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by oneplane
1354 days ago
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They have to follow the laws of the countries they operate in. Keep in mind that business operations and server locations (and incorporation locations) are not the same thing. If you serve customers in another country, their laws apply. You can either follow the law or not serve in that country. This is pretty much how it has worked forever. This is obviously not great if you have a set of less-restrictive and more-restrictive laws that contradict each other. And it's not great if values, politics and rights in general aren't compatible. As much as we can disagree with what mass-murdering authoritarian regimes are up to, unless we go to war (after we have already applied all the sanctions we can think of) there isn't much you can do about it. |
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Unless you can point to a treaty between the US and Iran that lets Iran sue US companies, or some other way that Iran can actually enforce a judgement on Twitter, then no, Twitter has no need to respect Iran's laws. About the only way I see is for Iran to firewall Twitter wholesale, but isn't the wholesale end-user Internet shutdown basically doing that?