80% of internet traffic could be routed through Room 641A you're not thinking about the infrastructure required to get it all there. It was a targeted operation on backbone lines that were right there.

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PenguinCoder
12 hours ago
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While the most well known, there are other points of presence doing the same thing. Easy and trivial to duplicate traffic at line speed. It doesn't affect the traffic flow itself.
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iso1631
6 minutes ago
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Yes you can trivially tap a fibre -- https://www.gigamon.com/products/access-traffic/network-taps... for example

You can even do this without breaking the fibre

What you can't do is ship 80% of the traffic across the world to the US without either the ISPs agreeing, and thus a conspiracy of thousands of people in thousands of ISPs, or doing it outside the data centres, meaning millions of taps in various ducts around the globe, which would be found on a daily basis.

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reactordev
11 hours ago
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They will never believe you until you show them and that requires a clearance.
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dmoy
10 hours ago
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A decent number of people reading this probably do have secret clearance. But that's not really the relevant point.

Simply having secret clearance doesn't mean you can just go digging around arbitrary secret classified info that you have no business reading. And it certainly doesn't mean that discussion can be had on hackernews.

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ta20240528
4 hours ago
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No need for a clearance, merely explain that

1. fibre-optic traffic is a beam of light

2. this beam can be passed through a glass prism…

3. the prism splits off say 20% of the light by intensity

4. this 20% is identical to the 80%

5. both the 20% and 80% component are 'bright' enough to be used

6. the 80% continues on its merry way, the 20% is redirected for 'other' uses.

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reactordev
1 hour ago
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That is simplifying it to the point of a lab experiment. It’s a bit more complicated but yes, you can split light and route that light anywhere you want.
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reactordev
14 hours ago
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Correct but local governments using Palantir will need to provide it to them somehow.
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reactordev
11 hours ago
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ascorbic
5 hours ago
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Most of the replies to this seem to think it's referring to some kind of secret government datacenter. It's us-east-1, and every other cloud provider's US East and GOV zones, which are all in NVA
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Den_VR
12 hours ago
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So they… drive the data around NOVA?
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shimman
12 hours ago
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No, but if you want to collaborate with the federal government it makes it more convenient to be located where the federal government resides.
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reactordev
11 hours ago
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No, but you can visit a “clean room” and look at the data at any number of sites.
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rootusrootus
12 hours ago
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When I worked for a CLEC (during that moment in history when they were briefly a Thing), we had a USG closet at our main datacenter, and we are nowhere even close to NoVA. I expect they still handle it this way rather than try to funnel any significant amount of traffic to a particular geographical region.
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duckerduck
1 hour ago
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Maybe the EU can open a book portal for the US.

https://pen.org/report/the-normalization-of-book-banning/

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BSDobelix
56 minutes ago
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Banned in public schools...
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k3vinw
56 minutes ago
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So not books banned from the general public? Got it!
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BSDobelix
40 minutes ago
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If you compare that list of "really banned" books, it sounds like creating a European portal would be a net negative.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_books_banned_by_govern...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_books_banned_by_govern...

The US list one (1) banned book in a earlier version (Operation Dark Heart) because of national security.

>The first, uncensored printing of 9,500 copies was purchased for $47,300 in early September and destroyed by the publisher at the request of the Pentagon

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Dark_Heart

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pms
5 hours ago
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It's a waste of resources, but please do it! The entire "European Union censors" narrative is a hoax [1], so the portal will achieve nothing, but you've got to do what you've got to do!

[1] First, the EU countries have much higher World Press Freedom Index than the US. Second, once you start reading how little there is of the alleged "censorship" in the EU, you realize it's a no-brainer aiming to protect people.

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jbstack
4 hours ago
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As someone living in an EU state who has to regularly turn my VPN on and off to have full internet access, I can't agree with you that it's a "hoax". It's inconvenient enough for me that I'm looking into having a custom router that will switch between VPN destinations depending on what site I'm accessing.

Also "EU countries have higher press freedom than the US" is a strawman argument. We're not talking about press freedom. It's also an example of the fallacy of relative privation ("X isn't bad, because Y is worse than X"). It's like saying "It's a hoax that the US executes some prisoners, because Iran executes even more".

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flohofwoe
46 minutes ago
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> who has to regularly turn my VPN on and off to have full internet access,

Is this because the EU or your country has blocked access, or some news site from the US blocking access from the EU because they don't want to deal with GDPR?

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pms
1 hour ago
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I really hope they go ahead and create the portal. I mean it.
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RealityVoid
3 hours ago
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What content are you missing? Off the top of my head, the type of content most likely to ve missing in Europe would be:

- geofenced media

- commercial sites intentionally removing eu access because of gdpr.

That's it. Those are the only cases where I could not access sites from tbe EU. At least the ones I encountered.

And do notice, both of them are not filtered by the EU or anything like this. They are enforced at the publishing website. Would you call this censorship? It kind of feels like a stretch. If not a deliberate contortion of truth.

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aarroyoc
2 hours ago
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In Spain many parts of the Internet are shut down when there's a LaLiga match to "prevent piracy". They usually block Cloudflare as a whole but also Vercel, GitHub,... had issues. For example last Sunday I couldn't access some of the stories submitted here. I could also not access the documentation of hledger, a FOSS contability tool.
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intended
1 hour ago
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Piracy would be IP protection, not censorship / stopping dissidents/ controlling ideas. Plus this wouldn’t be an EU wide policy.
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_heimdall
1 hour ago
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Blocking huge swaths of the internet skips right past IP protection in my opinion.
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roenxi
1 hour ago
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No, it is censorship. IP protection would be punishing the pirates after they do something illegal. I think what you're sensing is that it is censorship in support of intellectual property rather than censorship aiming at political repression.

There's something similar in RealityVoid's comment where it is identified that EU law promotes censorship, but that is discounted because the understanding is it in aid of privacy rather than politically motivated. Although given Europe's rich history of sliding into authoritarianism that does seem like an optimistic take on where the European elite are heading. A part of political censorship is making it hard for people to realise that popular political viewpoints are being censored and providing cover by claiming the censorship is for some good cause would be pretty routine.

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jbstack
2 hours ago
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See my reply on the other sub-comment. There's no need to accuse me of deliberately contorting the truth. We can keep the discussion civilised. And yes, I would call at least the second point (GDPR) indirect censorship, because it's a consequence of the fact that the EU has imposed the requirements extra-territorially ("your website must comply with our rules even though you aren't within our jurisdiction, and your website is fully legal within your jurisdiction").
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latexr
2 hours ago
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The GDPR does not dictate what websites can say, it dictates rules for handling collected personal information. Those are not the same thing, it’s not censorship.
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j-krieger
1 hour ago
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Notice how you went from "censorship is a hoax" to "not having access to these things is not important", while also implicitely assuming control of deciding the matter.
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nolok
3 hours ago
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Which country ?
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jbstack
2 hours ago
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Italy. Examples of sites I can't access without VPN: torrent sites (including legal uses), betfair.com (which I use as a more accurate political predictor than polls), and various non-EU sites which block access because they've decided it's easier than complying with extra-territorial requirements imposed by the EU (this one isn't direct EU censorship, but it amounts to the same thing indirectly.

Sometimes I set my VPN destination to the UK (my country of origin) to get around these. Then I find that I have other problems. For example, certain Reddit posts are unavailable to me because someone has posted a comment that some algorithm has decided is NSFW (and therefore triggers age verification under the UK Online Safety Act 2023).

The result is that I have to turn my VPN on and off depending on what I'm trying to do.

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asgerhb
2 hours ago
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I'm unfamiliar with Italian piracy laws and surveillance but I can tell you that accessing torrent sites for me was a simple matter of choosing a proper DNS provider.
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amarcheschi
1 hour ago
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Italian here. I can access most of the torrent sites and betfair.it (which I guess is the localized version) without vpn

I might have changed my dns in the past

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intended
1 hour ago
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This is a definition of censorship that seems to equate restrictions to any website or data stream as freedom, not whether the content of the site breaks local laws. This is a bit extreme, since most countries have laws against gambling, and if you could get around it by just setting up servers abroad, what value are local laws?
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jbstack
45 minutes ago
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I'm not sure I see any practical difference between a government saying "we will block website X because we don't like it" and "we will block website X because we say that website X is illegal". For example if Iran blocks a website which is critical of the regime, do you consider it important whether such criticisms are against the law or not in Iran? I think most people would consider it censorship either way.

If you want to make gambling illegal, then make gambling illegal and then enforce that law. You don't need to resort to indirect measures that go beyond the law (e.g. by preventing me from merely viewing the odds on a gambling website).

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intended
39 minutes ago
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Gambling of a certain type is illegal in India but the workaround has been to place ads from sites based outside of India.

How would you solve this.

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jahller
3 hours ago
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yeah, i'm calling bullshit. unless this person tries to surf the russian web or get behind the great firewall of china.
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jbstack
2 hours ago
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See my sibling comment to yours. I have no reason to lie.
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Argonaut998
4 hours ago
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Press freedom !== entirety of freedom of speech

European politicians are calling every day to censor social media. People are arrested regularly for social media posts.

Censorship is absolutely an issue in Europe and it’s only getting worse. I welcome such an attitude as this.

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danlitt
4 hours ago
[-]
The US's low press freedom index is precisely because people are being legally intimidated for wrongthink. It is not limited to the press, either. Mahmoud Khalil (the Palestinian activist detained by ICE on fake immigration charges for his political speech) is a famous example, but there are many.

The US's "commitment to free speech" is nowadays not very much more noble than Russia's principled stand against economic sanctions.

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k3vinw
39 minutes ago
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False equivalency. As a green card holder he does not share the same freedom of speech rights as that of a US citizen.
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suddenlybananas
3 hours ago
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Plenty of people in the UK are arrested for wrongthink. You might think that's justified (e.g. because it is hateful) but it is still arresting someone for speech.
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danlitt
2 hours ago
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I didn't say that they weren't. Hundreds of people were arrested for opposing the proscription of Palestine Action. The UK's defence of free expression is not great.

What I did say is that the US's position is not as a defender of free speech either (and as Russia is not a defender of free trade). They have particular speech they like to promote (the KKK, stormfront) and particular speech they like to suppress (criticism of war crimes, books about being trans). Draw whatever conclusions you like from that.

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youngtaff
2 hours ago
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Arrested for incitement not wrong think… if they had done the same thing in the street and there was evidence they would have been arrested too
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suddenlybananas
2 hours ago
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Well, there was a labour councillor who said people should have their throats slit on camera in the street, and he was let off.
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MiiMe19
3 hours ago
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If this is a real take you need to rethink your view on the world.
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danlitt
2 hours ago
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Got anything substantive to say?
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21asdffdsa12
4 hours ago
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The worst part is that its "outsourced" to private organizations and NGOs - and thus the state claims its "not state driven" censorship. They want social stability- but have no grasp of the concept of that stability being only a leaky abstraction for situational stability. You can not claim the world is peaceful and utopia is at hand, sitting in a ski chalet in the alps- while the whole mountain slowly comes down with that house on it. Reality cant be reasoned away, the rain will fall, no matter how much laws there are against it.
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kosinus
4 hours ago
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There are so so many reasons to get arrested for social media posts that have nothing to do with censorship.
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Argonaut998
4 hours ago
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Be that as it may, people are being arrested for expressing wrong think
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bargainbin
4 hours ago
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No, people are being arrested for making malicious communications. They would have suffered the same punishment if they had used email, letter, graffiti on a billboard.

You cannot go around threatening to harm people without repercussions.

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Gareth321
3 hours ago
[-]
"Malicious communications" is doing a lot of heavy lifting. This veteran was arrested for retweeting this meme (https://abuwjaawap.cloudimg.io/v7/_lgbtqnation-assets_/asset...).

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11066477/Veteran-ar...

He was offered to undergo "re-education." You might not like this meme. You might find it offensive. But should he be arrested by several officers for it? Of course not. This is just one example of many people being being arrested and imprisoned for offending people. It is against the law to offend people in the UK.

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talideon
2 hours ago
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Oh yes, the bastion of truth that is the Daily Mail.

Sorry, my eyes just rolled out if my head.

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Gareth321
2 hours ago
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foxglacier
2 hours ago
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Just Google it. It's been reported on various news sites. eg:

https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/irishman-arrested-for-...

Maybe it's not on The Guardian or the BBC but it obviously doesn't fit their bias so you may have to accept other sources.

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bonaldi
1 hour ago
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He was arrested for refusing to allow officers to enter his home on a pre-agreed return visit to discuss the complaints:

https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/arrest_of_mr_darren_b...

This is why the Daily Mail causes rolled eyes (along with Spiked and the rest of the right-wing agitprop).

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Gareth321
40 minutes ago
[-]
Re-read what you just linked. In the response from the JIMU:

"A 51-year-old man from Aldershot was arrested on suspicion of sending by public communication network an offensive, indecent, obscene, menacing message or matter."

This is the legal basis for the arrest. Without the retweet, police would not have had authority to turn up to his place of residence - twice - and demand entry. No doubt they preferred Brady voluntarily submit himself for interview at the station, but he refused, which I hope we can all agree is the morally correct position. No one should have police turn up outside their house - TWICE - because of a parody retweet.

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frumplestlatz
59 minutes ago
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Why on earth was he legally obligated to have that discussion in the first place?

Those complaints should have been laughed at and ignored.

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bonaldi
52 minutes ago
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The law might be a bad one (and probably is) but on balance better that police investigate suspected illegality than don’t. Overall I’d rather be somewhere where even a former royal can be arrested than somewhere the rule of law is optional.
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Argonaut998
4 hours ago
[-]
Nope. People are certainly being arrested for speech (e.g. opinions) that would be protected by the first amendment in the US.

Guising it under a scary sounding law doesn’t change the nature of it.

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ben_w
2 hours ago
[-]
People are certainly being arrested *in the USA* for speech (e.g. opinions) that are theoretically protected by the first amendment.

Unfortunately, last I tried to look this up, I found that there simply do not exist useful and easy to find stats for "malicious communications" in the UK such that stalkers and people making death threats can be separated from mere political correctness.

And even with actual death threats, there's stuff like this, where I don't myself have a single sustained state of my own mind about how I would respond to such a tweet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twitter_joke_trial

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Argonaut998
2 hours ago
[-]
It’s bad now and not perfect for sure, but I doubt these instances would be upheld by the higher courts.
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ben_w
19 minutes ago
[-]
Kinda irrelevant, given that the go-to examples I see on Hacker News of this happening in the EU and UK are either actual death/violence threats etc. (which are also not protected speech in the USA) or also not upheld in higher European courts.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_free_speech_exce...

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arrrg
3 hours ago
[-]
The people in Europe have a different view of freedom of speech and that’s fine. Not everything that’s a slightly different perspective on freedom of speech and what that entails and includes is tyranny.
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Argonaut998
3 hours ago
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I’m European and I do not. France and the UK especially come from the same liberal intellectual root as the USA. What we see today is a bastardisation of these principles in Europe. Only the US was smart enough to canonise it into law.
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suddenlybananas
3 hours ago
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So there is censorship, you just think that it is good. That's fine! But you should own the position and justify it on its own terms instead of pretending that it doesn't count as censorship.
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throwaway24778
2 hours ago
[-]
Sure but filtering what you say is also a form of censorship. Swinging the term around like it's some form of morality is silly; anyone who isn't for a form of censorship is just a moron and an asshole. Or even worse: a liberal.
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junon
3 hours ago
[-]
Examples please.
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Argonaut998
2 hours ago
[-]
[1] https://www.theguardian.com/society/2020/feb/14/transgender-...

[2] https://www.judiciary.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Scottow-...

”Margaret Dodd of one offence of improper use of a public communications network, contrary to section 127(2)(c) of the Communications Act 2003. This provides that a person commits an offence if “for the purpose of causing annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety to another [she] … persistently makes use of a public electronic network”.”

[3] https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025/dec/23/uk-police-le...

Regarding Graham Linehan who is by far the best example.

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junon
2 hours ago
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[1] is illegal

Not sure what [2] is about.

[3] doesn't appear relevant either.

