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Ironic.
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What specifically is unsafe in this article?
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It's not that the article is inherently unsafe, it's that the UK law imposes a liability the author is unwilling to shoulder.
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Although Ofcom doesn't think geo blocking is sufficient to absolve them of that liability. Crazy as that is.
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I actually wound up geoblocking the UK based on Ofcom's February 2025 presentation for small services providers--they said that they intended to target "one-man bands" who (e.g.) failed to perform a child risk assessment or age verification, but that a geoblock would be considered compliant. I don't like doing this, but as someone who visits the UK regularly (and has been regularly pushing Ofcom on this matter) I figure better safe than sorry.

https://player.vimeo.com/video/1053842235?app_id=122963

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I'm glad you have done this and I wish more would follow the same course. The more content that becomes unavailable in the UK, the more people might start to pay attention to the stupidity of the law.

I doubt it, but even from an irrational anger perspective, I hate that these idiots can do idiotic (and worse, counter productive) stuff, and get no comeback on themselves.

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>I'm glad you have done this and I wish more would follow the same course. The more content that becomes unavailable in the UK, the more people might start to pay attention to the stupidity of the law.

The law isn't going to be repealed because a bunch of nerds geoblocked their personal blog.

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That is a weirdly aggressive reply.
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Use the Tor browser
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[dead]
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[flagged]
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To be clear, that's not the full article, just the intro (though the whole thing isn't too long)
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