520 comments

  • onion2k 14 hours ago ago

    If we taught systems thinking in schools things like internet age verification would never get past being an idea on the back of a napkin. People struggle to consider the second-, third-, and nth-order effects of anything so asking them to consider what else might happen if we bring in laws and technical mechanisms to 'protect the children' is unfortunately too a big leap for a lot of them. Most people are bad at spotting causal links between parts of a system, and people who are good at it exploit that.

    • roenxi 13 hours ago ago

      In fairness, the evidence is that people already pretty firmly against things like chat control and the will to push it through tends to come from the political circles more than popular belief it is a good idea. I expect that if the measure itself went to a general vote, the majority would be against it once they have to deal with a specific proposal. It takes repeated pushes by the authoritarians looking for an opportunity to get things like speech controls or privacy violations through and the politicians mysteriously give up trying to roll it back no matter what the public pressure might be.

      That being said, any expectation of thoughtfulness at all makes politics frustrating. Even basic things like why people keep making small random changes when most of these problems and solutions haven't changed in more than 2 millennia. And there is a pretty easy consensus to come to about what works. The repeated failures of authoritarianism to get to a good place are so consistent it is wild that people keep trying it.

      • pc86 6 hours ago ago

        The problem is that "the authoritarians" (read: almost every politician at every level of government, but a drastically increasing percentage the higher you go) only need to get something passed once then it is there forever.

        Every law should have an automatic sunset period of 1-10 years that requires it to pass the entire legislative process again, or at least both full chambers + signing.

        • abecedarius 3 hours ago ago

          Increasingly wishing for this from a fictional constitutional convention:

          > I note one proposal to make this Congress a two-house body. Excellent — the more impediments to legislation the better. But, instead of following tradition, I suggest one house of legislators, another whose single duty is to repeal laws. Let the legislators pass laws only with a two-thirds majority... while the repealers are able to cancel any law through a mere one-third minority. Preposterous? Think about it. If a bill is so poor that it cannot command two-thirds of your consents, is it not likely that it would make a poor law? And if a law is disliked by as many as one-third is it not likely that you would be better off without it?

          https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/The_Moon_Is_a_Harsh_Mistress

          • TheOtherHobbes 3 hours ago ago

            Add money to politics - more accurately add even more money to politics - and see how this works out.

          • unethical_ban 3 minutes ago ago

            I love that book, and its teachings of cell structures for decentralized rebellion. But it is a libertarian fantasy. And we've seen in the US, particularly due to the voting-system-imposed two party cap, that bad faith actors will sabotage good government as a goal in itself. I'm not confident that we need to make it even harder to pass laws in the US. We need to have voting reform in the country to allow a real free market of political parties that accurately represent the will of the people, and hold true to the values that we have in our Bill of Rights such as freedom of speech and freedom to privacy and civil rights.

          • NoMoreNicksLeft 2 hours ago ago

            >Increasingly wishing for this from a fictional constitutional convention:

            There's an interesting, one-time shakeup that we could actually accomplish. While it's true that there will never again be another constitutional amendment... there's already one out there that will never expire, partially ratified. Completely beyond Congress's ability to rescind it or cockblock it. Article the First.

            Were it to be ratified, nearly immediately (whenever the next Census is), the House of Representatives has over 6000 seats. So many that the existing party apparatus wouldn't be able to vet candidates or manipulate. Lobbyists, even, would have a hard time allotting the slush funds to bribe them all.

            And what would it take to do all of this? Maybe 10 or 12 people hammering (gently) on some state legislator in Nevada or Kansas. Convince him or her to pass the resolution to ratify. Nothing more than that. A single state even attempting to ratify it would start the ball rolling, and no one would be able to stop it.

          • afiori 2 hours ago ago

            This looks like something only a libertarian would like

        • thesz 3 hours ago ago

            > Every law should have an automatic sunset period of 1-10 years that requires it to pass the entire legislative process again, or at least both full chambers + signing.
          
          Then you will have a lot of Constitution amendments. That's first.

          The burden of ever-changing law landscape will be carried by ordinary people, not by legislators. That's second.

        • flumes_whims_ an hour ago ago

          In the saga period of Iceland, 1/3rd of the laws had to be recited orally each year in a public assembly. If we had something like that then our legal code would be a lot slimmer.

          • mycall an hour ago ago

            Slim is not always better once people find exploits and loopholes which helps them but hurts society at large. Sunsetting is better.

            • sylos 16 minutes ago ago

              But clearly what's going on now with omnibus bills that no one has read in its entirety are ok?

        • intrasight 5 hours ago ago

          That would indeed solve many problems. It would also focus legislative minds now and in the future. Not sure it would be beneficial for the judicial branch.

          Also beneficial perhaps would be to have it be necessary that the law spells out the technical implementation. Sort of like patents do.

        • goalieca 4 hours ago ago

          I remember the patriot act.

          • pc86 4 hours ago ago

            In this very comment I started talking about the patriot act two or three times but kept deleting it because I didn't want to ramble. But yeah that's exactly what I was thinking of - for people who care about privacy and freedom it was really one of the worst pieces of legislation in modern US history, and permanently changed the country for the worse.

          • hvs 3 hours ago ago

            The Patriot Act is perfect example of the adage, "Never let a crisis go to waste."

            • wartywhoa23 2 hours ago ago

              Or rather "Always construct crises proportionate to the desired delta of the current Overton window's position".

      • beezlewax 11 hours ago ago

        I emailed my local TD minister in Ireland about the inherent dangers of chat control. They had some lacky respond with an email that framed the conversation in a way that made it look like I was interested in the illegal content and not privacy/control or nefarious future governments.

        • monssooon 11 hours ago ago

          This is what I fear the most. It is gas lighting and just manipulation. The idea of privacy will become associated with crime.

          Further down the line technical solutions that are private will become illegal and in general not being pro survailance will get you in trouble

          • ShinyLeftPad 10 hours ago ago

            Do you acknowledge that for many people and practically e2ee and crime are connected? e2ee is a very useful tool for crime and combined with crypto useful tool for monetizing crime. Criminals used to speak in code, meet clandestine, use burner phones and websites were easy to shut down. Now they don't need to.

            The solution to privacy problem is not to shout while closing your ears but to make it clear that you see their side, how new tech create new problems, and help solve it in least privacy invasive ways.

            Otherwise you will always be seen as somebody who has shady agenda. It's just reality. Ordinary people do not care about e2ee. Gotta read the room.

            But chat control and age verification are different things.

            • drtgh 7 hours ago ago

              > But chat control and age verification are different things.

              Although they appear to be different different things at first sight, they share the same agenda and objective, mass surveillance and identification of the citizens. Once the door is opened, it can be expected that things will not end there; Politicians and their patrons will exploit this data under "committees" (and of course be excluded from such surveillance as an aggravating factor).

              Nowadays it's needed a court order to access legally to the privacy of citizens, and this must be done by the Police or the Interpol, nevertheless someones want to break this.

              If they were really worried by the citizens security, they would increase the number of police and judges working in this digital divisions, among other things related to this.

              • ShinyLeftPad 2 hours ago ago

                Well, here's a case when police did their work. A massive international bust happened because the police was able to trick gangs to use an app that was not actually e2ee. And chances that it happens again are almost zero.

                • AnimalMuppet 2 hours ago ago

                  I have some faith in the lack of wisdom of (most) criminals. Most of them aren't geniuses, aren't super sophisticated, aren't good at following technical rules with 100% discipline.

                  So it's likely to work again - not as often as a law-abiding citizen would like, but not never.

                • wartywhoa23 an hour ago ago

                  And yet another notorious international bust just didn't happen recently despite the fact that the island loungers not only didn't use e2ee but actively made their crimes abundantly obvious to the public.

            • teiferer 9 hours ago ago

              > Ordinary people do not care about e2ee. Gotta read the room.

              It's a matter of phrasing things. Moxie had this illustrative take: If your chat is not e2ee, it'a a group chat. It's you, your mom, every secret service in the world and some ISP employees as well. If we could clarify to our social circles and broader society that every non-e2ee chat can be browsed by some overpaid freckled 20-something borded out of his mind at a FAANG or an ISP then the viewpoint could change.

              • ShinyLeftPad 8 hours ago ago

                Tons of people use IG and I think they pretty much know that it's them, the other guy and whatever number of contractors monitoring chats. They just don't care.

                Maybe one of the most helpful parallels is with mail. I think US and other countries have strict laws about mail communication privacy. Someone can in theory open your mail but it's strictly regulated and not done in a total way.

                Also I do think talking about future malicious government prosecuting people based on what was collected previously is actually a good one. But just talking about privacy may be a little too vague.

              • speff 4 hours ago ago

                I suspect a lot of people don't mind/care that the list is expanded to those groups. That's really a big part of the issue. It's better framing, regardless though.

                • AgentOrange1234 3 hours ago ago

                  More than that. Who cares if the state can read your chats/etc, when you believe you aren't the kind of people the state wants to persecute. Why deny the state ever more tools to go after people, as long as you think it's going to use them against the people you want it to go after.

                  • vladms 2 hours ago ago

                    I would add though that the opinion is not entirely irrational.

                    For many people the state is inefficient, illogical, evil and goes after them without any reason (ex: think COVID restrictions). Then why do you care about another way to label you, if you think they already do it, but randomly.

                    I feel that the privacy discussions do not acknowledge at all there are many other structural society issues. Sure it would make an evil-intelligent government have a harder time, but will not improve at all life with an evil-idiot government, and to me it seems those are a bit more prevalent (note: idiot = implementing solutions that will not solve the problems they claim they do, while them honestly thinking they do solve them)

            • monssooon 4 hours ago ago

              I think the below comments answer rather well for me. But of course you are rigth that criminals use technology... I just don't see it as the main issue here.

              I think that most common currency for criminals are still just cold cash... But maybe some use crypto yes. And maybe criminals use e2ee. And Marybe you are rigth that it is a problematic thing for law enforcement. That is not the point though.

              The point is criminalizing ordinary people for something completely reasonable like wanting to have the ability to talk in private. And talk in private about what they think of the current leadership...

              • ShinyLeftPad 3 hours ago ago

                > I think that most common currency for criminals are still just cold cash

                It doesn't scale as well. Can't go cross-border easily etc.

                I agree that it's wrong but I'm talking about common people (and lawmakers who care about) perception. Until they get burned they won't care and might not take your side like that.

