Just checking the place out after not being able to stand Reddit and its policies anymore. Their policing of Luigi posts was the last straw for me. Going public ruins companies.

  • @[email protected]
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    47 days ago

    This is the update post for it at least: https://lemmy.world/post/22920690

    The reasoning was ‘jury nullification when this was suggested in context of murder or other violent crimes’ potentially falling under ‘advocating for violence’. They decided to clarify the rules a bit and going forward, advocating for violence is still banned, but have been directed that the policy doesn’t apply to violence that has already happened.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 days ago

      Policy update seems reasonable at least. I’m curious where we could find the policies of other instances. Maybe I would move my communities if I found a better fit.

      • FartsWithAnAccent
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        26 days ago

        It ended up becoming more reasonable after it was pointed out that jury nullification is a real thing and restricting discussion about a legal term is… kinda nuts? The justification that they gave for restricting it was pretty flakey too: There are no legal cases where a website was held liable for not deleting jury nullification discussions (which is doubly ridiculous because, at least for now, website hosts are also protected as common carriers, which means they are 100% not legally responsible for what their users post, regardless of what it is outside of very specific circumstances where they would be obligated to remove it like a DMCA takedown notice.