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Argonaut998
1 hour ago
[-]
“Is illegal”

Well yes, that’s my point. :)

2. Is a woman being arrested and charged with causing “anxiety” for a series of tweets.

3. Is the same; wrongthink guised as “threats” etc

If you just want to defend the censorship as is your right then just say so instead doing the usual:

“It’s not happening”

“Ok. It’s happening and that’s a good thing”

Rigmarole and wasting my time.

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matips
4 hours ago
[-]
Considering all forms of sharing information as freedom, USA have huge problem with copyrights. Copyright limits people right to speech to protect interest of corporations, same as ban of stalking or slanders limits freedom of speech to protect victims.
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boudin
4 hours ago
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This portal will just contain propaganda to serve the fascist agenda of the current US government.

Not saying that things are perfect in Europe but the US talking about freedom and freedom of speech sounds like a joke.

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intended
1 hour ago
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I think nations should add content moderation as part of mandatory volunteer duties.

The online commons and tasks are too complex and absurd, and we have many people who value speech, who would be the ideal people to take on these tasks. Putting their values into action so to speak.

Sunlight is the best disinfectant, so the moment people volunteer for this, they will themselves see whether the claims of misinformation and disinformation are overblown, and then vote accordingly.

Obviously speech is a super important part of our online lives, and should be treated as such.

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Gareth321
3 hours ago
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I am European and I would like to challenge you a little. Both the US and Europe have major issues with press and freedom of expression. To give you some examples from the European side. Specifically, the UK:

* Police in England and Wales recorded 12,183 arrests in 2023 for online speech. This number is growing fast, but the government isn't releasing the data anymore. A few years ago this man retweeted a meme (pretty milquetoast by internet standards) and was arrested and asked if he would undergo re-education: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11066477/Veteran-ar...

* The UK records "non-crime hate incidents," whereby if someone complains about you because they don't like you, and if the officer also doesn't like you, they record your behaviour on your permanent record, even if you haven't committed any crime. This record is accessible and used by many industries such as teaching, firefighters, and police. If you have even one non-crime hate incident on your record, you can be excluded from a job.

* The UK Online Safety Act 2023 requires websites with content which "could" harm children to age verify all users. Porn sites. Social media. Etc. This required people sending in their government ID to be permanently retained by a multitude of private companies. There are already many examples of sensitive data being leaked and hacked. Now that kid are using VPNs to access porn sites, the current ruling government is seeking to ban VPNs ("for children", of course).

* UK law criminalises “threatening,” “abusive,” or “insulting” words. The legal test is (I am not making this up), whether someone took offense. This has led to outrageous examples such as this man who is facing a longer sentence for burning a Quran than the man who stabbed him (for burning said Quran): https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c8xr12yx5l4o

* In 2023–2024, the government obtained a court injunction preventing publication of details relating to a major data breach involving Afghan relocation applicants (the ARAP scheme). Parts of the reporting were restricted for national security and safety reasons.

* The Defence and Security Media Advisory Notice system allows the government to advise editors not to publish information that could harm national security. They have broad authority here.

* The Official Secrets Act 1989 criminalizes unauthorized disclosure of classified government information. Journalists themselves can potentially be prosecuted. There is no formal public interest defense written into the Act.

* The Contempt of Court Act 1981 restricts what can be published once someone is arrested or charged if publication could prejudice a trial.

* Ofcom regulates broadcast media under impartiality rules. News broadcasters must follow “due impartiality” rules. They can have their licenses revoked if they're not following some rather vague rules.

If I'm honest, I'm very envious of the First Amendment. It's clear that we do not have the same right to free expression in Europe. No doubt there are supporters of this system who prefer a society in which one may not say offensive or unkind things. But I think there are too many examples where suppression of speech inevitably leads to authoritarianism.

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phatfish
1 hour ago
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Thanks for your input on UK society. FWIW, despite the coordinated attacks we are doing just fine. If you live your life through social media it might look like we are one step from North Korea though.
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j-krieger
48 minutes ago
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> FWIW, despite the coordinated attacks we are doing just fine.

What a sad handwaive of the current state of affairs

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phatfish
19 minutes ago
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Is there something specific you would like to discuss? Preferably not a copy and paste "info" dump like the parent that is designed to be difficult to respond to unless someone is unemployed or an LLM.
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gadders
1 hour ago
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...as long as your views wouldn't be offensive to the average Guardian reader, you're OK.
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blell
29 minutes ago
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Russia Today is blocked in the EU.

Yes I know you’ll tell me it’s for my own good. Spare me.

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dgxyz
4 hours ago
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It's not a hoax, it's a straight up lie.
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dirasieb
3 hours ago
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https://archive.ph/bdEqK

>>Police make 30 arrests a day for offensive online messages

>The police are making more than 30 arrests a day over offensive posts on social media and other platforms.

>Thousands of people are being detained and questioned for sending messages that cause “annoyance”, “inconvenience” or “anxiety” to others via the internet, telephone or mail.

>Custody data obtained by The Times shows that officers are making about 12,000 arrests a year under section 127 of the Communications Act 2003 and section 1 of the Malicious Communications Act 1988.

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larholm
3 hours ago
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"What is illegal offline should be illegal online: Council agrees position on the Digital Services Act"

https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2021...

I believe you are referring to UK examples, which are not representative for Europe or covered under the DSA.

The overall message still applies; harassment and death threats are no less legal and no more legal because they happen online.

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dirasieb
3 hours ago
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the UK is located in europe, this US plan is about pushing for more free speech in europe

whether or not 30 arrests per day for social media posts is exclusive to the UK it is relevant to the OP link

>harassment and death threats

we both know that this is not what's being discussed here

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dgxyz
3 hours ago
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Ignore the cherry picking and sensationalism around this. There are a few cases which are thrown out which were overreach.

But nearly all of them are direct threats to people, stalking, repetitive abuse, support for terrorism and admissions of actual criminal activity.

If you wrote these things on a wall outside your house you'd be arrested. If you said them down the pub you'd get the shit kicked out of you in 30 seconds. Do you expect these to be ignored under "free speech"? No because they wouldn't be even in the US.

This increased because people feel safe saying these things on social media because there are other people saying them in their social bubble.

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j-krieger
45 minutes ago
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> It's not a hoax, it's a straight up lie

> There are a few cases which are thrown out which were overreach <-- You are here

> Well overreach and sentencing is happening, but it's not common enough to care

> Yeah sentencing to prison is common now, but as long as you stay within the confines of the law you won't be affected

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dirasieb
3 hours ago
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where's your source? am i supposed to just take your word for it?
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dgxyz
3 hours ago
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3 day old account asking me to cite sources - find your own that isn't the Times! Start a research project if you care this much!
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dirasieb
3 hours ago
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my sources (the times, FOIA requests) are bad

your sources (nonexistent) are good

got it

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j-krieger
1 hour ago
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> First, the EU countries have much higher World Press Freedom Index than the US

It's a logical fallacy to derive perfect freedom from censorship from this. Sorry, but you're dead wrong.

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flawn
1 hour ago
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So you're telling me, the landlord of a burning house starts to put out the (smaller) fire next door in a self-less act of virtue?

There is some other incentive here other than supposedly restoring "freedom of speech", don't you agree?

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j-krieger
40 minutes ago
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No, I'm telling you that deriving perfect free speech from a higher freedom of press is a logical fallacy.
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syspec
7 hours ago
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Meanwhile, you can't even go on pornhub in certain states in the US, but yes let's let people go on X and engage in hate speech. In fact I'm sure bad actors will use that site FROM the us, to anonymize their hate speech from Russia/China
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hdgvhicv
3 hours ago
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Americans is land of the free until someone shows a nipple. Or copies a floppy. Or refuses to partake in flag shagging. Or says something critical of the president.

Basically America is very good at protecting hate speech, not so good at the rest.

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numpad0
52 minutes ago
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Yeah. This effort feels perplexing. US just isn't the free-est country on Earth in terms of free speech protections, and the gap is slowly widening. IIRC there still isn't secrecy of communication baked into laws as principles.
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kjksf
2 hours ago
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I principled stance would be against government censoring nipples AND speech of any kind, including what you call "hate speech".

My educated guess is that your definition of "hate speech" doesn't include people openly calling for assassinating federal employees (i.e. ICE).

BTW: properly applied 1st amendment is what led to un-banning censorship of nipples (see. Flynt v. United States, Miller v. California) as well as unbanning "obscene" books by Henry Miller and others (Grove Press, Inc. v. Gerstein)

I'm against censorship of nipples and speech including what you likely consider "hate speech". To me the line is calling to kill or physically harm someone. Which leftists are currently doing in spades and yet BlueSky doesn't ban them for that.

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hdgvhicv
2 hours ago
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So your line is in a different place to majority of Americans and certainly the majority of the world

Which is fine, and also why crying about “freedom of speech” is disingenuous. Everyone has different views on what’s allowed and what’s not, but everyone agrees there must be restrictions.

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kjksf
3 hours ago
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I'm confused about your principles.

Do you want censorship (of porn, of "hate speech") or not?

Because it seems you don't want censorship of porn but do want censorship of speech.

"hate speech" is a made up thing that politicians use to jail people who complain about government.

If you're an American you should cherish 1st amendment. You should cherish the fact that founding fathers recognized that the greatest thread to your freedom is not another person with a gun but a thousand people with a gun i.e. government.

And giving government the power to censor speech they don't like is the fastest way to tyranny.

That's why freedom of speech is 1st amendment. Not second, not fifth. It's 1st because it's that important.

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larholm
3 hours ago
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Freedom of speech is not absolute anywhere, not even under the 1st amendment in the USA.

Death threats are illegal whether they happen offline or online.

Yelling "I HAVE A BOMB!" in an airport comes with consequences.

I believe we can agree on these two examples.

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kjksf
2 hours ago
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Yes, we can.

But that's not what "hate speech" is code word for.

At this point in time any opinion to the right of extreme leftist ideology is considered by said leftist to be "hate speech".

Examples of "hate speech": criticism of muslims (but jews are ok), or minorities, or men playing in women's sport or breast amputation of 15yr olds, or immigration.

Nick investigating Somali fraud is racist and hateful.

The "hate speech" box is big enough that you can put a lot in it.

So yeah, we agree that there are limits to free speech. We agree that death threats cross the line.

But you tell me if we agree where that line is.

If you think there's such think as "hate speech" and it crosses the line, then we do not agree.

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mortarion
1 hour ago
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Countries in Europe (and most of the world) have positive constitutions, which defines what the government "must do" (for its citizens), whilst the USA has a negative constitution that defines what the government "cannot do" (against its citizens).

What constitutes hate speech is carefully defined in the constitutions of EU countries. Politicians can't just amend or extend the definition at will, except in the UK which has a strange system of laws and not a constitution like you're used to in the USA or in the EU.

In Europe we recognize that Hitler came to power by abusing free speech, which is why using the same rhetoric now can land you in trouble with the law. We also recognize that the pen is mightier than the sword and that unfettered speech can be used to persuade groups of people to use violence against other groups of people.

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frumplestlatz
46 minutes ago
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Hitler was literally banned from public speaking for two years.

The Nazis came to power through widespread normalized political violence, not speech, and banning Hitler from speaking did nothing but further undermine the legitimacy of the government’s mandate to rule.

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RupertSalt
34 minutes ago
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Joseph Goebbels would have been disappointed to learn that his office was superfluous and irrelevant!
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beej71
6 hours ago
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> Meanwhile, you can't even go on pornhub in certain states in the US.

Hilarious to think that freedom.gov might be the workaround.

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j-krieger
1 hour ago
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I agree that hate speech must have limits but I have no idea where government trust comes from, especially in the current times. It's like people forget that voting swings and sways and that at some point in time, a government you won't agree with will be able to wield all these shiny new tools for censorship.
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xp84
5 hours ago
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> let people go on X and engage in hate speech

So interesting to see it become a popular opinion that we should "not let" people say certain things. Like, if necessary, we should jail people for speaking.

I remember learning about the ACLU[1] as a teen, 25 years ago, and how they took a lot of flak for defending people who said things we all agreed were gross, which at first glance seems disgusting. But the lesson we were taught was that the Constitutional guarantee of "freedom of expression" wasn't qualified with "as long as the opinions being expressed are cool ones."

Really, "hate speech" is defined as "any ideas counter to beliefs I hold dearly." Right wingers think some or all porn is the "bad" kind of expression and apparently banworthy, and left wingers think saying pretty much anything about trans ideology (other than full-throated endorsement) is hate speech.

I'm aware that many who are of the "don't let people do 'hate speech'" aren't Americans and don't owe any respect for the ideas of our particular Constitution, and that's fine -- but many Americans also now feel that citizens should only be able to speak the subset of ideas that one party endorses, and that any other ideas should be punishable, as they are in the UK.[2]

[1] If I understand it correctly, I think the ACLU is under new management, and no longer defends anyone whose ideas are uncomfortable.

[2] https://factually.co/fact-checks/justice/uk-arrests-for-twee... This fact-check points out that "only" 10% of the 30 arrests per day for online postings end up with convictions, and that it's rare to have "long" prison sentences. Very comforting.

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jeroenhd
5 hours ago
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American free speech laws are the exception, not the rule. All European free speech laws have always been balanced and weighed up against other laws. This is hardly anything new. If anything, the internet has brought forth a short time period where everything goes and the status quo is now recovering.

The legal definition of hate speech (or rather, its local equivalents) is not just "any ideas counter to beliefs I hold dearly".

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MiiMe19
3 hours ago
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American free speech laws are the superior option. A government that has the power to arrest people for saying "hateful" things is no better than China or North Korea. But at least you won't need to deal with people saying mean things (that you can block) on your computer (that no one is forcing you to use for social media) anymore, right?
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jjtwixman
38 minutes ago
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Boring American arrogance.

America wants to be free to spread fascist propaganda and child sexual abuse material all over the world, i.e., it's utterly degenerate culture.

You are free to try, we are free to ban it. It's all good.

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dirasieb
3 hours ago
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12 thousand people arrested per year for social media posts is "balanced"? https://archive.ph/bdEqK

at this point it's the #1 principle of the UK government, everything else comes second after putting people in jail for saying the wrong things

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jeroenhd
2 hours ago
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What the law says and what law enforcement does are two different things. 90% of those arrests don't lead to conviction. The law isn't the problem here.
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dirasieb
2 hours ago
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do you think being arrested for social media posts can lead to a chilling effect on those social media posts? why are we pretending that being "arrested but not convicted" is anywhere near acceptable for speech the government doesn't like?
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jeroenhd
2 hours ago
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Cops can arrest anyone for any reason. If it wasn't for speech, it'd be for public intoxication or accusations of being a paedophiles or for potentially possessing a weapon.

Like the linked article states: the law doesn't permit the police to do what they do. Even if you implement an America-style "you can even yell bomb in an airport" speech law, the cops would still arrest people to intimidate them. Changing the law does nothing when the police force is simply ignoring the law.

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dirasieb
1 hour ago
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>America-style "you can even yell bomb in an airport"

that's not even remotely close to reality, you have zero understanding of what the free speech laws in america are if you believe this is covered by the first amendment

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dirasieb
3 hours ago
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complaining about losing the freedom to watch porn without ID while in the same comment pushing for more people to face state action for social media posts

porn is ok, posts that hurt my fee fees and ideological bias bad :'( (both are ok in my opinion btw)

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nomilk
13 hours ago
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Can someone ELI5 how it actually works?

Say I'm a UK citizen with advanced glioblastoma (implying loss of faculties, seizures, and pain; no cure, and things to worsen before eventually passing away, possibly some time from now). Suppose I wish to view websites on euthanasia options, but am blocked from doing so by the UK's Online Safety Act.

How does/will Freedom.gov help? (is it essentially a free VPN?)

Also, as others have pointed out, couldn't the censoring government simply block access to freedom.gov?

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gpt5
12 hours ago
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According to Reuters, it will essentially be a free VPN.

https://www.reuters.com/world/us-plans-online-portal-bypass-...