                • monssooon 2 hours ago ago

                  Millions and millions of euro and dollars are being "talen" in white washimg scemes for organised crime ever year. It is a crime-business in it self.

            • buellerbueller 3 hours ago ago

              >Criminals used to speak in code, meet clandestine, use burner phones and websites were easy to shut down.

              And none of these things were ever made illegal.

              >Ordinary people do not care about e2ee.

              I am an ordinary person, and I care about the right to be secure and private in my communications. The founders of the United States put it in our Bill of Rights. Mail in America can't just be read without a warrant; it is protected by the 4th Amendment.

              • ShinyLeftPad 3 hours ago ago

                > And none of these things were ever made illegal.

                Those things are barriers that make it more difficult to be criminal. We're talking about a factor that removes those barriers and makes it easier.

                • ligne 2 hours ago ago

                  Not sure it's ever been particularly difficult to be a criminal. If anything, the tricky part has always been establishing who you can and can't trust.

                • buellerbueller 2 hours ago ago

                  What are you talking about? Thieves' cant, burner phone, clandestine meetings--these are all things that make crime easier, and none of them are illegal. We ban crime, not things that allow crime.

            • eimrine 6 hours ago ago

              How is it possible to be that level of biased, to not observe that the government is a product of mass violence?

              And e2ee/cryptography/bitcoin is just the implementation of free speech which supposed to be guaranted?

              It is like saying that killing people is OK but storing photo of oneself nudes is a crime - and keep pretending to be not idiot.

            • greenleafone7 4 hours ago ago

              "Ordinary people do not care about e2ee. Gotta read the room"

          • teiferer 9 hours ago ago

            > The idea of privacy will become associated with crime.

            The risk is there but it is not a given. The debate is not new, it's been going on for decades. It's a permanent struggle.

        • theodric 10 hours ago ago

          Respond and ask them directly if they're accusing you of a crime, or if they intend to address the point of your message rather than making libelous statements that they may later be forced to explain should they persist.

      • friendzis 11 hours ago ago

        When you think about it, the idea of a representative democracy is rooted in the technical difficulties of implementing a direct democracy: both spread of information/discussion to the masses and organizing the votes.

        In this day and age, probably with a relatively tiny investment into public access points, we could very reasonably have a technically functional direct democracy. The legislative cycle is already authenticated so there's no need to solve "authenticated anonymous vote" problem, European countries already have functional eIDAS systems to back the authentication part and the legislative systems are already to some degree digitized.

        On one hand, the problem "what if someone sells their vote" is already present and unsolved, in the shape of lobbying. What's interesting, though, that we have built entire systems to shape public opinion and entrenched them into our daily lives, which are used by corporations and politicians alike.

        This begs a question: is there such a thing as unbiased public opinion without authenticated internet access?

        inb4: direct democracy does not mean parliamentary systems could be abolished altogether, central spaces for debate would still help solve discussion exchange problems

        • DrScientist 7 hours ago ago

          You are confusing the ability to bring information to people, with the ability of people to consume it.

          As has been mentioned elsewhere on the thread - the real issue is often there are complex 2nd and third order effects, often there are devils in the details.

          I'm not saying people are not capable of consuming it, I'm saying people don't have the bandwidth.

          Direct democracy is best when it's used for very specific proposals with lots of time for debate - not every decision.

          If you use it for every decision, time poor citizens will end up at the mercy of professional story tellers.

          • friendzis 5 hours ago ago

            First, my comment is a knee jerk reaction to the idea of representative democracy falling to authoritarianism, don't take it as seriously in favor of direct democracy.

            Second, your comment hinges on an interesting hidden assumption. There's implication, that representative democracy selects for a group with inherently higher average bandwidth allocated per proposal and inherently higher average expertise to evaluate the non-immediate, higher-order effects. I'm not going to contest the idea, however, this assumption has to hold quite strictly for the concerns listed to be material.

            > If you use it for every decision, time poor citizens will end up at the mercy of professional story tellers.

            Otherwise this concern is just another side of the lobbying coin. The distinction between professional storytellers curating media in favor of certain party and convincing masses or elected representatives on merit of some law is paper thin anyway.

            • DrScientist 4 hours ago ago

              > There's implication, that representative democracy selects for a group with inherently higher average bandwidth allocated per proposal \

              Eh? It's a representatives full time job to consider these things as oppose to the general public doing a full time job and then having to consider legislation.

              The difference between lobbying for representatives versus people directly is that representatives have to answer to the people - whereas no-one loses their job as a citizen if they get persuaded by story tellers.

              ie both come down to - "it's their job"

              • friendzis 4 hours ago ago

                > The difference between lobbying for representatives versus people directly is that representatives have to answer to the people - whereas no-one loses their job as a citizen if they get persuaded by story tellers.

                I would not be so sure. What's the fundamental difference between convincing general public to vote certain way in a hypothetical direct-ish democracy and convincing that lobbied-for vote by representatives is the good one in a representative system? Quite a large portion of this full time job is already not spent nitpicking legislative initiatives

                • DrScientist 4 hours ago ago

                  With humans bandwidth is pretty much always limited - however it's clear that a representative has a higher bandwidth for politics than the average person - because it's their job ( and note they normally have a team of researchers around them as well ).

                  In terms of persuasion - if a representative votes in a way that's at odds with the people who elect them, then there is a risk of the representative losing their job.

                  If you have a small group of citizen, selected at random for a particular decision, if they are bribed/lobbied/copted - they aren't at risk from an electorate down the line.

                  Obviously given that large scale persuasion is now cheap and automatable - even in a representative democracy you might well choose to set the political weather by directly targeting the electorate.

                  Right now this is a major threat to democracy - you only need a few people skilled int he dark arts, no morals and a sackful of cash to change the political weather currently.

          • pc86 6 hours ago ago

            Do you think the average person - ~98 IQ, at most one year of college but likely none, working some sort of retail, home health, or counter food service job - is truly capable of synthesizing third-order effects of a legal proposal and how it interacts with the current environment? If you do, what about someone 10% below average? 20%? Even at 20% below average intelligence we're still talking about one out of every three people, roughly.

            I don't think it's just a bandwidth problem.

            • jodrellblank 5 hours ago ago

              If I follow your comment, then a politician who is elected based on how they look while eating a bacon sandwich[1] is better at synthesizing third-order effects of a legal proposal because they are a politician?

              (i.e. Politicians are selected from average people, often on things like appearance, charm, charisma, voice, snappiness, being less-bad than the other candidates, standing for the voter's preferred party, etc. not based on intelligence or systems thinking; so why would they be better reasoning about 3rd order effects than average people? And they are elected on short terms, so why would they be more interested in spending time trying than others?).

              [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ed_Miliband_bacon_sandwich_pho...

              • pc86 4 hours ago ago

                Why would you think I'm making that completely different argument?

                If the current scenario is bad, and someone says "we should do this other thing that would be even worse," pointing out that the other thing is worse isn't an endorsement of the current (bad) scenario.

            • DrScientist 6 hours ago ago

              A consequence of democracy means average people get a vote.

              However average people are actually pretty good at making the right moral, common sense calls, if not the technical legal detail. I suspect that's in part because they are not living in the Westminister ( or whatever your seat of power is ) bubble.

              So any system needs to blend that common sense, with specific expertise. In theory that's what a representative democracy does - however one of the failings currently is the party system ( note designed, in part, to overcome the bandwidth problem - people grouping together to give a single consistent message rather than 100's of independent ones ), where capture of the party by a few people has become too easy and some options that the majority of people want never being offered at the voting time.

              This results in an increasingly angry and volatile electorate.

              • friendzis 4 hours ago ago

                > However average people are actually pretty good at making the right moral, common sense calls, if not the technical legal detail. I suspect that's in part because they are not living in the Westminister ( or whatever your seat of power is ) bubble.

                It's easy to make decisions when you are the benefactor and the costs are born by someone else. Unless you are in a country with overall population density approaching that of an urban hub, there are high chances that the benefits afforded and costs born by the seat of power bubble versus an average person barely overlap.

                > however one of the failings currently is the party system <...> where capture of the party by a few people has become too easy and some options that the majority of people want never being offered at the voting time.

                I'd argue that the fiefdoms within parties come primarily from their corporate likeness. Since the ultimate goal of any party is to capture power and remain in power, the structures that emerge serve this goal first, everything else second.

                • DrScientist 4 hours ago ago

                  > I'd argue that the fiefdoms within parties come primarily from their corporate likeness. Since the ultimate goal of any party is to capture power and remain in power, the structures that emerge serve this goal first, everything else second.

                  If this is true, which doesn't seem that unreasonable, then the crucial factor then becomes what are the key factors in terms of staying in power - responsiveness to the electorate or raising money to persuade the electorate?

                  Ensuring the latter doesn't take over, in my view, is a top priority to ensure a working democracy - and from the outside, appears to be why the American system is now largely broken.

            • ElFitz an hour ago ago

              It’s been tried in China, in the Zeguo Township, with interesting results.

          • graemep 7 hours ago ago

            An alternative would be to select representatives by lot. It would get rid of a political class, would automatically be representative (so no arguments about whether women, minorities, whoever are fairly represented) and not select for people who want power and it would mean people have the same amount of time as those in the current system.

            • DrScientist 7 hours ago ago

              I heard this idea, or variants of it, quite a lot recently.

              Some of the examples I've seen it tried - I've seen the people setting it up trying to fix the outcome by carefully choosing the question, then providing expert advice on options scoped by the question.

              Framing of the question is a powerful tool to promote the outcome you want, and avoiding ever asking certain questions is another.

              Not saying it doesn't have it's place - you just need to be careful that the process isn't used to try and legitimise what would otherwise be unpopular policies via concentrated persuasion on a small number of people.

              • graemep 4 hours ago ago

                Did you reply to the wrong comment? The idea I just put forward does not involve questions, it involves replacing one group of people with another doing the same job.

                Framing questions is already a problem with legislation. You can frame "do you want to increase online surveillance" as "do you want to protect children" very successfully!

                • DrScientist 3 hours ago ago

                  The parent was around direct democracy - where a particular question is posed - and frequent hybrid is randomly selected people to work on a specific question.

                  If you are saying choose people at random to be an MP for 5 years ( or whatever ), then sure that's different and it would be an interesting experiment - though that would be a pretty stressful job to pitch people into at random.

                  It would be interesting to see how those random 600 people would organise to get stuff done. In the current government you have specialisation - home secretary, foreign secretary etc - you wouldn't want to keep that structure and randomly allocate roles - but if you have the 600 vote on everything then you still have a bandwidth problem.

