atomizer
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2024
Can't they seek cross-border enforcement of fines? Very unlikely to occur, but on the off chance it did it could put tremendous pressure on the site.
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If you point out the "two-tiered justice system" BS -- or even just repost a post of someone else pointing such out -- you could get in trouble for "hate speech" in the UK.the UK government regularly allows Middle Eastern men to gangrape white girls
Fair point. I keep forgetting whether the treacherous kike's name is spelled "Kier" or "Keir". His head belongs on a spike regardless.Mr? Nigger doesn't even deserve the title. Just call him Queer Starmtrooper like the fucking rest of us.
EUtard ignorant to the fact that the world doesn't operate like his faggy wannabe superstateCan't they seek cross-border enforcement of fines? Very unlikely to occur, but on the off chance it did it could put tremendous pressure on the site.
To Sao Tome? An African country that never had contact with the UK trough history, even during colonial times?Can't they seek cross-border enforcement of fines?
I'm sure it had something to do with it. A number of other sites I use or have used in the past have closed too, some citing this imbecilic law. The fact is the only way to comply with this bureaucratic nightmare is to have a legal team to do it. All the oligopoly companies like your Google/Twitter/Facebook types can afford to comply or suck up a fine.So that is the reason ovarit closed
Dozens of small internet forums have blocked British users or shut down as new online safety laws come into effect, with one comparing the new regime to a British version of China’s “great firewall”.
Several smaller community-led sites have stopped operating or restricted services, blaming new illegal harms duties enforced by Ofcom from Monday.
They range from a hamster owners’ forum, a local group for residents of the Oxfordshire town of Charlbury, and a large cycling forum.
These are the sites that don't have the money or power to resist laws like this. Not the giants.“While this forum has always been perfectly safe, we were unable to meet [the compliance requirements of the Act],” wrote the operators of The Hamster Forum, which describes itself as “the home of all things hamstery”.
Richard Fairhurst, the administrator of the “Charlbury in the Cotswolds” forum, wrote that the Act was “a huge issue for small sites, both in terms of the hoops that site admins have to jump through, and potential liability”.
I'd be shocked if that tea nigger was the only one. They were going to do it anyway. I was wondering when.@Null Britbong is claiming that he is the one responsible for this.
I don't see this myself as Britbong doesn't have the intelligence to pull something like this off. All Britbong can do is lust after underage children like his current underage internet girlfriend.
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Say what you like about our elected idiots, but the First Amendment is still strong. And also say what you like about the current composition of the Supreme Court, but its current First Amendment positions are as rock solid as they have been in decades.I have a feeling that here in Burgerland any pretense of the 1st Amendment is also going to vanish in the next few years thanks to the alphabet agencies that really run our government regardless of the fucktard puppet who sits on office as "president".