The Chancellor of Justice, JK, has launched eight preliminary investigations that include 151 publications against the Nordic Resistance Movement's website, writes the magazine Expo. JK believes that the publications constitute a hatred for people.

But since the turn of the year, the publisher does not have to take responsibility for the publications provided they are removed.

Have two weeks to wear

On 1 January this year, new constitutional amendments came into force in the Freedom of Expression Ordinance and the Statement of Freedom of Expression. Previously, a responsible publisher was legally responsible for all publications on the web, including those made under another responsible publisher. With the change, publishers would be given the opportunity to be released for publications older than one year.

If a publisher is notified by the Chancellor of Justice that a publication may constitute a crime, it has two weeks to remove the publication and thus avoid liability.

Even before the law came into force, it received criticism that extreme forces can publish heat and threats without being punished.

"The fact that the legislators, after being warned about the consequences, gave the Nazis carte blanche to stir for free on the internet is one of the legislators' shame in modern times," Mårten Schultz told the Expo.