this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2025
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As well as:
https://www.npr.org/2024/11/28/g-s1-36142/australia-social-media-ban-children
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_Safety_Amendment
It sounds like, from my quick skim, that their criteria would also apply to the Threadiverse, as I don't see any sort of userbase size or revenue restrictions on their definition of its scope. Here's the bill text:
Subsection (6):
I'm sure that there will be more discussion on this that will probably clarify it.
For the moment, I'm pretty confident based on past case law that the US legal system won't consider a US-based Threadiverse instance that isn't actively doing something like advertising to users specifically in Australia or selling products to Australia to be within the legal jurisdiction of Australia, as it won't be doing business in Australia, so the US legal system will not enforce Australian law against it. Australia might block a node but shouldn't be able to fine someone, so blacklisting Australian IP addresses or the like probably isn't necessary. One notable issue: I don't know off the top of my head whether instances accepting donations from Australian users could be affected.
I don't know what the EU's position on Internet jurisdiction is.
That might be a much more substantial problem for Australia-based instances, like
to name one that comes to mind
aussie.zone.