Just received an email from feddit.online saying they've geoblocked UK IPs due to the Online Safety Act
from Skavau@piefed.social to fediverse@lemmy.world on 26 Jul 13:36
https://piefed.social/post/1078583

I think they’re the 3rd, 4th largest piefed instance? Check: !feddit_online@feddit.online

#fediverse

threaded - newest

MxRemy@piefed.social on 26 Jul 13:49 next collapse

Uhh totally unrelated but... how hard is it to get fedi platforms working over the alt internets, like tor/i2p/ipfs/etc? I'm sure somebody somewhere must be working on that, right?

[deleted] on 26 Jul 14:32 next collapse

.

AntiBullyRanger@ani.social on 26 Jul 15:52 next collapse

Social problems aren’t solved with technology 🤦‍♀️, it’s great shame .online decided to abstain, but even greater shame UK illiterates desire fascistic anti-intellectualism.

deafboy@lemmy.world on 26 Jul 18:34 collapse

They absolutely are. It’s one thing to beg for the right to do something. It’s entirely different to be able to just do it without the permission.

Did people forget how big of a deal the printing press was?

AntiBullyRanger@ani.social on 27 Jul 04:17 collapse

Of course I recall the printing press that still exists today. But the UK has chosen to censor itself politically, therefore technologically.

Unless you know of a magical “ignore law” technology, let me know it!

deafboy@lemmy.world on 27 Jul 11:52 collapse

There. We just broke the law.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/ab528997-96aa-41dd-a7a6-9db184d464a1.jpeg">

AntiBullyRanger@ani.social on 27 Jul 15:23 collapse

How so?

muntedcrocodile@hilariouschaos.com on 26 Jul 23:53 collapse

It is a thing it is being done. I can’t remember the repo link but u can do it.

Blaze@sopuli.xyz on 26 Jul 13:52 next collapse

6th with 70 monthly active users piefed.fediverse.observer/list

Piefed.social has 949, piefed.world 222

Jerry@feddit.online on 26 Jul 16:28 collapse

Piefed.social isn't as affected because they restrict the NSFW communities. Feddit.online doesn't have the restriction, so it's more exposed.

The fear is a complaint being made to Digital Ocean that a server they host is violating UK law. It would be much easier for DO to remove the server than to take any other action.

Skavau@piefed.social on 26 Jul 16:51 next collapse

To be clear, the specifics in the act go beyond not specifically hosting pornographic content.

Blaze@sopuli.xyz on 26 Jul 19:06 collapse

That makes sense

Piatro@programming.dev on 26 Jul 14:00 next collapse

I’m just waiting for all UK users to be banned from anything that isn’t Facebook or X. It’s absolutely ridiculous and a huge win for big tech as it locks us in to their platforms and their platforms only. Those of us with a bit of tech knowledge will work around it but it’s infuriating.

Skavau@piefed.social on 26 Jul 14:02 next collapse

Currently Twitter is doing the bare minimum by simply allowing UK users to bypass the age-checks by setting their location to another country.

henfredemars@infosec.pub on 26 Jul 14:14 next collapse

The equivalent of a pop-up asking you if you’re 18 or older.

Back in the day, I was 18 for like five years.

relativestranger@feddit.nl on 26 Jul 14:41 collapse

half the internet is 45 years old this year.

nokturne213@sopuli.xyz on 26 Jul 17:15 collapse

At least do it Leisure Suit Larry style and ask three questions someone at least 18 should know.

General_Effort@lemmy.world on 27 Jul 13:21 collapse

Ahh, nostalgia. Thank you.

TeddE@lemmy.world on 27 Jul 16:17 collapse

Just a reminder. Self-hosting is a hobby that is both useful and satisfying, and the skills you pick up will change how you see computers that are increasingly part of everything.

You probably won’t be going off-grid overnight, but the tech industry has spent 30 years promoting propaganda that ‘only skilled engineers should worry about what goes on under the hood’ and have conditioned us to expect tech to just be magic.

Fighting back means educating yourself, and that means grabbing an old laptop, learning how to install Linux on it, fire up a few Docker projects, and exploring all the options that opens up.

It will take a few weekends to get started, and it will require some upkeep. But for that price you will gain some sovereignty back over your digital life.

For extra credit and when ready you can pay $15 /year for a vanity domain (you’d only need one, as you can freely create an unrestricted number of subdomains), once done you move from being a serf to a digital landlord.

Jerry@feddit.online on 26 Jul 15:30 next collapse

The Mozilla VPN with their Firefox extension (not yet on Linux), for example, lets you change the VPN server's country based on the domain you connect to and even bypass the VPN for certain domains. So, I believe it can be configured to select a U.S. VPN server, for example, when visiting a U.S. social site, but stay on the native connection when accessing BBC services. It uses Mullvad as the provider, actually, which is high quality. They can't be the only one.

The Internet always seems to find ways to bypass blocks.

misk@sopuli.xyz on 26 Jul 20:15 next collapse

I’m confused, why are non-UK instances banning UK users? Are their admins located in the UK? Is anyone afraid of being extradited to UK because of their local laws? Do you block Saudi Arabia too because you can’t guarantee blasphemy laws are going to be upholded?

