Quote:
Originally Posted by Kevin-SFBucks
As I said in another thread. Our laws start at our borders. The instance that digital signal on the internet crosses into US territory, we have every right to expect the content contained within it or that it helps to compose, to be subjected to US Law. Just because it's being hosted elsewhere doesn't negate the fact that it's being viewed here. There's more to the law than the hosting locale.
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When you visit a foreign website operated by a foreign webmaster, you are an international tourist. My

says if you can't accept all the ramifications of wandering into a foreign nation, just don't visit those countries, physically or virtually. The information isn't invading your homeland, you are inviting it. If international law worked as you are advocating, US-based webmasters would be brought up on endless charges for breaking local laws in China, Germany, Saudi Arabia, etc. Instead, for example, the US can't do anything to shut down offshore gambling sites just because an American played there; and shouldn't have any right to; they can only police their own citizens.
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