            • j16sdiz 5 hours ago ago

              Look at how the American hate jury lottery, I doubt this would be welcomed in the state.

              It may work in some other country..

              • DrScientist 4 hours ago ago

                > It may work in some other country..

                Jury service in the UK is generally seen in a positive light ( despite having far too much hanging around ).

                I suspect the US problems could be easily fixed by forcing employers to pay you while you are doing it.

              • graemep 4 hours ago ago

                Juries are unpaid and obscure. I think most people in the UK would be delighted to sit in Parliament for the a £100k an year salary + expenses (what MP's currently get) plus a lot of prestige and the experience. It would be a pretty good thing to have on your CV!

        • remus 6 hours ago ago

          > When you think about it, the idea of a representative democracy is rooted in the technical difficulties of implementing a direct democracy: both spread of information/discussion to the masses and organizing the votes.

          I think there is more to it. A large part of democracy is delegating decision making to people with time and expertise to investigate issues more thoroughly than most individuals can or want to.

          I have some broad opinions about the environment etc. but I am by no means an expert in the details, so I am happy to delegate day to day decision making to someone with more expertise who's opinions broadly align with my own.

          I'd agree that referendums do make more sense on "issues of conscience" though, like whether to have a death penalty, voting reform etc.

        • Aeolun 8 hours ago ago

          If you make it legal to sell your vote, it’d become very obvious very quickly how much money is in politics.

        • Ouman 8 hours ago ago

          I am not sure the hard part of direct democracy was ever only the logistics of voting

        • pc86 6 hours ago ago

          Representative democracy is rooted in the idea that the average person is kind of a moron. Just look at states where it's incredibly easy to get state-wide referendums on basically anything on the ballot and you'll see the legal landscape there quickly becomes a mess.

        • SubmarineClub 5 hours ago ago

          > idea of a representative democracy is rooted in the technical difficulties of implementing a direct democracy

          In the US at least, no it is not. The founders were incredibly concerned about the ‘passions of the mob’ and deliberately built a system that they hoped would temper the excesses of the public.

          And after seeing the wacko stuff going on in California, I can’t blame them!

        • lelandbatey 10 hours ago ago

          Is there such a thing as "unbiased public opinion" at all though? The memetic effects of language and communication means propaganda and similar tools of rhetoric and leveraged communication will always work, with or without an internet. There's no "solution", only "good enoughs".

          Direct democracy is cool, but also impractical. I do not want to vote on every counties appropriations for road maintenance. So what's a level of direct democracy that's "good enough"? How do we make sure we're directly voting in things relevant to our lives? What if "relevant to our lives" is unrelated to our geographic location and is very interests based? If anyone can vote for anything, but most folks don't ever vote for most things, how do you prevent brigading of votes via coordination by groups who see that their group alone can swing what would be a small local vote whatever way they want by virtue of sheer numbers? How do you prevent trolls from going through every vote and just voting no on every "community center paper-and-ink budget" across the entire country?

          There are so many questions I have about direct democracy systems! Do you have more information?

          • AnthonyMouse 8 hours ago ago

            > I do not want to vote on every counties appropriations for road maintenance.

            The best way to do this is through a combination of subsidiarity and constitutional rights.

            You have a central government but its primary purpose is to set out and uphold fundamental rights. It essentially sets out what the local governments can't do, so you can't have ex post facto laws, censor speech, detain people without trial, try to enforce local laws on actions performed in remote jurisdictions, etc.

            In particular, the central government should not be in the business of regulating private conduct. Only the local governments do that.

            Then you don't have to be worried about appropriations for road maintenance in some other county because you don't live there. Whereas the appropriations in your county are coming out of your pocket, and aren't such a far away thing that your vote is being diluted into irrelevance, so then maybe you want to be paying some attention to that.

          • iamnothere 5 hours ago ago

            A solution is “liquid democracy”, or instantly revocable delegation of your vote. With good UX, you could build a system that allows you to have a nominal representative you trust for different types of votes, with manual override for votes you want to make yourself. It would require some procedural changes to ensure that people have time to read and debate bills.

            (This otherwise great in theory idea is mooted by the fact that remote legislative votes are a terrible idea, as security is a shitshow literally everywhere.)

          • dbspin 6 hours ago ago

            > Direct democracy is cool, but also impractical. I do not want to vote on every counties appropriations for road maintenance. So what's a level of direct democracy that's "good enough"?

            This particular question has an extremely simple answer - derived from the decades of practical development of consensus based systems in democratic spaces (art spaces, leftist political groups etc). You vote / participate in the consensus decision making of the issues that are most important to you. It's that simple. Every issue is democratically decided, and you just 'tune in' to the ones that matter to you.

            In terms of brigading / trolling are harder. In consensus institutions they're usually dealt with by limiting the amount of blocking (forcing tabling of an issue) and ensuring that voting / consensus participation is limited to those who are actively involved in the community. This is obviously far more complex on a societal level.

            Overall this requires a bigger investment of time, but you're in no way required to care about everything. Over time though, the group / institution / society, is forced to grow up. Or at least grow out of the learned helplessness that dominates contemporary representative democracy.

          • dguest 10 hours ago ago

            I think everyone can agree that having O(100M) people vote on every local initiative is absurd.

            But a lot of countries are somewhere on the "direct" vs "representative" spectrum. The US actually abnormally lacking in direct mechanisms, for example. See

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Referendums_by_country

            • tancop 10 hours ago ago

              > The US actually abnormally lacking in direct mechanisms

              only on a federal level. states like california or texas are more direct than a lot of western europe in some ways. like the fact that ballot props are binding law or sheriffs and state attorneys are elected.

            • coldtea 8 hours ago ago

              >I think everyone can agree that having O(100M) people vote on every local initiative is absurd.

              I'm one of those everyones, and I don't agree.

              Except if you mean local initiatives that don't concern 100M people, but e.g. some regional municipality. Of course then just the locals can vote, be they 100K or 1M.

              • dguest 8 hours ago ago

                Yes! I meant local issues that don't concern 100M people. Local issues that concern a few thousand people can be (and often are) resolved by direct democracy.

                I guess I could argue that putting a stop sign at a particular intersection in rural Kansas could concern me, even though I don't live in Kansas, but I think very few people would make that argument in good faith.

          • coldtea 8 hours ago ago

            >Is there such a thing as "unbiased public opinion" at all though?

            Doesn't really matter except philosophically. There's something close enough to unbiased public opinion when there are no government propaganda campaings, censorship, press owned by conglomerates, and corporate messaging.

            • TheOtherHobbes 7 hours ago ago

              In most political systems the two functions of government are rationing and ideological control for the poor and profiteering for the rich. The media provide marketing and propaganda support for both.

              It's very hard to have truly independent media.

          • xinayder 10 hours ago ago

            The Swiss succeeded in this, maybe we should look at their model and improve.

            • AnthonyMouse 7 hours ago ago

              Switzerland is a country with a total population approximately the size of the state of New Jersey. This being too centralized for most things, they then further divided that population into 26 cantons ranging in size from approximately the size of New Hampshire at the high end to "that number of people would be classified as a town rather than a city" at the low end.

              The median size looks to be around 200,000 people, so maybe start by dividing the US population into cantons of around that size and doing most of the rulemaking at that level.

          • po1nt 9 hours ago ago

            The best level of democracy is no democracy. The problem of voting for road repairs is a problem we created by democracy. We voted ourselves into a system we can't escape, just because people back in the days couldn't fully comprehend side effects of their collective decisions.

            Very few people realize that there is option to not use government cohersion as a solution to everything.

            I know this is unpopular opinion. The system is designed for this to be unpopular opinion.

            But the problem is not the democracy, but the level of power we give to the government. If the only power of government would be to pick flag colors and national anthem, no one would care about it.

            No one cares about UK having a king, because it doesn't change a thing.

            • teiferer 9 hours ago ago

              > The best level of democracy is no democracy.

              That's a quite fatal view. I'm not going to defend the shortcomings of democracy as a system or the issues all real implementations have. But democracy has a feature that is unique about it: as long as it actually is a democracy, as soon as things go a way that the people don't like, they can do something about it and change course. For better or worse, but they can. That's the main point of democracy.

              Besides, having votes or electionsor is really just a minor detail of the concept of democracy. There is much more to it, like a free conversation in society, strong independent education, journalism, justice, protection of minorities, etc. The will of the people doesn't fall from the sky or is set in stone. It's a permanent conversation which needs all the other mechanisms. If all that happens is a vote every few years, that's not at all indicative of a democracy. Neither is democracy synonymous with majority rule.

              > Very few people realize that there is option to not use government cohersion as a solution to everything.

              What is "cohersion"? There are "cohesion" and "coercion". Assuming the latter, what does this have to do with democracy? An autocracy or dictarship or whatever non-democratic system you can imagine also likely has a government, and their coercion mechanisms tend to be worse than in democracies. In a democracy you have an independent judical system that you can use against government overreach.

              • po1nt 3 hours ago ago

                >There is much more to it, like a free conversation in society, strong independent education, journalism, justice, protection of minorities, etc.

                All in theory. Otherwise we wouldn't debate this. Historically none of these traits are unique to democracy, but developed society. US had a civil war over protection of minorities even though it was considered a democracy.

                >In a democracy you have an independent judical system that you can use against government overreach.

                Which can only follow laws passed by the government. Separation of powers is not unique to democracy. Again the coercion mechanisms doesn’t matter, but the severity of it.

            • oarsinsync 9 hours ago ago

              > No one cares about UK having a king, because it doesn't change a thing.

              Which is the position the Monarchy absolutely wants you to have, and they definitely don't want you to know that they have veto power over all laws, and regularly intervene and get laws modified so that they're not included in scope.

              Meanwhile they just gave themselves a massive pay rise, at a time when government is cutting public spending in all areas.

              • ligne 4 hours ago ago

                In theory the King can veto any law he wants. In practice he couldn't without causing a monumental constitutional crisis that would probably end his reign. His unofficial ability to influence government policy is the real issue, but one that is definitely not limited to that one guy with the special blood.

              • po1nt 4 hours ago ago

                You can benefit much more as a corrupt politician, as the blame is diluted between the whole government. Single king is responsible for it's actions and we even have a word for throwing them out of the window if they misbehave.

                It's much rarer for politicians to even get into jail.

              • nephihaha 8 hours ago ago

                The BBC is monarchist to the core. A lot of people say the BBC is biased in one political direction or another, but they often forget about monarchism.