Skavau@piefed.social on 26 Jul 20:17 next collapse

They believe that Ofcom could pressure their hosts to cut their services off if they don't comply with the act, or believe they could be fined.

misk@sopuli.xyz on 26 Jul 20:22 collapse

How would that even work in another country? Wouldn’t Saudi Arabia pressure hosts for breaking blasphemy laws?

Skavau@piefed.social on 26 Jul 20:29 next collapse

Saudi Arabia has no soft power here. UK does.

Not saying that UK will here (I think they won't), but the relationship dynamics are a bit different.

misk@sopuli.xyz on 26 Jul 21:39 collapse

Saudi Arabia has plenty of soft and hard power too. Possibly more so than UK. I think we’re getting overly dramatic. UK doesn’t have enough pull to start extraditing thousands of people for not complying with their weirdo laws.

Skavau@piefed.social on 26 Jul 21:41 collapse

Not when it comes to tech. You think the USA would let Saudi Arabia force the total shut-down of a USA-based site because they allowed people to make fun of Islam? Come on. Saudi Arabia just quiety blocks sites.

UK doesn’t have enough pull to start extraditing thousands of people for not complying with their weirdo laws.

I agree with you there too. The forum owners here fear Ofcom pressuring their hosts to force compliance, not extradition. I think its misguided and unlikely (especially for small arms of the fediverse) but it is what it is.

Jerry@feddit.online on 26 Jul 21:18 collapse

Yes, the U.S. and the U.K. have cooperation agreements for Civil actions.

Jerry@feddit.online on 26 Jul 21:17 next collapse

A public enforcement action by Ofcom could make it difficult because payment processors can refuse to work with the site owner, domain registrars could be pressured to suspend the domain, and hosting providers might refuse to provide services.

Who needs this drama?

Skavau@piefed.social on 26 Jul 21:19 collapse

I think in practice Ofcom would just geoblock your site specifically.

dsilverz@calckey.world on 26 Jul 22:31 collapse

@misk@sopuli.xyz @Skavau@piefed.social

As a sidenote, I remember that UK has an odd and ancient "law" stating something in the lines "The Crown must not be offended" (i.e. being anti-monarchy and advocating for the end of monarchy, even without any violent language/means but a pacific defense of anti-monarchy). I couldn't find it, nor I can remember the exact phrasing, but such a "law" threatens prison time for those who "dare" to "offend" the crowniness of UK Crown. Also, I'm not sure to what extent this law is applied in practice.

Even though I'm Brazilian (so the UK supposedly "have no power over here", and I say it with the Gandalf's voice), I see these international situations with some worry: there are needed laws (such as laws against noise pollution) and there are laws whose reach ends up going way too far from their "seemingly well-intentioned" puritan scope (such as the aforementioned laws).

If countries are capable of passing draconian laws against their own citizens, don't expect that those same countries couldn't go further to impose these laws beyond their own lawns, especially in times of interconnectedness.

And Fediverse platforms from everywhere around the entire globe end up being caught in the crossfire, due to that same interconnectedness.

In the end of the day, the world is increasingly bleaker, as the history is being repeated (maxims "One thing people can learn from history books is that people can't learn from history books", and "history doesn't just repeat, it rhymes").

Skavau@piefed.social on 26 Jul 22:32 next collapse

As a sidenote, I remember that UK has an odd and ancient "law" stating something in the lines "" (i.e. being anti-monarchy and advocating for the end of monarchy, even without any violent language/means but a pacific defense of anti-monarchy). I couldn't find it, nor I can remember the exact phrasing, but such a "law" threatens prison time for those who "dare" to "offend" the crowniness of UK Crown. Also, I'm not sure to what extent this law is applied in practice.

Given there's an active pro-republican campaign site I'd wager not at all.

If countries are capable of passing draconian laws against their own citizens, don't expect that those same countries couldn't go further to impose these laws beyond their own lawns, especially in times of interconnectedness.

UK against the USA? I think the UK isn't winning that.

Flax_vert@feddit.uk on 27 Jul 00:33 collapse

I think treason laws have only been used against people who were actually plotting to or attempting to murder the monarch.

General_Effort@lemmy.world on 27 Jul 13:29 next collapse

I remember that UK has an odd and ancient “law”

The Treason Felony Act of 1848. Nothing odd about it. That used to be quite standard. Actually, the years of 1848/49 saw many major revolutions and hard fighting across the continent.

For my German homies…

Womble@lemmy.world on 27 Jul 21:35 collapse

Also, I’m not sure to what extent this law is applied in practice.

as per the article general_effort posted:

The act – which makes it a criminal offence, punishable by life imprisonment, to advocate abolition of the monarchy in print, even by peaceful means – has not been deployed in a prosecution since 1879.

Its one of those laws that are on the books mostly becuase no one has got around to modifying it and removing the bits that are unused.

roserose56@lemmy.ca on 26 Jul 21:17 collapse

Ain’t had no job to pass a bad law for their citizens. Now our chaps have to use VPN to come and talk with us! It’s sad!