Wikipedia may have to impose quota on number of UK users to comply with Online Safety Act
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This post did not contain any content.
Wikipedia threatens to limit UK access to website
Digital encyclopaedia may impose quota on number of users to comply with Online Safety Act
The Telegraph (www.telegraph.co.uk)
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This post did not contain any content.
Wikipedia threatens to limit UK access to website
Digital encyclopaedia may impose quota on number of users to comply with Online Safety Act
The Telegraph (www.telegraph.co.uk)
Fucking insane
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This post did not contain any content.
Wikipedia threatens to limit UK access to website
Digital encyclopaedia may impose quota on number of users to comply with Online Safety Act
The Telegraph (www.telegraph.co.uk)
Just FYI, it's considered poor form to post a paywalled article with no way of bypassing it.
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Just FYI, it's considered poor form to post a paywalled article with no way of bypassing it.
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This post did not contain any content.
Wikipedia threatens to limit UK access to website
Digital encyclopaedia may impose quota on number of users to comply with Online Safety Act
The Telegraph (www.telegraph.co.uk)
I’m not a fan of the laws regardless, but if we pretend for a second they’re justified, it’s worth considering how they should work in a case like Wikipedia.
Wikipedia has quite strong protections against problem content already, and that’s because it has a shared global view of content with effective moderation tools and a wide moderator base that respects the rules. That reality should be taken into account in the governments new rules. On the other hand, anyone who understands how this all works was already against this stupid law, so I guess they didn’t get any useful feedback internally -
Just FYI, it's considered poor form to post a paywalled article with no way of bypassing it.
I still buy the odd paper if I'm working away from home.
These paywalls or "pay for no tracking" wankers make it easy to decide what papers not to buy.
Not that it really matters a flying fuck when print membership is sinking faster than the Oceangate grain of sub. It's satisfying though.
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Hmm. It does sound like Wikipedia's concerns are unlikely to come to fruition.
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This post did not contain any content.
Wikipedia threatens to limit UK access to website
Digital encyclopaedia may impose quota on number of users to comply with Online Safety Act
The Telegraph (www.telegraph.co.uk)
If Wikipedia can't fully comply and has to resort to blocking, how a small one-man platform is supposed to do it?
Yeah, exactly, block all the UK and move on.
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If Wikipedia can't fully comply and has to resort to blocking, how a small one-man platform is supposed to do it?
Yeah, exactly, block all the UK and move on.
I think the law would only apply above a certain number of monthly users, so small platforms are safe from it for now.
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Just FYI, it's considered poor form to post a paywalled article with no way of bypassing it.
Sorry, I didn't realise it was paywalled. It didn't prompt me to pay when I opened it. It's not a source I usually use, but I couldn't find an alternative unless from much less reputable sites.
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Just FYI, it's considered poor form to post a paywalled article with no way of bypassing it.
Reader view on most browsers will bypass articles like this. It worked for me.
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