Tennessee’s Age Verification Bill Escalates Effort to Criminalize Adult Sites

https://www.xbiz.com/news/280759/tennessees-age-verification-bill-escalates-effort-to-criminalize-adult-sites

My dogs that love gravy!  These laws are being driven by religion, more truthfully people that hid their true religious intent to get elected to then try to force their religious views on everyone else.  To force everyone to live by their churches doctrines and their religious driven idea of what is moral or not.  Do you understand this is a bunch of hyper religious people wagging their fingers at the people they dislike and telling them god sees what they are doing?  This is our time of the temperance movement or the prohibition of alcohol that went so badly wrong.  It is a small group of people who have extreme views of morality based on their own religious views who insist on forcing everyone else to live according to their views.  It is the morality police and the vice patrols of the Islamic theocracies that the same people doing this in the US claim to hate.  It is scary to me the regressive world they want to force the country into.  Hugs.  Scottie

Tennessee's Age Verification Bill Escalates Effort to Criminalize Adult Sites

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee’s version of the age verification bills being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists continues making its progress through the state legislature toward likely approval.

On Tuesday, the state’s Senate Finance Committee advanced SB 1792 — titled by its chief sponsor, Republican Senator Becky Duncan Massey, as the “Protect Tennessee Minors Act” — out of committee.

SB 1792 “would make porn websites criminally liable if they don’t verify the ages of users of their sites through photo matching,” local CBS affiliate WREG reported.

Massey compared the proposed new requirement to “age verification when folks go on an alcohol-related site,” and said her bill is necessary because, she believes, pornography “can cause damage” and “mental health issues.”

FSC Director of Public Affairs Mike Stabile, however, told XBIZ that Massey’s bill effectively criminalizes the distribution of adult content online, which he cited as a frequently stated goal of many conservatives.

Stabile also called SB 1792 “an escalation of what we’ve seen in other states” and deemed it “a grave threat” to First Amendment protections.

“First it was private lawsuits, then fines from attorneys general — Tennessee evidently wants to become the first state to begin arresting pornographers,” Stabile said, adding that the Tennessee bill’s chilling effect on legal speech will be substantial.

“The legislature’s own fiscal review committee says that it assumes ‘a majority of entities’ will simply stop publishing content in the state, but that, if not, ‘the increase in such convictions could be significant,’” he explained.

Stabile also pointed out that for many legislators, age verification is “just an excuse to increase liabilities for people that create, and platforms that host, material dealing in sex or sexuality. It’s no surprise that Tennessee has also recently expanded the definition of ‘material harmful to minors’ to include drag and other non-explicit LGBTQ+ content offline, and the bill itself criminalizes as little as the description of a nipple.”

Aylo: Recent Slew of AV Laws Are ‘Ineffective, Dangerous’

SB 1792 would also require websites to keep “anonymized age-verification data” for extended periods of time.

Massey told WREG, “They keep the data but not personally identifying data. They have to keep the data to prove that they did verify for seven years, but it can’t have their name, address. It can’t have any personal identifying markers.”

Kansas, Texas, Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Montana, Utah and Virginia have passed similar age verification bills, all introduced by Republicans, while 19 other states have introduced similar legislation. Florida recently passed its version of the law, written by a legislator who is also a pastor, as part of a more comprehensive social media bill.

Aylo issued a statement about the Tennessee bill and the other laws, stating, “The way many jurisdictions worldwide have chosen to implement age verification is ineffective, haphazard, and dangerous. Any regulations that require hundreds of thousands of adult sites to collect significant amounts of highly sensitive personal information is putting user safety in jeopardy. Moreover, as experience has demonstrated, unless properly enforced, users will simply access non-compliant sites or find other methods of evading these laws.”

Main Image: Anti-Porn crusader Tennessee Sen. Becky Duncan Massey (R)

6 thoughts on “Tennessee’s Age Verification Bill Escalates Effort to Criminalize Adult Sites

    1. Hello Ali. I figure anyone old enough to work is old enough to access porn. I will go even farther. I think the only reason these people are terrified that young people might see porn is they don’t want to talk to or have their kids taught about sex, what sex really is, talk to the kids about consent, and how sex is not just about the male’s pleasure only. If they really worried about porn just sit little Jimmy and Jane who are going through puberty down and explain that porn is a made up thing with actors and that includes amateur porn, and that is not how real sex happens. If they had that conversation they could then laugh when they see their child’s search history. They have made sex such a boogieman they can’t even talk about it with their kids. Again the 1950s mindset. It is like how they feel about LGBTQ+ material, if kids never see it they won’t ever feel that way or have that desire. These people need to grow up. Hugs. Scottie

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