I have this project, some news website that aboard actual news, but more like in a parody way. I’m developing my own CMS and I’m doing pretty well, but, before start developing the actual front end of the site I wanna know what kind of legal stuff do I need to publish my website. This would be my first public website.

  • @[email protected]
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    11 hour ago

    What you need… is a lawyer

    Publish what you have the right to publish. Is you question what you have the rights to? About the technical hosting or distributing? Referencing or quoting other works? Whether you need a legal entity or author disclosure?

  • @jqubed
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    33 hours ago

    What legal stuff you need to do will depend largely on what country you’re in, the legal jurisdiction. Are you doing this just for fun? Then probably very little. Are you hoping to make money from this? You might want to set up a legal entity, a company that owns and publishes the website, probably something that limits your personal legal liability in case someone decides to sue you. Speaking of which, you’ll probably want to become very familiar with legal requirements for libel/defamation where you live, as well as where you can legally take photos/videos without permission and if you need someone’s consent to publish their image.

    In registering your company you’ll also need to register with the tax authorities. Keep in mind that there are usually fees involved with these registrations, so you’ll want to have a plan to hopefully break even if not turn a profit, unless you don’t care about losing money.

    You’ll probably need to have some legal documents like Terms of Use, Privacy Policy, Cookie Policy, etc. Even if it’s not legally required where you are those are good to have. If they are required you’ll want to be sure you’re familiar with those requirements and what they mean, such as what data you collect and how you safeguard it. I’ve found this write-up informative; it’s U.S.-focused but should at least give you an idea of the kind of things you need to consider if you’re creating a website with a significant audience. You might also want an explicit statement about AI/LLM training with your content, and be familiar with copyright laws in your country; do you need to register/submit your content for protection?

    That’s not necessarily exhaustive, but probably a good starting point. Depending on how serious this venture is for you it might even be worth consulting with an attorney. Most news organizations have some level of ongoing relationships with an attorney or attorneys, either in case they are sued or perhaps they need to sue for open access to government records or similar.

  • Max-P
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    228 hours ago

    I think the whole point of free speech is… you can just make a website and publish whatever you want on it.

    • SatansMaggotyCumFart
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      56 hours ago

      News corporations have a legal department for a reason.

      US free speech is only to do with the government and there’s still restrictions.

  • hendrik
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    67 hours ago

    Depends on country, if you’re a company or doing it for profit and if you do additional stuff like sending emails.

    If you’re doing it for fun and are in the USA, you don’t need to do anything.

    If you’re a company you should add the fine print. Add copyright notices, trademark claims, terms and conditions, disclaimers…

    If you’re sending out newsletters you need to make sure people can unsubscribe.

    If you’re in the EU you might need a whole imprint, privacy policy, handle user data properly…

  • @[email protected]
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    25 hours ago

    There are no requirements.

    I’d advise that if you’re making a parody site you have some disclosure of that fact pretty accessible on your website (it doesn’t need to be front and center but it needs to be reasonably discoverable).

  • @[email protected]
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    58 hours ago

    I would just make a substack or a self hosted ghost website unless you’re really invested in the development process.

    I would just look at sites like https://apnews.com/ or https://www.bbc.com/ and see what they do, but I don’t think you technically need anything, plenty of people have wordpress blogs and substacks without a legal section. What’s the difference between your website vs a twitter account vs a substack where you live, probably not very much.

  • @[email protected]
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    48 hours ago

    If this is the US, I can’t think of anything as such.

    If you’re choosing a name for the thing, then I’d choose something fairly unique, so that if you get into any kind of trademark wrangling down the line, you’re in a good position. That’s about as legal as I can think of.