It's very unfortunate that people are simply fatigued of fighting this fight.
Also see the UK as well for an example of how previously unregulated speech has become regulated because the authorities have pushed over and over again, backing off every time there's a loud enough protest, but trying again after a short time.
All the stuff in the UK is voluntary (except the traffic analysis snooping stuff, but that's centralised and the Americans were doing that to their own citizens when it was theoretically illegal, so, meh). All the big famous ISPs you see advertising on TV have decided to volunteer to censor, but it's not a law. Smaller specialist ISPs just say "No". Mine even had a thing saying look at this great endorsement and it was a link to Hansard (the official parliamentary record) where a Peer was moaning that bad people can get uncensored Internet service from that ISP and the law doesn't stop them.
Nope. It's fascinating how many people believe this, but it isn't what that law says, and so sure enough such sites are accessible via my ISP. The ISP is required by law to provide some means by which consumers can choose not to be able to access "adult" content. It does this during sign up, if you pick "Yes, block adult content" it informs you that they choose not to do business with you and suggest you use a different ISP.