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Tag: Blocks

  • Judge largely blocks Tennessee’s porn site age verification law as other states enforce theirs

    Judge largely blocks Tennessee’s porn site age verification law as other states enforce theirs

    NASHVILLE, Tenn. — A Tennessee law requiring pornographic websites to verify their visitors’ age was largely blocked in court before it was to take effect Jan. 1, even as similar laws kicked in for Florida and South Carolina and remained in effect for more than a dozen other states.

    On Dec. 30, U.S. District Judge Sheryl Lipman in Memphis ruled that Tennessee’s law would likely suppress the First Amendment free speech rights of adults without actually preventing children from accessing the harmful material in question. The state attorney general’s office is appealing the decision.

    The Free Speech Coalition, an adult entertainment trade group, is suing over Tennessee’s law and those in a half-dozen other states. The coalition lists some 19 states that have passed similar laws. One prominent adult website has cut off access in several states due to their laws.

    The issue will hit the U.S. Supreme Court for oral arguments regarding Texas’ law next week.

    No one voted against Tennessee’s law last year when it passed the Republican-supermajority legislature, and GOP Gov. Bill Lee signed off on it.

    The law would require porn websites to verify visitors are at least 18 years old, threatening felony penalties and civil liability possible for violators running the sites. They could match a photo to someone’s ID, or use certain “public or private transactional data” to prove someone’s age. Website leaders could not retain personally identifying information and would have to keep anonymized data.

    The Free Speech Coalition and other plaintiffs sued, winning a preliminary injunction that blocks the attorney general from enforcement while court proceedings continue. However, the coalition expressed concern that private lawsuits or actions by individual district attorneys could be possible.

    In her ruling, Judge Lipman wrote that parental controls on minors’ devices are more effective and less restrictive.

    She wrote that under Tennessee’s law, minors still could access adult sites using VPNs, or virtual private networks, that mask a user’s location. Or, they could view pornographic material on social media sites, which are unlikely to reach the law’s threshold of one-third of its content considered harmful to minors.

    The judge also said the impact could be overly broad, potentially affecting other plaintiffs such as an online educational platform focused on sexual wellness.

    She noted that Tennessee’s definition of “content harmful to minors” extends to include text. She specifically mentioned that the phrase “the human nipple,” or crude combinations of keyboard characters, would be considered harmful as long as they lack “serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value for minors.”

    Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti’s office is asking the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to let the law take effect as the lawsuit proceeds. His spokesperson, Chad Kubis, noted that other appeals courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, allowed similar laws to take effect.

    “The Protect Tennessee Minors Act institutes common sense age verification to stop kids from accessing explicit obscene content while protecting the privacy of adults who choose to do so,” Kubis said.

    The Free Speech Coalition has argued the law would be ineffective, unconstitutional and force people to transfer sensitive information.

    “This is a deeply flawed law that put website operators at risk of criminal prosecution for something as trivial as a mention of the human nipple,” said Free Speech Coalition Executive Director Alison Boden.

    As verification laws took effect in Florida and South Carolina last week, website PornHub cut off access there and posted a message encouraging people to contact political decision-makers. They’ve acted similarly in other states that passed verification requirements.

    Judges had paused the laws in Indiana and Texas. But circuit appeals courts stepped in to allow enforcement.

    The Supreme Court declined to halt Texas’ law in April while the court action continues. The next step is Supreme Court oral arguments on Jan. 15.

    Another age verification law is set to begin in July in Georgia.

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  • Real Madrid Blocks First Team Star’s Expected January Exit

    Real Madrid Blocks First Team Star’s Expected January Exit

    Struggling Real Madrid has blocked one of its first team players, who has at least two potential suitors, from leaving the club in the upcoming January transfer window according to SPORT, which cited anonymous sources.

    Dani Ceballos joined Los Blancos in 2017, and, with a loan spell at Arsenal wedged between, renewed his contract until 2027 when it was approaching expiry in summer last year.

    This warded off several clubs interested in signing the 28-year-old for free. But the arrival of Jude Bellingham in mid-2023 from Borussia Dortmund resulted in the Andalusian having even less prominence than before.

