No.2323
I've been discussing the possibility of removing a ban on pedophile literature with an admin for a U.S. based publishing site. The site's servers, he claims, are in the U.S., and all admins and the site-owner live in the U.S.
Though it's not likely he'll ask, I've offered to provide reputable sources about the legal boundary between what sort of pedophile writing is and isn't legal in the U.S. (assuming the strictest state's standards, which I'm guessing is Florida). If he does ask, I'll be throwing myself into research, and could really use any links my comrades here can offer. Ideally, I'd like to make it as simple as possible for him while showing him the results of trials and excerpts from national and state laws.
No.2324
"Publishing site" may be a bit generous, btw. It's a large, populated site for derivative fiction... Just doing what I can in small ways on my end, even if it only affects a small corner of the web. The discussion seems to have gone well generally, in any case.
No.2325
I don't understand why you would think any sort of pedophile literature would be illegal in the United States. The first amendment makes it very clear that no form of fiction, no matter how heinous the public believes it is, can ever be banned.
No.2326
>>2325I think we should be standing up for the constitution, not asking criminals what their 'laws' are.
No.2395
>>2323
>a large, populated site for derivative fiction
Which site exactly? I post my fanfics on AO3, they're all about "write whatever shit you want, we won't delete it", I have a Dog With a Blog story with Francesca Capaldi's character in it on there.