                One notable example of their privilege was when Andrew George MP dared to ask a question in parliament about the Duchy of Cornwall, only to be told he wasn't allowed to. (The Duchy of Cornwall is a kind of slush fund for the heir to throne. Charles had it before he became king. It has tax breaks, and also the ability to seize property and mine on people's land.)

            • nephihaha 8 hours ago ago

              Actually quite a few people care about the UK having a king, in the UK. In Northern Ireland, there is a considerable republican (small "r" population) for political reasons.

              The BBC promotes the monarchy heavily as it is under royal charter.

              There were significant protests at the Queen's funeral cortege and the current king's coronation. The state clamped down hard, in one case arresting someone for holding up a blank bit of paper.

              • po1nt 3 hours ago ago

                I admit UK wasn't the best example as now it's freedom of speech is maybe worse than in Russia or China. But I feel like public does not trat it as the biggest issue of the UK at the moment.

                Let's say Denmark for example.

                • nephihaha 3 hours ago ago

                  Thing is that freedom of speech was not good back when I was growing up. There were many groups that were heavily monitored by Special Branch. Some of this has been declassified now. I do not wish to downplay the atrocities of the IRA, but there certainly was another side to the Troubles which the BBC wouldn't report on fairly and tried to claim it was an internal religious conflict.

        • analog8374 4 hours ago ago

          2 ideas about direct democracy.

          Selling your vote becomes a nonissue when everybody is doing it.

          An LLM informed by a reddit-style discussion tree might be a good way to implement the policy-creating part of a direct democracy.

        • echelon 6 hours ago ago

          > When you think about it, the idea of a representative democracy is rooted in the technical difficulties of implementing a direct democracy: both spread of information/discussion to the masses and organizing the votes.

          REPLACE FED CHAIR WITH DOVE OR HAWK?

          BUILD NEW STRATEGIC BOMBERS?

          START A WAR WITH IRAN?

          VOTE NOW!

          Imagine the chaos. Imagine all the ads.

      • chii 13 hours ago ago

        Stupid things like brexit was put to a vote, but really important things such as age verification and mass surveillance are never put to any vote.

        • teiferer 9 hours ago ago

          In what way was Brexit a stupid thing? It was an extemely important decision, directly affecting everybody's life. If asking people about anything then isn't that what it should be? You might not like the outcome (I don't) but I consider the question of Brexit important.

          • ben_w 8 hours ago ago

            Analogy:

            Cancer surgery is an extremely important decision, directly affecting many people's lives.

            What happened with Brexit was a analogous a bunch of salesmen on TV saying "that mysterious ache you have, don't listen to doctors who say it's fine, call our surgical team today! It's cancer! We can fix this quickly and you'll be back to your old self within a week!" for two decades, then the country agreeing, going to surgery, and waking up to find they'd had half their liver removed, the post-surgical biopsy results said it was fine and not cancerous at all, it took 6 months to recover and they could never drink alcohol again. And the ache was still there.

            If it had been an honest "we know it will cost X, we are willing to spend this because otherwise what is the point of money", that would have been totally fair.

            Instead, problems that weren't caused by the EU were blamed on it for decades, while the benefits of membership were treated as the natural state of the world to the extent that talk of losing them was equated with "being punished".

          • epihelix 8 hours ago ago

            Should we also have a referendum on reducing the tax rate to zero? It would also be an extremely important decision, directly affecting everybody's life. If asking people about anything, then isn't that what it should be?

            Not all referenda that might win a "yes" vote are sensible to propose.

          • nextaccountic 7 hours ago ago

            It was put to vote for stupid reasons. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Causes_of_the_vote_in_favour_o...

            > The referendum was originally conceived by David Cameron as a means to defeat the anti-EU faction within his own party by having it fail.

            After that, another issue is that the leave campaign was heavily based on lies and misleading the British voters.

            Couple that with a extreme form of policy lock-in / hysteresis: you need just to form a small margin in a majority at a single point of time. After that point of time, the popular opinion doesn't matter anymore because getting back to EU isn't as easy as leaving. So the misinformation campaign need to work just once. By the time voters realize what happened, it's too late.

            This situation is a critical failure of democracy. Not just direct democracy, representative democracy can't work in a post-truth world either.

        • godwinson__4-8 13 hours ago ago
        • shevy-java 12 hours ago ago

          But Brexit was a vote, by the people. Yes, the pro-leave campaign lied to no ends, but people still made a choice on their own and the majority for leave was quite slim.

          This is very different to age sniffing here. Age sniffing is not being queried via public votum - lobbyists push it through without any resistance. It's amazing how this works.

          • graemep 7 hours ago ago

            The pro-remain campaign lied too and I would argue a great deal more. Take a look at the predictions of the immediate effect of Brexit vote (for 1017-18) on page 9 of the Treasury report: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/5a80772140f0b...

            This whole argument is why we do not have more direct democracy. The people in power and people who benefit from the status quo do not want the hoi polloi taking the "wrong" decisions. We might end up nationalising things or taxing big business effectively or all sorts of terrible things. Better to just give people the illusion of choice by letting them choose between two "neo-liberal" parties.

            • graemep 2 hours ago ago

              That should read for 2017-18

      • egorfine 9 hours ago ago

        > the evidence is that people already pretty firmly against things like chat control

        I'm not sure about that at all. All my normies friends have no problem immediately submitting their documents to any KYC service that requests it. And talking about chat control they happily parrot the propaganda points, which is something very normal given that they have no insight as we do.

        So unfortunately I believe that the laymen are all in favor of chat control.

      • Ouman 8 hours ago ago

        I agree that it is not always mass public demand for authoritarianism. Often it is more like institutional persistence plus vague moral framing

      • maccard 10 hours ago ago

        I’m not in favour of Chat Control;

        > the evidence is that people already pretty firmly against things like chat control and the will to push it through tends to come from the political circles more than popular belief it is a good idea.

        This is quite the statement. What evidence do you have that of this? Here in the UK, the equivalent bills are pretty widely supported across he board.

        > I expect that if the measure itself went to a general vote, the majority would be against it once they have to deal with a specific proposal

        This is likely true of pretty much anything, though. Imagine suggesting that people collectively fund a national road network by paying 20% of their income to the government (or whatever number your state/country/municipality chooses). All of a sudden it’s a terrible idea!

      • lopis 8 hours ago ago

        > the evidence is

        I don't believe this. I believe us more tech oriented people live in a dangerous bubble that reassures us that obviously people are against it. But that's very likely not true.

      • themaninthedark 6 hours ago ago

        I disagree, if anything the last 12 years or so have shown that there are groups on both sides of the political spectrum that are quite willing to engage and justify censorship.

        From "Muh freeze peach" to the actual government requested censorship during COVID everyone is rushing to get a new shiny stick they can use to beat their political opponents with.

      • akoboldfrying 4 hours ago ago

        > The repeated failures of authoritarianism to get to a good place are so consistent it is wild that people keep trying it.

        Lee Kuan Yew would like a word.

        The world is complicated. There may be more than one way to get to a good place, if we can even agree on what good looks like. Most people, even libertarians, think that some kind and degree of authoritarianism is beneficial in a government, we just disagree on the details.

      • gigatexal 10 hours ago ago

        But it’s not about critical thinking or governing well it’s about getting re-elected.

        So the argument will go to “think of the children” which is a guise for more control and then pretty soon we are living in the dystopian future of 1984 or the UK where the film V for Vendetta took place.

        This same kind of thinking gets idiots like Trump elected because people don’t have any sense of the commons and become single issue voters (sic). “Oh just reduce my taxes on my carried interest… reduce my taxes… I’m a xenophobe I hate immigrants let’s not do anything systematic let’s just hard close the border or the world is flat America only exists we don’t need allies or trading partners (JD Vance) … and so on”

    • cdrini 6 hours ago ago

      I think there are many arguments for and against this type of regulation. Good arguments on both sides take into account nth-order effects. But both sides have different priorities, and have different weighing of the trade-offs. Calling one side effectively "thick" isn't really taking part in the debate.

      (And cause and effect are taught pretty early on in school; not sure you need to learn "systems thinking" to understand nth-order effects.)

      What are the nth-order effects that you think are not being considered or weighted accordingly by proponents of this regulation?

      • eimrine 6 hours ago ago

        There are no good arguments for this type of regulation, but there are some very good arguments to not let kids to use proprietary software. You know, nothing is worse than a half-truth.

      • rTX5CMRXIfFG 3 hours ago ago

        Violation of rights to privacy — age verification ties an identity to the request, so if you’re surfing porn or browsing controversial threads, you could be flagged by law enforcement or the other third parties that the state might be sharing data with, such as insurance companies that might infer the wrong things about you. You could be blackmailed, too.

        And then there’s also the leakage of those data points to rival nation states, in case of a security breach.

        Plenty of bad nth order effects if you just think about it

        • thinkingtoilet 2 hours ago ago

          What right to privacy do you have online? For the record, I am fully against this but people just throw the word "right" around. In another thread here people had a "right" to Anthropic's latest model. It almost becomes a joke. You have a right not to use the internet, but if you do the government can make laws, however shitty, if they want to. Relying on "rights" as an argument fails quickly in my opinion. You have a right to buy a gun, but a lot of places require verification. You have the right to be alcohol or porn, but that requires age verification. What right do you have to go online without providing verification? If you can't provide a legal basis, come up with a better argument because yours is easily dismissed.

      • asdf88990 5 hours ago ago

        This is Whataboutism. Maybe the wolf has good reasons for leaving the stockyards gates open, it is a different perspective, yeah, but for the stock it is pretty clear good vs death.

        Now of course, no one is going to “directly” dir from these laws but so much meaning that comes with freedom will be lost, but maybe the wolfs see it under a different light.

    • ccppurcell 5 hours ago ago

      I agree with your broader point but I'm always skeptical of the claim "we should teach xyz in schools!" Because, well, choose your least favourite subject at school. A language, history or geography, mathematics perhaps. How much do you remember? The reason you don't remember is because you weren't motivated to learn, since you didn't, at the time, think it worth learning. If you think kids are champing at the bit to learn systems thinking, or how to file taxes, or law or anything else really then you are unfortunately wrong.

      • cosmic_cheese 2 hours ago ago

        To me classes being boring and forgettable has more to do with the method of teaching than the subject. Just about anything can be made interesting with the right approach, and often that approach isn’t the typical textbooks, tests, and rote memorization.