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fbn79
6 minutes ago
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So nothing new. We can just use cloudflare warp
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tokenless
3 hours ago
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Free ... as in they'll spy on everything you do.
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backscratches
3 hours ago
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They already record as much global traffic as possible.
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tokenless
3 hours ago
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Sure but now suckers probably using their DNS, or if not they still got a human name to IP / time / duration map.
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touristtam
9 hours ago
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So you're not paying for it? In corporate america how is that going to be moneytized?
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toofy
5 hours ago
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it would be extremely naive to believe that certain corporations allied with the regime wouldn’t have complete, entire, total access to all of the traffic to feed their data collction.
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EagnaIonat
8 hours ago
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VPNs are in no way secure. I'm sure they will be taking all your data and using it.
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mobiuscog
3 hours ago
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I'm sure Palantir will volunteer
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trimethylpurine
7 hours ago
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It's a government program. The tax payer pays the service provider, a company owned by some government official's cousin. Monetization happened just before your employer paid you this week.
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askl
4 hours ago
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You are the product
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HomeLabCrap
8 hours ago
[-]
Let the NSA deal with that…
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jeroenhd
5 hours ago
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That may be pretty useful for torrenting, actually.
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badgersnake
5 hours ago
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Oh they’re definitely going to be watching for that. You can have the propaganda but if you start stealing from rich people they’ll be after you.
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shiroiuma
4 hours ago
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Can people use it for sailing the high seas?
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techterrier
6 hours ago
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can we use it for, erm, other 'freedoms' ?
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isodev
10 hours ago
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Free Trump VPN to go with one's Trump Phone?
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oaiey
7 hours ago
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And since euthanasia is not favoured by the religious right in the US (I assume here for sake of argument) it would be filtered by VPN / DNS anyway in the VPN
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bastawhiz
9 hours ago
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As someone who lives in North Carolina and can't even open most mainstream porn sites, I too am waiting for the freedom
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balls187
7 hours ago
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Porn Sites? How about an interview with a politician on a late-nite network television show.
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hdgvhicv
3 hours ago
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Is YouTube blocking that in your state?
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kjksf
2 hours ago
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It would be useful if you provided the context.

CBS was given rights, from US gov, for free, to broadcast their programming in airways (which are limited resources hence you need gov to manage access to it).

To get that they had to agree to Equal Opportunities/Equal Time Rule (Section 315 of the Communications Act). Basically give politicians from different parties equal time on airways.

That seems like the right rule. It's also a rule that has not been enforced. I can only find cases of denying complains in 2006, 1996.

Maybe leftist government were not interested in suing leftist news network for promoting leftist politicians. Or maybe I'm paranoid.

Anyhoo, CBS taped an interview with leftist politician. FCC chair reminded them that Section 315 exists and that they'll be on the hook to provide equal time to a non-leftist politician.

I don't know decision making process at CBS but they decided to not air interview on public airways and instead posted it on YouTube, which is not governed by Section 315 because they don't use public airways.

So what exactly do you object to?

The existence of Section 315? Take it up with politicians.

That FCC enforces the rule? It's their purpose. Their raison d'etre.

You don't believe interview with a politician triggers Section 315? State your case.

You don't like that CBS decided to put interview on YouTube to avoid triggering the obligation to also give airtime to another politician? Take it up with CBS.

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guerrilla
1 hour ago
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There has never been a leftist government in the US. You seem a bit lost.
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TacticalCoder
25 minutes ago
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> There has never been a leftist government in the US. You seem a bit lost.

I'll give you three examples of the dems sliding left.

Biden did make sure all the borders were wide open and american forklifts, operated by americans, have been used to facilitate the mass migration of millions and millions of non-US citizens into the US.

Under the same government there have been politicians passing laws so that there'd be tampons in men's restrooms.

And you now have a mayor in NYC explaining publicly, to americans on US soil, that it's time to "look at the life of the prophet Muhammad" (I encourage everyone to go and buy a quran and go read it to actually learn about the muhammad but this may make want you to switch from democrat to republican).

I understand that people who vote democrats don't want to be called leftists but I don't think anyone disputes that dems have been slanting towards the left more and more.

Democrats having no issues with a politician lecturing them as to how they should look at the life of the prophet of islam makes me think something serious is going on.

I'm not sure who is lost here.

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crossroadsguy
9 hours ago
[-]
Such an irony that there are two sides trying to control the Internet in their own lovely ways and in the end it's the people who will have to suffer one way or the other. But I do think countries around the world should have a hard look at how the Internet is, even today, de facto controlled by the US. Take ".com" and ".net" domains for example. Like there are efforts underway to get away from SWIFT (and hopefully one day USD as well), this should be independent. In a way, at least in the long term, this US administration might be a net positive for the world at least in the term of depolarisation. Or maybe the focal points will shift from existing ones to new ones.
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IAmGraydon
7 hours ago
[-]
You think you want US influence to weaken, but you may feel very differently should it happen. There is a lot you’re taking for granted.
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seszett
4 hours ago
[-]
These days what people receive of the US influence is mostly interference in politics to favour the far-right, military threats and economic war through tariffs. As well as just random verbal attacks on local politicians on local matters.

I'm sure there is a positive side to the US influence, but it's well hidden and they definitely don't advertise it.

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jjtwixman
36 minutes ago
[-]
Since you guys voted for Trump 2 it's guaranteed and it's happening right now. But, at least you deserve it.
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jadenPete
13 hours ago
[-]
Then won’t foreign governments just ban freedom.gov? This problem has already been solved with networks like Tor and I2P. It seems like it would be more strategic to fund those projects instead.
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jjmarr
7 hours ago
[-]
> This problem has already been solved with networks like Tor and I2P. It seems like it would be more strategic to fund those projects instead.

The US government is responsible for 35% of Tor's funding[1] and has been its primary sponsor since Tor was invented as a side project in the US Naval Research Lab.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tor_Project

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krige
4 hours ago
[-]
Is, or was? I vaguely recall Doge gutting this among many other things?
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nickorlow
12 hours ago
[-]
US can probably use their soft power to influence them not to do that. Also would imagine the US gov could also set up some more censorship resistant access methods.
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crossroadsguy
9 hours ago
[-]
At this point US has close to zero (if not negative) "soft" power.
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coliveira
8 hours ago
[-]
This is what democrats and Hollywood are for. Some people still believe in them.
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rtkwe
8 hours ago
[-]
Trade and tarriff relief are an option still. Despite how shitty the US has been and the distrust that will cause in the future access to US markets will be very attractive until the economy collapses. Soft power isn't just from countries liking you after all.
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crossroadsguy
6 hours ago
[-]
Access to US market? Is that a joke you are trying to crack? An “access” that literally depends upon how loud the orange fool farted on the commode that morning — that access and that market? I mean do you really not see what’s happening or you are just being a nice contrarian? Because this baffles me.
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micw
6 hours ago
[-]
Would be a good reason for the EU to start a 200% tariff for US software and cloud services then.
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sssilver
5 hours ago
[-]
How would this work? Wouldn't a reciprocal tariff with identical parameters by the US against EU tech companies completely obliterate EU tech landscape?
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microtonal
5 hours ago
[-]
Most EU tech companies probably have primarily European customers (given that services export from the US to the EU is much larger than the other way around). Second, all those EU customers are looking for EU alternatives that do not have a huge tariff.

Reciprocal tariffs would (for the EU) hurt export of goods much more, since that is where the EU has a large surplus.

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sssilver
5 hours ago
[-]
The number of tech companies matters less than their scale. SAP, Spotify, and Dassault Systèmes likely have more economic impact than ten thousand tiny software shops combined. And notably, all three derive a huge portion of their revenue from the US market.
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argsnd
3 hours ago
[-]
The US simply has more numerous and more important companies that rely on being able to freely export their services globally. The leverage here is with Europeans not only because of this asymmetry but because there is also more political appetite there to punish America than there is in America to punish Europe.
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dirasieb
3 hours ago
[-]
...and collapse their own economies in the process
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happymellon
7 hours ago
[-]
> Trade and tarriff relief are an option still.

That surely is running out of steam. Everyone's got whiplash from trying to watch America and it's tariffs. How do you know it won't be applied anyway, or forgiven for whatever flavour of the day policy it changes to.

There is very little point in conceding to it when you'll have another opportunity for something else that might be more amicable before the inks dry on that tariff.

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jjtwixman
35 minutes ago
[-]
Bro literally nobody trusts you any more. We do what you say, you put tariffs on us, we don't do what you say, you put tariffs on us.

We don't care any more. We don't like you. Do you understand?

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riffraff
5 hours ago
[-]
> Trade and tarriff relief are an option still

Are they though? Trump tried to use them to get ownership of Greenland a few weeks ago and just gave up. Then he tried to bully Canada again, and also gave up again. I think at this point nobody takes his offers of relief or threats seriously anymore, since any deal you make can be invalidated a couple weeks later.

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copperx
12 hours ago
[-]
Which soft power are you talking about?
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petcat
11 hours ago
[-]
I think we're all aware that EU is trying to become more independent, but as of right now basically everything they do online, or really anything with technology at all, is American in some way. That's a lot of "soft power" and it will take decades, maybe a century, for EU or UK to replace it.
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XorNot
6 hours ago
[-]
Tarrifs cost US consumers not EU consumers.

If the US wants to ban AWS from operating in the EU that's just going to accelerate the shift away, for example.

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petcat
1 hour ago
[-]
There are no tarriffs being applied on digital services. That's obviously intentional considering how much soft power those services exert on countries the USA wants to maintain an outsized influence over.
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XorNot
52 minutes ago
[-]
How would tarrifs be applied on digital services?

Tarriffs are a tax on imports to the US applied by the US government.

You can't tarriff selling a service overseas, in fact since AWS in other countries is a locally incorporated entity you can't even meaningfully demand they charge more AWS in the UK is a separate corporation incorporated and taxed under UK law, for example.

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petcat
48 minutes ago
[-]
Right, I'm aware of that. Which is why I don't know why you brought up tarriffs in a discussion about the "soft power" that US technology services impose.
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XorNot
33 minutes ago
[-]
Because you said "that's obviously intentional" as though that's a thing that could be done.

My point was that tarriffs or other trade sanctions on Europe are hardly going to change the calculus or consumption of services by Europe - the most that could be done is accelerate the migration away, but European consumers wouldn't notice a thing by those mechanisms (because US digital services are an import - "kind of" - given actual corporate structures).

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kulahan
11 hours ago
[-]
Sure, it's decreasing under Trump, but to pretend the richest, most militarily powerful, most culturally influential nation on the planet somehow doesn't have any soft power is... certainly a choice.
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jjtwixman
34 minutes ago
[-]
Yeah actually we hate you. Apparently you've still got a loft of soft power in Nigeria, though. Most Europeans are now firmly anti-America.
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pornel
8 hours ago
[-]
Republicans are spending all of US's remaining soft power on stealing Greenland.

If it ends with the Navy showing its non-soft power, Europe won't have any fucks left to give about some website.

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kataklasm
6 hours ago
[-]
We already don't. We want the Americans to pack up their bases and fuck off. Ami, go home! They've done enough work to stir up chaos and war all over the planet in the last 7 decades.
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viking123
2 hours ago
[-]
Yeah they should pack up and leave seriously, go serve Israel and attack Iran, I want no part in that.
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frumplestlatz
34 minutes ago
[-]
You’re entirely free — at any time — to leave NATO, develop your own replacement weapons programs, and fully fund your own defense.

I suspect most Americans would actually be quite supportive.

You’ll just have to figure out how to actually pay for it.

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jjtwixman
33 minutes ago
[-]
The only country Americans care about is Israel, it doesn't really matter, we get it. We don't care. Please close Ramstein :)
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polski-g
8 hours ago
[-]
Anyone who wants to trade in USD. Protection of maritime trade routes. Nuclear shield. Netflix, YouTube, Nvidia, OpenAI, Amazon.
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microtonal
5 hours ago
[-]
To be honest, only the last few holdouts in Europe still believe in the US nuclear shield. The fact that Germany is trying to make a deal with France should tell you everything.

Netflix, YouTube and OpenAI are completely meaningless and we could drop it tomorrow. NVIDIA and AWS are a different story. The only problem is that once things become transactional (as opposed to mutually trusting allies), Europe can leverage ASML and possibly ARM. So it doesn’t bring much soft power anymore, only mutually assured economic destruction.

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viking123
2 hours ago
[-]
More European countries need nuclear deterrent, after all that is what seemingly gets Trump to write love letters to Kim Jong-un and meet him.
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XorNot
6 hours ago
[-]
What sort of soft power do you imagine Netflix represents? It exists but it's not leverage.
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shaky-carrousel
4 hours ago
[-]
In the same way they used their soft power to influence them not to block twitter and facebook? Because that power is slowly going from soft to limp...
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ascorbic
5 hours ago
[-]
No government can stand up to the might of La Liga
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ohyoutravel
12 hours ago
[-]
Well, maybe USAID could have helped here. Or a robust State Dept.
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chatmasta
12 hours ago
[-]
Wait until you find out who funded Tor development...
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paulryanrogers
11 hours ago
[-]
The US Navy. Why would that be surprising?
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scythe
11 hours ago
[-]
It's a propaganda maneuver. And it's obviously just as critical of China as it is of Europe. The State Department's public voices may be immersed in the culture war but there are probably a few cooler heads left who have learned to keep out of the spotlight.
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badgersnake
5 hours ago
[-]
Yes. And then, if he doesn’t like the regime because they haven’t done him enough favours the orange one will rage about it on his social network.
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zmgsabst
12 hours ago
[-]
Sure — but the UK or EU has to accept the constant rhetoric of “you clearly don’t support free speech, you block freedom.gov” when discussing with the US.

I don’t think it’s meant to be a perfect solution; I think it’s meant to be a political tool.

Also, the US does fund Tor — originally US Navy + DARPA, now through Dept of State. Entirely possible that they’ll eventually operate a Tor onion site for freedom.gov too.

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calmworm
8 hours ago
[-]
This is grade-school level mind games. Is it really that easy?
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thomasingalls
6 hours ago
[-]
I'm not convinced that this whole discussion section isn't astroturf... some real out there opinions popping up in here
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globular-toast
6 hours ago
[-]
When did you stop being a child? Can you point to the actual day it happened? Guess what... It didn't happen to anyone else either.
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carlosjobim
10 hours ago
[-]
Maybe that's the purpose? Pushing European and global "allies" to show their cards. Some citizens will support more censorship, while some will start questioning. It's good to know where your rivals stand.

Also it is cheap, easy, non-controversial domestically in the US, and ethically coherent with American values.

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seszett
4 hours ago
[-]
> ethically coherent with American values

Do you mean that VPN will blur the nipples when you watch pictures of classical paintings through it?

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shaky-carrousel
4 hours ago
[-]
> Do you mean that VPN will blur the nipples when you watch pictures of classical paintings through it?

No, it means they will send a SWAT team to your house if you use it to download a movie.

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warkdarrior
6 hours ago
[-]
> Pushing European and global "allies" to show their cards. Some citizens will support more censorship, while some will start questioning. It's good to know where your rivals stand.

I don't think European countries have been shy or sneaky about their restrictions on online content.

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carlosjobim
1 hour ago
[-]
That's a good point.
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rdudek
9 hours ago
[-]
What about all the age restriction stuff coming online here in the US in various states? Those are cool right?

This service is definitely a honeypot for tracking.

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ivan_gammel
15 hours ago
[-]
If something looks like MITM, chances are it is MITM.
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zorked
4 hours ago
[-]
It is indeed one marvelous honeypot.
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dirasieb
3 hours ago
[-]
i'll take US mitm harvesting my data over the european alternative (man in the jail)
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engineer_22
14 hours ago
[-]
What's MITM?
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trelane
14 hours ago
[-]
Man In The Middle. They're saying that the US is intercepting the traffic.
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Am4TIfIsER0ppos
13 hours ago
[-]
What do you think cloudflare is? This is just them coming out with it now.
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ivan_gammel
11 hours ago
[-]
It is much more convenient to catch the fish that eats particular sort of worms putting such worm on a hook than finding the right fish among many others in a fishnet.
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cortesoft
10 hours ago
[-]
Also MITM? The comment you are replying to in no way implies that this is the only MITM.
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Am4TIfIsER0ppos
3 hours ago
[-]
Since they masquerade as example.com with an https certificate that your browser will trust: yes.
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trelane
10 hours ago
[-]
I am not claiming the OP ist right or wrong.

I am merely explaining what MITM is and what the OP meant.

