this post was submitted on 25 Jul 2024
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That was the case here in the US, but a lot of states are now passing laws that require actual verification, not just a button. The result is that PornHub is no longer accessible in my state w/o a VPN, and if more states do it, I would probably need to send in a picture of my ID or something and make an account.
That all happened this year, right? And PH does the blocking from their side. I mean it's not some DNS blocking that internet service providers are required to do? And what's with the next biggest porn sites? Do you still have access to xvideos .com and xhamster?
The law passed either last year or the year before, I can't remember, and it's going into effect this year or last. There's also a social media ID law as well, but I don't think it has gone into effect yet (I don't use SM aside from Lemmy, so I haven't noticed, but occasionally follow Twitter links).
I just checked, and xvideos works fine, but xhamster has a "start verification" pop-up upon page load that requires uploading my ID, or logging in if I've already verified myself. Pornhub just refuses to load with a protest screen with the following text:
The checks are all on the service side, not the ISP, and Pornhub lays out the rest of the problems here. I assume Utah would sue noncompliant companies.
So the simplest solution for people in Utah is just to use a VPN in Colorado, our next door neighbor, which adds minimal latency (like 10-20ms). I'm in the process of setting that up for my Wi-Fi network so nobody in our network needs to show ID.