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295 points AndrewDucker | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.205s | source
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andybak ◴[] No.45045278[source]
Between this and the UK Online Safety Bill, how are people meant to keep track?

Launch a small website and commit a felony in 7 states and 13 countries.

I wouldn't have known about the Mississippi bill unless I'd read this. How are we have to know?

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zaptheimpaler ◴[] No.45045350[source]
Any physical business has to deal with 100s of regulations too, it just means the same culture of making it extremely difficult and expensive to do anything at all is now coming to the online world as well, bit by bit.
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kragen ◴[] No.45045609[source]
Websites aren't necessarily businesses; they're speech.
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TGower ◴[] No.45046388[source]
A blog is speech, but I wouldn't say that deciding to operate a social media site is speech. That said, there are plenty of good reasons to oppose this law.
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kragen ◴[] No.45046926[source]
Speech isn't just shouting into the void; it's dialogue back and forth between two or more different people. Social media sites such as Hacker News and the WELL facilitate this, even when they aren't businesses, in much the same way as a dinner party or a church picnic does.
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Terr_ ◴[] No.45049547[source]
> Speech isn't just shouting into the void; it's dialogue back and forth between two or more different people.

In some cases this arises in US Constitutional law as the freedom of other people to seek and encounter the speech, though I'm not sure if there's a formal name for the idea. (e.g. "Freedom of Hearing".)

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FFFBBDB5 ◴[] No.45056633[source]
freedom of association
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1. Terr_ ◴[] No.45057117[source]
That usually gets used in more of a "you guys can't make a club together" sense, as opposed to "you aren't allowed to search for that keyword."