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diego_moita
13 hours ago
[-]
The most effective way to intercept messages encrypted with public key cryptography: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man-in-the-middle_attack

You can also call it "U.S. government spying on Europeans".

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latentsea
8 hours ago
[-]
MAGA-Infused Trump Machine.
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tills13
15 hours ago
[-]
A state sponsored vpn is probably not (only) gonna do what you think it's doing.
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soulofmischief
9 hours ago
[-]
It probably will do what I think it's doing.
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1970-01-01
10 hours ago
[-]
I'm guessing China will simply block it at the firewall. It would be hilarious to witness the US Gov validating The Pirate Bay's hydra domain approach. Maybe some squatting isn't a bad idea:

freedom.live freedom.xyz freedom.space etc.

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shakna
8 hours ago
[-]
I wonder of China can pay Trump with a golden limosuine to get backdoor access to it.
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jimnotgym
4 hours ago
[-]
Will I be able to use this to watch Democrats get interviewed by Stephen Colbert?
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tracker1
15 hours ago
[-]
Until you have to validate your id/age to continue...

Seriously though... we have one segment undermining foreign lockdowns while the same and other segments are literally doing the same here.

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MiiMe19
13 hours ago
[-]
its like we have different smaller governments that can pass their own laws inside of one larger government or something
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feature20260213
10 hours ago
[-]
This comment made my day :)
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alistairSH
15 hours ago
[-]
Won't those other nations just ban freedom.gov?
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Aloisius
13 hours ago
[-]
Nothing stops them from hosting it on fbi.gov, state.gov, etc.

It's one thing to block some random .gov site unused for anything else, it's another thing to block a domain used for, say, filing flight plans.

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antonyh
1 hour ago
[-]
As a Brit/European, would I notice or care if fbi.gov was blocked via consumer internet providers? I'd probably not notice if *.gov was blocked. I'm fairly sure government-level internet provisioning has a very different set of restrictions to the general population for those who need access to US Gov services, in the same way that I'm sure the Chinese state itself isn't subject to the rules of the Great Firewall.
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jeroenhd
4 hours ago
[-]
Europeans don't generally use .gov so if the US tries to pull that, they'll just block whatever .gov their VPN is hosted on.

Southern European countries are blocking whole Cloudflare IP ranges because of the massive grip on the government the sports licensing maffia has there. These countries also don't feature any direct flights to America as far as I can tell.

These blocks may cause (temporary) issues for American business relations and tourism, but such side effects may not be considered so problematic if the US leverages their government infrastructure to attack European legislators.

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tjohns
13 hours ago
[-]
Nit: If you're filing a flight plan, you do it with the country you're departing from. Even if you're piloting an aircraft departing into the US, it wouldn't have any effect on operations if you couldn't reach US websites. There's also several alternative ways for pilots to file flight plans outside of the web.

(The flight plans get passed between countries via AFTN/AMHS, which are dedicated telecommunications networks independent of the Internet.)

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Aloisius
12 hours ago
[-]
I thought airlines still had to file passenger manifests with CBP separately, no?
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tjohns
12 hours ago
[-]
Yes, though that's separate from the flight plan.

There's also several different ways to transmit the passenger manifest to CBP - including over a CBP-provided VPN and IATA "Type B" messages sent through ARINC/SITA.

The network for Type B messages is also independent of the Internet (it was developed 60 years ago).

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crossroadsguy
9 hours ago
[-]
If a Govt decides that I am pretty sure they won't stop at anything but TLD level banning. Besides I don't know about other countries (or EU) but I won't be surprised if our giant industrious neighbour already has infrastructure in place just for such Trumpian shenanigans :)
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IAmGraydon
7 hours ago
[-]
Since no one seems to have a serious answer to this…the answer is yes, it would easily be blocked. Beyond that, absolutely no one would use this service. Therefore, it can be considered to be nothing more than political posturing by a weak administration.
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crest
15 hours ago
[-]
They wouldn't dare ban a .gov domain and we will hide all of behind Cloudflare! /s
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amarant
11 hours ago
[-]
What content bans does Europe have? /Confused European
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throwaway140126
3 hours ago
[-]
In Germany there are some examples for the suppression of speech. For example popular examples are: (1) getting your house raided for calling a politician a dick (2) getting your house raided for calling a politician stupid (3) most recent, just in this week, a retiree gets into trouble with the police for asking worried questions about migration

(1) https://www.spiegel.de/panorama/justiz/hamburg-wohnungsdurch... (2) https://www.justiz.bayern.de/media/images/behoerden-und-geri... (3) https://www.welt.de/politik/deutschland/article6996cb47fc148...

These are examples that spontaneously come to my mind. So I can not talk for whatever country you live in but Germany has a problem about being able to express opinions.

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hananova
2 hours ago
[-]
(1) Is also because it's literally vandalism. (2) Also points out that there were posts of holocaust denial, which has been illegal in most of europe for literal decades. (3) Is an article about an investigation into whether or not the cart was protected by freedom of expression or whether there would be grounds for further trial. Nobody is in trouble yet.

Isn't it convenient how all posts that say something that rhymes with "You can get in trouble in EU country X for just doing Y." The "just" is doing a lot of concealed lifting? None of your three links actually support your assertion.

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throwaway140126
1 hour ago
[-]
(1) Calling a politician a dick is vandalism? That's nonsense.

(2) The corresponding prosecutor made clear that his house was raided for calling the politician stupid and NOT for anything else. You would have known that if you would have read the document I linked to. To quote it:

  Wegen des Tatverdachts einer gegen Personen des politischen Lebens gerichteten
  Beleidigung gem. §§ 185, 188, 194 StGB erfolgte am vergangenen Dienstag, 12.11.2024, eine
  richterlich angeordnete Durchsuchung der Wohnung des Beschuldigten durch Polizeibeamte
  der Kriminalpolizei Schweinfurt
Translated to english:

  Due to suspicion of an offence of insulting persons in political life
  pursuant to Sections 185, 188, 194 of the German Criminal Code (StGB), a
  judicially ordered search of the accused's apartment was carried out last Tuesday, November 12, 2024, by police officers
  from the Schweinfurt Criminal Investigation Department.
(3) He is in trouble in terms that there is an police investigation against him and no it is not okay to have police investigations just because a person expressed his worries about migration.

So, yes my links support my assertion.

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j-krieger
42 minutes ago
[-]
People will lie in your face about number two even though both the Amtsgericht Bamberg as well as the press have been saying that the arrest was made in a case of 188 StgB for months now.
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Etherlord87
1 hour ago
[-]
(1) - there's a photo of a graffiti in the article. But the translation of the article to English doesn't mention the insult was actually painted on a wall...
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throwaway140126
1 hour ago
[-]
(1) That is just a symbolic image. The person answered „Du bist so 1 Pimmel“ (english: „You're such a dick“) to a post of the politician on twitter.

According to Wikipedia it was an answer to the following tweet https://twitter.com/AndyGrote/status/1399001436973899780

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j-krieger
43 minutes ago
[-]
> Also points out that there were posts of holocaust denial, which has been illegal in most of europe for literal decades.

The arrest wasn't made for this but for the insulting of a politican. Stop lying. The press has been correcting this case for months.

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drnick1
7 hours ago
[-]
Porn (now requires age verification), online libraries, movies, some news websites, sports (because of obscure copyright laws) and countless other things.
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josefrichter
7 hours ago
[-]
I’m in the EU and haven’t encountered any of these, except the copyright restrictions - which is really a different matter.
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antonyh
1 hour ago
[-]
I'm in the UK and can't access https://imgur.com/ - an American service that now refuses to serve content to Britain because "On September 30, 2025, Imgur blocked users from the United Kingdom in response to a potential fine from the Information Commissioner's Office regarding its handling of children's personal data". I presume that means OSA.

It does lend credibility to the blocks when it's US companies trying to dodge fines while mishandling PII. The suggestion of using a US freedom gov to dodge US-based self-censorship is as ironic as it is stupid when the real solution is pay the fine and handle the data properly.

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ivan_gammel
6 hours ago
[-]
if you are in Germany, try opening ria.ru. It’s not like we are deprived of something worthy - it is Russian propaganda after all, but it tells enough about freedom of speech.
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jeroenhd
5 hours ago
[-]
With the German border maybe 10 minutes to the east of me, I can open that website just fine. Seems like an exclusively German problem, not a European one.

I don't think foreign propaganda was ever exempt from freedom of speech here in Europe (except the countries and regimes which lacked free speech, of course), it just wasn't much of a problem before the internet made opinions so easy to broadcast.

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ivan_gammel
4 hours ago
[-]
Unfortunately EU is now developing practice of extrajudicial sanctions on EU and national level, targeting both media and individuals expressing points of views alternative to position of Brussels or Berlin. Vance was surprisingly right back then in Munich.

It’s not just Russian propaganda, but now it is conveniently used as a blanket cover to sanction even EU citizens (see case of German journalist Hüseyin Doğru, whose only connection to Russia was a hosting of his pro-Palestinian outlet on a platform affiliated with RT).

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josefrichter
34 minutes ago
[-]
These are very broad generalizations and accusations based on very few individual cases, each of which has its own specific context. And "expressing points of view alternative to position of Brussels and Berlin" sounds like typical propaganda nonsense. Vance couldn't be further from truth, and his remarks sound even more ridiculous in the light of what's happening on US soil.
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josefrichter
5 hours ago
[-]
I'm in Czechia, next to Germany. Just opened Ria Novosti and Russia Today in two other tabs, nothing blocked here.
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micw
6 hours ago
[-]
I am. It just opens. But I can't read russian ^^
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ivan_gammel
4 hours ago
[-]
Looks like German firewall has more holes than Russian or Chinese one. Are you using VPN? It’s still blocked for me.
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throwaway140126
4 hours ago
[-]
Germany uses DNS blocks.. So you can circumvent the censorship by using a DNS provider different than the DNS provider of your ISP.
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heinrich5991
3 hours ago
[-]
Works for me.
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viraptor
5 hours ago
[-]
This is another "in Europe" thing. There's no "in Europe". Germany, Italy, Poland, Portugal, etc. will all have different rules.
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dominicrose
3 hours ago
[-]
A major porn site's reaction to France requiring age verification was quite funny, they replaced their content by complaints instead of implementing the verification. Liberty isn't always a good thing, allowing teens to simply click to say they're adults doesn't cut it.
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warkdarrior
6 hours ago
[-]
Ooooh, if freedom.gov helped bypass copyrights on sports and streaming websites, that would be fantastic!
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FergusArgyll
2 hours ago
[-]
True American freedom requires free NFL for all
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anthk
5 hours ago
[-]
Spaniard here. No, we don't. Every country has different laws. The European Union share some laws but not these.
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sunaookami
5 hours ago
[-]
LaLiga?
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anthk
17 minutes ago
[-]
Malversation.
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dgellow
4 hours ago
[-]
No?
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jusssi
6 hours ago
[-]
List please. Surely there is a wiki page you can drop a link to, right?
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cal_dent
11 hours ago
[-]
its wild to me how so much of online america has been radicalized into becoming nothing more that digital curtain twitchers
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ljlolel
10 hours ago
[-]
Russia Today is banned, for one
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Epa095
7 hours ago
[-]
You mean the TV station lost broadcasting-rights, or you mean the website it actually banned? Cause the website is certainly accessible for me from my European country, although that does not rule out that it is banned in some European countries.
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sunaookami
5 hours ago
[-]
The website rt.com is banned in the whole EU due to a decret by von der Leyen which bypassed parliament. It's trivial to bypass since it's "only" a DNS block but it's still censorship (no matter how you think about the content of RT). Same for Sputnik and the relevant TV channels.
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dgellow
4 hours ago
[-]
That’s a complete lie. I’m in Germany and can access rt.com perfectly fine
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throwaway140126
3 hours ago
[-]
No, it is not. I'm also german and rt.com is DNS blocked by the Telekom.

  dig @192.168.2.1 rt.com
  
  ; <<>> DiG 9.18.39-0ubuntu0.24.04.2-Ubuntu <<>> @192.168.2.1 rt.com
  ; (1 server found)
  ;; global options: +cmd
  ;; Got answer:
  ;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, status: NXDOMAIN, id: 64757
  ;; flags: qr rd ra; QUERY: 1, ANSWER: 0, AUTHORITY: 0, ADDITIONAL: 1

  ;; OPT PSEUDOSECTION:
  ; EDNS: version: 0, flags:; udp: 512
  ;; QUESTION SECTION:
  ;rt.com.    IN A
  
  ;; Query time: 30 msec
  ;; SERVER: 192.168.2.1#53(192.168.2.1) (UDP)
  ;; WHEN: Fri Feb 20 09:17:58 UTC 2026
  ;; MSG SIZE  rcvd: 35
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eagleal
1 hour ago
[-]
It's a per country thing as the EU is not 1 country.

In Italy for example RT website is blocked.

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krige
4 hours ago
[-]
No it isn't. t. EU citizen.
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jampekka
4 hours ago
[-]
rt.com works fine in Finland at least. I don't think we have website bans in general aside something like CSAM and copyright reasons, and even the latter at least is rare.

There seems to be a manufactured narrative from the US right how "Europe" is somehow doing large scale censorship.

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jeroenhd
5 hours ago
[-]
rt.com loads just fine for me. If you want to do research into/get brainwashed by Russian propaganda, nothing is stopping you here.
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3D30497420
4 hours ago
[-]
I'm in Germany and rt.com does not resolve for me. If I use a VPN and access via, say Austria, it does work.
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Gustomaximus
9 hours ago
[-]
That seems crazy to me I read news there occasionally as I like to view opposite sides. Go to BBC, RT, France24 ,Al-Jazeera type sites and see what each has as their focus stories.

You're aware news sites are used to push agenda, some more than others, but that's half the interest of seeing what they push. And sometimes the more fringe have stories on what should be news but don't make it to mainstream media channels.

...anyway I'm more a believer in assuming people have a brain and can figure stuff out vs banning sites, both have danger to them but censorship seems the bigger danger to me.

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amarant
9 hours ago
[-]
True! Though I can't really say I mourn the loss, it is a Russian propaganda outlet dedicated to helping their expansion war. Is this the speech the USA is going to protect? It's still weird to me that the gringoes are helping the commies now, I guess I'm stuck in the old world order!
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carlosjobim
10 hours ago
[-]
One is Russian media, just as Russia bans European media.

Also the world's largest library is banned in Germany.

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jeroenhd
5 hours ago
[-]
Piracy is illegal in most countries. Unless you mean the American Library of Congress, but that's an American decision, not a European one.
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amarant
9 hours ago
[-]
The first one I'm ok with, the second one I'm not sure what you're saying? Google suggests the largest library in the world is the US Congress library, but I couldn't find any sources saying it's banned in Germany? (Also, it's a physical place in the US... What?)

Closest thing I could find to library banned in Germany was a collection of pirated material, which was blocked at a DNS level, meaning many users bypass the ban accidentally, and anyone who wants to can trivially use a different DNS.

I mean I'm probably more in favour of digital piracy than the next guy, but I had completely missed that were calling copyright protection censorship now?

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carlosjobim
1 hour ago
[-]
Yes, I'm referring to the pirate site, which is the largest collection of books in the history of mankind. Of course it is a bit fringe to talk about censorship when it comes to piracy, but I would say that it is. While noting that the US also censors pirate websites.
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Epa095
7 hours ago
[-]
He probably means a famous pirating site, called library dot something.
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kettlecorn
6 hours ago
[-]
I think part of this is preempting concerns that the EU could ban or limit X / Twitter.

They've already fined X heavily for lacking transparency, like not providing a database of advertisers or allowing researchers to access internal data to evaluate misinformation concerns. The EU has threatened that if they need to they may ban or limit X.

Musk and conservatives view X as a critical tool to spread their preferred ideology, and Musk has shown he's not beyond algorithmic and UX manipulation to achieve desired outcomes.

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pembrook
11 hours ago
[-]
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amarant
10 hours ago
[-]
Can we filter for current censorship? Hate to brake it to you but the top category in that page, "censorship in the soviet union" does not apply anymore.....
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pembrook
10 hours ago
[-]
Spain

1) Catalan Referendum Website Seizures (2017)

Spanish courts ordered ISPs to block dozens of pro-independence domains and mirror sites during the referendum. Civil Guard units physically entered data centers to seize servers tied to the Catalan government’s digital voting infrastructure.

