Despite the age of consent in Mississippi being 16, no one under the age of 18 will have access to digital materials made available through public and school libraries without explicit parental/guardian permission.

Mississippi has a new law on the books directly impacting access and use of digital resources like Hoopla and Overdrive for those under the age of 18 throughout the state. Even if granted parental permission, minors may not have materials available to them, if vendors do not ensure every item within their offerings meets the new, wide-reaching definition of “obscenity” per the state. Mississippi Code 39-3-25, part of House Bill 1315, went into effect July 1, 2023, and libraries across the state have scrambled for how to be in compliance.

  • pokemoney@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    For a a state that consistently ranks on the bottom of educational rankings -> Deny access to books!!!

    That’ll really help your state.

    • Fredselfish @lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Good thing most kids know how to set their age at 18 when signing up for accounts so this can be bypassed.

      But what needs to happen and should is this law be struck down for being unconstitutional.

      Another GOP control state telling DeSantis and Florida to hold my beer moment.

      Sick and tired of these fascist winning.

      • revelrous@sopuli.xyz
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        1 year ago

        Unfortunately I’m not sure they can here. Age is part of a library card application. I’d bet the library systems will revoke access from patron data. This is totally against ALA principles, no way it doesn’t go to court.

        • Jamie@jamie.moe
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          1 year ago

          I had to show ID when I got a library card at my local library. Of course, some libraries might work differently.

          No faking that without actually breaking the law, but then again, minors already do it to get a little booze. So who knows.

    • DarkSpoon@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      It’s pretty on-brand for them. You don’t get to the bottom by trying to improve things usually.