Sounds like the new TOS may be the start of a final wave of LJ diaspora. We're down low enough on people that it won't make sense to stay here longer if we lose another, oh, say 30-50% of 'em. It's already kind of a ghost town
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Those terms where I've looked up the relevant Russian Federation laws don't seem unusually bad for a corporation. But "no worse than usual for a corporation, plus different legal jurisdiction, plus terms can change at random" is already pretty bad. With US laws, there *are* some weirdnesses you just have to know about. I'd be shocked if Russian law was different.
Yeah, I just went and wrote a script to delete all of my entries (but keep the account login so I can at least follow whether other people also go to Dreamwidth).
Turns out LJ has a post rate limit though, so after deleting like 500 entries it basically said "lol stop spamming our server you're posting too frequently".
I mirrored my journal to Dreamwidth, which even copied over all of the comments and everything. No idea if that works for you or not, but it is really simple.
I think it is the usual overreaction and "Putin panic" but secretly I want everyone to abandon LJ so that I can be the only one who remained here and rule the place alone.
The best-considered "I'm leaving" response I've seen so far basically went, "Russia outlaws all sorts of things, including my sexual preferences, and it'll be very hard to make sure I'm not breaking Russian laws while talking about my day-to-day life."
Which, y'know, fair. For starters, the user agreement said you had to appropriately label "mature" all content that might (in the opinion of Russia) be inappropriate for the under-18 set... And there's a bunch of "no breaking Russian law" bits where I simply don't know the relevant Russian law, nor have anybody reliable to ask (the Internet doesn't count for this.)
Yes, this makes sense in theory but I absolutely do not think any of this will be enforced on us, international users. We are about 5 percent of total users here I think with almost no audience, etc. They are mainly concerned with those Russian blogger with big Russian audiences, nobody will be spending time to enforce it in my journal with all my 17 readers I think. I will actually test it soon, I think it is interesting to see if they will react to a provocative post from me which I won't label "mature content".
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And for Russian law I don't already know them.
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Turns out LJ has a post rate limit though, so after deleting like 500 entries it basically said "lol stop spamming our server you're posting too frequently".
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Which, y'know, fair. For starters, the user agreement said you had to appropriately label "mature" all content that might (in the opinion of Russia) be inappropriate for the under-18 set... And there's a bunch of "no breaking Russian law" bits where I simply don't know the relevant Russian law, nor have anybody reliable to ask (the Internet doesn't count for this.)
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