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EXCELLENT article in Wired re: 2257 [must read]
I applaud Wired for bringing this information to a mainstream publication. Excellent stuff. We certainly need more of these types of dialogues to get out the message of how the new 2257 jepardises our freedoms in this industry.
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,...w=wn_tophead_4 |
Cool :thumbsup
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Which issue was this in? Maybe I haven't gotten the newest mag but I don't remember reading this. Very good stuff :thumbsup
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why even bother reading this stuff.. Just let your attorneys deal with it.
Duke |
I'm going to call that columnist on Monday to thank him. I'm amazed more attention hasn't gravitated towards this subject.
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I read this in a link from another board and was amazed at how biased it was.
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As usual the rest of the industry will stand back and let a few individuals pay for the undoing of this law rather than stepping up to the plate and fighting as a united force. Quote:
As pornographers we have responsibilities, should we fail to maintain them do not be surprised if Vias and the banks make it even harder to do business. |
President Bush allotted $270 million to "abstinence education," up from the $97.5 million budgeted in 2000.
:helpme |
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Very good artice and a great magazine but when it comes down to it the law is so full of shit it's not going to do any harm to those that know what's up with it and have a great lawyer...
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If I'm reading this correctly, it sounds as if you're almost siding with the Attorney General who drafted this peice of legistlation. He definitely has made his agenda clear, and it goes way beyond protecting the innocent. |
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Look at the law and the way it's written, are all of the things is asks for doable the way the Adult Internet works? In my opinion and knowledge it's not. This gives a lawyer the argument that the law in itself cannot be enforced. Now imagine if they had consulted industry people and made a law that could be enforced, but made it very didficult and expensive. What would you prefer? One of the simplest things is the distributing personal information to every webmaster with free content. Let's say they made people obtain a license to get that information or made you employ a lawyer to maintain it. I think it was a knee jerk reaction from someone who had to come up with a quick excuse of why his department had never enforced the act. Ash c roft gave the excuse to the Senate committee, that the law was under review so he could not enforce it at the moment. The original law was in response to Traci Lords having one forged ID when she was under age doing porn. Then they passed 2257 which stil asked for 1 ID and was very flexible about what ID that could be. The industry I worked for insisted on better IDs and two of them. |
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Bush, Ashcroft etc don't believe porn is a legitimate business. Which ironically will be their downfall with these new 2257 rules. 2257 is about REGULATION, if something is not legitimate how can you regulate it? You don't see the FDA regualting the quality of crack do you? The government can't say on the one hand that porn is not a legitimate business so therefore it doesn't deserve consititional protections yet at the same time trying to regulate how it is run. |
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Whatever Bush and Ashcroft think is irrelevant, under the constitution freedom of speech is a fundimental right. So porn is a legitimate business and not illegal like crack. Bad example. But if they were a bit more clever they could of made it a lot more difficult to produce/publish porn inside the US. I was saying that if you publish porn you need to be able to prove certain things, are you saying you should not have to prove the age of the models? Like I said in that other thread, no wonder the banks are wary of us. |
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