        Perhaps I’m biased, though. I learn best when provided with working practical examples and hands-on exercises that allow me to develop my own internal models. They can make a concept “click” where I’d be beating my head against a wall with traditional methods for a much longer period of time to achieve the same revelation.

      • rTX5CMRXIfFG 3 hours ago ago

        And I agree with the commenter’s well-meaning, but we are technically teaching systems theory already in schools. If you’ve had classes in any of the natural sciences, you’ve had systems thinking. If you don’t remember a whit, well then, proves your point—it’s probably not that great of an idea afterall.

        • cosmic_cheese 2 hours ago ago

          The question however is if students are ever challenged or encouraged to apply their learnings beyond the classroom and in daily life. In my experience, the answer is usually “no”.

    • chrisweekly 4 hours ago ago

      I've long held that Logic should be a part of the core high school curriculum. Understanding basic if/then propositions and a handful of axioms form a robust foundation for reasoning in any domain.

    • hellojesus an hour ago ago

      I was asking the Google llm search about why iterative games don't reach their competitive equilibrium the round after revealing the theory. In my example, it was the "guess 2/3 the average game", and I asked it why my class didn't immediately converge to zero after it was explained. The llm said people are lazy and I have autism because I couldn't identify or understand the stopping criteria used by my classmates. I'm still confused.

      • Matumio 20 minutes ago ago

        How people play those games has to do with cultural norms and expectations, not just mathematics and logic. Same for age verification.

    • ben_w 8 hours ago ago

      Having grown up through the early-ish days of the web, I'm still surprised the internet in general didn't get an 18+ age rating almost immediately.

      Though I suppose that may have something to do with households in the early days having at most one internet connected device even if they were well off, so society could get away with blaming parents for not monitoring kids' use.

      • vessenes 7 hours ago ago

        Don’t underestimate the impact of AOL - the main experience boomers and greatest generation had of the early internet was moderated and mediated. My parents were not on IRC.

    • NoPicklez 13 hours ago ago

      Well we teach people the health benefits of physical activity school but many don't continue with it.

      • onion2k 13 hours ago ago

        Sorry, this is going to be a rant. :)

        Admittedly it's a long time since I was in school, but when I was there the notion of teaching the benefits of physical activity was limited to being told to run about for some 'sport', and absolutely nothing about why that's a good idea. Everyone was expected to do the same thing with no consideration for ability, disability, or motivation. Kids were punished with detentions for refusing to endure painful exercise that they couldn't do as well as their more capable peers.

        The very obvious second order effect of poor physical education is fat unmotivated adults who don't exercise. Maybe educators need some systems thinking training too.

        • 5693802 11 hours ago ago

          I'd add that not only were we not taught about health benefits in PE classes, the punishment for non-participation was not only detention but also potentially failing the entire grade. I ended up dropping out in my first year of high school due to a culmination of similar issues. I loved and still love learning, but my school was not an environment for learning. It was an environment for teaching rigid obedience to authority, and nothing more.

          My particular favorite thing to rant about is how, on the first day, I was held in detention for the entire day and made to skip the introduction to my classes because I unknowingly wore the wrong shade of blue for the dress code. Like the middle school in the same district, the dress code required a white, red, or blue polo (FUCK YEAH AMERICA!!!!), but the shade of blue from the middle school uniforms was not allowed, something I was never aware of but instead got arbitrarily punished for along with dozens of others, with my parent being made to buy a new set of uniform shirts after school.

          It is no wonder that the US is in a state of decline given how horrid the schooling is. I can't imagine a worse environment for stifling intellectual curiosity than the one I was in.

          • Aeolun 8 hours ago ago

            That must be a joke right?

        • lopis 8 hours ago ago

          I was in school for 12 years and for 11 of those years I was told I was bad at sports. It was only in the last year of high-school that I finally had a PE teacher that actually tried to teach us that sports is about doing what we like and moving our bodies. I had top grades that year and finally learned that I liked (some) sports. Turns out I was just bad at football (soccer) which was what we were forced to do 90% of the time.

        • philipbjorge 12 hours ago ago

          It’s been 25 years since I was in school and this was my experience. Unsure if it’s changed…

        • CalRobert 12 hours ago ago

          Ironically when I was in high school I was fat and hated pe but biked about 20 minutes to school every day. Now in middle age I still bike everywhere and am in better shape than most of my peers..

          Turns out I just really really hate running.

          • HerbManic 11 hours ago ago

            Same. In my mid 40's and probably in the top 20% of my age group.

            Absolutely hate running!

    • abustamam 2 hours ago ago

      This is an excellent point. I'm self educated while my wife holds multiple degrees and a masters. Yet when she saw a news article about age verification (something I've been following for years thanks to HN) she was like "this is good" and I'm like "why" and the ensuing discussion made it clear that she didn't really think about the repercussions of age verification, just that seemingly smart people in positions of power seemed to think it was a good idea.

      And I think this is dangerous. We have smart people like my wife who would probably vote Yes on this if it came to our ballot, because the smart people who wrote the measure were able to control the narrative.

      Not that I'm so smart, mind you. I just follow HN and EFF so I'm exposed to this kind of stuff. I'd probably be blind to such things outside of the tech world. I'd love to say that I'd think of nth order effects when at the ballot but honestly maybe I won't.

    • Ouman 8 hours ago ago

      A lot of bad tech policy seems to come from judging a proposal only by its stated intent

      • technol0gic 5 hours ago ago

        carefully crafted stated intent

    • raxxorraxor 7 hours ago ago

      No, not everyone exploits that. But those that reject these controls are often ridiculed because the thought about any side effect is too alien.

      Yet I don't think age verification will work with national IDs for that matter. I generally use social media sites that won't implement it.

      But yes, the normal insta/tiktok user will be affected and not think too much about it. Others will have true freedom of speech.

      • petcat 7 hours ago ago

        > I generally use social media sites that won't implement it.

        Which social media sites won't implement it?

        • raxxorraxor 6 hours ago ago

          Most of them are more insignificant than Twitter, Insta, TikTok. And while they do employ advertising here and there, profit is only interesting for keeping up with server costs.

    • caseysoftware 5 hours ago ago

      > "If we taught systems thinking in schools"

      In the US, the public school system can barely teach basic reading and math. And the teachers don't appear to understand 2nd or 3rd order thinking themselves so therefore are unlikely to be able to teach it.

      Teaching systems thinking may be an effective solution but it needs an effective delivery system to test it.

      • criddell 3 hours ago ago

        Have you talked to any high school students or teachers lately? The ones I have (via my kids) are all articulate, thoughtful, and kind. It gives me a lot of hope for the future.

        • hattmall 2 hours ago ago

          I mean, not surprisingly, this is entirely geographic and system dependent. Do your high school teachers (or elementary) have to wear body cameras, practice administering narcan, and how to clear the chamber of a discovered gun, or do they get to 3D print parts for their classroom and go on field trips?

          • criddell an hour ago ago

            It's the outliers that are geographic and system dependent. Rank the schools and exclude outliers at both extremes. The remaining schools aren't filled with teachers acting like prison guards watching over illiterate students.

    • order-matters 3 hours ago ago

      most people simply dont care to control for higher order effects. they enjoy doing things on principle and then dealing with the effects seperately.

      the principle of protecting children is strong. the solution of verification, no matter how poorly implemented, cannot be struck down while people are interested in persuing the principle it claims to represent.

      the only other way around it is to come up with another solution that supports the principle and hope it gains more traction. but when the powers at be putting forth the verification may have ulterior motives to begin with, alternative solutions have a way of losing traction

    • afiori 2 hours ago ago

      Well people that have been hearing of the slippery slope fallacy their whole life might end up biased against such an approach

    • hogehoge51 9 hours ago ago

      If we taught systems thinking in any educational setting, and it took hold for a significant portion of the population, we would have already transcended into immortal thinking energy beings and age verification debates would be irrelevant....

    • TomasBM 7 hours ago ago

      Unfortunately, I don't think systems thinking alone would help much.

      One could present the case in favor of Internet age verification to the nth-order effects, while downplaying the effects in the case against.

      So, in addition to presenting the cases with foreseeable effects, we need ways to compare the impact of worst-case scenarios in the two cases, and make a decision or compromise based on that.

      • intended 5 hours ago ago

        Concur.

        Systems thinking is one thing. One sided systems thinking is another.

        If you disregard the challenges kids and their parents, or adults as a whole, are facing with just social media, you can easily make a case against age verification.

        Yet, the whole reason we are at this juncture, is because there are actual injuries being felt by people. Not because privacy isn’t valued or hasn’t been defended regularly.

    • wartywhoa23 2 hours ago ago

      > If we taught systems thinking in schools ...

      This plus methods of narrative steering and psychological manipulation in general.

      Though I can't see this happenning while the transnational cartel is still at the helm.

    • pasquinelli 4 hours ago ago

      it's not that they're bad at logic in general, it's that the "protecting the children" part gets them emotionally reactive, which bypasses logic. same thing happens when you tell a man who's emotionally reactive about his masculinity that soy will give him tits, just those words are enough to shut down his thinking.

      people are plenty good at systems thinking. if we made them better at it, their emotional immaturity would still bypass it.

    • bluegatty 13 hours ago ago

      No, we have any number of social constructs around 'age and responsibility' - driving, alcohol, pubs, porn, excessive violence and so much more.

      It's bereft to suggest that we wouldn't nominally have those in the digital world.

      And, people are concerned about nth order effects, it's a huge point of debate.

      Yes - there is a huge slippery slope argument to be made, but it's an argument ... to be made. There are all sorts of ways of doing this.

      • dv_dt 12 hours ago ago

        Social media age verification is like none of those - social media is the modern public square and age verification is asking everybody to show their papers before participating in free speech in the public. It will have a chilling effect on free speech and will be a tool for authoritarian control

        • gherkinnn 10 hours ago ago

          Social media, as we have it today, has nothing to do with a public square.

          A public square does not have trolls and bots from across the globe teleporting in and out. A public square does not amplify the most divisive comments and drown out your friends's holiday photos because the former makes the ad space more profitable.

        • simondotau 12 hours ago ago

          A poor analogy.

          The public square has never been properly anonymous. If you start saying things which contravene laws or the rights of others, the police have been able to capture you and unmask your identity, if concealed.

          • dv_dt 12 hours ago ago

            So the solution for criminals in the public is for everybody to show their papers walking into a public square? It is not, we have requirements for police process like warrants and a process for determining the requirements for urgent conditions of arrest.

