There's a troubling trend emerging in global regulation that Web3 communities should watch closely. When quasi-judicial bodies can demand content removal across borders within 30 minutes—with zero transparency, zero due process, and zero appeal mechanism—that's not law anymore. It's censorship dressed up in bureaucratic language.
This kind of "remove things we don't like" framework is creeping into policy discussions, and it fundamentally contradicts how pluralistic societies should operate. No appeal process. No explanation. Just compliance demands with no recourse. That's incompatible with the principles Web3 was built on: transparency and due process.
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DecentralizedElder
· 5h ago
Delete content within 30 minutes? This is not the rule of law; it's pure despotism disguised as legality.
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LiquidityNinja
· 01-11 11:42
Deleted your stuff within 30 minutes, and didn't even give an explanation... Isn't this just a dictatorship in a suit?
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MoodFollowsPrice
· 01-11 00:50
There's no reason to delete content within 30 minutes? Isn't this just a disguised form of dictatorship, just wrapped in a "regulation" guise?
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liquiditea_sipper
· 01-11 00:50
Delete in 30 minutes? Isn't this just censorship under a different guise? Regulators are really getting more and more outrageous.
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GasFeeSurvivor
· 01-11 00:37
Deleting content in 30 minutes without any notice? That's outrageous. Where's the due process?
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ForeverBuyingDips
· 01-11 00:32
Deleted within 30 minutes, and no reason given? This is the true face of the authorities.
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tx_or_didn't_happen
· 01-11 00:31
Delete content in 30 minutes with zero explanation, this is really not law, it's pure violence.
There's a troubling trend emerging in global regulation that Web3 communities should watch closely. When quasi-judicial bodies can demand content removal across borders within 30 minutes—with zero transparency, zero due process, and zero appeal mechanism—that's not law anymore. It's censorship dressed up in bureaucratic language.
This kind of "remove things we don't like" framework is creeping into policy discussions, and it fundamentally contradicts how pluralistic societies should operate. No appeal process. No explanation. Just compliance demands with no recourse. That's incompatible with the principles Web3 was built on: transparency and due process.