2) GitHub Repository Takedown (2017)

Spain obtained a court order forcing GitHub to remove a repository that mirrored referendum voting code and site information, extending censorship beyond Spanish-hosted domains.

3) Rapper Convictions for Online Lyrics

Spanish rapper Valtònyc was convicted for tweets and lyrics deemed to glorify terrorism and insult the monarchy; he fled the country and fought extradition in Belgium for years.

France

4) Blocking of Protest Pages During Yellow Vests (2018–2019)

Authorities requested removals of Facebook pages and livestreams tied to the Yellow Vest protests, citing incitement and public order concerns.

5) Court-Ordered Removal of Election Content (2019 EU Elections)

French judges used expedited procedures under election-period misinformation law to order removal of allegedly false political claims within 48 hours.

6) Prosecution of Political Satire as Hate Speech

Several activists were fined or prosecuted for online posts targeting religious or ethnic groups in explicitly political contexts, even where framed as satire.

Germany

7) Mass Police Raids Over Social Media Posts

German police have conducted coordinated nationwide dawn raids targeting individuals accused of posting illegal political speech under hate-speech laws.

8) Removal of Opposition Content Under NetzDG

Platforms removed thousands of posts from nationalist or anti-immigration political actors within 24 hours to avoid heavy fines under NetzDG enforcement pressure.

9) Criminal Convictions for Holocaust Commentary Online

Individuals have received criminal penalties for online statements denying or relativizing Nazi crimes, even when framed in broader political debate contexts.

United Kingdom

10) Police Visits Over Controversial Tweets

British police have conducted “non-crime hate incident” visits to individuals’ homes over political tweets, creating official records despite no prosecution.

11) Arrests for Offensive Political Posts

Individuals have been arrested under public communications laws for posts criticizing immigration or religion in strongly worded terms.

12) Removal of Campaign Content Under Electoral Rules

Election regulators required digital platforms to remove or restrict political ads that failed to meet transparency requirements during active campaigns.

Italy

13) Enforcement of “Par Condicio” Silence Online

During mandated pre-election silence periods, online political content—including posts by candidates—has been ordered removed or fined.

14) Criminal Defamation Charges Against Bloggers

Italian bloggers critical of politicians have faced criminal defamation prosecutions for investigative posts during election cycles.

Finland

15) Conviction of Sitting MP for Facebook Posts

Finnish MP Päivi Räsänen was prosecuted for Bible-based comments posted online regarding sexuality and religion; although ultimately acquitted, the criminal process itself was lengthy and high-profile.

Sweden

16) Convictions for Anti-Immigration Facebook Posts

Swedish courts have convicted individuals for Facebook comments criticizing immigration policy when deemed “agitation against a population group.”

Netherlands

17) Criminal Case Against Opposition Politician

Dutch politician Geert Wilders was convicted (without penalty) for campaign-rally remarks later amplified online, deemed discriminatory.

Austria

18) Rapid Court Orders Against Political Posts

Austria’s updated online hate-speech regime enabled expedited court orders compelling removal of allegedly unlawful political speech within days.

Belgium

19) Prosecution of Political Party Messaging

Members of the Vlaams Belang party have faced legal sanctions for campaign messaging shared online deemed racist or discriminatory.

Switzerland

20) Criminal Fines for Referendum Campaign Speech

Swiss activists have faced criminal fines for online referendum messaging judged to violate anti-discrimination law during highly contentious votes.

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amarant
10 hours ago
[-]
Can you filter the ones that aren't obviously harmless like laws banning Nazi salutes or agitating violence against people based on race?
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handoflixue
8 hours ago
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See, the problem is, "obviously harmless" varies by person: if you think it is obviously harmless to ban an entire political party, which ostensibly won a legitimate election, and certainly had a lot of popular support... well then, of course we should also ban whichever current political party you consider most evil, right? And then the next most evil political party, and so on, until people have the freedom that comes from knowing only Good, Proper, State-Sanctioned Political Parties exist!

And of course, once it's illegal to agitate against violence, we just have to redefine violence: for instance, posting about Nazis puts them in danger, and they're all white, so clearly you're a racist for opposing Nazis.

These aren't hypothetical examples: the people defending Free Speech have watched these slippery slopes get pulled out again and again. Misgendering a trans person is a "hate crime", reporting on the location of gestapo agents is "inciting violence", protesting against the state is "terrorism"

And fundamentally, this is a lever that gets wielded by whoever is in power: even if you agree with the Left censoring Nazi salutes, are you equally comfortable with the Right censoring child mutilation sites (also known as "Trans resources")?

SURELY "child mutilation" is "obviously harmless" to ban, right?

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hananova
2 hours ago
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Child mutilation is obviously harmless to ban of course. Though calling trans resources that is equally obviously disingenuous.

Maybe Americans should take a break from criticizing the EU and fix their own shit first. It's incredibly frustrating to constantly see far right goons swing around "freedom of speech" as if that term hasn't been a fig leaf for ages. In the US, if you do something that the powers that be dislike that is covered by freedom of speech, they'll manufacture something else to hit you with. At least here in the EU, when you get investigated for something that freedom of expression covers, you'll at least get acquitted eventually.

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seattle_spring
11 hours ago
[-]
There's a hate speech / violence law in the UK that is getting some people arrested for saying things like "round up all people of race X, put them into a hotel, and burn the hotel down." People like Joe Rogan and his ilk are re-packaging those examples as "people being arrested for just sharing their opinion."
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amarant
10 hours ago
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Oh, is that what y'all are on about? I'm not too worried then. About Europe.
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stinkbeetle
10 hours ago
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I don't know what Joe Rogan says or who his ilk are, but this is a pretty extreme characterization of the situation that I don't think is accurate.

For example, UK police track what they consider to be undesirable "non-crime" speech, build databases of people, and intimidate them for these non crimes (knock on their doors, invite them to come to police station, advise them not to say such things, etc). This is quite a new thing, within the past ~10 years.

There have also been other high profile cases of people being arrested for posting things that were not like that burn the hotel down case. They arrested 12,000 people in 2023 and convicted 1,100 of those. For cases where the evidence is as cut and dried as posts made online, they could only secure convictions in 8% of cases, which seems staggering to me when UK's conviction rate generally is like 80%.

Even the conviction rate, even if you say yes there are laws to prohibit certain speech, how far is too far? Are these kinds of laws and convictions needed? Why don't all other countries need them? Why didn't UK need them 20 years ago when there was still internet and social media? Is it not concerning to you that we're told this kind of action is required to hold society together? I'm not saying that calls to violence don't happen or should be tolerated, but if it is not a lie that arresting thousands of people for twitter posts and things is necessary to keep society from breaking down then it seems like putting a bandaid on top of a volcano. It's certainly not developing a resilient, anti-fragile society, quite the opposite IMO.

Is nobody allowed to be concerned about any of this without being some horrible underground extremist, in your opinion?

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amarant
9 hours ago
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Damn I keep forgetting the UK is still located in Europe. Ever since they left the union they feel like their own continent.

Actually they feel like they might secretly be the fifty first state!

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jimnotgym
4 hours ago
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> They arrested 12,000 people in 2023 and convicted 1,100 of those. For cases where the evidence is as cut and dried as posts made online, they could only secure convictions in 8% of cases, which seems staggering to me when UK's conviction rate generally is like 80%.

Isn't the conviction rate the number of people convicted divided by the number charged, not the number arrested?

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seattle_spring
9 hours ago
[-]
> There have also been other high profile cases of people being arrested for posting things that were not like that burn the hotel down case

Such as?

> Is nobody allowed to be concerned about any of this without being some horrible underground extremist, in your opinion?

Horrible underground extremist? Not so much. More likely just someone who consumes a very particular slice of media that puts a dishonest (at best) spin on situations like this.

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stinkbeetle
8 hours ago
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> > There have also been other high profile cases of people being arrested for posting things that were not like that burn the hotel down case

> Such as?

That was the only thing in my comment you took issue with? Great, that's easy to clear up because there's a few around. Here's one

https://www.leeds-live.co.uk/news/leeds-news/yorkshire-man-a...

Arrested for saying "F--- Palestine. F--- Hamas. F--- Islam. Want to protest? F--- off to Muslim country and protest."

> Horrible underground extremist? Not so much. More likely just someone who consumes a very particular slice of media that puts a dishonest (at best) spin on situations like this.

Hmm. Was your previous post a dishonest (at best) spin on it too? That would be consistent with your claim if you are a consumer of a very particular slice of media and did not know you can find articles from a whole range of publications about this stuff easily on the internet.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2026/jan/19/arresting-pa...

https://www.forbes.com.au/news/world-news/people-are-being-t...

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2922w73e1o (Online speech laws need to be reviewed after Linehan arrest, says Streeting)

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/2/13/uk-decision-to-ban-...

https://www.politico.eu/article/freedom-speech-suspicion-bri...

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/10/world/europe/graham-lineh...

https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/palestine-action-ruling...

https://edition.cnn.com/2025/09/03/uk/uk-farage-free-speech-...

https://www.fire.org/news/uk-government-issues-warning-think...

https://www.foxnews.com/world/shocking-cases-reveal-britains...

You really don't need to be some obscure basement dweller to have any kind of vague inkling that something might be a little on the nose in the proverbial state of Denmark.

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oezi
8 hours ago
[-]
The key thing to understand is that Europeans want clear rules around hate speech, online harassment and such. Thus lawmakers are acting to find laws which encapsulate these. In Germany, we have some simple ones surrounding using Nazi symbols and speech. These rules generally work well in our civil law context. Civil law usually is rather broad strokes and there might be cases where something injust happens which requires tuning laws.

If you come from a common law context the whole idea might seem strange.

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deaux
7 hours ago
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> The key thing to understand is that Europeans want clear rules around hate speech

Regardless of my personal thoughts on this (complicated), simply putting "many" in front of "Europeans" does a lot to diminish further alienation of those who don't, helping you achieve your goals. It takes 0.5 seconds.

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oezi
5 hours ago
[-]
Agreed
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stinkbeetle
6 hours ago
[-]
> The key thing to understand is that Europeans want clear rules around hate speech, online harassment and such.

Do they? Or is it being pushed upon them? And why is it "the key thing" here?

> Thus lawmakers are acting to find laws which encapsulate these.

I suspect it has been the reverse, the ruling class desperately wants those powers and if the common people are now in favor of them it is more than likely because of intensive campaigns from their governments and corporations to change their minds.

> In Germany, we have some simple ones surrounding using Nazi symbols and speech. These rules generally work well in our civil law context. Civil law usually is rather broad strokes and there might be cases where something injust happens which requires tuning laws.

Some laws existing does not mean some other laws won't be unjust. Or that legislated laws will always be right and not require "some tuning".

> If you come from a common law context the whole idea might seem strange.

The different systems of law don't seem all that strange to me at least, but the thread you are replying to is discussing censorship in the European nation of the UK.

Further, what we are discussing involves executive police powers (intimidation, arrests, compiling lists), as well as legislated laws, so it is not really just some quirk of common law at all.

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LAC-Tech
5 hours ago
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I think if you come from a German context the concept of free speech is probably strange to you in general - because no one in living memory has ever had it. Not in Weimar, not in the Nazi period, not in East Germany and not in the Federal Republic.

Unless you understand concepts like "Natural Rights" the idea of a government not being able to curtail what you say will remain completely foreign to you.

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oezi
5 hours ago
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That isn't really what we perceive (at least if educated). We see that Free Speech is not an absolute right, but is secondary to the most important right which for Germans is Human Dignity. It might be foreign to you because your constitution and history doesn't put the same value on it than our history taught us.
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stinkbeetle
1 hour ago
[-]
I'm not American but I similarly don't care for the meek subservience to the government which characterizes European attitude on this.

Human dignity is not foreign to me at all, I just don't believe a life where the state protects your feelings from words, and that dictates what you may and may not talk about is not a dignified one.

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LAC-Tech
4 hours ago
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How could German history have taught you anything about human dignity?

You went from a military dictatorship to an unstable republic to a fascist state, then you split into military occupation zones, and then one of your military occupation zones annexed the other, the militaries left but you kept the laws, and now you arrest people for saying "from the river to the sea".

Using your German-ness to talk to anyone else about freedom or human dignity is patently ridiculous. If you have an ideological point to make, make it, but the whole "as a German" angle just does not hold water. "As a German" your history shows you don't understand this.

Your concept of Freedom of Speech is much closer to the Mainland Chinese model than an Anglo one.

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dirasieb
3 hours ago
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sschueller
2 hours ago
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So I will finally be able to access those US news websites that block EU access because of the cookie banner?
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tantalor
11 hours ago
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That's not very "America First"

Why are my taxes paying for benefits for Europeans?

They already killed USAID.

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eagleal
1 hour ago
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This is a valid tool for intelligence and propaganda operations, for both USA and Israel (since they have access to whatever.

In this age this is akin to funding and arming a militia in a foreign country, or what would've been on old times preemptive land operations.

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speedgoose
6 hours ago
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The cost of running such a VPN is perhaps worth it when you consider the value of the intelligence it can collect.
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sunaookami
4 hours ago
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I like that the US government finally speaks out about the rampant censorship from the EU regime but I wouldn't trust a state VPN. But they put the topic on the radar. Hope they can pressure enough to abolish the DSA. And USAID was just funding for propaganda outlets.
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oblio
3 hours ago
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> I like that the US government finally speaks out about the rampant censorship from the EU regime

Are you a EU citizen?

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josefrichter
6 hours ago
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For Europeans? They don’t need anything like this, zero benefit. May benefit someone in North Korea, China or the United States.
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aembleton
3 hours ago
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Or the UK
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1970-01-01
10 hours ago
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They will force their users to pay for the service in Trump's crypto and call it a win for freedom.
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bdangubic
10 hours ago
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this administration is the least “america first” we’ve had … like ever!
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nimbius
9 hours ago
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Wild flex from the country that literally bought their own tiktok to control the propaganda.
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reisse
15 hours ago
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Fun hypothetical question - will it be restricted to users in sanctioned locations (where it's most needed) because of, well, sanctions?
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iugtmkbdfil834
15 hours ago
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Amusingly, there typically are various exceptions made for those. All technical and whatnot, but for example, Iran is heavily sanctioned, but has all sorts of exceptions for stuff like that precisely because of the impact it can have.
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entropyneur
1 day ago
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Previous discussion: https://www.reuters.com/world/us-plans-online-portal-bypass-...

Weird title, but worthy of discussion. From the little info available so far this appears to be little more than political posturing. If you want to fight censorship, an "online portal" to access all the censored content is the wrongest possible way to go about it. But we'll see.

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dang
16 hours ago
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(This comment was posted to https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47072613 but we merged the threads)
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1vuio0pswjnm7
10 hours ago
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Text-only, no Datadome Javascript, HTTPS optional:

https://assets.msn.com/content/view/v2/Detail/en-in/AA1WCCeV...

Simple HTML:

   { 
     x=AA1WCCeV
     ipv4=23.11.201.94 
     echo "<meta charset=utf-8>";
     (printf '%s\r\n%s\r\n\r\n' \
     "GET /content/view/v2/Detail/en-in/$x HTTP/1.0" \
     'Host: assets.msn.com') \
     |nc -vvn $ipv4 80 |grep -o "<p>.*</p>"|tr -d '\134'
   } > 1.htm
   firefox ./1.htm
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Ancalagon
12 hours ago
[-]
Will this bypass the porn bans in conservative states
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stubish
11 hours ago
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Governments around the world could setup, in solidarity with the US, freedom.ca, freedom.eu etc. Hosting provided by Pornhub. Maybe Pornhub could even start registering the TLDs now where available.
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sschueller
2 hours ago
[-]
So can this be used to loop back to US age restricted content?
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mesk
6 hours ago
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Cool, so the US students will be able to read school banned books ? Or US state banned research papers ? Or US state banned historic books or photos ? Or soft banned late night shows - so Colbert will continue ? Kimmel ? Or domains of shadow book libraries banned by FBI/corporate requests ? And it will circumvent geoblocking enforced mostly by US companies ?

Cool, such a heroic effort to remove censorship from theinternet that US enforces on us :-)

Ooh, almost forgotten there also some porn and media pirating sites blocked in the EU that will surely get also unblocked. But who cares, there are thousands of theese....

