this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2024
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Privacy
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The content is irrelevant. One country should not censor the entire web. I don't care how terrible it is. It is easy to say a stabbing is bad but what about a criticism or a leader or hard discussions.
I don't live in Australia but yet they were trying to enforce there legislation on me. Australia is very much not the only country that is guilty of this. It is one win in the bigger picture.
If a international platform wants to host something questionable they should have the right to. If it violates local law they just remove it from the specific country.
I agree, but I think it is more complex than that. There are limits to free speech already. I agree that no one country should be able to censor others, but what about content that is illegally produced in that country.
So if terrorist training videos were made in Australia, could banning them from distribution mean they could prosecute fitter for distributing them? How about csam? How about China prosecutes for ibfro about Tiananmen. What about CSAM?
So objectively there are things some countries would want banned, but not all. Some that all might agree to ban. Classifying it might help but might that be more of an invasion of privacy? The web is built on lots of open protocols that assume good actors and no malicious intent. We are now adding protocols that increase privacy and security on top. Even something like the fediverse is a good example of the trade off between being public and being anonymous and being private. You can't have it all.
Geoblocking is a better solution. Just don't store that content in Australia and block it from coming in.
Everything on the internet is effectively permanent anyway
The eSafety commission argued that "well everyone just uses VPNs anyway so it won't matter"