ManWithShoesForHands

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 year ago (10 children)

Germany allows loli content, so long as it does not “produce or reproduce an actual event.” It is illegal in Lithuania. This obviously does not say whether the content is/isn't allowed by your server host.

If you're looking for a privacy/speech respecting provider you might find this article semi-useful: https://crippled.media/free-speech-vps-providers-put-to-the-test it compares 7 “Free Speech” server providers based on the content they allow and their various terms.

I think @[email protected] wrote the article, actually.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

One of the best resources I have found is this Wikipedia article which goes through basically each country and gives a basic rundown of the laws. I wish the page on exclusively fictional content was as informative as this one is, but unfortunately, it is not. To go even deeper into each country's laws would require you know the language of said country, as I feel most sources would likely be in the country's native language as opposed to english. Since like, it's most likely you'd want to know the laws of a country if you lived in said country, so the most informative information would be in the native language.

 

In my opinion, this is really good news, but wasn't sure if it really fit into the good news community, so I'm putting it here.

 

Well, as long as they got permission, then I guess it's okay. /s

 

Advertisements seemed to be the way until recently, where it doesn't seem like advertising is at all a valid way to make money.

Crypto mining, while good tech, was abused far too much to where any ethical solutions made are just going to be tacked into the same category as the unethical ones.

Subscriptions are popping up a lot more, but I'm not sure that's the best way to do things.

Donations seems like a valid way, but that relies on people actually caring enough to find something.

For the sake of discussion, let's talk about smaller websites/businesses as opposed to huge companies like The Hard R, Amazon, etc…

How do you think the web should be monetized?

 

I like the focus on free expression and the loli/shota/cub policy! The admins seem pretty chill too!

 

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