Last week’s Supreme Court decision in Cox Communications reshaped the piracy liability landscape, creating new urgency for site-blocking.

  • smeg@infosec.pub
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    4 hours ago

    Literally every single large AI provider admits to committing large scale piracy. No congressional response.

    Some members of the public are watching HBO shows because they’re poor? FULL FORCE OF THE LAW

  • Jul (they/she)@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    3 hours ago

    Good news for fascists since it means there will be an easy way to force ISPs to block all “unlawful” content like Wikipedia or any other site that gives educational information to refute their current agendas or reflects opposing opinions that they consider “alternative facts”.

    • Teknikal@anarchist.nexus
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      33 minutes ago

      Most isps just mess with the DNS, dnscrypt is a solution to make sure they can’t. Best solution is not using dns in the first place though.

      • dan@upvote.au
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        25 minutes ago

        Best solution is not using dns in the first place though.

        Use DNS over HTTPS (or TLS or QUIC). I think some browsers use it by default now. If there’s country-specific blocks, use your own recursive DNS server.

  • Teknikal@anarchist.nexus
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    4 hours ago

    Sooner everything moves to something like i2p the better, there’s no reason to be using the clearnet imo.

    It’s just a safer way of doing things and eventually things will be driven that direction anyway.

  • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 hours ago

    Haven’t other countries tried DNS level site blocking, and it’s very easy to get around? Does it even make any difference? The strategy of ISP copyright letters has already trained Americans to use VPNs for this, it seems like the only difference will be that I will have to turn my VPN on before searching for torrents instead of just before actually opening my torrent client

    • alakey@piefed.social
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      3 hours ago

      DNS blocking is a paper wall indeed. However, this is just a step one. VPNs are already a target, so this will help them with justifying step 2 - introducing DPI to monitor all traffic and proactively block new VPNs and other obfuscation methods. Step 3 is more or less final, it’s when they realize this is also not quite as efficient as they’d like and they’ll get tired of the constant cat and mouse game, so the solution would have to be whitelisting approved websites and blocking everything else. It’s amazing for billionaires and their corpos as that makes it nearly impossible for new projects to enter the market, and it’s great for governments that desperately want to be authoritarian, but pesky constitutions, privacy laws and some such are getting in the way.

  • alakey@piefed.social
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    6 hours ago

    Ahhhh, there comes the american own great firewall, fantastic…

    Wonder if we will suddenly see this same bullshit pop up in all the pro age verification countries now or a tad later to make it less obvious.

    • Auster@thebrainbin.org
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      5 hours ago

      Several such movements have been going around since around September 2025, with some countries’ governments, e.g. Brazil’s current one, pushing for such for longer.

        • orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts
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          4 hours ago

          Eyyy I love that this link is making the rounds. Can’t take credit for the graph, but happy to help broaden visibility.

            • orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts
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              34 minutes ago

              I guess they’re the group that was behind the Itch censorship.

              The group rose to prominence in 2025 after lobbying for the digital distribution platforms Steam and Itch.io to remove hundreds of video games that they said featured themes such as rape, incest, and sexual violence, which resulted in Itch.io temporarily deindexing all not-safe-for-work adult games.[5] Collective Shout’s campaigning against violent adult games, in collaboration with payment processors, has raised concerns about financial censorship,[6] effects on LGBTQ+ games,[5][6][7] and creative freedom.[8]

  • CobraChicken3000@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    So how would this work theoretically? People in the states would just be prohibited from accessing certain sites and Google would remove them from results of searchs?

    • dan@upvote.au
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      23 minutes ago

      Google already remove results in certain countries based on local laws, and as a response to DMCA complaints.