Btw. did Putin and Xi allowed this ? Or their `free` internet will remain free as before.

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Manuel_D
5 hours ago
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When has the US ever banned students from reading certain books or research papers? What research papers can I not legally read?

The domains of shadow libraries are banned for copyright infringement, you can still read the books legally by purchasing a copy.

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mesk
5 hours ago
[-]
Here you can find short sample of those `dangerous` books: https://pen.org/banned-books-list-2025/

And https://climate.law.columbia.edu/content/cdc-orders-retracti...

And, I know those shadow libraries are banned because of copyright, but that's just an excuse. If someone pushes such a broad understanding of Freedom as US does, than copyright should maybe not be the one exception that's ok. People should have freedom to publish anything and other should have freedom to read/play/watch anything. If US can ban something because of so abstract as copyright, why can't EU ban something because of so abstract as `its all lies and state sponsored propaganda` ?

NOTE: just playing devils advocate here, to show the hypocrisy of it all...

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Manuel_D
5 hours ago
[-]
Those book "bans" are just librarians' decision on what to use finite shelf space to stock. Students are 100% free to bring any of the "banned" books to school and read them. By this logic, when a librarian changes out an older set of YA novels with a newer set, those older novels are being "banned". So to answer your question:

> Cool, so the US students will be able to read school banned books ?

The answer is "whenever they want."

Furthermore, the CDC's calls for retraction don't prohibit anyone from reading the retracted papers.

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mesk
4 hours ago
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Sure, librarians wouldn't know how to do they work, if they didn't get a list on 'not approved' books from the school boards. /s

It's something else if something can't be bought or placed on the shelf because its on some school provided list, and if you (librarian) decide you don't buy it because of (whatever reason).

The same with research, if something is not published, or funding on research is stopped because `we know climate change doesn't exists`, that no one can read it, because its not even created. But who cares, its useless debate...

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walthamstow
15 hours ago
[-]
So it'll have porn?
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general1465
15 hours ago
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I wonder if American citizens from states which requires age verification to access porn (25 US states today) will be fine with it or these states will start demanding ID to access freedom.gov. It would be delicious irony.
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plorg
10 hours ago
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Or, since it's apparently run by HHS, surely they will protect people looking for resources about abortion, hormones, etc.

Real rich material coming from the government demanding it's biggest Internet companies unmask government critics.

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ojbyrne
7 hours ago
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Pretty sure it will be like TrumpRX. Big PR blitz and when the details are exposed, a nothing burger.
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jeroenhd
5 hours ago
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Previous propaganda channels from the government couldn't legally be broadcast within the US itself, so it's possible they'll try to pull the same thing here.
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Animats
15 hours ago
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Right. Porn will probably be most of the traffic. The number of people in Europe who really want to access US neo-Nazi sites is probably not large.
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graemep
15 hours ago
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There is a lot more blocked than porn and neo-nazis. This will also allow access to sites that block access because of laws: Imgur is not accessible from the uk, nor are a lot of smaller US news sites. Ofcom are after 4 chan too.
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mvc
12 hours ago
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Oh no! Not 4chan.

How ever will we Europeans keep up with the latest theories about which celebrities are actually AI influencers.

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petcat
11 hours ago
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Sounds like censorship is already becoming normalized in the EU and UK. Terrifying.
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sensanaty
3 hours ago
[-]
First off, the UK isn't in the EU, and 2nd, not a single website is blocked for me here in the Netherlands, quite literally none. I can access Discord without an ID, I can watch all the porn I want, I can pirate anything I want from anywhere etc.

How many states require IDs to go to porn sites, again? How many journos is it now that Trump blacklisted from the White House? Yeah, lotta freedoms over there...

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graemep
12 minutes ago
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> First off, the UK isn't in the EU

I would guess that is why the GP said "EU and UK"

> ot a single website is blocked for me here in the Netherlands, quite literally none

One EU country. At the very least I know you have censored search results as that is an EU wide requirement of the right to be forgotten.

> I can pirate anything I want from anywhere etc.

Multiple EU countries are blocking pirate sites. https://torrentfreak.com/european-isps-complain-about-dispro...

Some countries have very broad definitions of hate speech.

There are definitely American sites that block EU visitors because of the cost/risk of GDPR compliance.

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pembrook
11 hours ago
[-]
Amazed to see so many government bootlickers on "hacker" news these days.

Gone are the days of the misfits and pirates and the innovators.

"Tie me up and tell me what I'm allowed to do daddy government, I will agree no matter what, you know what's best."

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crest
15 hours ago
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Government mandated uncensored free porn access. I wonder if this will this also apply in US states requiring age verification to legally access such content?
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kojacklives
15 hours ago
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They will probably (first) have to bounce off freedom.ccTLD for any ccTLD but .us.
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ReflectedImage
15 hours ago
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So going forward all countries will be providing citizens of other countries free access to the internet whilst censoring their own citizens?
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freakynit
9 hours ago
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This will be like a global circus of free speech:

Country-1: "Absolutely free speech! Except when it's about Country-4 -> rights revoked."

Country-2: "Criticize Country-4 all you want, but talking smack about Country-5 is treason buddy."

Country-3: "Wait... so I can roast Country-4 but not Country-5... and also not Country-6? My head hurts."

Country-4: "We don't block anything! ...Just not that thing you're talking about."

Country-5: "See Country-3? We absolutely love speech. As long as it praises us. Freedom yay!"

In the end, we might end up having the very same private vpn';s (or tor) routing their traffic over these gov. vpn's based on keyword matches in the request.. or customer's will be able to choose .. kinda like auto-model feature on openrouter lol.

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LAC-Tech
13 hours ago
[-]
Better than the alternative where they don't, I suppose. Kind of like how for some political things you have to use yandex to search because US search companies suppress the results.
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jimnotgym
4 hours ago
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I see, there is a danger of US propaganda not getting through, so they are trying a new way.
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_HMCB_
10 hours ago
[-]
All the while the FCC was grilled yesterday for trying to shut down free speech. Make it make sense.
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Buttons840
10 hours ago
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Politicians want power over people in the country, but also internet technology is one of the only things the US is best at, and so we don't want the entire world dividing into separate internet silos.

(The other things we're best at is having a huge military and having legally protected free speech, which is ironically being weakened, as you say.)

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mlh496
15 hours ago
[-]
Sad that western Europe is pushing so hard for limits to free speech & privacy. I'm not surprised given their history, but it's sad nonetheless.
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carlm42
13 hours ago
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Sad that the United States are pushing so hard to encourage the propagation of propaganda & lies. I'm not surprised given their history, but it's sad nonetheless.
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zefalt
11 hours ago
[-]
Sad that people can’t see past their ideological bubbles. Tech spaces used to be dominated by people who saw free speech as an imperative. Now their own political biases have them supporting censorship.

https://www.thetimes.com/uk/crime/article/police-make-30-arr...

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MiiMe19
12 hours ago
[-]
>stop saying what you want !! you can only say stuff fact checked by mr. European center-left bureaucrat !!
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NewJazz
12 hours ago
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Elon let a bunch of people generate lewd photographs depicting minors, then published it.
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MiiMe19
12 hours ago
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And the pencil companies let people draw lewd drawings depicting minors. The typewriter manufacturers let a bunch of people write lewd stories depicting minors.
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NewJazz
11 hours ago
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They don't publish that on their websites, though.
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MiiMe19
9 hours ago
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Does X personally post ai generated kids to people's accounts or do people make pictures with a tool and post them on their own accounts?
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NewJazz
6 hours ago
[-]
X is not a person, it is a website run by Elon Musk.

Elon, through his company, publishes the photos. I don't think it matters whether he posted them or not. He was aware of and encouraging of the practice, at least when applied to photos of adults.

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MiiMe19
3 hours ago
[-]
Legally, he does not. The poster publishes them onto their own page.
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mortarion
1 hour ago
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In the EU the platform becomes responsible for posted content, the moment someone notifies them that they are hosting something illegal. They have plausible deniability until notified, after which they have a certain time to act, and if they don't they are criminally liable. The user posting the content is also liable, from the moment they made the post.
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SvnewbKfvFxRPZG
10 hours ago
[-]
I decided to investigate these claims since it is frequently expressed by those attacking Elon or X. It seems to be yet another misrepresentation or falsehood spread around to achieve political gain.

I had ChatGPT investigate and summarize the report from CCDH it is based on. https://counterhate.com/research/grok-floods-x-with-sexualiz...

  "CCDH did not prove that X is widely distributing child sexual abuse material. Their report extrapolates from a small, non-random sample of AI-generated images, many of which appear to be stylized or fictional anime content. While regulators are rightly investigating whether Grok’s safeguards were insufficient, CCDH’s public framing collapses “sexualized imagery” and “youthful-looking fictional characters” into CSAM-adjacent rhetoric that is not supported by verified prevalence data or legal findings."
Scale of sexual content:

  “~3 million sexualized images generated by Grok”
  They sampled ~20,000 images, labeled some as sexualized, then extrapolated using estimated total image volume. The total image count (~4.6M) is not independently verified; extrapolation assumes uniform distribution across all prompts and users.
Images of children:

  “~23,000 sexualized images of children”
  They label images as “likely depicting minors” based on visual inference, not age metadata. No verification that these are real minors, real people, or legally CSAM.
CSAM framing:

  Implies Grok/X is flooding the platform with child sexual abuse material.
  The report explicitly avoids claiming confirmed CSAM, using phrases like “may amount to CSAM.” 
  Public-facing messaging collapses “sexualized anime / youthful-looking characters” into CSAM-adjacent rhetoric.
CCDH's bias:

  Ties to the UK Labour Party: Several of CCDH’s founders and leaders have deep ties to Britain's center-left Labour Party. Founder Imran Ahmed was an advisor to Labour MPs.
  Target Selection: The organization’s "Stop Funding Fake News" campaign and other deplatforming efforts have frequently targeted right-leaning outlets like The Daily Wire, Breitbart, and Zero Hedge. Critics argue they rarely apply the same scrutiny to misinformation from left-leaning sources.
  "Kill Musk's Twitter" Controversy: Leaked documents and reporting in late 2024 and 2025 alleged that CCDH had internal goals to "kill" Elon Musk’s X (Twitter) by targeting its advertising revenue.
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NewJazz
6 hours ago
[-]
Maybe try reading the source next time?

AI was also used to assist in identifying sexualized images of children, with images flagged by the tool as likely depicting a child being reviewed manually to confirm that the person looked clearly under the age of 18.

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587687646343767
11 hours ago
[-]
Didn't expect anything but a non sequitur by a henchman of the regime.
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MiiMe19
11 hours ago
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nice alt, did you make it yourself?
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carlm42
12 hours ago
[-]
I don't know where you live but I've been able to express myself without any form of approval. Granted, I tend to not encourage genocide or glorify fascist regimes, but that's just me.
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goodmythical
11 hours ago
[-]
Where do you live where you're allowed to express yourself without any form of approval?

For instance, in the US, I cannot hysterically scream FIRE while running toward the exit of a theater, nor could I express a desire to cause bodily harm to an individual.

Not that I would, per se, but if I did I'd be liable to prosecution for the damages caused in either instance.

I'd have to get the approval of those involved (by their not seeking legal recourse), in order to do either without consequence.

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infamouscow
10 hours ago
[-]
The "shouting fire in a crowded theater" line is one of the most misunderstood pieces of legal dicta in US history. It comes from a case that was overturned by Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969).

Under current First Amendment law, the government cannot punish inflammatory speech unless it is directed to inciting "imminent lawless action" and is "likely" to produce such action.

To illustrate how high this bar is: you can legally sell and wear a T-shirt that says "I heart killing [X group]". While many find that expression offensive or harmful, it is protected speech. This is because:

- It is not a true threat (it doesn’t target a specific individual with a credible intent to harm).

- It isn't incitement (it doesn't command a crowd to commit a crime immediately).

In the US, you don't need approval to express yourself. The default is that your speech is protected unless the government can prove it falls into a tiny handful of narrow, well-defined exceptions.

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foxglacier
2 hours ago
[-]
You're lucky that the only things you want to say are also things your government allows you to say. Quite a coincidence, don't you think? I'm sure if you were born and raised in Pakistan, you would have no inclination to encourage homosexual activity either and you'd be just as comfortable.
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peyton
11 hours ago
[-]
FYI freedom of speech in the US sense is not so much about self-expression as much as it is to prevent e.g. the King decreeing a law that “nobody can say the word ‘Parliament’”. Or for a modern example, “discussing what to do about xyz group is ‘hate speech’.”

Anybody can run their mouths. Discussing ideas with others is what’s protected.

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zmgsabst
12 hours ago
[-]
Sure — you just deny those same rights to anyone you deem a “fascist” in a secret report. Much like say, the Stasi would allow you to speak your mind unless you were a capitalist subversive, as clearly documented in your secret trial.

Obviously we should censor fascists and subversives!

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sublimefire
13 hours ago
[-]
What limits? You can do pretty much what you want but make sure you can defend yourself in the court. I feel there is a bit of a disconnect in terms where people get the news where in US you kind of expect biggest news providers to be biassed, eg Fox, hence reliance on social media. In Europe gov media is quite strong and objective, and the idea that it restricts something is odd. A great example is the banning of RT, they lost licenses IMO in multiple countries, but the agency was spreading a lot of lies. IMO what we all want is objective news reporting.
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gpt5
11 hours ago
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Concrete examples - in Germany you are not allowed to insult politicians or the government in social media. In Italy, people have faced criminal charges for simply criticizing the prime minister.

When the government does not allow its population to freely speak against it, it's just waiting to be abused by one bad leader.

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codethief
11 hours ago
[-]
> Concrete examples - in Germany you are not allowed to insult politicians or the government in social media.

You're not allowed to insult anyone, https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/stgb/__185.html , though the term "insult" is not nearly as broadly defined as in everyday speech. The law dates back to the 18th century, and has largely been unchanged for 150 years. I really don't understand the recent outrage over these and other laws. We have been fine.

More background: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beleidigung_(Deutschland)

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pembrook
10 hours ago
[-]
> has largely been unchanged for 150 years. I really don't understand the recent outrage over these and other laws. We have been fine

The last 150 years of Germany have...ahem...not been what I would call "fine."

It would be interesting to have a replay of history without this law and similar ones related to it. Could be nothing different happens.

On the other hand, any law regulating speech is going to have a reverberating effect on the marketplace of ideas with 2nd and 3rd order outcomes that are impossible to disentangle after the fact.

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codethief
10 hours ago
[-]
> The last 150 years of Germany have...ahem...not been what I would call "fine."

But it's certainly not been because of that law…

At the very least I'm sure you'll agree we've been fine the last 80 or so years. Again, I'm just saying I don't understand the outrage right now.

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ljlolel
10 hours ago
[-]
almost all communication was oral 20 years ago, now-- especially since covid -- it's almost all, even casual comments, through text messages which can easily be used in evidence
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tchalla
11 hours ago
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> Concrete examples - in Germany you are not allowed to insult politicians or the government in social media.

Germany restricts insulting individuals / your neighbour, police officer, a pastor or a minister. There’s no special law for politicians. Political criticism is protected under the Basic Law (constitution). Go ahead and be crucial about a politician’s actions but don’t insult their person’s honour or use a slur. That’s not your freedom of speech, that’s the dignity. In fact, you can even insult the government! You can say German government as the government is not a person.

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gpt5
9 hours ago
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Free speech in America is specifically about protecting you against the government. Your neighbor is still not allowed to defame you.
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drnick1
7 hours ago
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> A great example is the banning of RT, they lost licenses IMO in multiple countries, but the agency was spreading a lot of lies. IMO what we all want is objective news reporting.

You shouldn't need a "license" to publish a website.

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NewJazz
5 hours ago
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They had TV licenses. Also they are the state media arm of a country that is in a proxy war with the EU and NATO. I don't think that situation would even pass muster in the US.
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0xy
11 hours ago
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Thousands of people in the UK have been arrested for social media posts, some for speech recognized as protected by international organizations.

Germany is currently actively campaigning to force everyone to use their real names on all social media and force ID checks to do so, a clear chilling effect for free speech.

