The issue in that case wasn't really discrimination at all - it was whether or not a service provider must create things that he finds morally objectionable just because a client orders it. People don't tend to be very consistent about that - most people don't have a problem with a Jewish baker telling a neo-nazi that he won't make a swastika cake, but Colorado was unwilling to extend that courtesy to Jack Philips. Personally, I'm pretty firmly on the side of the creator in both cases, though I'm willing to admit that taken to the extreme it can cause problems.BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Mon Aug 05, 2019 7:54 pmEven given the deferment or proficient ruling on the actual case, the issue there revolved around a special case of discrimination pertaining to marriage equality. It wasn't really a general discrimination as far as I could tell, unless you have other thoughts as it pertains to this.
I have no idea what bearing any of this has on Cloudfare kicking 8chan to the curb, because the client-provider framework is fundamentally different here.