8 comments

  • rblatz 40 minutes ago
    Default judgement, absolutely meaningless at this point as to how a court would rule against a plaintiff that actually showed up, respected the court’s authority, and defended itself.
    • trhway 16 minutes ago
      That is the strategy - you start with the easy cases - somebody who wouldn’t or couldn’t defend themselves and who is “bad” in public perception.
  • throwaway81523 50 minutes ago
    The domain name is motherless.com if that's what you wanted to know. It's a porn site.
  • BobbyTables2 55 minutes ago
    I don’t understand - was this site or company based in Texas?

    Otherwise the general idea seems absurd that an individual state could freeze a domain impacting for the whole Internet…

    (EDIT: I won’t lose any sleep at the loss of such scum but the general principle seems a bit strange.)

    • comrade1234 17 minutes ago
      It's not confusing and you should understand what's happening for your own safety. This has been happening for a couple of decades internationally and now with USA states.

      This result means that Texas can take various means to block motherless. But more importantly no motherless employees should travel to Texas without risk of arrest. Same for abc/youtube/facebook employess traveling to India.

      You should be aware of this and monitor it in your industry.

      • TurdF3rguson 10 minutes ago
        I would think it only applies to named employees, right?
    • BLKNSLVR 27 minutes ago
      > obtained a court-ordered writ directing Verisign, the company that maintains the “.com” domain registry, to place the domain “motherless.com” on a registry lock, hold, or similar status.

      So they're using the fact that Verisign is a US company and can therefore be leaned on.

      I'm not sure how I feel about this. What do other countries do who don't have Verisign to lean on? US companies really don't like being told what to do by governments of other countries, but when the shoe is on the other foot...

      • 15155 23 minutes ago
        > What do other countries do who don't have Verisign to lean on?

        They lean on their ISPs, see Spain and the La Liga controversy.

        • BLKNSLVR 20 minutes ago
          But that, more appropriately, only affects internet users in that country (ignoring the cloudflare network blocking that causes various other sites to also be blocked).

          This appears to basically wipe the site from the entire internet, for all countries.

          • 15155 16 minutes ago
            When you create the infrastructure, you make the rules. If a party doesn't like those rules, they are free to create their own replacement infrastructure and obtain global buy-in.

            ccTLDs already exist and their respective countries have sovereignty over those TLDs: the UK can disappear any .uk domain name it wants from the global internet.

            The .com TLD is American, and is therefore subject to American legal proceedings.

    • Cpoll 49 minutes ago
      > The Office of the Attorney General will continue to use every available legal mechanism, including writs of attachment against domain names, to enforce Texas law and ensure that no company, regardless of where it is incorporated, can profit from exposing Texas children to harmful content.

      And Kick Online Entertainment S.A. appears to be incorporated in Luxembourg. The "S.A." is a mostly European thing, kind of like a "limited" company.

    • WhyNotHugo 10 minutes ago
      > I won’t lose any sleep at the loss of such scum but the general principle seems a bit strange.

      That's generally key in making a precedent. The first case is someone nobody really cares for, but it's built a precedent where the next case must follow suit.

    • tailscaler2026 11 minutes ago
      > I won’t lose any sleep at the loss of such scum

      Thank you for your virtue signaling. You're now registered as a lifetime GOP member.

    • jagged-chisel 53 minutes ago
      I think it remains to be seen whether Verisign follows through.
      • jerrythegerbil 40 minutes ago
        • EmbarrassedHelp 38 minutes ago
          So he managed to block the site globally for not forcibly violating the privacy of its users with mandatory age verification.

          The US court system really needs to do something about this, and overturn Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton in favour of Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union.

          • reactordev 24 minutes ago
            The US court system is completely hamstrung by the current administration.
          • applfanboysbgon 21 minutes ago
            FWIW, the site isn't blocked globally. They just moved to a new domain.

            I do generally agree that local governments trying to forcefully exert their influence beyond their jurisdiction is deeply problematic. It wouldn't even be possible to host a website on the internet if this becomes normalized, due to being held to thousands of contradicting standards. At most Texas should have the authority to tell Texas ISPs to block traffic.

    • lcnPylGDnU4H9OF 51 minutes ago
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Verisign

      (Under "Controversies".)

      > In March 2012, the U.S. government declared that it has the right to seize domains ending in .com, .net, .cc, .tv, .name, and .org if the companies administering the domains are based in the U.S. The U.S. government can seize the domains ending in .com, .net, .cc, .tv, and .name by serving a court-order on Verisign, which manages those domains.

      • BobbyTables2 31 minutes ago
        Perhaps for violations of _federal_ law…

        However, applying this for violations of _state_ law seems odd.

        Where does it end?

        What if a law enacted by a single US city’s city council is violated? Would US as a country seize the domain?

      • what 34 minutes ago
        Texas isn’t the US government?
        • randbyte 18 minutes ago
          When people say “US government” they usually mean the federal government…
    • toomuchtodo 51 minutes ago
      It operates in Texas if it is serving Texas users.

      > Kick Online, which openly describes itself as a “moral free” company, ignored the lawsuit and refused to comply with the court’s order. It continued publishing and distributing harmful sexual material that was accessible to minors in Texas.

      This is the same website with a forum with millions of users trading information on how to assault their partner.

      https://www.cnn.com/interactive/2026/03/world/expose-rape-as...

      FAFO.

      • pixl97 43 minutes ago
        All fun and games till religions get in battles and shut down websites talking about gods and beliefs they don't like.
      • Dylan16807 30 minutes ago
        > It operates in Texas if it is serving Texas users.

        Then it's violating the laws of a whole lot of places by serving pornography to adults.

        The existence of a web server doesn't feel like enough nexus to seize a domain.

      • EmbarrassedHelp 37 minutes ago
        The problem is that Paxton is attempting to do the same thing to every site that doesn't forcibly violate user privacy with mandatory age verification. Its part of Project 2025 and the Heritage Foundations goals, and its incompatible with privacy rights.
  • msftgreed 16 minutes ago
    So a state (or municipality or anyone capable of making laws) has the ability to say, "You don't meet our local laws, take down your URL" now?

    This is going to be a real problem when states start nuking whole parts of the internet from orbit. A state has a law against conversion therapy and starts to remove sites with that? A state has a law against trans people? Or abortion? Or medical misinformation? Suddenly we just start purging sites back and forth?

    Battlegrounds end up as torn up, muddy, desolate places. Turning the domain registry into a battleground is a bad idea. Over the long term, no one wins if we choose to fight there.

    • TurdF3rguson 4 minutes ago
      It seems like it's pretty easy to comply. Pornhub and others don't have any problems complying with TX.
    • ranguna 9 minutes ago
      I thought this was always the case?

      But what people do instead is to disable access for people from that specific state.

  • charcircuit 11 minutes ago
    I wonder when browsers will follow Brave's lead and support decentralized domains that can't be censored due to laws from half way across the world.
  • EmbarrassedHelp 40 minutes ago
    There's no such thing as "reasonable age verification measures". Its lie spread by fascists like Ken Pax­ton, the Heritage Foundation, and ton of other evil people.
  • tamimio 35 minutes ago
    So, what’s the safest domain tld that’s safe from all that craziness out there?
  • ofewfewhw 48 minutes ago
    Definitely bad overall and opposed to the principle by which this is being done, but I am at least glad it happened to motherless. The last I saw of that site it had terrible moderation and hosted quite a bit of dubious material.
    • paxys 23 minutes ago
      So it's bad but you're okay with it because it's being done to someone you don't like..

      This is exactly how we lose all our rights.

    • ActorNightly 30 minutes ago
      [flagged]