            • bluegatty 12 hours ago ago

              No, obviously not, and this is a completely glib argument.

              Who is suggesting people 'show their papers' to go into a public square?

              Literally nobody.

              It really demonstrates how bad the analogy is - so much so that it's not even analogy.

              The 'social controls' on the 'public square' are limited by a few laws (aka directed violence) but apart from that you can say as you like, kids can as well - it's where parents can be parents.

              And - don't have problem with kids in the public square.

              We have a very real problem with kids on social media, verifiable, scientific.

              Kids are depressed, distracted, they bully each other, they're creeped on, and they're not yet in the business having serious discussions about 'Mein Kampf' - they're kids.

              Everything in kids lives is introduced in an 'age appropriate' fashion - literally everything.

              Given the toxicity of social media, it's a 'primary concern' for one of those gated things.

              This is not even an argument - the only argument is 'the slippery slope'.

              • dv_dt 11 hours ago ago

                The science for age bans on social media is weak at best. There were pretty much terrible studies done during Covid and did not attribute all sorts of uncertainty going on at the same time.

                If the point were to improve on the mental health of kids there are countless underfunded public programs. Especially in the US, social support programs like food, healthcare basic and mental, actual physical public spaces for kids, arts in curriculum, etc.

                • simondotau 11 hours ago ago

                  For what it’s worth, as an Australian, and as the operator of an online community, I unreservedly approve of the social media ban enforced by our government.

                  Conversely, I don’t agree with the way some other countries are going about it. Especially the UK with the abysmal way they have physically policed online speech by adults. Incredibly sad to see police prioritise non-violent “speech crimes” because they’re too scaredy-cat to tackle actual violent crime.

                  There is a reasonable answer to be found, if we're willing to be inventive. It shouldn’t be beyond the imagination of cryptography experts to design a system where only governments can issue an age identification certificate, which individuals can use to generate verifiable proof of age tokens. But where the tokens can’t be used by the government to identify the individual.

                • fyredge 11 hours ago ago

                  This is hauntingly reminiscent of the gun law argument in US:

                  The government shouldn't infringe on my right to bear arms, mass shooting is a mental health issue anyways, oh but we can't really fund mental health support because my tax shouldn't go towards helping those who put themselves in that situation. Que the same argument for privacy on the internet.

                  You can't have your cake and eat it too. If you can't trust the government, then work towards healing it, restructuring it, overhauling it. Subverting the government is such antisocial behaviour, very criminal like.

            • simondotau 11 hours ago ago

              If that’s how you interpreted my post, I can only hypothesis that you didn’t read it. I can’t think of another explanation.

              I actually like the traditional public square model: you have anonymity most of the time, but it’s not some absolute shield you can abuse to be an obnoxious prick. The police can intervene, but the intervention happens in the public square too.

          • hparadiz 12 hours ago ago

            People publish entire books anonymously.

            • simondotau 11 hours ago ago

              Yes, and plenty of people have spoken in the public square anonymously too, because the police didn't feel the need to arrest them.

              Publishing a book anonymously in the public square still means someone has to physically manufacture it, distribute it, convince you to read it, and pay for all of this. All these steps are subject to interdiction by the police.

        • pavlov 12 hours ago ago

          Was there ever a public square where children could participate anonymously among adults? (I’m imagining three Dickensian urchins in a trench coat giving a speech in Hyde Park.)

        • TFNA 10 hours ago ago

          The public square was in communities small enough where townspeople knew each other, and so speech was not anonymous besides those who penned (but not those who distributed) unattributed pamphlets. Moreover, if the speech you were pronouncing was beyond the pale of the community’s values, you could face retribution for it, whether judicial or extra-judicial like tarring and feathering. Even in the nascent USA whose political elite was high on Lockean ideas of natural rights and freedom of speech, the public square was never a free-for-all.

          • raxxorraxor 6 hours ago ago

            My supposedly modern government has problems with all kinds of speech and this is a lazy excuse. Government needs really hard boundaries and not being able to identify someone who perhaps said something controversial is a pretty good one.

            You are right about the public square. That is pretty much what governments want to enforce. To silence everyone not in line, like in medieval towns.

        • Nursie 12 hours ago ago

          Social media as it has become now is a shitshow where a minority of angry and/or disingenuous posters dominate discourse.

          Twitter (X) was never the public square, and now it's little more than a playground for propagandists. The rest of us do well to ignore it, and it seems that even the 'legacy' media are starting to realise the days of breathlessly reporting on tweet-storms weren't great for anyone.

          • hparadiz 12 hours ago ago

            In a recent survey of under sixteen year olds in a place where an under sixteen social media ban exists asked how many of them used social media found that 80% were still using it. Do you actually need a login to consume social media? The answer to that is no. You can doom scroll all you want on sites like Reddit with no account whatsoever.

        • bluegatty 12 hours ago ago

          Your local library has age and ID requirements.

          Your local 'town square' has 'some rules'.

          Parents are entirely able to overcome any of this if they so choose - including feeding their kids alcohol, guns etc. - and so the freedom does materially exist.

          Social Media isn't a place for free expression - it's mostly toxic - like exposing your children to the most vile, inauthentic people.

          The more genteel places, frankly, won't have much in the way of age restrictions.

          Entire nations are banning social media for kids because it's just not healthy - the teachers want it, the parents want it, the data seems to support it.

          I think you're right to be (very concerned) but this is a necessary discussion. As a teacher.

          • Telaneo 11 hours ago ago

            > Your local library has age and ID requirements.

            It literally doesn't (at least not if I don't intend to borrow a book and take it home; if I stay there and read, I can do so without any ID. I only need ID to get a library card, and I don't need that to enter and read a book).

            • bluegatty 11 hours ago ago

              It literally does - and you just admitted it.

              The point is that 'even the local library' enacts rules and social conventions - not that they're exhaustively and acutely enforced in all corners.

              No 4chan section in the library?

              You might wonder why it doesn't have vast array of avant guard adult content, porn or art with really aggressive themes and people calling each other the n-word?

              In society we have 'age related' conventions all over the place ... including your Library.

              This is the absolute worst of HN, where people dissolve into Reddit-like discussions of bad meatphors and totally out of context hair splitting.

              I just can't believe anyone here has any relationship with the reality of children, teaching or parenting whatsoever. It's the same argument made by the 'drugs should be legal and accessible' crowd - completely oblivious to the instantaneous massive health epidemic we'd have with opioids and fentanyl, or the 'anti vaxer' crowd - narrow ideological arguments about expression disconnected from any kind of reality or nuance.

              There's a variation of social media that will be fine for the kids, they can be exposed to more into their late teens. Parents that want to opt out, will de facto be allowed to - and there is always a slippery slope with every law.

              • Telaneo 10 hours ago ago

                > It literally does - and you just admitted it.

                I can be 9 years old and go to the library and read any book they have without showing ID. Whatever your point is, it escapes me.

                > The point is that 'even the local library' enacts rules and social conventions - not that they're exhaustively and acutely enforced in all corners.

                Then let us do the same thing on the internet. Age verification is not that (at least in the forms being pushed).

                > No 4chan section in the library?

                No, but there are 4chan-style books I can read there. Anything that isn't outright illegal (Anarchist's cookbook) is pretty darn available there.

                > You might wonder why it doesn't have vast array of avant guard adult content, porn or art with really aggressive themes and people calling each other the n-word?

                That'd be because it does have books like that. Your point continues to escape me. Maybe my library is really pushing whatever limits.

                > I just can't believe anyone here has any relationship with the reality of children, teaching or parenting whatsoever

                I've literally been an assistant teacher for about a year. You probably won't believe me though.

                > It's the same argument made by the 'drugs should be legal and accessible' crowd

                Who I agree with! Funny how that works!

                > completely oblivious to the instantaneous massive health epidemic we'd have with opioids and fentanyl

                Imagine a world where we can have that regulated, so people know what they're taking, and can see a doctor to get help without getting the police on their back, rather than the unregulated shitshow we have now.

                > or the 'anti vaxer' crowd - narrow ideological arguments about expression disconnected from any kind of reality or nuance.

                This comparison escapes me too. Anti-vax started with (or at least got a massive growth boost by) Andrew Wakefield, whose paper was based on science so bad and whose research was so heinous he's no longer a doctor. If the 'drugs should be legal and accessible' stance is based on science that bad, I'd love to see it.

                • bluegatty 8 hours ago ago

                  "Then let us do the same thing on the internet. Age verification is not that (at least in the forms being pushed)."

                  So you prefer the internet be censored to be as civil as the library?

                  'Age appropriate' content is the easiest and most obvious way to do this, particularly because of the effects of social media on young minds.

                  ---

                  "No, but there are 4chan-style books I can read there." (at the library)

                  Nonsense.

                  This is 4Chan [1] , and your library does not contain stuff like this.

                  ---

                  "that'd be because it does have books like that."

                  Again - no - your library contains books in 'avant gard' art that you think is 'avant gard', but it's in the civil sense.

                  Your library does not contain books or films showing 'rape voyeurism'.

                  ---

                  "Imagine a world where we can have that regulated, so people know what they're taking,"

                  They do! It's right on the bottle! In exact quantities and 'high quality ingredients'!

                  It's made by PURDUE PHARMA, dispensed by doctors, and has caused a vicious national epidemic affecting millions of lives - and is the leading cause of death for ages 18-45 !!

                  It's truly the litmus test of 'common sense' vs. 'naive ideology'

                  The 'starting point' for 'harm reduction' is a reasonable reaction to ugly, ham fisted authoritarian 'throw them all in jail' traditional approaches - especially those milder things like 'marijuana' etc.

                  But in the end 'Harm Reduction' is actually a 'Radical Religious Progressive Cult of Ideology' rooted in the belief that 'Policing' and 'Patriarchy' the the 'Justice System' are the source of all harms, completely oblivious to basic human behaviour, mixed in with a bunch of Libertarian nonsense.

                  It's not unreasonable to posit that in 'some cases' an addict can have 'controlled access' to a substance 'without judgment' to help them stabilize, and find a path off of heroin on etc.

                  This is the 'polite' argument, but it's completely effete.

                  In reality that those cases are surprisingly rare, clinical, and extremely expensive to administer and control.

                  Reality is 'the alley full of zombies'.

                  Drugs kill substantially more people than guns - in Canada guns kill about 300 vs 7000 overdose deaths / year.