    During the current campaign, Ceballos has managed just 110 minutes spread across six appearances – one as a starter and five as a substitute – and there are reportedly at least two outfits willing to give him more playing time.

    These are namely his boyhood club Real Betis and Real Sociedad. Yet according to SPORT, Madrid will block any potential exit and doesn’t even want to listen to proposals that come its way regarding the former Premier League star.

    Though used sparingly by the Italian, Ceballos is considered a useful resource for head coach Carlo Ancelotti, who offers something different to most of his midfielders – especially in terms of physicality.

    Ancelotti is struggling to find the right balance in his side which hasn’t managed to compensate for the loss of Toni Kroos after the German announced his shock retirement leading up to a 15th Champions League win at Wembley achieved against Borussia Dortmund back in June.

    Any January reinforcements greenlit by President Florentino Perez are likely to be made in defence, where Ancelotti needs another center back and perhaps a right back with Dani Carvajal out injured for the rest of the season.

    It wouldn’t make sense to further deplete midfield, where Aurelien Tchouameni is struggling with injuries and Ancelotti can’t currently get the best out of Bellingham and Fede Valverde because of the ripple effect that Kylian Mbappe’s arrival from Paris Saint-Germain has caused.

    Notching his 153rd appearance during the 3-1 UCL loss to AC Milan on Tuesday, Ceballos might be rewarded playing time at home to Osasuna in La Liga this weekend.

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  • Federal judge temporarily blocks Utah social media laws aimed to protect children

    Federal judge temporarily blocks Utah social media laws aimed to protect children

    A federal judge in Utah has temporarily blocked social media access laws that leaders said were meant to protect the mental health and personal privacy of children, saying they are unconstitutional.

    U.S. District Court Judge Robert Shelby on Tuesday issued the preliminary injunction against laws that would have required social media companies to verify the ages of their users, disable certain features and limit the use of accounts owned by Utah children.

    The laws were set to take effect on Oct. 1, but will be blocked pending the outcome of the case filed by NetChoice, a nonprofit trade association for internet companies such as Google, Meta — the parent company of Facebook and Instagram — Snap and X.

    The Utah legislature passed the Utah Minor Protection in Social Media Act to replace laws that were passed in 2023 and were challenged as unconstitutional. State officials believed the 2024 act would hold up in court.

    But Shelby disagreed.

    “The court recognizes the State’s earnest desire to protect young people from the novel challenges associated with social media use,” Shelby wrote in his order. However, the state has not articulated a compelling state interest in violating the First Amendment rights of the social media companies, he wrote.

    Republican Gov. Spencer Cox said he was disappointed in the court’s decision and was aware it could be a long battle, but said it “is a battle worth waging,” due to the harm that social media is causing children.

    “Let’s be clear: social media companies could voluntarily, at this very moment, do everything that the law put in place to protect our children. But they refuse to do so. Instead, they continue to prioritize their profits over our children’s wellbeing. This must stop, and Utah will continue to lead the fight.”

    NetChoice argues Utah residents would have to supply additional information to verify their age than social media companies usually collect, putting more information at risk of a data breach.

    Several months after Utah became the first state to pass laws regulating children’s social media use in 2023, it sued TikTok and Meta for allegedly luring in children with addictive features.

    Under the 2024 Utah laws, default privacy settings for minor accounts would have been required to restrict access to direct messages and sharing features and disable elements such as autoplay and push notifications that lawmakers argue could lead to excessive use.

    Parents could obtain access to their children’s accounts and would have grounds to sue a social media company if their child’s mental health worsens from excessive use of an algorithmically curated app. Social media companies must comply with a long list of demands — including a three-hour daily limit and a blackout from 10:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m. — to help avoid liability.

    The laws sought to shift the burden of proof from the families onto the social media companies, requiring them to demonstrate that their curated content did not fully or partially cause a child’s depression, anxiety or self-harm behaviors. Companies would have to pay at least $10,000 in damages for each case of an adverse mental health outcome.

    NetChoice has obtained injunctions temporarily halting similar social media limitation laws in California, Arkansas, Ohio, Mississippi and Texas, the organization said.

