When this instance first started, I don’t think it was fully anticipated how large it would get. The place where this instance was when I first stepped up as admin was wholly unsustainable long term. There was little direction as to what the instance’s intentions as a website were, and the specific intentions it seemed to lean towards (being a sort of reddit 2.0) is not something we have the ability to handle. Neither monetarily nor legally.

The expectations that this instance specifically would be replacing reddit nsfw content entirely is not realistic, and the expectations that have been had for what all of lemmy is capable of has been much higher than what the backend side of things is at right now. Rome was not built in a day, and the same is true for communities of this nature. We are utilizing a platform based on a philosophy that hasn’t been widely used outside of email since the early Internet, while now having to work the laws and limitations that the current Internet now presents as well. It’s an experiment, and just like all other communities we have made mistakes and are trying our best while figuring this out together. This is not a business, we are not shareholders, we are simply passionate volunteers.

Right now, our team has been paying attention to concerns and feedback that have been raised. We are currently actively engaged in a discussion of what the next steps are from here. My hasty implementation of the current restrictive content policy was not something to do long term but an attempt to reign in a community with what felt to have little restrictions and many issues popping up. There is a lot that goes on behind the scenes of managing a community like this. The current policy as it stands right now, has been a band aid while we discuss further how to move forward. And we have been.

And thankfully we have a much bigger back-end team than before. What has helped the most to provide insight is that we have a back-end team member who has active experience in hosting adult websites within the legal span of the law. We also have backend team members who are helping to build mod tools not just for lemmyNSFW but with active collaboration with others across instances as well.

As we have discussed rule changes and throwing things at the wall, our biggest aspect has been determining if we are on the same page as a team. Unfortunately, a now previous back-end team member decided that he was not. And that’s ok. However last night, instead of moving forward and deciding that our ethos as a team moving forward isn’t for them there was a post that was made that compiled our original rough draft for new content guidelines and attempted to pass them off as that is going to be our full go to as a community. It isn’t. We are discussing things and hashing things out as a team still but have made significant progress moving beyond what was discussed. When changes occur, we will make a post clarifying such changes. We ask for patience, please.

  • @nsfwaccount411
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    21 year ago

    That’s the theory but… What does that look like in practice?

    I’ve got the knowledge and funds to set-up a lemmy instance where the rule is “anything legal goes”. The bar isn’t high from a technical/financial perspective tbh.

    Except… /r/rape_hentai is illegal in Germany as far as I can tell, and I could see that being the case in many EU countries including mine (whether they’d care to prosecute is another story, but I ain’t taking that risk buddy).
    But thinking on it further, “reluctant sex” is just such a common trope in hentai… potential liability is near infinite if some prosecutor 10 years from now decides to string me up for knowingly hosting such content at some point in the past.

    Also what even is the legal framework for unintentionally federating illegal content? If one of my users subscribe to burggit’s loli content, I’ll be caching and distributing VERY illegal thumbnails. Someone’s going to go to court to create a legal precedent on the liability for federated content, and I’d rather it not be me because I can see that go either way (of course personally I don’t think lemmy instances should be held accountable for federated content from other instances, but some courts have been known to have… backwards opinions on internet stuff, to put it mildly).


    I’ve said it before, I’d love it if lemmynsfw allowed everything that is currently allowed on reddit (i.e. following US law, which is extremely lax compared pretty much everywhere else). As someone living in the “anywhere else” part of the world, I don’t think I can take on the challenge of hosting that “morally dubious” content. Some of it is legal, some of it is illegal, and a lot of it probably is in the “IDK I should ask a lawyer, and probably there just isn’t enough case law to conclusively say that it is definitely for sure legal” area.

    Of course the alternative is to just say “fuck it” and host it anyway, maybe find a foreign host in Russia or w/e, but I don’t think that shields the admin for legal liability, only makes them harder to track. But feel free to do so, like I said it’s only a few tens of euros a month and basic docker/hosting knowledge (at least for a midsized instance).

    • lemmyposter212MA
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      51 year ago

      That’s understandable that you’d want to cover your ass, if that’s the case I get it. But at the same time this is something that will become more and more of an issue. This is the biggest nsfw instance, perhaps it would be a good idea if it were hosted in a place where the laws are more lax to cover the admin’s asses regardless.

      • @nsfwaccount411
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        -21 year ago

        It’s more than just hosting. I am no lawyer, but I’m pretty sure that the owner of the website is liable for its content regardless of where the site is hosted. I think lemmynsfw’s admin team is made up of US citizens for this reason, as the US is much less strict on online pornography laws than many Western countries.

        Of course, you can try to host “anonymously” in a country that doesn’t care what it hosts. Torrent websites have been working this way for years. But every now and then a team of motivated lawyers/prosecutors manages to take one down and sometimes the owners do a stint in prison and/or exile themselves to somewhere without extradition treaties. The risk might arguably be lower with pornography (if you stay away from the very illegal stuff like loli), but it’s not zero.

        • lemmyposter212MA
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          41 year ago

          I think hosting anonymously is not necessary if it were to be hosted in the US. They go after torrent sites because of the illegal nature of the content hosted there.

          But that’s a good point about the domain owner, iirc yay is outside of the US. He could however transfer the domain.

          It’s a shame there’s not a way to remain federated with a server and not have their content cache on yours. Or only caching encrypted data that’s encrypted in pieces rather than full unencrypted data.

          • @nsfwaccount411
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            11 year ago

            I think hosting anonymously is not necessary if it were to be hosted in the US. They go after torrent sites because of the illegal nature of the content hosted there.

            Uh… source? These people here seem to agree with me.

            To take an extreme example, if I was to host CP on Afghani servers with Taliban approval, my country’s courts would very much put me in a dark, dark jail for several decades at least. “It’s on foreign servers!” is not a “get out of jail free” card. One might argue that, in many cases, hosting abroad probably does obfuscate things to a point that the judicial system doesn’t bother about mildly illegal stuff that would require significant international cooperation to fully prosecute… at least for now.

            • lemmyposter212MA
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              21 year ago

              Woah woah, no one is talking about CP here, I have said in above comments, I am also against hosting Loli and shoata, and very very much against CP, we are talking about hosting a US server with only things that are not illegal in the US.

              One of the points of contention was what is illegal in European countries, with the example of the rape_hentai. They often have legislation that outlaws depictions of illegal sexual acts, even if animated.

              • @nsfwaccount411
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                11 year ago

                I’m not saying that CP was on the table, I was just using an extreme example to illustrate my point. Because, legally, CP and rape hentai are both illegal to host and the point is that hosting illegal content abroad doesn’t shield me from liability if I do that while, myself, living in a country that forbids it.

                CP on the internet is in a weird place because it’s the only illegal content that has some kind of coherent action taken against it… for now. But, legally, and I cannot stress that enough, rape hentai is illegal even if governments aren’t currently taking meaningful actions to prevent the production/facilitation/viewing of such content in countries where it is illegal.

                • lemmyposter212MA
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                  1 year ago

                  It is not illegal in the US was my point. Loli and Shoata aren’t even illegal in the US. Animated content is treated very differently than really images/video here.

                  My point was someone else could host it in the US.

    • Porn Account
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      -51 year ago

      The age of consent in Germany is 14. They are not exactly role models.