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by Jamesbeam
140 days ago
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Not really, we use a similar system for court ordered DNS blocks.
So to get on that DNS blocklist they need probable cause and a federal judge reviewing the request. The public is keeping an eye on what domains are blocked also.
Example: https://cuiiliste.de/domains So if your 3D printer is no longer printing anything that is not illegal to print, you can always contact a journalist or tell the public on whatever channel you choose to that they are blocking a file/object that is not prohibited and provide video evidence. That doesn’t guarantee the file gets unblocked, but if they want the system to be publicly accepted, both sides have to play by the rules, and with transparency comes trust in institutions. Same if they abuse the system to get notified whenever you print something that is not illegal. They do it once, and then that whole project is toast. |
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