    “With this now sixth injunction against these overreaching laws, we hope policymakers will focus on meaningful and constitutional solutions for the digital age,” said Chris Marchese, director of litigation for NetChoice.

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  • For months, Lauren waited patiently at home while The Block’s heartthrob Ricky Recard finished filming so the lovers could fly off on a romantic trip to Mexico. But when he returned, he broke her heart instead

    For months, Lauren waited patiently at home while The Block’s heartthrob Ricky Recard finished filming so the lovers could fly off on a romantic trip to Mexico. But when he returned, he broke her heart instead

    The Block’s heartthrob Ricky Recard has been branded a love rat by his jilted ex after he dumped her on the eve of their dream trip overseas to hook up with a married make-up artist he met on the show.

    The 34-year-old plumber broke up with Lauren Smith after she had waited three months at home for him while he filmed the new series of Nine’s reno show on Phillip Island.

    Just days after the split, he revealed he was now dating married mother-of-two Erin Lee who had broken up with her heartbroken husband to be with the show’s star.

    To add insult to injury, Recard jetted stright off on holiday with his new lover, leaving Lauren to go on their romantic getaway to Mexico for her 30th by herself. 

    ‘I was absolutely blindsided,’ she told Daily Mail Australia.

    ‘I spent three months looking after his dogs and his house while also helping his employee with the business.’

    Ms Smith said the couple had an overseas holiday arranged to celebrate her milestone birthday, which would have been the first trip away from her young daughter.

    ‘We were due to go at the beginning of July for my 30th birthday but we broke up about two weeks after he got back from filming,’ she said.

    ‘I found out while I was in Mexico that he had apparently begun a relationship with Erin during the time I was away.’

    Ricky Recard has hooked-up with married mum-of-two Erin Lee

    Ricky Recard has hooked-up with married mum-of-two Erin Lee

    His heartbroken ex-girlfriend Lauren Smith says she was 'blindsided' after dog-sitting and minding his house for three months whilst he was busy filming on The Block

    His heartbroken ex-girlfriend Lauren Smith says she was ‘blindsided’ after dog-sitting and minding his house for three months whilst he was busy filming on The Block

    Ricky Recard, left, has made an impression with female fans after joining The Block alongside his best mate Haydn Wise (pictured) on the Yellow Team

    Ricky Recard, left, has made an impression with female fans after joining The Block alongside his best mate Haydn Wise (pictured) on the Yellow Team

    Recard, from Melbourne, has proudly boasted of his budding relationship with 40-year-old mum-of-two on social media.

    The couple flew to Port Douglas in Far North Queensland last month and ‘hard launched’ their relationship on his private Instagram page.

    He posted an image of the couple together with the caption: ‘Beach time with this stunner.’

    On Thursday Ms Lee also shared of her with Recard, with the message: ‘Sometimes the path we never planned leads us to brighter things and the happiness we always needed. 

    ‘Trust the journey.’

    Ms Lee’s estranged husband Lucas Day – who is a lookalike for love rival Recard – insists his wife only hooked up with the Block tradie after their marriage ended

    ‘We are separated now and I’ve dealt with it,’ he told Daily Mail Australia.

    ‘They got together after we split when he got back from Mexico in July and we were done then.’

    Day also agreed he bears a striking resemblance to Ms Lee’s new lover, calling the similarity between the pair as ‘strange’.

    ‘It is a bit strange, it definitely is,’ he said.

    Lauren shared a gushing post about her now ex on Instagram

    Lauren shared a gushing post about her now ex on Instagram

    Recard and his new love enjoyed a getaway to Port Douglas together last month

    Recard and his new love enjoyed a getaway to Port Douglas together last month

    Lucas Day (right) admits he bares a striking resemblance to his ex's new lover Recard

    Lucas Day (right) admits he bares a striking resemblance to his ex’s new lover Recard

    In a recent interview with New Idea, Recard confirmed his new lover, but didn’t identify her.

    Biazrrely though, despite her working as a make-up artist on The Block, he claimed she not know of his role on the show.

    ‘I can definitely say she was impressed, and why wouldn’t she be?’ he said.