Macron has been railing against free speech specifically in recent months, calling it "bullshit".

Europe is against free speech, any argument to the contrary must contend with the above examples of them trampling on rights.

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codethief
11 hours ago
[-]
> Germany is currently actively campaigning to force everyone to use their real names on all social media and force ID checks to do so, a clear chilling effect for free speech.

Source? (Other than one derailed politician, which unfortunately we get to call our chancellor, having a moment? He's still not "Germany", though, not even "the German government".)

> Macron has been railing against free speech specifically in recent months, calling it "bullshit".

I think you're misrepresenting what he said:

https://www.politico.eu/article/emmanuelmacron-calls-social-...

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-02-18/macron-bl...

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0xy
11 hours ago
[-]
Huh? You're saying the German Chancellor does not represent the German government? [1] Large swathes of the CDU support it as well.

Macron was responding to criticism of the Digital Services Act, which contains censorship provisions for 'hate speech', which is repeatedly and routinely used by European nations to crack down on protected political speech. For example, it has been used as an excuse to censor political views leaning anti-immigration.

The UK in particular has used Ofcom as a weapon to target American companies that enable free speech communications, notably 4chan.

[1] https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/germanys-merz-calls-real...

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codethief
11 hours ago
[-]
> Huh? You're saying the German Chancellor does not represent the German government?

I'm saying, there is a huge difference between a random utterance of the chancellor, which by next week he'll likely already have forgotten about, and "Germany actively campaigning" e.g. at the EU or federal level, both of which would require both ruling parties to get behind the chancellor's demands, which – based on how similar discourses have turned out in the past – is completely unlikely.

I'm not defending Merz's position, not by a long shot. I'm just saying that, based on previous experience, we're still quite far away from the "actively campaigning" stage and very, very, very far away from Merz's ideas being turned into law. I'm concerned about many things but this is not one of them. Civil rights organizations are already rallying and telling him how stupid he is¹ for suggesting that real name enforcement would be a good idea. :-) It's the usual political discourse.

¹) See how I am exercising my right to free speech and am not at all concerned about being charged for "insulting a politician"?

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codethief
11 hours ago
[-]
> the Digital Services Act […] The UK in particular

You do realize that the UK is not part of the EU? So I'm not sure how UK's supposed "weaponization" of Ofcom has anything to do with Macron's statement.

> which is repeatedly and routinely used by European nations to crack down on protected political speech.

I'm really looking forward to your sources here. The DSA does not contain any provisions that change anything about the legality of speech. It's mostly meant to harmonize procedural aspects across the member states.

https://www.csis.org/blogs/europe-corner/does-eus-digital-se...

https://bhr.stern.nyu.edu/quick-take/a-clear-eyed-look-at-th...

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seattle_spring
11 hours ago
[-]
> some for speech recognized as protected by international organizations.

Can you share some concrete examples from reputable sources that show these? Every examples I've seen have been clear-cut calls for violence, or unambiguous harassment.

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NewJazz
5 hours ago
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0xy
11 hours ago
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Absolutely. There are several examples that are not calls for violence or unambiguous harassment that were documented by The Telegraph.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/02/15/hundreds-charged...

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seattle_spring
11 hours ago
[-]
The only semi-concrete example that article gives:

> After the Southport stabbings, several people were questioned by police over false communications for spreading claims the attacker was a Muslim immigrant. In one instance, a man pleaded guilty to the offence for a livestreamed video on TikTok where he falsely claimed he was “running for his life” from rioters in Derby.

That very much seems like an attempt to harass or invite harassment against a group of people...

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api
11 hours ago
[-]
Ten seconds of searching:

https://www.reddit.com/r/NoStupidQuestions/comments/1qv0vpi/...

The propaganda take I keep seeing is that you can get arrested for misgendering people or something, but these are at least close to incitement to violence. Some clearly cross that line.

To be clear I’m closer to the American view. I think the bar should be very, very high for speech to be criminally actionable. Just pointing out that it doesn’t seem as nuts as some make it sound.

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0xy
11 hours ago
[-]
You didn't search very hard.

https://freedomhouse.org/country/united-kingdom/freedom-net/...

"Internet freedom declined in the United Kingdom during the coverage period due to a reported increase in criminal charges for online speech"

"A separate report from The Telegraph found that 292 people had been charged for spreading false information and “threatening communications” under the Online Safety Act between when it came into effect in 2023 and February 2025. Some civil liberties groups expressed concern that the laws were being applied broadly and in some cases punished speech protected by international human rights standards (C3)."

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/02/15/hundreds-charged...

"Legal experts have also questioned the new rules. David Hardstaff, a serious crime expert at the law firm BCL Solicitors, said the fake news offence was “problematic both for its potential to stifle free speech if misused, but equally for its lack of clarity and consistency”."

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PolygonSheep
12 hours ago
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I have heard of RT lying but I have never actually seen examples of specific lies. Is there any list out there where they list any specific ones? If they do it a lot, it should be quite easy, no?
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Aloisius
12 hours ago
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sunaookami
4 hours ago
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This is a propaganda website funded by the EU.
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wasabi991011
12 hours ago
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Here's a source with some: https://www.rand.org/pubs/perspectives/PE198.html

> The January 14, 2016, edition of Weekly Disinformation Review reported the reemergence of several previously debunked Russian propaganda stories, including that Polish President Andrzej Duda was insisting that Ukraine return former Polish territory, that Islamic State fighters were joining pro-Ukrainian forces, and that there was a Western-backed coup in Kiev, Ukraine’s capital.11

> Sometimes, Russian propaganda is picked up and rebroadcast by legitimate news outlets; more frequently, social media repeats the themes, messages, or falsehoods introduced by one of Russia’s many dissemination channels. For example, German news sources rebroadcast Russian disinformation about atrocities in Ukraine in early 2014, and Russian disinformation about EU plans to deny visas to young Ukrainian men was repeated with such frequency in Ukrainian media that the Ukrainian general staff felt compelled to post a rebuttal.12

> Sometimes, however, events reported in Russian propaganda are wholly manufactured, like the 2014 social media campaign to create panic about an explosion and chemical plume in St. Mary's Parish, Louisiana, that never happened.15 Russian propaganda has relied on manufactured evidence—often photographic. Some of these images are easily exposed as fake due to poor photo editing, such as discrepancies of scale, or the availability of the original (pre-altered) image.16 Russian propagandists have been caught hiring actors to portray victims of manufactured atrocities or crimes for news reports (as was the case when Viktoria Schmidt pretended to have been attacked by Syrian refugees in Germany for Russian's Zvezda TV network), or faking on-scene news reporting (as shown in a leaked video in which “reporter” Maria Katasonova is revealed to be in a darkened room with explosion sounds playing in the background rather than on a battlefield in Donetsk when a light is switched on during the recording).17

> RT stated that blogger Brown Moses (a staunch critic of Syria's Assad regime whose real name is Eliot Higgins) had provided analysis of footage suggesting that chemical weapon attacks on August 21, 2013, had been perpetrated by Syrian rebels. In fact, Higgins's analysis concluded that the Syrian government was responsible for the attacks and that the footage had been faked to shift the blame.18 Similarly, several scholars and journalists, including Edward Lucas, Luke Harding, and Don Jensen, have reported that books that they did not write—and containing views clearly contrary to their own—had been published in Russian under their names.

I found that source on the Wikipedia page for RT after a couple of minutes. You can find more pretty easily.

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mortarion
1 hour ago
[-]
Compared to the USA, we have incredible privacy in the EU.
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codethief
11 hours ago
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> Sad that western Europe is pushing so hard for limits to […] privacy

Uh what? :-)

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touwer
14 hours ago
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It's not sad. It's smart to ban hate speech, blatant lies and things like that. We know, we had the Nazis. Seems the US still has to learn a lesson or two, considering the current political situation. Hope it will not be as bad
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roenxi
5 hours ago
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> It's not sad. It's smart to ban hate speech, blatant lies and things like that.

Blatant lies have to be legal. Firstly because it isn't philosophically possible to tell if someone is lying, it can only ever be strongly suspected. Secondly because it is a bog-standard authoritarian tactic to accuse someone of telling a blatant lie and shut them down for challenging the authoritarians.

Banning "blatant lies" is pretty much a textbook tell that somewhere is in political trouble and descending into either a bad case of group-think in the political community or authoritarianism. The belief that it is even possible to ban blatant lies is, if it has taken root, itself a lie people tell themselves when they can't handle the fact that some of the things they believe and know are true, aren't.

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fungi
12 hours ago
[-]
Banning Nazi and ISIS propaganda doesn't and hasn't negativity affected anyone but Nazis and Jihadists. It's just plain good policy.

I guess that's why arguments against it always fall back on straw men and hypothetical slippery slopes.

There are plenty of actual things that do negatively affect societies free speech but this isn't even close to one of them.

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stinkbeetle
10 hours ago
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Is calling people nazis hate speech?
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generic92034
4 hours ago
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It depends. One prominent figure of the right-wing populist party AfD in Germany has been called a Nazi. When he sued the originator the court decided that, considering the circumstances, was not an insult in the sense of the law.
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stinkbeetle
1 hour ago
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That was argued to be a satirical skit rather than sincere statement I think. Which is quite an outlier but would be still probably quite interesting to compare with other cases.

But in general if you were walking down the street or talking about something on the internet and somebody else called out or posted and said you are a nazi. Hate speech?

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calmworm
7 hours ago
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A rose by any other name…
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stinkbeetle
6 hours ago
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That didn't answer my question.
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dmitrygr
11 hours ago
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> It's smart to ban hate speech

Everyone has their own idea what hate is. For me: it is anyone saying any word with “a” in it. Better stay quiet, or it is hate speech.

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Epa095
7 hours ago
[-]
In general the justice system don't care much what your idea of the law is.

If its not clear through the actuall law or the accompanying comments what constitutes hate speech, it will be cleared up by the court itself.

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dmitrygr
5 hours ago
[-]
Do you really not understand the sort of slippery slope that presents?
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Epa095
5 hours ago
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My point is that this is the norm, not the exception in legal systems. It's good for laws to be clear cut and unambiguous, but in practice the world is not, and laws gets interpreted as courts use them.
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theandrewbailey
12 hours ago
[-]
"There is no time in history where the people censoring speech were the good guys."

- RFK Jr.

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LAC-Tech
13 hours ago
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This argument has always struck me as ridiculous. You think if only the Weimar Republic had had Hate Speech laws everything would have been fine?
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perching_aix
13 hours ago
[-]
Right, I guess the people there just magically all woke up one day hating the jews and voting in Hitler. Crazy how that happens. Why do political factions even spend money on campaigning? Those silly geese.
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LAC-Tech
13 hours ago
[-]
Wait, your operating theory on why the NSDAP became popular is because they... tricked everyone into hating jews?

You are not only entirely misunderstanding why the NSDAP appealed to people, you're also completely misunderstanding what post WWI Germany was - a republic hastily brought about with little care so that Woodrow Wilson would offer Germany peace based on his 14 points (he didn't). It was doomed to fail from the very beginning. If not the NSDAP it would have been some other extremists.

The idea that freedom of speech was what led to its downfall does not stand up to even the smallest scrutiny. Or the idea that an aged, pacified 2026 Germany would immediately return to 1930s Nazism if they had free speech is even more ludicrous.

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perching_aix
5 hours ago
[-]
> If not the NSDAP it would have been some other extremists.

Oh okay, all good then...

> Or the idea that an aged, pacified 2026 Germany would immediately return to 1930s Nazism if they had free speech is even more ludicrous.

Can you think in even more absolute, even more reality-divorced terms? I was trying to mock this with my previous comment, but clearly that angle did not reach you.

"Oy vey, the insane ideas I craft, that people aren't actually saying, are insane." Yes, they do be. Congratulations.

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bdangubic
12 hours ago
[-]
people are sheep mate... in 2026 with the social media at politicians disposal you can convince most people of just about anything you want. current politics in the US is basically cultism. if trump says that Russians are now great guys, 99% of people who grew up during the cold war that are "maga" now are going "oh, what a turnaround, love them Russians now."

same goes the other way, Germany can return to 1930s in the time one political campaign starts and ends given the state of society at the moment.

I am not advocating for limits on free speech, I am a free speech absolutist. and with that come the consequences we see not just in the united states but around the world. but to think that allowing anyone to say anything cannot lead to absolute catastrophies/hatred/... in the year of our lord 2026 is very misguided...

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Hikikomori
13 hours ago
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Well they kinda did,long before the Nazis and der Sturmer put a torch on it.
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bitcurious
12 hours ago
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>We know, we had the Nazis.

Yes, I keep thinking about the bastion of free speech that gave birth to the Nazi movement. If only the Weimar Republic had anti-hate speech laws, perhaps the Shoah could have been avoided? Oops, turns out it did have those laws, and those very laws were subverted to suppress dissent.

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joelwilliamson
11 hours ago
[-]
I think tourer was arguing that the Nazis were a template for how to use speech restrictions to maintain power.
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NewJazz
12 hours ago
[-]
It's so sad US elites are so desperate for mindshare that they have to resort to dumping (mis)information on everyone else, everywhere.
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m000
12 hours ago
[-]
Does this mean we will be able to read RT from Europe again?
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ceejayoz
12 hours ago
[-]
Will Texans be able to access Pornhub with it? Heh.
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sensanaty
3 hours ago
[-]
Weird, I'm in "Europe" and I can read the blatant Russian propaganda site all I want!
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mcs5280
8 hours ago
[-]
All content will likely be pre-approved by Larry Ellison and his other billionaire friends, so how much freedom will this really have?
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viking123
7 hours ago
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Will be Pre-approved by Israel*
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riffraff
7 hours ago
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Can't wait for them to realize this allows sidestepping geoblocks on media and Hollywood to freak out.
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reconnecting
13 hours ago
[-]
Last copy if from 2005 (2) according to the Web Archive. I like vote from 1998, if Internet Remain Tax Free (3).

1. https://web.archive.org/web/20050209024923/http://freedom.go...

2. https://web.archive.org/web/19981201060504/http://freedom.go...

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nomilk
13 hours ago
[-]
And before that, looks like the domain was used to give updates from the House Majority Leader (e.g. things like voting info, social security updates, legislative changes, tax info etc).
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reconnecting
13 hours ago
[-]
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neom
7 hours ago
[-]
The speak out about cloning gif is wild. Dolly the sheep anyone?
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randomNumber7
6 hours ago
[-]
Personally I think the EU goes too far when I'm not even allowed to access books on the internet where the author died more than 100 years ago. So I like it xD
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jeroenhd
5 hours ago
[-]
The Americans are just as bad when it comes to intellectual property (70 years after the death of the author or 95 years after publication). By American copyright standards, you can read The Silmarillion for free around 2072.

The difference in approach (American companies suing and financially ruining a select few downloaders versus European lobbyists going attempting to block the distribution points) makes piracy slightly less convenient in Europe but the basis for the copyright problem was turned into a global problem at the Berne Convention.

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RupertSalt
5 hours ago
[-]
I can read that for free, and even hang on to it for a couple of weeks, as soon as the library opens today.

Actually I don't need to wait, because it's available immediately over the Internet in eBook format, with my library card.

There are also CDs, DVDs, and on-demand audio/video available with a library card.

I visited a library across town, and many sections were given over to video games for various popular console systems.

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randomNumber7
4 hours ago
[-]
I can access almost every book and every paper that exist in seconds over the internet...

I also got a job in science and I think it's partly because I read a lot of papers (illegaly) since years.

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ruszki
5 hours ago
[-]
Which book is that?
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randomNumber7
5 hours ago
[-]
Gutenberg.org was DNS blocked for a very long time. Now it's not DNS blocked anymore but I think it will detect your IP and restrict access for some books if you are in the EU.

Of course very easy to circumvent if you know s.th. about tech.

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ruszki
1 hour ago
[-]
What is the difference between those cases and Steamboat Willie? Besides the obvious that those happened in different countries.
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anhner
4 hours ago
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what americans think happens in the EU:
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Doxin
5 hours ago
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which books?
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randomNumber7
5 hours ago
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Sorry I'm not allowed to tell you.
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rkagerer
1 day ago
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Or they could just make a donation to Tor and similar projects, and get way more mileage for their money.
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kyboren
1 day ago
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They do support Tor, actually[0]. Which makes this even more confusing.

