Bluesky Blocks Mississippi Users
Age verification laws are already coming for Americans’ access to free speech.

The social media platform Bluesky is blocking users from Mississippi rather than comply with the state's age verification law.
"Unfortunately, Bluesky is unavailable in Mississippi right now, due to a new state law that requires age verification for all users," the company's official account posted last Friday. "While intended for child safety, we think this law poses broader challenges & creates significant barriers that limit free speech & harm smaller platforms like ours."
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How To Violate Privacy While Creating a Censorship Regime
Mississippi's age-check law—like so many others being floated and passed in different states—requires social media companies and some other types of web platforms to check all user ages. "A digital service provider may not enter into an agreement with a person to create an account with a digital service unless the person has registered the person's age with the digital service provider," states House Bill 1126, passed last year.
The law applies to digital services that allow users "to socially interact with other users," create a profile, and "create or post content"—a category that covers not just such platforms as Bluesky, X, Instagram, TikTok, and Facebook but also message and chat forums, YouTube and similar video sites, and more.
Providers can verify ages by checking IDs, using bio-metric scans, or other "commercially reasonable efforts," but the result is the same: a major invasion of all users' privacy and digital security. That's strike one.
Strike two: the exclusion of even older minors from participating in these forums without express parental consent.
It gets worse. Digital service providers must also "develop and implement a strategy to prevent the known minor's exposure to harmful material," which the law defines as anything "that promotes, glorifies or facilitates" suicide, self-harm, eating disorders, illegal drugs, stalking, bullying, harassment, grooming, trafficking, child pornography, sexual exploitation, violence, substance abuse, or "any other illegal activity."
Laws like this pass because lots of people casually think "Well, who would want minors to see such horrid stuff?" and move on. But if you stop to ponder how this requirement would work in practice, a lot of problems emerge.
Many of those categories are legal, First Amendment–protected speech, and preventing minors from seeing it often means preventing anyone from seeing it. What's more, defining and identifying which speech falls into this "harmful material" category would be hard enough for the most meticulous human moderators to do properly, let alone the kinds of algorithms necessary to do such content moderation at scale.
That means huge amounts of not just legal but actually beneficial—or at least morally and socially neutral—content will get caught up in the sweep.
We've seen this already with the implementation of the U.K.'s Online Safety Act, which serves some of the same functions as this Mississippi measure. Attempts to stop minors from seeing "violent" or "self-harm" material quickly turned into war news and psychological support groups getting restricted for minors—or anyone unwilling to show an ID.
That's strike three: Laws like these quickly become enormous censorship regimes.
Mississippi Law 'Likely Unconstitutional,' Can Still Be Enforced
Enforcement of Mississippi HB 1126 was put on hold by Judge Halil Suleyman Ozerden last year and, in June Ozerden enjoined enforcement of the law again (after his first preliminary injunction went to the appeals court and then back to him). But the state appealed, and in July the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit said Mississippi could start enforcing the law as the legal challenge to it played out.
NetChoice—a tech trade group challenging the law—appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, seeking an emergency injunction on enforcement. But the Supreme Court declined to intervene at this juncture.
The Court did not say why they would not halt enforcement as the challenge plays out, though Justice Brett Kavanaugh did suggest, in a short concurring opinion, that NetChoice "is likely to succeed on the merits—namely, that enforcement of the Mississippi law would likely violate its members' First Amendment rights under this Court's precedents."
"The Mississippi law is likely unconstitutional," wrote Kavanaugh. But "because NetChoice has not sufficiently demonstrated that the balance of harms and equities favors it at this time, I concur in the Court's denial of the application for interim relief."
With the ultimate fate of the law still pending, "we cannot justify building the expensive required infrastructure," Bluesky posted on Friday. "For now, we have made the difficult decision to block access in Mississippi."
A Two-Tiered Internet?
Bluesky's decision is reminiscent of the way some porn companies—including Aylo, the company behind such platforms as Pornhub—have reacted in response to state laws requiring age verification for online providers of adult content.
