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by icu
578 days ago
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As much as I disagree with the concept of OF content, I do believe that people should be free to do what they want, provided it is consentual and it isn't harming others. However, OF—and any adult content for that matter—can lead to exploitation. Because of this, I think it is sensible for online platforms of adult content to voluntarily require a model release and proof of Government ID as part of their Terms of Service. Since this isn't happening, it now seems sensible to regulate that any, and all, adult content posted online require a model release. The way I see it, OF was morally complicit in this sordid affair, but couldn't be held to account due to the law. The OF management could have easily protected themselves, and sexual assault victims, from these worst case scenarios but didn't. The law really needs to change and there needs to be regulation in this area. |
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I think this might require a separate law to be meaningfully enforceable since you really want people to be directly liable for the lack of release, rather than having defendants claim "nobody ever reads the ToS or has a release".
At the very least it would probably require very clear messaging from OFs that this is required, such that basically everyone on the platform actually has/is able to produce it.