The Telecommunications Bill, 2023 is a deathblow to democracy in India - you can read more about it over here.

The bill allows the government to take over, manage or suspend telecommunication services or a network over national security.

Federated apps are not censorship-resistant, right? I’d like to believe that this should not cause issue over federated web-apps, but at the same time, will it force VPS vendors to comply with the rule of the state, and therefore, restrict apps?

I’d like to think of how could such arrangements be bypassed? Lemmy’s documentation mentions about running it as a Tor-hidden service.

  • smoothbrain coldtakes@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    You guys realize that the server rules regionally only apply regionally, and not globally right? If you don’t like the rules of your nation state it’s very easy to move your hosting elsewhere where the rules you are trying to avoid are not going to apply.

    Just because India has some massive breaking sweeping law doesn’t really change anything about our other servers if they are just not in that jurisdiction. Lemmy.ca is not going down for Indian rules, because we’re hosted in Canada. Lemmy.ml I would imagine is also not hosted in India.

    The fediverse is not even big enough (we’re about the size cumulatively of like a medium subreddit) to really want to actively police.

    It’s like saying Iran or anywhere else in the Middle East has powerful internet control, as if that’s going to change literally anything hosted outside of those incredibly repressive nations. Unless India has some agreement with other states long-term to remove content they disagree with, literally nothing is going to change. I know North American sentiment towards India is not strong these days because of the recent assassinations (and/or attempts) within our borders of Sikh “extremists”.