If this trend keeps up, the U.S. will soon see a two-tiered internet, where residents of some states have access to a relatively free and open online world and residents of other states have major restrictions on what they can see.
Of course, with so many states passing laws requiring various kinds of age verification and harm mitigation—and the federal government constantly threatening to do so—it could soon behoove tech companies to cave and simply start verifying everyone's ages and blocking minor users entirely or treating all adults as if they're minors in terms of what they can see.
At least 20 states have laws requiring age verification for platforms where sexual content can be accessed—and while some of these are aimed specifically at porn websites, others apply more broadly (meaning they could require social media platforms or gaming marketplaces to verify ages merely because some small portion of their content might be adult-oriented). Meanwhile, more states are considering and passing laws like Mississippi's, which require age verification by social media platforms and other sorts of "digital service providers."
It's been absolutely predictable that the crusade to stop minors from seeing pornography would quickly spread into a censorship agenda that could span the whole internet and destroy online anonymity broadly. The cynics among us might even suggest that for some, this has been the endgame all along.
For now, measures like Mississippi's are going to come down hardest on smaller platforms without the resources to either implement compliance or fight off legal challenges.
"We think this law creates challenges that go beyond its child safety goals, and creates significant barriers that limit free speech and disproportionately harm smaller platforms and emerging technologies," states the Bluesky team in an August 22 blog post. "Age verification systems require substantial infrastructure and developer time investments, complex privacy protections, and ongoing compliance monitoring — costs that can easily overwhelm smaller providers. This dynamic entrenches existing big tech platforms while stifling the innovation and competition that benefits users."
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" . . . bullying, harassment, grooming, trafficking, child pornography, sexual exploitation . . . "
Reads like the democrat party platform.
Trump is a pedophile who went on Epstein trips to abuse girls.
Cite?
Your side loves pedophiles so don't act like you think that's a pejorative.
LOL your community is only one letter away from pedophilia. The fantasy is for the pool "boy" not the pool "man."
Unless you are claiming special expertise in this area, in that case keep talking...
Think of all that those Mississippians are missing out on...
It's kinda like the 4B movement or like a crazy cat lady or other chick in the "No Go Zone" declaring she won't date Southerners.
It's unclear if anyone in Mississippi has even noticed.
I love her holding up BlueSky as "free speech". Because they do tolerate opposing views of any sort whatsoever.
Oh...ENB adored Twitter when they behaved like that. ENB is a fascist.
Yeah, BlueSky and other social media are absolutely not 'free speech' but I suppose if you squint real hard and ignore just about everything about them they could appear that way to the exceptionally dim.
'What, exactly, was Twitter?' The Paroxysms newsletter suggests that "what Twitter was, and what social media continues to be, is a redescription of the world in terms of networks and relationships, and a sense imparted on its users that we lack validity and authenticity unless we are plugged securely into the right channels."
How ENB tells me she's in an existential crisis of angst over social media... without telling me she's in an existential crisis of angst over social media...
The more I read this article, the more I'm getting concerned ENB might need an intervention.
She's past the need for an intervention. It's time for an exorcism.
Blue Sky will not miss Mississippi, Mississippi will not miss Blue Sky.
Just another private company determining what markets they will serve. Like Beyond and California.
Set VPN to the UK, then make a few piste about all the rapefugees gangs that the British govt tolerates resulting in Scotland Yard spending resources trying to track you down for speech violation against the protected class of foreign rapists.
It's not like we walked by some Muslims and discussed the merits of bacon.
Alt headline: BlueSky Defends Speech Controls and Pedophilia Faster Than You Can Say '0 Mississippi'
ISWYDT
The twom main things I have heard about Bluesky (aside from it being a self selected left wing insane asylum echo chamber), is that
- it is against free speech / for curated or approved speech (classic left wing)
- it has a massive problem with child porn (also classic left wing)
So banning a group of people that are doing age verification is the most on brand thing they could do
- Don't forget don't-say-go-woke-/-go-broke practice of amputating a portion of your customer base because your user/customer numbers are in steady decline:
https://www.reddit.com/r/BlueskySocial/comments/1kxib89/bluesky_stats_only_13m_active_users_in_the_last/
Last week (3 mos. ago) the total number of users registered hit 36M, but actually only 13M of those showed any activity in the last 90 days.