    ‘The reason why she was impressed was not because I’m on The Block. She thinks it’s pretty funny. 

    ‘She didn’t know I was on The Block when we started seeing each other.’

    He even claimed she poked fun at him and joked she was now dating ‘someone famous’.

    Recard also responded to viewers who have called him the heartthrob on this year’s hotly-anticipated 20th anniversary series.

    He has won female fans, with many viewers naming him their all-time celebrity crush as they swooned over his rugged looks.

    Fans have also been left charmed by his positive attitude and cheeky sense of humour, taking to social media to claim Ricky’s Yellow Team as their favourites.

    The plumber laughed off being called a celebrity crush as he insisted he is not famous enough to be given the label.

    ‘I don’t know if I consider myself a celebrity, seriously,’ he told Yahoo Lifestyle. 

    ‘I think as a celebrity, you’ve got to have a fair resume, right? Like Shelley [Craft], she’s got The List – Saturday Disney for years, Funniest Home Videos, The Block.

    ‘She’s an Australian icon and I’m just an absolute nobody. But if people want to have a crush on me, that’s cool. I appreciate the love.’

    Daily Mail Australia has contacted Recard and Nine Network for comment. 

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  • Brazil blocks Musk’s X after company refuses to name local representative amid feud with judge

    Brazil blocks Musk’s X after company refuses to name local representative amid feud with judge

    SAO PAULO — Brazil started blocking Elon Musk’s social media platform X early Saturday, making it largely inaccessible on both the web and through its mobile app after the company refused to comply with a judge’s order.

    X missed a deadline imposed by Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes to name a legal representative in Brazil, triggering the suspension. It marks an escalation in the monthslong feud between Musk and de Moraes over free speech, far-right accounts and misinformation.

    To block X, Brazil’s telecommunications regulator, Anatel, told internet service providers to suspend users’ access to the social media platform. As of Saturday at midnight local time, major operators began doing so.

    De Moraes had warned Musk on Wednesday night that X could be blocked in Brazil if he failed to comply with his order to name a representative, and established a 24-hour deadline. The company hasn’t had a representative in the country since earlier this month.

    “Elon Musk showed his total disrespect for Brazilian sovereignty and, in particular, for the judiciary, setting himself up as a true supranational entity and immune to the laws of each country,” de Moraes wrote in his decision on Friday.

    The justice said the platform will stay suspended until it complies with his orders, and also set a daily fine of 50,000 reais ($8,900) for people or companies using VPNs to access it.

    In a later ruling, he backtracked on his initial decision to establish a 5-day deadline for internet service providers themselves — and not just the telecommunications regulator — to block access to X, as well as his directive for app stores to remove virtual private networks, or VPNs.

    The dispute also led to the freezing this week of the bank accounts in Brazil of Musk’s satellite internet provider Starlink.

    Brazil is one of the biggest markets for X, which has struggled with the loss of advertisers since Musk purchased the former Twitter in 2022. Market research group Emarketer says some 40 million Brazilians, roughly one-fifth of the population, access X at least once per month.

    “This is a sad day for X users around the world, especially those in Brazil, who are being denied access to our platform. I wish it did not have to come to this – it breaks my heart,” X’s CEO Linda Yaccarino said Friday night, adding that Brazil is failing to uphold its constitution’s pledge to forbid censorship.

    X had posted on its official Global Government Affairs page late Thursday that it expected X to be shut down by de Moraes, “simply because we would not comply with his illegal orders to censor his political opponents.”

    “When we attempted to defend ourselves in court, Judge de Moraes threatened our Brazilian legal representative with imprisonment. Even after she resigned, he froze all of her bank accounts,” the company wrote.

    X has clashed with de Moraes over its reluctance to comply with orders to block users.

    Accounts that the platform previously has shut down on Brazilian orders include lawmakers affiliated with former President Jair Bolsonaro’s right-wing party and activists accused of undermining Brazilian democracy. X’s lawyers in April sent a document to the Supreme Court in April, saying that since 2019 it had suspended or blocked 226 users.

