• stoly@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    If you offer a service in a country you are subject to their laws.

    • FriendBesto@lemmy.ml
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      12 hours ago

      The internet is open. It is not up to a site to block a country just because. Which is what happened here, and this why their law is dumb and over reaching.

      The argument is more like:

      “UK citizens, via the open internet could see your site, and we have now decided that we do not like it. We are not going to complain via diplomacy or via your country’s existing Laws or policing agencies, as such, you must pay us £20,000 in fines, per day, for exisitng because we say so. Despite you having no interests, employees or infrastructure, at all, in our country.”

    • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      17 hours ago

      My website is my website. You visit my website, my website does not visit you. My website is public, you choose to enter it. You visit my website through your infrastructure to get to my infrastructure. My infrastructure is publicly available to you, should you be able to access it.

      The governing body of your (second person, not you specifically) infrastructure (the UK government) chooses to impose rules on my actions. Their threat is “we’ll stop letting people in our infrastructure from being able to reach your infrastructure.”

      That is extortion, not working in the public’s favor. The UK government is saying they’ll block all roads from your house that lead to my website outside of the UK. My website is overseas, brother. The UK is blocking all the ports so you can’t sail here. I don’t “offer services” to you in the UK, I just don’t prevent people from the UK from trying to reach my island. Nothing about my services requires the UK infrastructure. My services keep operating whether the UK government exists or not. How do they have any right over my infrastructure in this scenario?

      If this is about ads, the UK has all the right to remove my ads from their country. That is within their right. Anything about blocking people from the UK is within their right, sure, but that’s not my problem lol. Sorry you have a shit government lol

    • deathbird@mander.xyz
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      24 hours ago

      I’m not sure I like the idea that you’re “offering a service” in a country simply by being a data service that can accessed from it.

      Someone from Australia can call me and we can chat. It doesn’t mean I or my phone carrier are offering a service in Australia.

      • x00z@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        You’re right, but that also means your service can get blocked in said country. And that’s what they don’t want, so they’re trying to fight it from home.

      • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        Whoever is providing the communications infrastructure to the Australian caller would be offering a service in Australia (5g masts, fibre, customer service etc.)

        Only if the call is going via satellite owned by non-Australians could you avoid this.