                  That's ballpark 40K-80K non-lethal overdoses per year. Every human who has had an 'overdose' is in a very distressed state - their lives may never recover. Each of them has family members who are in distress.

                  The 'world you are imagining' (where Fentanyl is available over the counter in 'whatever dose') is 5-10% of of the population hospitalized for opioid related problems within 6 months, and a collapse of the medical and law enforcement systems, not to mention all of the other knock on effects aka huge spike in small crime, loss of workforce, taxation, child welfare problems etc..

                  Singapore, which takes a very aggressive and authoritarian 'zero tolerance' approach has less than 1% of the deaths.

                  Less than 1%.

                  99% percent of those dying of overdose, ostensibly are dying because we refuse to actually take action.

                  And - because they have such a dramatically lower rate of addiction they can afford full rehab for the remaining actual addicts - this is the most damning evidence against the 'harm reduction' approach: it engenders so many addicts that even as 'rich nations' , we can't afford to help, whereas if we could 'contain the problem', we could afford to focus more on actual addicts.

                  The 'world you need to imagine' is one where we actually are able to restrict fentanyl, definitely restrict doctors from handing out entire bottles, and are able to afford actual rehab for those how need it.

                  Addiction is a social disease: it's a learned behaviour transmitted from one person to another. The most dangerous thing to society, is not a 'guy with a gun' - it's a fentanyl addict who will teach or induce someone around them into 'walking death'. That form of 'transmission' is actually more dangerous than COVID.

                  We're not going to expose our kids to free drugs, or guns, or porn, or vodka, and neither will our kids not use Social Media until they're old enough to be properly socialized to ingest and understand the impact of it.

                  Then they grow to be adults and make their own decisions, watch porn ... drink vodka ... just not fentanyl. That's it.

                  ---

                  (Warning, this is a 4-chan like to crude content - only to make a point about what 4chan is)

                  [1] https://boards.4chan.org/soc/thread/35155514/kik-dick-pic-th...

                  • Telaneo 7 hours ago ago

                    > So you prefer the internet be censored to be as civil as the library?

                    Given that I can find books that aren't civil there, sure.

                    > This is 4Chan [1] , and your library does not contain stuff like this.

                    Finding dick pics at my local library isn't hard, if you know where to look. Ditto 4chan.

                    > Your library does not contain books or films showing 'rape voyeurism'.

                    That'd be because it's illegal. Hence my comment about that.

                    > It's made by PURDUE PHARMA, dispensed by doctors, and has caused a vicious national epidemic affecting millions of lives - and is the leading cause of death for ages 18-45 !!

                    I'm glad I don't live in the US, where doctors are lobbied (this doesn't seem like the right word, but you get the idea) to push opiates or whatever other drugs on patients, only to then get away with it. Preventing things like that is also included in 'a world where we can have that regulated'. For instance:

                    > The 'world you need to imagine' is one where we actually are able to restrict fentanyl, definitely restrict doctors from handing out entire bottles, and are able to afford actual rehab for those how need it.

                    I agree we should restrict doctors from pushing opioids! And rehab should be state sponsored! That too is harm reduction.

                    > Singapore, which takes a very aggressive and authoritarian 'zero tolerance' approach has less than 1% of the deaths.

                    Ah, yes, sterile Singapore. I guess 30 years in prison is better than dying.

                    I'll refrain from commenting on the rest of your post. Have a good day. I know I won't.

          • dv_dt 12 hours ago ago

            My local librarian did not restrict my books to the kids section when I was a kid. Also librarians have fought civil legal battles to keep reading activities anonymous. Libraries are unlike the restrictions and risks of the proposed legislation being discussed for social media

            • bluegatty 11 hours ago ago

              ?

              --> Your local library fought for your right to read literature of some kind.

              ---> They did not fight for your right to gang up on others and call them the n-word, to spread lies and slander about people, to harass children and expose them to creeps and pedophiles, to inundate children with hyper-targeted advertising, or 'Andrew Tate 'how to beat women' seminars'.

              Nobody is pushing for a ban on social media so that the kids will be stopped from reading 'Judy Bloom' stories about a girl's 'first period'.

              It's disingenuous to suggest that this has anything to do with the causes your librarians stand for.

              Literally the opposite - your librarians are creating essentially 'safe spaces' for kids so they can read and be civil.

              • ligne 2 hours ago ago

                The past few years have seen attempts to get The Diary of Anne Frank pulled from libraries, along with any mention of LGBT or Black people. What makes you think that this will be used to protect kids from racial, sexual and misogynistic abuse, let alone predatory businesses?

              • dv_dt 10 hours ago ago

                Im not sure of your direction as the age verification legislation also does not address this:

                | They did not fight for your right to gang up on others and call them the n-word, to spread lies and slander about people, to harass children and expose them to creeps and pedophiles, to inundate children with hyper-targeted advertising, or 'Andrew Tate 'how to beat women' seminars'.

                I think existing laws should be engaged to address pedophiles and incitement of violence in public spaces and social media - no new legislation is really needed. Barring potential victims from a place instead of prosecuting the noxious behavior from the public place seems like an odd approach indeed.

                As for libraries - libraries are curated spaces of freedom that are obviously under assault by right wing parties to ban books that support cultural and personal acceptance for other societies as well as out groups like lgbt information, and even basic women's health information. The problem for authoritarians is libraries are too free - not that they are "curated".

    • stymaar 12 hours ago ago

      “Age verification” isn't a problem in itself, the problem is how it's done. They could issue a physical id card with a cryptographic chip and do the age verification in a zero-knowledge fashion and it would be perfectly fine.

      The problem is the lack of thinking about the solution and just handwaving “age verification” as a political posture, which is why we end up with half-baked systems.

      • ball_of_lint 11 hours ago ago

        I strongly disagree.

        You're framing this as some desirable thing that could be good except that a bad implementation erodes privacy. That's wrong at every step. These bills originate from big tech such as Meta that literally profit from collecting as much personal info from you as possible. https://old.reddit.com/r/LinusTechTips/comments/1rsn1tm/it_a...

        But even beyond their tainted origins, you can't implement your way out of something badly formed in the first place. You handwave "zero knowledge" but that doesn't do for your privacy what you're hoping it will. That id card will still have a serial number and CCTV of you purchasing it and you will de facto end up trusting some government binary blob to implement this cryptography correctly without backdoors. Snowden was a decade ago. This will have a backdoor. This will be used for surveillance, tomorrow even if by some miracle not today.

        And finally, this makes the internet worse. There will be a section of people who are, for one reason or another, not able to pass this bar. Much of the goodness of the internet comes from being able to interact with anyone on it.

        • intended 5 hours ago ago

          That Reddit post is feeding more conspiracy thinking than helping.

          The facts listed also match the actions of a firm aiming to ensure that the burden of verification does not fall on it, for a legislative process that they know is coming.

          Red flag after red flag has been raised on child outcomes and social media, for a decade.

          The internet is great for people here on HN, who know enough to avoid getting screwed.

          The internet is a grotesque horror show for anyone who is stuck on the wrong side of a customer support system. Plus, most people here are thinking from the perspective of someone in the US or EU. They actually get better support than the rest of the world gets.

          Let me be clear - I hate that we are at this juncture. However willful ignorance of the harms being inflicted on users is palliative care for our feelings. It means that one day, there is going to be a confrontation between a techie advocating for privacy and the people whose lives are being upended by tech.

          Privacy has to be protected effectively, which means acknowledging the hurt and providing solutions for that.

          • MaKey 4 hours ago ago

            How did you come to the conclusion that advocating for privacy is at odds with protecting users? I'd argue the opposite is true.

            • intended 4 hours ago ago

              Because the entire reason we are here is due to the fact that harms to kids are on the other end of the scale.

              There is no “win” here, which doesn’t have the issue coming back.

              Dismissing the harms only makes privacy advocacy irrelevant to voters.

              Defending privacy effectively means plugging the root cause it is being encroached.

              This is being articulated as a defense of privacy when it originates from social media harms to kids.

              • MaKey 3 hours ago ago

                > Because the entire reason we are here is due to the fact that harms to kids are on the other end of the scale.

                If that's a "fact", where is the proof? What harms are there that can only be addressed with age verification and not in any other way?

                > Dismissing the harms [...]

                This is a strawman you've created.

                > Defending privacy effectively means plugging the root cause it is being encroached.

                Defending privacy means defending privacy, not submitting to nefarious interests and well-meaning but misled followers.

                > This is being articulated as a defense of privacy when it originates from social media harms to kids.

                Social media can be dangerous to kids, I don't see anyone disputing that. The dispute is around the solution to this issue.

                • intended an hour ago ago

                  ? > If that's a "fact", where is the proof? What harms are there that can only be addressed with age verification and not in any other way?

                  > Social media can be dangerous to kids, I don't see anyone disputing that. The dispute is around the solution to this issue.

                  It may not be what you intend, but that is how the dispute is going to be rendered.

                  I have no dispute with you over the conclusion of your comment. The meat and potatoes is in the shape of the solution.

      • vaylian 10 hours ago ago

        People fall through the cracks of the system. You suddenly can't use a digital service any more, because it requires you to use a specific technology that you can't obtain, even though you are old enough. You might be a refugee, you might be someone with special characters in their name or you might be someone from a country that simply doesn't provide recognized digital certifications. Or you might want to run a rooted operating system on your phone or computer.

      • MaKey 11 hours ago ago

        This assumes good faith, which doesn't match reality. It's about control, not protecting children.

        Also age verification is still a problem in itself. Given your idea of a physical card, kids will find a way to use the card of their parents. Even if the card couldn't be misused by others - you give platforms the knowledge of whom is a minor, which means they can be targeted better.

        • jonathanstrange 10 hours ago ago

          Kids will simply find a way to circumvent it without any extra steps. To make age verification useful for protecting kids, you'd need to lock down every software on every operating system and put it under tight government control. We're talking about things like every programming language with a networking library, wget, curl, every web browser that was ever developed, etc.

          All kinds of tools and software would need to be locked down or criminalized. Otherwise, some smart kid is guaranteed to get around the restriction and give that method to others, and if it's at school on a USB stick.

          • stymaar 9 hours ago ago

            > Kids will simply find a way to circumvent it without any extra steps.

            This is just an argument against any regulation whatsoever. Yes, some people will find ways to do illegal stuff, but that doesn't mean forbidding stuff is useless. For instance gangs members always find a way to get access to weapons even in countries where firearms is regulated, but there are still pretty much zero mass slaughter in schools in these countries.

