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Comment by aimazon

4 months ago

Headline: 2.6M posts

Reality: the forum has negative 358 posts in the last month. The forum has negative ~2k posts over the last 12 months. The forum is so inactive that they’re deleting posts faster than creating them. 8 people have created accounts in the last year.

The forum has been long dead.

Apparently any piece of informational older than a year has no value to you?

Thankfully you aren't writing the laws in my country.

Creating a law that makes internet creators want to delete all historical record for fear of potential prosecution under extremely broad terms -- doesn't seem like it's in the interest of the greater good.

  • The law has absolutely nothing to do with historic content, it has no provisions for or relevance to content published decades ago. Even in the most cautious response to this law, there is no reason to take content offline.

    • Counterpoint: I read the law and it seems to me that it absolutely does apply to historic content. Ultimately you may be right, but the fact that there isn't a clear answer means nobody without thousands of dollars to throw at lawyers can take that risk.

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I'm not sure why you're comparing total posts to monthly new posts. The tragedy here is that 2.6 million posts, potentially full of great content, is being deleted.

>The forum is so inactive that they’re deleting posts faster than creating them.

They've been in read-only mode, more or less, for awhile. Primarily, again, due to the (at the time proposed, now passed) law.

Not to mention, this comment is missing the forest for the trees. This is not the only forum or website to shutter operations in the wake of the UK Online Safety Act.

  • The forum has had less than 100k posts in the last 10 years.

    Forums and small websites have been killed off by changing consumer behaviour, the shift to big social media platforms. Using big numbers to suggest that the UK Online Safety Act is responsible for killing off these smaller independent websites is disingenuous.

    If you do the same exercise for the other forums, you’ll find they’re all long dead too.

    • I posted another example in this thread of someone running forums with 275k monthly active users that also decided to shut down. That does not qualify as "long dead".

      That's just one other example. I can assure you that it is not just long-dead forums deciding to shut down, despite your preconceived notion.

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