Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed lawsuits on Tuesday against the parent companies of Chaturbate and xHamster, claiming that the sites are not complying with the state’s controversial age verification law, HB 1181.

Archived version: https://archive.ph/3s70h

    • dumples
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      128 months ago

      This is a good point. They aren’t just afraid of queer sexualities but all sexuality. The old sodomy laws made it illegal to receive or receive oral sex. This will affect everyone

      • @[email protected]
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        68 months ago

        Ancient humans: We don’t know why we’re getting sick. Maybe if we stop mouth and butt stuff, it will help. Let’s make some laws and try it.

        Modern humans: We know exactly why people get sick and how to prevent it, but we’re going to enforce ancient laws anyway because it helps us control the rubes.

        • dumples
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          38 months ago

          Ancient was like 1970 for these laws in the US.

        • tygerprints
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          18 months ago

          Also modern humans: It don’t matter I can do what I want, I have a tube of Ivermectin in the house…

      • tygerprints
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        18 months ago

        In Utah they’re afraid of ALL sexuality. They’d rather humans didn’t have such “urges” at all. I don’t know where all these little Mormon kids keep coming from, but someone’s cabbage patch sure is doing good business.

        It isn’t all that ironic that the state with the highest rates of teenage pregnancy is good old Utah - even though (and frankly, because) we outlaw teaching kids about sexuality and giving them any education about what sex is all about.

    • tygerprints
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      98 months ago

      In Utah they are so absolutely frightened by the idea of teenagers having sexual thoughts, they’ve not only forbidding porn sites from being available they’ve also now made it impossible for anyone under 21 to access social media at all.

      Not to mention all the books they’ve pulled out of schools because of representations of adults being couples or having kids or being possibly gay. GASP! Imagine how the kids’ heads would explode if they were ever to be exposed to such horrible nasty truths!!! Teenagers would NEVER think about sex on their own, it’s all because the media is trying to corrupt them at every turn!!!

      • MxM111
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        88 months ago

        At the same time you can enlist without parental consent to military service and sent abroad to kill other people at age 18. But no tities until 21!

        • @Zron
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          58 months ago

          First it was no booze but you could kill.

          Then it was no smokes but you can kill people.

          Now it’s no titties but you can kill people.

          I’m starting to think these assholes think murder is a fun hobby.

          • tygerprints
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            18 months ago

            It still is that crazy here in Utah - no booze allowed, but you can go to a state liquor store and buy it if you’re “that type” (which apparently everyone is because the stores are always packed).

            You can’t gamble here because “it’s immoral and addictive,” but you can go across the state line to Wendover and spend your entire paycheck on gambling, which almost everyone here does, giving all our cash to Wendover’s schools and infrasctructure projects.

            You can’t look at porn because Pornhub was sued by Utah and shut down here but you CAN go to any of the several donut and sugary drink dispensaries around town which are always crowded and indulge your (apparently very widespread) food addictions.

            I’ve always said it’s stupid to outlaw something because a few folk might become addicted to it. Some will, most won’t, and many of us have the brains to be able to regulate how and when we use something.

            • @Zron
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              28 months ago

              Legally Banning anything on moral grounds is a fools errand. Laws should be based on the protecting citizens from direct and measurable harm.

              Assault is a crime because it causes another person injury.

              Extremely addictive drugs like cocaine and meth not only harm the addict physically and financially, but also harm those around them as they tend to make people violent and money hungry.

              Unless it harms another person physically or financially, I don’t see why it should be a crime.

              • tygerprints
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                28 months ago

                Social media is considered the “moral enemy of mankind” here in Utah. Obviously it’s not the user’s responsibility to watch what they do or consume, it’s the media’s fault for having consumable imagery or suggestions in the first place.

                Assault is a crime and should always be prosecuted, I agree. And I also agree about addictive drugs, which people abuse and use to harm others - like the fact that there’s a 1000 fold increase in drivers going the wrong way on Utah freeways because they are coked to the gills.

                But they tell the media, “OH it was just a random thing, people in utah don’t use drugs or alcohol.” MY ASS THEY DON’T. Law enforcement officers have reported that every driver they pull over is high on alcohol and/or drugs of some kind, every single one.

        • tygerprints
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          18 months ago

          You can have a gun here at the age of 9 (apparenlty because most kids do) and watch all the violent content you want. But GOD FORBID you should see a naked breast!!! THE CORRUPTION! THE FILTH!!! THE PERVERSION OF NUDITY!!! Won’t someone PLEASE think about blinding our kids to such horrors!!!