[0]: https://www.torproject.org/about/supporters/

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greyface-
15 hours ago
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That funding was recently cut: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47070658
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gzread
1 day ago
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The point is for them to track their users, which they can't do if their users are all using Tor.
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astro1138
15 hours ago
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Is that going to accelerate copyright violations for AI training? https://cuiiliste.de/domains contains just a lot of piracy sites.
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general1465
15 hours ago
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It is like ultimate throwing stones in a glass house. Americans are dependent on other countries following IP and copyright protections and yet they will go great lengths to undermine it because it is short term beneficial for their companies.
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ortusdux
15 hours ago
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The quest for quarterly returns will be our downfall.
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c420
8 hours ago
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Anyone know why this would be appearing on the front page but completely absent from https://news.ycombinator.com/active
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GoblinSlayer
3 hours ago
[-]
Without net neutrality it's kinda dead on arrival.
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1970-01-01
11 hours ago
[-]
"The Net Interprets Censorship As Damage and Routes Around It"

https://quoteinvestigator.com/2021/07/12/censor/

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comex
11 hours ago
[-]
This project is hardly some emergent property of the Internet or even Internet culture. The existence of VPNs and proxies in general is. They are easy to set up and hard to block. But this project, if it launches, will be a single well-known target which, at a technical level, countries could easily block access to. Whether blocking actually occurs will depend on the whims of geopolitics, but it’s not exactly a robust situation.
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tachyons
11 hours ago
[-]
It's kind of ironic given how much USA is censoring content based on their interest.
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andsoitis
11 hours ago
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> It's kind of ironic given how much USA is censoring content based on their interest.

What’s a good example?

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_HMCB_
10 hours ago
[-]
See yesterday’s FCC hearing before congress. It’s hypocritical for the US to be doing the exact opposite of what they’re doing at home.
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mjmsmith
11 hours ago
[-]
TikTok.
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andsoitis
11 hours ago
[-]
> TikTok.

Case that it's not censorship: it is not about what content TikTok shows, it's about who owns the algorithm and data. Forcing a sale to a US owner keeps the platform available while removing a (perceived) national security risk. The government isn't suppressing any particular speech.

Case it is censorship: forcing the sale of a platform used by 10s of millions of Americans does affect speech of both creators and viewers. The government is making a structural intervention in a speech platform based partly on the potential for future manipulation.

The argument that some would use is that it is more accurately framed as economic nationalism or geopolitical competition dressed in free speech clothing. Others see it as a legitimate national security risk with acceptable free speech tradeoffs.

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petcat
11 hours ago
[-]
Which content is being censored?
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eviks
8 hours ago
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Do they plan online portal for content banned in the U.S.?
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Nnnes
15 hours ago
[-]
Cool, maybe I'll be able to access www.census.gov from outside the US now
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crest
15 hours ago
[-]
At least the starting page is reachable from Germany without a VPN.
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mcintyre1994
3 hours ago
[-]
So instead of using a VPN that might have weird relationships with spy agencies, you just use one run by the US government? Clever idea to spy on the stupidest people in the world I guess.

Also I’m guessing they won’t allow this to be used to get around the sorts of content blocking project 2025 calls for in the US.

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dfee
10 hours ago
[-]
at one point, HN was anti-censorship. this discussion shows how ideologically aligned this concept has become.

there are volleys back and forth of "what censorship" followed by links to wikipedia enumerating it. RT and Joe Rogan are thrown in the mix.

when did this experiment fail?

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panny
13 hours ago
[-]
Can I use freedom.gov to bypass age verification though? :)
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zombot
2 hours ago
[-]
This is so very strange. I don't trust the motivations behind this.
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PaulDavisThe1st
14 hours ago
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Do they plan to allow residents of various US states to access sites that are now required to have documented ID evidence?
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blumtyoty
2 hours ago
[-]
Ah yes the 'freedom' USA is giving other people 'freedom'.

Has nothing to do with propaganda or with just reading all the traffic for the cia/fbi/whatever snowden told us.

USA became so fast an enemy, its crazy :(

They should start again funding services like https://nsidc.org/ice-sheets-today instead of 'freedom'.gov

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api
12 hours ago
[-]
Screams giant honey pot to me.

And my taxes need to fund a VPN when there’s 50 cheap VPNs on the market? What happened to reducing spending?

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koonsolo
32 minutes ago
[-]
Ah yes, freedom of speech for the Europeans!

And when we travel to US, they need to check our social media to see if our opinions align with the US government.

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anovikov
3 hours ago
[-]
This is good. But because societies are democratic, and most voters are now economically irrelevant, something has to be done about possibility to create discontent simply to shake things and weaken countries - because there is nothing this discontent can achieve (you can't turn objectively irrelevant people, relevant again).

If top 10% of people create half of all spending and more of the spending on nonessentials, thus feeding majority of economy/creating majority of value, things will revolve around them. Something has to be done so that the other 90% won't be trying to break things down just for the sake of it. It's also that top 3% pay half of all federal taxes. Can we expect that the government will really care about others? It's also that same top 3% have a net worth of $5-6M and up - in the "never have to work again unless it's real fun" range.

If the majority of government funding and good half of corporate value comes from people who don't care anymore because they have arrived, can we expect anyone to be a responsible voter? We are firmly in 'bread and circuses' area.

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Hamuko
15 hours ago
[-]
The joke that I saw online was "Does it have Colbert on it?"
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cyberax
15 hours ago
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Yes, but you'll have to spend equal time browsing Pravda^W Truth Social.
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calmworm
8 hours ago
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Orwellian quotes are bandied about so much these days… does anything more need to be said?
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Lio
5 hours ago
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This comes across not as some noble to support free speech and more an attempt to exempt US firms like Grok, Meta, etc. from laws banning AI generated child porn and deliberately addicting social media.
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paganel
5 hours ago
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As an EU citizen this is damn nice. The US might have some things to still work on/improve, but when it comes to freedom of speech it is still light years ahead of everybody else, and good for them.
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EGreg
8 hours ago
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This reminds me of "Radio Free Europe" and "Radio Liberty", which were basically bankrolled (and likely largely influenced) by the CIA. They wanted to distribute all kinds of programming into USSR that was banned there, same with Solzhenitsyn's books etc. Eventually the USSR fell apart.

Now they are treating Europe like they treated USSR. Musk and other big influencers on X have already been calling for the breakup of the EU, after the EU fined X $100M. I bet that was at least some of the reason behind this.

The irony is that the Trump admin has been deporting non-citizens for speech, his FCC has been intimidating media like ABC and CBS into firing people or canceling programs and interviews, his DOJ has been telling social networks to fork over the identities of citizens who criticized ICE online, and his CBP will begin demanding that tourists hand over 5 years of their social media history, as well as their biometrics, family's information and whatever else.

This is the administration who would lecture Europe about freedom of speech? Didn't they just get through 10 years of telling European countries to be "nationalist" and resist the influence of their own federal government in Brussels -- but I guess we can just ignore their laws and broadcast anything into their countries, tempting them to set up a "great firewall" like China.

Well, if freedom of speech means violating other countries' laws, in this case can European governments just start streaming copyrighted movies for free to US viewers, and piss off the RIAA / MPAA? Or maybe they can do what Cory Doctorow has been proposing: https://doctorow.medium.com/https-pluralistic-net-2026-01-29...

It's like when USA ignores European trademarks (actually even stronger, PDOs) like Champagne or Parmesan but expects Europeans to honor US trademarks.

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sunshine-o
15 hours ago
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I would have loved to be in the meeting where they were wondering how to replace the highly costly and complex influence tool that was USAID, and then someone said:

- Why don't we just make a website?

- Yes let's just do that.

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pjc50
15 hours ago
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But will they put the complete Epstein files on there?
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freitasm
15 hours ago
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"Portal team includes former DOGE member Coristine"

"...user activity on the site will not be tracked."

Ok, stopped reading right there.

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FpUser
10 hours ago
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>"and added that user activity on the site will not be tracked"

Until it will. Please do not make me laugh. This will probably be used to help organize converting regimes or look for potential spies. Not denying possible positive value. If they're so generous they should expose Youtube this way and some generic communication platform if they believe they can pull it off (reliable ban bypassing)

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mjmsmith
11 hours ago
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Finally, a resource for oppressed people in backward countries to find information about abortion.
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shadowgovt
12 hours ago
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Excellent. I look forward to other service providers responding by cutting traffic from the US.

If the goal is to balkanize the internet, this administration has hit upon an excellent step.

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touwer
14 hours ago
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Maybe they can redirect from stupid.gov
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diego_moita
13 hours ago
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Can it be used to help people in the Bible Belt watch porn?
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nomilk
13 hours ago
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I think the states themselves don't block porn, but require sites to verify users' ages, and sites would rather block access in those states than comply. (although not sure how they do that from a technical standpoint, based on IP geolocation, perhaps?)
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13415
15 hours ago
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The irony is big in this one.
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DeathArrow
6 hours ago
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The EU will probably build its own version of the Great Firewall of China.
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csrse
14 hours ago
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Fantastic! Now EU just needs to setup freedomgov.eu that bounces off freedom.gov so americans also can browse whatever with no restrictions.
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Aloisius
14 hours ago
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What restrictions do Americans have now that would make that useful?
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Hikikomori
13 hours ago
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Facts on .gov websites.
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kg
12 hours ago
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Increasingly widespread age restriction laws?
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GlacierFox
12 hours ago
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Like the ones we have in the UK? I can't even look at the craft beer Sub-Reddit anymore without handing over my ID.
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tick_tock_tick
12 hours ago
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What's the point of the EU hosting an empty page? While tons freedoms and content is legal in the USA that isn't in the EU I don't know of any opposites.

Do you have any examples?

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0xy
11 hours ago
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Link to the US government banning free speech on the internet. You have no credibility when the UK, Spain, Germany and France have been railing against free speech and calling it "bullshit" in the last month.
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csrse
6 hours ago
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It was just a bit of fun, pointing out a ridiculousness of the situation. But for the sake of argument, age verification? lcelist? Annas? Not showing your state that you look at a democrat website? Or do you mean the free speech, non-censor freedom.gov will "filter" these sites?
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astahlx
7 hours ago
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In the end, facts are useless. You belief what you think your social bubble, and in particular, the group you think you belong to, is thinking. And many people do not speak up. Mostly those with strong (often selfish) interests speak up, and often in a manipulative way. Having narcissist or sociopaths as leader can indeed be a bad thing. Some sort of media control is good, to protect core values, to protect the law against mass manipulation.
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lbrito
12 hours ago
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This is also going to debut in Saudi Arabia, right?

...Right?

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verdverm
1 day ago
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What even is this? It looks to technically be Next JS with a single canvas element. But what does in protend...?

visuals with the only text on screen being...

---

"Freedom is Coming"

Information is power. Reclaim your human right to free expression. Get ready.

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apothegm
1 day ago
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What it is is a teaser for what will undoubtedly be a giant load of far-right propaganda.
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verdverm
16 hours ago
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Turns out it's to "uncensor" content blocked in other countries, which we know will be a process free of bias /s

They also gutted the prior org that helped people do this in other countries on the ground

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2OEH8eoCRo0
15 hours ago
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How long until Europe says, "fuck your copyright claims then?"
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crest
15 hours ago
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Just tell everyone who wants to downloads warez to use the US .gov VPN and refuse to resolve the IP addresses when they complain.
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dangus
10 hours ago
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Another dumb idea by our braindead administration.

The site will just be blocklisted by countries who don’t want you to use it. Duh.

You’d have to have some horrendous security instincts to use a government-hosted VPN.

Remember January 2025 when we were pitched the idea that the Trump administration was going to make the federal government efficient and cut frivolous programs?

Let me know when the budget deficit starts to decrease!

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sequence7
1 day ago
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Wow, it's actually real:

https://freedom.gov/

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dang
16 hours ago
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Thanks - we'll put that link in the toptext.
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throw-the-towel
15 hours ago
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And the site even has a French translation.
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sega_sai
11 hours ago
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I guess it will allow to access information unless it is about abortion or it is negative about DJT.

It is really a joke to pretend that current US cares about freedom of internet access, given all the attacks on free press it things like voice of America radio in the states.

I assume US will also provide a portal to Russian citizen if it is so eager to allow people to bypassing content bans (/s).

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JumpinJack_Cash
14 hours ago
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After the Trump checks and the Trump jabs ....the Trump porn?

I'd rather not...

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xvxvx
1 day ago
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The world will be exposed to hardcore pornography, child endangerment, AI CSAM, and militant algorithms by force, if needed!

Surveillance Valley: The Secret Military History of the Internet by Yasha Levine (2018) directly claims the internet is “the most effective weapon the government has ever built,” tracing its roots to Pentagon counterinsurgency projects like ARPA’s efforts in Vietnam-era surveillance.

The book argues surveillance was “woven into the fabric” from the start, linking early ARPANET development to intelligence goals, and extends to modern tech giants like Google as part of a military-digital complex.

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reisse
15 hours ago
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When U.S. Govt sponsors Tor, which does expose exactly what your describe, the reaction is usually positive.
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derelicta
15 hours ago
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Great! I sure hope it means Americans will stop censoring pro-Palestinian and pro-workers movements!
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black_puppydog
12 hours ago
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Sorry, but whatever you think about the laws that lead to these blockages, how else are european governments supposed to take that than a direct attack on their executive powers by a foreign government?

This being besides the fact that the folks crying wolf over "censorship" regularly conflate flat-out lies with valuable and protected speech.

Edit: I mean, I love tor as much as the next person, but imagine the reaction you'd get if an EU state (say, Germany) was to launch an official page with the express goal of allowing access to information censored by the Chinese government, targeting it directly to chinese citizens.

Could you make a moral case for this? Probably.

But would you be surprised or offended if the Chinese government took any measures they saw fit to strong-arm Germany into shutting that site right back down? Probably not. And the crowd here would probably go "bruh what did you expect?"

... Now waiting for examples of exactly that having happened already. :D

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nradov
12 hours ago
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In enlightened, civilized countries speech is protected regardless of whether anyone subjectively considers it to be "valuable".
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black_puppydog
12 hours ago
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rofl, go ahead try spreading lies about someone in the US. IIUC, the slander laws are just as draconian over there. the difference is in whether you can spread the same lies about someone with or without deep pockets without retribution.
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sgnelson
1 day ago
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Why? Seriously, why do we care so much about this?

Do we not have better uses of our money. Also the irony considering recent moves by the US government in terms of control of the internet and free speech.

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ericmay
15 hours ago
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> Also the irony considering recent moves by the US government in terms of control of the internet and free speech.

Well you've got plenty of countries doing it, including France, Iran, the United Kingdom, Germany, China, Brasil, Australia, you name it. Not that it's good, but a criticism for the goose is a criticism for the gander, as a manner of speaking.

As to which, why or why do we care so much about this? Idk, same reason our government funds tens of thousands of initiatives and cares about lots of different things that people find equally important or unimportant.

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mrighele
15 hours ago
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Historically the US did care a lot, in a way it reminds me of the Crusade for Freedom [1] and Radio Free Europe [2].

So I find this in line with the behavior of many American administration, the weird thing being that this time the target is not the just usual suspects (China, Iran, etc.) but also European allies.

(not saying this is a good thing btw, just trying to put it in perspective)

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crusade_for_Freedom

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio_Free_Europe/Radio_Libert...

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carlosjobim
21 hours ago
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These things have been going on forever. Since WWII and until right now, there has been radio stations broadcasting into enemy territory, to bypass censorship.
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throw-the-towel
15 hours ago
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Ironically, this effectively is a pro-Trump comment because it's the Trump administration that defunded US propaganda outlets.
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idiotsecant
15 hours ago
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No, the Trump administration is an enormous supporter of propaganda outlets, just not the ones that already existed. They don't care about maintaining the rules based world order. Their propaganda is much more inward-focused.
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throw-the-towel
15 hours ago
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You're probably right, I was speaking as someone from outside the States, and hence more familiar with the outside-focused US outlets.
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k3vinw
47 minutes ago
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Good. I’m bypassing the UK altogether since they can throw you in jail for thought crimes.

https://www.newsweek.com/policing-thought-crime-should-have-...

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