Er. Gosh. Why is Inkbunny, then, so very different to something like literotica.com, which is an archive of free erotic material dealing extensively with textual depictions of sexual activity involving 'persons' continues to operate? Or, as another example, how a company like Paypal.com can accept payment for books containing erotic material, so long as it's legal under US law? --> http://techcrunch.com/2012/03/13/paypal-updates-erotica-policy-target-is-specifc...
Which 'Many Jurisdictions' have enacted laws which would result in a work like the one I linked, a short story titled 'Not Divorced', being criminalized? I'm not aware of it being of a criminal nature anywhere in the world, but apparently I'm rather underinformed and in danger of prosecution? Could you provide details?
I'm sorry to be combative on this issue, but ever since Inkbunny launched I have sat and stared at that ACP policy, and I just disagree with it so hard. And it's left me feeling like a chunk of my works are effectively marginalized.
Pornography is, in a very large part of the world, entirely legal. There is no problem with the sex in that story. It is _not_ illegal to the best of my knowledge, and if it is, I really fucking need someone to tell me, because I don't like breaking the law.
Er. Gosh. Why is Inkbunny, then, so very different to something like literotica.com, which is an archive of free erotic material dealing extensively with textual depictions of sexual activity involving 'persons' continues to operate? Or, as another example, how a company like Paypal.com can accept payment for books containing erotic material, so long as it's legal under US law? --> http://techcrunch.com/2012/03/13/paypal-updates-erotica-policy-target-is-specifc...
Which 'Many Jurisdictions' have enacted laws which would result in a work like the one I linked, a short story titled 'Not Divorced', being criminalized? I'm not aware of it being of a criminal nature anywhere in the world, but apparently I'm rather underinformed and in danger of prosecution? Could you provide details?
I'm sorry to be combative on this issue, but ever since Inkbunny launched I have sat and stared at that ACP policy, and I just disagree with it so hard. And it's left me feeling like a chunk of my works are effectively marginalized.
Pornography is, in a very large part of the world, entirely legal. There is no problem with the sex in that story. It is _not_ illegal to the best of my knowledge, and if it is, I really fucking need someone to tell me, because I don't like breaking the law.