> It's much easier to say "I'm going to make it impossible for us to have to worry about the Australian government filing a lawsuit against $my-state-agency, because legal said so" than "Well, if we allow Australian IPs to access this website, there's a 0.x% chance that we get sued by Australia, but it's worth it for the sake of the 0.00x% of American expats in Australia."
I personally doubt US state and local governments are specifically targeting Australia in the way you suggest.
I actually doubt they are thinking about Australia at all. I also doubt their legal departments are worried about the Australian government, since the Australian government taking legal action against a foreign government (even a local or subnational one) would in most cases be illegal under all three of international, Australian and foreign law due to sovereign state immunity, and diplomatically they wouldn’t do it to the US because it would offend their American allies. If for some strange reason an Australian government agency had a bone to pick with some US state or county, they’d aim to solve it with the US State Department. Private corporations and individuals are not protected by the same legal doctrines or diplomatic protocols.
I think they just see some option in their firewall config (or Cloudflare or whatever) called “limit countries allowed to access”, they turn it on and add only the US, and then they think “see I’ve kept all the foreign hackers out now!”.
I personally doubt US state and local governments are specifically targeting Australia in the way you suggest.
I actually doubt they are thinking about Australia at all. I also doubt their legal departments are worried about the Australian government, since the Australian government taking legal action against a foreign government (even a local or subnational one) would in most cases be illegal under all three of international, Australian and foreign law due to sovereign state immunity, and diplomatically they wouldn’t do it to the US because it would offend their American allies. If for some strange reason an Australian government agency had a bone to pick with some US state or county, they’d aim to solve it with the US State Department. Private corporations and individuals are not protected by the same legal doctrines or diplomatic protocols.
I think they just see some option in their firewall config (or Cloudflare or whatever) called “limit countries allowed to access”, they turn it on and add only the US, and then they think “see I’ve kept all the foreign hackers out now!”.