The chilling effects on free speech have already begun even before it becomes law. Today reddit banned the subreddits r/escorts and r/hookers as part of a new policy against advertising sexual services for a fee. That is not what happened on these groups. Merely discussion about topics pertaining to prostitution. I have followed these groups for a few years and can’t ever remember seeing an ad there. Originally Posted by SpankyJYep. All people did there was talk. Not solicit, not advertise, not facilitate, not make dates....just talk. And now this new law has everyone so scared that talking is forbidden.
Yep. All people did there was talk. Not solicit, not advertise, not facilitate, not make dates....just talk. And now this new law has everyone so scared that talking is forbidden. Originally Posted by easymoeUnfortunately, as I understand it, this law actually makes it a FEDERAL crime to use the internet to "promote or facilitate prostitution." And that provision is for INDIVIDUALS. So doing nothing more than talking about it may be prosecutable.
I don't think that services owned by companies that operate outside the jurisdiction of the US will be affected. What's not clear is whether non-US companies that have servers within US borders will be subject to the law.You don't need to be in the US to be charged with violating US law. It doesn't matter where the business is registered or where the servers are located, if a website has prostitution related content pertaining to US cities then it is subject to US federal prosecution.
ECCIE's days are probably numbered. I imagine the owners would sooner shut it down and try to setup shop in a country that's more friendly to sites like this rather than fight FOSTA/SESTA in the courts.
- TER is registered in Cyprus
- P411 operates out of Canada
- ProtonMail operates out of Switzerland
In any event, I would consider transitioning to services outside the jurisdiction of the US until the dust settles. Originally Posted by johnny_rocketz