It would be nice if bad laws were impossible to comply with. Then nobody would comply with them. Then someone comes along and finds there's a way to sell the appearance of complying with the law (even though actual compliance is impossible) as a service, and everybody is forced to buy the service so they don't get prosecuted. Just one more instance of bad politics and capitalism messing everything up for everybody. On 16 February 2026 15:08:46 CET, Michael Greenup via NANOG <nanog@lists.nanog.org> wrote:
It is important to consider the extent to which US state government mandates influence the regulation of content access. For instance, numerous states now require identity verification for viewers of adult content to confirm their age. Many of these laws are formulated such that any viewer within the state's jurisdiction must be verified, necessitating IP address-based geolocation to ensure compliance.
Not saying I agree or disagree here, just laying out a regulated use case.
YMMV.
Regards,
Michael
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Rich Kulawiec wrote:
Personally, I???ve always thought that IP Geolocation was a bad idea and nothing I???ve seen in the usage of it to date has changed my mind. Agree. We've spent decades trying to build a network that allows everyone to access everything independent of geographical location, and now people have come along with broken business models which demand that we abandon
On Sun, Feb 15, 2026 at 10:25:56PM -0800, Owen DeLong via NANOG wrote: this fundamental principle of the Internet in order to accomodate them.
---rsk
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