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[return to "Online Safety Act – shutdowns and site blocks"]
1. b800h+W5[view] [source] 2025-08-13 07:45:19
>>azalem+(OP)
What's frustrating me about this is that theoretically this list should include every MUD and BBS, if they don't want to get in trouble. It's a horrible law, which forces people into the pockets of the largest sites which can afford to do the age verification.

Speaking as a Brit, I wish Wikipedia would just go black for the UK. That might focus some minds.

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2. silon4+H7[view] [source] 2025-08-13 08:04:30
>>b800h+W5
Even if they don't, maybe go black for all weekends.
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3. cm2187+ob[view] [source] 2025-08-13 08:38:59
>>silon4+H7
That wouldn’t address their liability.
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4. vaylia+4c[view] [source] 2025-08-13 08:44:35
>>cm2187+ob
It would raise awareness in the general population and increase justified resistance against this stupid law.
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5. vidarh+ed[view] [source] 2025-08-13 08:55:30
>>vaylia+4c
But in that case it'd be easy for supporters of the law to argue it was just performative and clearly not really needed since they're otherwise accessible.
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6. 4bpp+ri[view] [source] 2025-08-13 09:46:46
>>vidarh+ed
They are free to do that, but what of it? Sanctions and boycotts are "performative" in the same sense, and yet they continue being a popular tool to compel voters and politicians of other countries to act or refrain from acting in particular ways.

Wikipedia is a popular website that many people depend upon; denying access to UK users would not only create a massive inconvenience along with the temptation that it could be avoided if the law were rolled back, but would also encourage more UK users to adopt VPNs, which would subvert the law's effectivity along with that of a plethora of other authoritarian measures that the UK has in place.

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