Of course. The private platform argument once again.<p>GoDaddy is a private domain name service and anyone who is violating their terms of service can be booted off the service. The site owners are just going to find another one (Like Epik) and they will host them anyway.<p>When are the so-called 'hacktivists' going to tell Google Inc. to terminate their ReCAPTCHA service off of the website then?<p>The so-called 'hacktivists' don't like what the site is saying (neither do I) but if this site is still going to be up somewhere else where it can't be taken down and that law ends up still being in effect well, I guess these methods of deplatforming and script-kiddie form attacks are a waste of time for them.<p>There are other ways of getting rid of this law than these methods which can also be done to anyone else.
> A site that explicitly encourages people to narc on their neighbors by revealing privileged medical information seems to be in pretty clear violation of those standards, one might think, which is exactly what prolifewhistleblower.com did.<p>How delightful if HIPPA played a part in removing this law. The essence of the law is those ability of anyone, anywhere in the US, to bring a lawsuit. The theory is that since law enforcement is not involved current law like Roe v Wade is not violated.