  • BrikoXOPM
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    8 months ago

    I can’t wait until the list of people that used the verification system gets exposed, and we will be able to see the same politicians on that lists that voted to implement the law.

    EDIT: typo.

    • iAmTheTot
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      -88 months ago

      For the record, the law is dumb. But also, so what if we found out that was the case? The law is intended to prevent minors from accessing certain things. The law makers aren’t minors, and if they submitting identity to access the stuff, then they are following their own law. They wouldn’t be hypocrites in this specific case, so why would it be some kind of shock or scandal to find out they used them?

      • BrikoXOPM
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        8 months ago

        It wouldn’t matter apart from obvious security and privacy issues it would pose, if they were regular boring corporate politicians. But the porn was banned in the name of god and purity and other bullshit religious zealots like to use to justify their bad acts. If those same religious zealots gets outed as users of porn sites, they will quickly reverse the law.

      • @[email protected]
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        8 months ago

        For the same reason that Rafael Cruz caught all that flack (deservedly so) for liking that/ those Cory Chase mom porn video tweets.

        Edit: it’s not so much that they’re “outed” for watching porn, but the hypocrisy of the fact when there are all sorts of religious politicians who wage a public war against things like porn on a daily basis. This would just be an ironic way to find out that they’re just about as hypocritical as we all assume (know)

  • Jaysyn
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    388 months ago

    Reminder: Ken Paxton should have been in Federal Prison 7 years ago.

  • Maple Engineer
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    208 months ago

    This isn’t about protecting children. This is about a christofascist theocracy banning porn completely.

  • @[email protected]
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    138 months ago

    I don’t really understand how the state can make it the site’s responsibility to restrict access from their citizens. The site is not operating out of or incorporated in Texas. If the state doesn’t want their citizens to access something, it’s their responsibility to ensure that.

    • @[email protected]
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      48 months ago

      I think it’s like alcohol and tobacco sales. The state doesn’t place agents at every store to verify your ID, it’s the person selling the restricted goods that’s responsible.

      • admiralteal
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        8 months ago

        The analogy isn’t quite right, though.

        In this case, you are leaving the state (digitally) and going to a market where the goods are not restricted. The vendor is then packaging them up the same way they always do, and you’re bringing them back home with you. You can’t even really claim they’re “shipping” the goods. YOU provided all the shipping labels and all that, they just dropped it in the mailbox dutifully, like they do everything else.

        …then the AG is suing the bodega you bought them from for not checking that you were from a state where it was restricted.

        It seems to me if anyone should be getting sued, it’s either the ISP or the consumer. Both of which are politically infeasible; the first draws intense net neutrality implications on top of being an imposition among his homies and cronies in the ISPs and the latter would be unenforceable under current technological and legal paradigms.

        Long term, we should ABSOLUTELY expect these christofascist lunatics to push us towards our own Great Firewall though. That’s definitely the endgame. They want total control over morality backed by the clenched fist of the state.

        • @[email protected]
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          28 months ago

          In this case, you are leaving the state (digitally) and going to a market where the goods are not restricted.

          I’m by no means an expert, but that sounds more like saying when I walk into the tobacco store I’m leaving the public area (the road and the sidewalk) and entering private property (the store), so the responsibility is on the state to post guards outside the exits to make sure I don’t illegally possess tobacco while in public.

          Honestly I think the answer is that the state can place the burden on whomever it wants for as long as the court cases take to get resolved.

          Long term, we should ABSOLUTELY expect these christofascist lunatics to push us towards our own Great Firewall though. That’s definitely the endgame. They want total control over morality backed by the clenched fist of the state.

          Feels like that happened already when they turned on the algorithms in 2014.

  • @NatakuNox
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    118 months ago

    So much freedom, you can’t even jack off in Texas with Mr. Paxton knowing

  • @[email protected]
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    78 months ago

    If there ever been a whole face that makes you just want to poke the person it belongs to right in the eye, it’s his.

    Low-lying fruit? Yup. But fuck that guy.

  • tygerprints
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    38 months ago

    Utah’s doing the same thing, having demanded (and won) their case to have Pornhub and other sites prohibited from being accessed by adults in our state. Of course we all know that porn is extremely damaging and awful, but it’s OK to get addicted to food and religious ideology and other shitty nonsense.