Slashdot Mirror


Pirate Bay Launches Free Speech Blog

Chris Blanc writes "In their ever continuing battle to 'free the Internet', The Pirate Bay has now launched an uncensored blogging service, called Baywords. The service is intended to be a safe haven for bloggers who want to be able to write whatever they want."

3 of 171 comments (clear)

  1. "Whatever" with limitations by Jugalator · · Score: 4, Informative

    You'd still at least have to comply to Swedish laws, an example of a notable one to Americans being that on the topic of hate speech.

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  2. Kinda like by ncryptd · · Score: 4, Informative

    Kinda like NearlyFreeSpeech.net -- except without true free speech. TPB's got to comply with Swedish (and EU) law -- so anything that can be construed as hate speech is illegal. Compare and contrast that to NearlyFreeSpeech.net, which has this "beliefs" page. They've been around since 2002, and as long as I've been using them, stayed completely true to those beliefs.

    Disclaimer: I'm in no way associated with NearlyFreeSpeech.net -- I'm simply a happy customer of theirs who enjoys the free speech protections and FreeBSD cluster hosting they offer. They don't have any form of affiliate program, so I couldn't be monetarily compensated for this post even if I wanted to be.

  3. Re:biased enforcement by nguy · · Score: 5, Informative

    Can you point to some actual examples of atheists being prosecuted for suggesting that Christians or Muslims be tortured?

    No, I can't, because atheists generally don't suggest that other get tortured for all eternity. They don't because (1) they don't believe that anybody lives for all eternity, (2) most atheists are either religious or humanists and hence object to torture in any form, whether by divine beings or men, and (3) they know that if they speak out publicly, they risk death threats and arrest.

    I suspect that your post is just irrelevant speculation.

    Well, then you're living under a rock. Geert Wilders film, for example, has been condemned, literally, as "hate speech" by the UN secretary general (here), and all he did was compile a collection of quotes from the Quran and Muslim leaders.

    Here are other examples:

    http://www.lutononsunday.com/lutononsunday-news/displayarticle.asp?id=306589

    http://www.axcessnews.com/user.php/articles/show/id/12315

    http://sweetness-light.com/archive/ap-far-righters-arrested-for-anti-islam-protest

    You can find many more if you look around, with free speech by students, bloggers, protesters, and others being suppressed for criticizing religions or saying things that "offend" people of one or the other religion.