    In his decision Friday, de Moraes’ cited Musk’s statements as evidence that X’s conduct “clearly intends to continue to encourage posts with extremism, hate speech and anti-democratic discourse, and to try to withdraw them from jurisdictional control.”

    In April, de Moraes included Musk as a target in an ongoing investigation over the dissemination of fake news and opened a separate investigation into the executive for alleged obstruction.

    Musk, a self-proclaimed “free speech absolutist,” has repeatedly claimed the justice’s actions amount to censorship, and his argument has been echoed by Brazil’s political right. He has often insulted de Moraes on his platform, characterizing him as a dictator and tyrant.

    De Moraes’ defenders have said his actions aimed at X have been lawful, supported by most of the court’s full bench and have served to protect democracy at a time it is imperiled. He wrote Friday that his ruling is based on Brazilian law requiring internet services companies to have representation in the country so they can be notified when there are relevant court decisions and take requisite action — specifying the takedown of illicit content posted by users, and an anticipated churn of misinformation during October municipal elections.

    The looming shutdown is not unprecedented in Brazil.

    Lone Brazilian judges shut down Meta’s WhatsApp, the nation’s most widely used messaging app, several times in 2015 and 2016 due to the company’s refusal to comply with police requests for user data. In 2022, de Moraes threatened the messaging app Telegram with a nationwide shutdown, arguing it had repeatedly ignored Brazilian authorities’ requests to block profiles and provide information. He ordered Telegram to appoint a local representative; the company ultimately complied and stayed online.

    X and its former incarnation, Twitter, have been banned in several countries — mostly authoritarian regimes such as Russia, China, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea, Venezuela and Turkmenistan. Other countries, such as Pakistan, Turkey and Egypt, have also temporarily suspended X before, usually to quell dissent and unrest. Twitter was banned in Egypt after the Arab Spring uprisings, which some dubbed the “Twitter revolution,” but it has since been restored.

    A search Friday on X showed hundreds of Brazilian users inquiring about VPNs that could potentially enable them to continue using the platform by making it appear they were logging on from outside the country. It was not immediately clear how Brazilian authorities would police this practice and impose fines cited by de Moraes.

    “This is an unusual measure, but its main objective is to ensure that the court order to suspend the platform’s operation is, in fact, effective,” Filipe Medon, a specialist in digital law and professor at the law school of Getulio Vargas Foundation, a university in Rio de Janeiro, told The Associated Press.

    Mariana de Souza Alves Lima, known by her handle MariMoon, showed her 1.4 million followers on X where she intends to go, posting a screenshot of rival social network BlueSky.

    On Thursday evening, Starlink, said on X that de Moraes this week froze its finances, preventing it from doing any transactions in the country where it has more than 250,000 customers.

    “This order is based on an unfounded determination that Starlink should be responsible for the fines levied—unconstitutionally—against X. It was issued in secret and without affording Starlink any of the due process of law guaranteed by the Constitution of Brazil. We intend to address the matter legally,” Starlink said in its statement. The law firm representing Starlink told the AP that the company appealed, but wouldn’t make further comment.

    Musk replied to people sharing the reports of the freeze, adding insults directed at de Moraes. “This guy @Alexandre is an outright criminal of the worst kind, masquerading as a judge,” he wrote.

    Musk later posted on X that SpaceX, which runs Starlink, will provide free internet service in Brazil “until the matter is resolved” since “we cannot receive payment, but don’t want to cut anyone off.”

    In his decision, de Moraes said he ordered the freezing of Starlink’s assets, as X didn’t have enough money in its accounts to cover mounting fines, and reasoning that the two companies are part of the same economic group.

    While ordering X’s suspension followed warnings and fines and so was appropriate, taking action against Starlink seems “highly questionable,” said Luca Belli, coordinator of the Getulio Vargas Foundation’s Technology and Society Center.

    “Yes, of course, they have the same owner, Elon Musk, but it is discretionary to consider Starlink as part of the same economic group as Twitter (X). They have no connection, they have no integration,” Belli said.

    ___

    AP writers Barbara Ortutay reported from San Francisco and David Biller from Rio. Savarese contributed from Sao Paulo.

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