[clicks link]
"9.71M users over the last 90 days"
First they came for Bluesky, but no one used Bluesky so no one cried out, then they came for Mastodon...
the entire tantrum the left had in response to Elon buying Twitter has them all crawling back to Twitter, some of them for the 10th time *cough* Ron Pearlman, Steven King, Mark Hamill *cough*
Ah, yes, Mark Hamill. That poor idiot. It should shock zero people that actors are unsatisfied with a platform that reaches just about no one. They are attention whores, and places like BlueSky simply don't give them the proper dopamine hit for shitposting.
I used to like his voice acting. Now, I go out of my way to avoid it.
Entertainment companies (movies/TV/gaming) need to put in the contracts that to be paid, you need to shut the fuck up as nothing an actor says will help anything but it will certainly kill a product.
Twitter has shown us how incredibly stupid actors tend to be when they do not have intelligent people telling them, word for word, what to say.
In most circumstances I couldn't care less what an actor happens to believe as long as their acting is decent. Hamill is a decent actor, so I don't really care that he's a raving idiot in his spare time.
If someone wants to boycott productions because of the idiotic views a cast member might hold, you'd be watching nothing.
Not watching most of the current entertainment product --- you don't really miss that much.
"Oh no, I have to miss a terrible comedy? Drat. Oh, a police procedural that is the exact same as every other one? Golly gee"
I have no desire to help anybody who hates me. I, personally, LOVE how badly gaming companies have done while shovelling shit at their players.
If this trend keeps up, the U.S. will soon see a two-tiered internet
For probably 30 yrs. I've been seeing diagrams with clouds labeled "Internet" on them. A decade of Information Superhighway and ramps being built to get onto it before that. Even today, I routinely traverse spaces where I have free gigabit-speed wifi and places where I would have to relay radio or use satellite internet if I had to be connected. Half the websites I go to allow me to "shop by location" or "shop my nearest store" only to tell me that whatever thing I want is out of stock and I can either pay to have it shipped directly or would have to be shipped two zip codes away within the next 3 days for free.
The idea that *this* is what will make it a *two*-tiered internet is laughable.
To be fair, I think Bluesky probably wanted to block Mississippi since the beginning.
Sounds like a win. Keeping the good people of Mississippi away from the dangerous and predatory nature of Bluesky users? That's a win.
where residents of some states have access to a relatively free and open online world and residents of other states have major restrictions on what they can see.
omg federalism and states rights, the horror.
omg federalism and states rights, the horror.
It's like internet apartheid!
Having 50 experiments is better than having 1 experiment.
Yeah, but folks don’t need 23 kinds of woodchippers.
totally forgot blue sky existed guess they needed juice.
What are you talking about? They despite them all. They're all pro-Hamas terrorism over there.
Oh you said they needed... sorry, misread.
It used to be that to see, hear, be part of or involved in Adult activities or venues ID was required.
Age verification is simple, make the person provide their credit card which validates age of at least 18.
Because operators of porn sites can absolutely be trusted with your credit card.
Because no youth, ever, has stolen their parents' (or someone else's) credit card . . .
No, preventing minors from seeing something absolutely does not prevent everyone from seeing it.
Ever been to the strip club?
Showing Bubba your ID at the door of a club is NOT the same thing as turning over your personal info and credit card numbers to the sketchiest content providers on the internet.
Yes it is.
Also, it's 100% avoidable.
Does Chippendales count?
- sarc
Ah,. the usual cultist argument - because an intrusive and likely unconstitutional law doesn't affect them but does affect people they don't like, it's a good law.
It has nothing to do with "liking" anything or anyone. It has to do with right and wrong.
You can pretend "right and wrong" don't actually exist, but they do and we all know which column "peddling smut to kids" falls into.