To be clear, I’m not advocating for online age verification. I’m very much against it in any form. I’m just curious from a technical standpoint if it’s possible somehow to construct an accurate age verification system that doesn’t compromise a user’s privacy? i.e., it doesn’t expose the person’s identity to anyone nor leaves behind a paper trail that can be traced to that person?

  • sleen@lemmy.zip
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    14 hours ago

    The kids are just bait for the masses, the big bad wolf doesn’t care about the safety. Control is what they’re after.

    Besides that the point about guardrails, is what I agree in. It would prove beneficial for kids until they become fully aware teenagers. It is also beneficial to note the lack of distinction between teens and kids within these laws. This is what truly makes this predatory - where the fully aware individuals are stripped off their rights.

    If they are going to take away the rights of our children, teens & adolescents, what is stopping them from taking away our rights?

    • rowinxavier@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      Yeah, there is a massive difference between a 9 year old and a 14 year old. Someone who is 17 is not necessarily significantly different from an 18 year old, yet we have to draw the line somewhere. I think if you own and pay for the service it should be up to you at a service level, not up to the government to demand a random third party company be accessed to verify ID and so on. That third party company stands to make money while also being a wonderful target for hackers.

      • sleen@lemmy.zip
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        3 hours ago

        That brings us to the whole concept of the internet. Decentralisation. Everyone at this point is impacted; and while age is being used as a weapon, the internet is becoming more and more centralised.

        Amazon and cloudflare outages were warnings before the real storm. Decentralisation is where we should strive for - and yet the only thing this proves, is the naiveness and the lack of understanding the people that make these laws have.