            > To make age verification useful for protecting kids, you'd need to lock down every software on every operating system and put it under tight government control.

            No! This should never be implemented at the software or OS level in the first place. You should be handed a chip card that you can use for that purpose, like how the bank rent you a credit card. Any other implementation is a bad one, and should be fought.

            But by fighting the very idea of age verification instead, an idea that pretty much nobody else in the society has issues with when it comes to voting rights, driving rights, or alcohol consumption, you are just favoring these poor implementations by moving the debate on a ground you can't win.

            > Otherwise, some smart kid is guaranteed to get around the restriction and give that method to others,

            You should really read that “The optimal amount of fraud is non zero” blog post I linked above.

            • raxxorraxor 7 hours ago ago

              Sorry, I don't want to involve the government in anything when I just want to communicate. It is a pretty simple request and it is not comparable to anything that can endanger others directly.

              You don't need government ID to talk to people and share info. You don't need government ID to take a dump.

              Also the criticism of the article is just ignored while it is a very likely development and lack of imagination isn't an excuse.

              Even today government in the EU are already implementing mass surveillance, even by third parties.

              Verification wasn't needed in the past, it won't be needed in the future.

              Requiring an internet ID is the the opinion of a marginalised minority that has difficulties with technology. Aside from those that are advertisers of course.

              • intended 5 hours ago ago

                You spoke yourself and the status quo.

                Parents are speaking for their kids in a group and against the status quo. The status quo is not working for them.

                • iamnothere 5 hours ago ago

                  “Parents” are not a monolith. Your group will lose this war. Any temporary wins will be worked around and kids will probably lead the charge.

                  • intended 4 hours ago ago

                    My “group” is not what you think it is.

                    I have been beating on this drum to avoid this situation for far longer than it has been the topic of interest on HN for the past few months.

                    We are here, because difficult conversations were avoided and action which could be taken to stop this from metastizing came in the way of growth.

                    The “parents” win just by having the laws passed, because it makes it clear what guard rails society expects to have in place for internet use.

                    If you want, I could give you stories of how KYC rules are not followed in India, enabling fraud. How certain rules in the DSA are toothless, resulting in reduced compliance.

                    Privacy is going to lose. Correction, it is losing, because the people who think they are defending it don’t understand that the forces at play have changed.

                    • iamnothere 4 hours ago ago

                      Privacy as we wanted, anonymity on the clearnet, is losing, I agree. The next generation of privacy, taking your shit offline, is winning. The step beyond, fully private networks, is in its infancy, but we’ll get there.

                • raxxorraxor 4 hours ago ago

                  Nope, that isn't true. Petitions and opinion polls break records with rejecting such proposals.

            • jonathanstrange 8 hours ago ago

              First of all, the sane chip card design will not take place. That's virtually guaranteed. As a closely related example, banks all over the world have moved away from this design to merely trust the (nonexistent) security of mobile phones. Why? Costs and convenience.

              Second, if you hand over a chip card, you still need to lock down and tightly control every executable on every machine. How else would you guarantee that kids cannot access content the government deems unsuitable for them?

              Third, I still haven't seen a coherent argument why parents shouldn't be in charge of what content their children are allowed to consume. I'm not at all against governments providing free parental control software, for example, or voluntary industry standards similar to the movie ratings.

              Finally, "protecting the children" is obviously a pretense. The sole purpose of the push for this is for governments to get the foot in the door of operating systems they currently can't control well. It's the starting point for a surveillance infrastructure: age verification -> digital ID verification -> tracking who said what and handing the data over to intelligence and law enforcement.

              • stymaar 7 hours ago ago

                > First of all, the sane chip card design will not take place. That's virtually guaranteed. As a closely related example, banks all over the world have moved away from this design to merely trust the (nonexistent) security of mobile phones. Why? Costs and convenience.

                Businesses are always going to favor the cheapest options, but that's why regulation exist.

                > Second, if you hand over a chip card, you still need to lock down and tightly control every executable on every machine. How else would you guarantee that kids cannot access content the government deems unsuitable for them?

                You don't need to guarantee that. It's like saying you can't have an alcohol consumption ban on teenagers without spying on them all the time. It's technically true but it doesn't matter: having teenagers consume way less booze due to the rules than they would without it, and that's fine for most people, societies don't need to enforce an absolute 100% ban of things for bans to deliver the expected outcome.

                > Third, I still haven't seen a coherent argument why parents shouldn't be in charge of what content their children are allowed to consume.

                It's much less about what their children are allowed to consume, but what are businesses allowed to sell to their children. It's exactly like alcohol restrictions: the government don't raid houses to check if parents are letting child drink whine and beer at home, but it aggressively enforces that bars don't sell booze to teenagers.

                > Finally, "protecting the children" is obviously a pretense.

                Not from the electors. Most people are favorable to these things, and that's why these laws are voted. Obviously intelligence agencies are always trying to get access to more data whenever they can, but that's not the reason why these laws are voted, and the representatives routinely could vote for a version of that which doesn't serve any intelligence purpose.

                • jonathanstrange 22 minutes ago ago

                  The world you describe is not plausible from a technical perspective. Any kid who wants to will be able to download a tool that will enable them to surf the net like an adult. It will be as common as our access to cracked C64 games during the 1980s. The only thing to limit this in any reasonable sense is to crack down hard on all operating systems and network software.

                  At the very least, you will need to make sure that no child can install Linux. Otherwise, why wouldn't they? Most kids aren't stupid and want to know what their braindead parents are doing on the internet.

                  I really believe it's dangerously naive to believe this is about the children. It's quite obvious why suddenly ominous entities are shilling for age verification, digital IDs, digital wallets, and so on (more is to come). Countries in the EU used to get valuable SIGINT from the US that prevented many serious crimes. They still get it but now they've realized that the US might not always remain aligned with them and panic because they have almost no access to modern operating systems except for buying 0-day exploits on shady black markets. They desperately need to get their foot in the door to get the right surveillance infrastructure going. At the same time, politicians are rightly worried about the influence of bots on elections.

                  These are the principal reason why governments are suddenly pushing for this. If this was about the children, they'd have done it 30 years earlier. Until very recently, this discussion didn't even exist. It's manufactured.

          • iamnothere 5 hours ago ago

            The same people want to require licensing before you can publish software, if you look deep enough in these threads.

            • account42 5 hours ago ago

              That's already the case on iOS, Android and even macOS and Windows if you don't want your users to see scary warnings. Of course like many instancing this licensing boils down to paying some company.

              • iamnothere 5 hours ago ago

                But that’s not (yet) a government license. I’ve seen people unironically advocating for a full professional licensing regime with required exams, fees, insurance requirements, and the like.

        • stymaar 11 hours ago ago

          > This assumes good faith, which doesn't match reality. It's about control, not protecting children.

          Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.

          > Given your idea of a physical card, kids will find a way to use the card of their parents.

          Sure there are kids who have access to their parents credit card with the PIN, but how frequent is that? In every system, fraud will exist, but that doesn't mean the system is worthless. “The optimal amount of fraud is non-zero”: https://www.bitsaboutmoney.com/archive/optimal-amount-of-fra...

          • ball_of_lint 10 hours ago ago

            I linked it in my direct reply, but - we don't need to guess at why these bills are being introduced or who by. We have evidence. It's malice. https://old.reddit.com/r/LinusTechTips/comments/1rsn1tm/it_a...

          • applfanboysbgon 11 hours ago ago

            > “Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.”

            This is not an argument, it's just a stupid quip. And I would sooner suggest that you "never attribute to stupidity that which is adequately explained by malice". Humans are overwhelmingly selfish and more than willing to harm others to serve themselves.

            • Telaneo 10 hours ago ago

              Given the amount of malice in the world, that's not even an unreasonable statement. Even more so if you agree that being in a position of power while not having the expertise needed to fulfil it is itself malicious.

              The traditional quip works well on small-scale stuff, but if there's loads of money or power to be gained, malice and greed tends to be fairly prevalent.

      • nly 9 hours ago ago

        But to be effective you need to prove that the person presenting the ID is the person the ID belongs to.

        In person that falls to a human being, and it's an easy and intuitive task that takes seconds.

        On the internet this involves some kind of video recording being sent to some agency somewhere being paid a fee, who may later be asked to prove the efficacy of their service. This agency needs a digital copy of the photo from your ID for matching purposes. They'll be tempted to store this for auditing purposes... they'll also be tempted to store correlation IDs etc if the architecture allows.

        The issue is trust. You just can't trust these first and third parties not to collaborate for commercial gain or at government demand or request.

        And ultimately you're still exchanging verification at registration for a shareable credentials: I could use my ID to sign up to pornhub premium and then sell the username and password to a 16 year old if I wished, just like those buying alcohol can go and give it to the underage. A black market for digital credentials is even easier to establish than material goods

        • stymaar 9 hours ago ago

          > On the internet this involves some kind of video recording being sent to some agency somewhere being paid a fee, who may later be asked to prove the efficacy of their service. This agency needs a digital copy of the photo from your ID for matching purposes.

          That's why I'm talking about an “Id card” using Zero-knowledge proofs in a cryptographic chip, not using a paper ID with your picture on top…

          • nly 9 hours ago ago

            Doesn't matter!

            You still need to send a digital image from the id, signed by an authority, saying "this person is 18"

            You then still need a trusted ID service or algorithm to capture an image of the user _at the time of use_ to compare that to.

            Just having access to your digital ID credentials proves nothing

            The zero knowledge proof only helps prevent tracking between the ID service and the website you're logging into. This is valuable but requires standardisation and client side support, which doesn't exist.

            All the time the client side is implemented by JavaScript served from the server side you're just trusting these parties to behave and not snoop

            • stymaar 8 hours ago ago
              • nly 8 hours ago ago

                Yeah...I'm fully aware what a ZKP is..you're just missing the point.

                • stymaar 8 hours ago ago

                  Why did you write that then:

                  > You then still need a trusted ID service or algorithm to capture an image of the user _at the time of use_ to compare that to.

                  > Just having access to your digital ID credentials proves nothing

                  • nly 4 hours ago ago

                    Because it's accurate?

                    If I have access to your digital ID I shouldn't be able to impersonate you anymore than I should be able to fly using your passport.

                    Your passport is useful not just because it's difficult to forge, but because border control is a thing.

      • egorfine 9 hours ago ago

        It is a problem in itself. First they want to know your age (they're pretending: of course they want to know your identity, but let's leave that for a moment).

        What's next? Your US legal status as determined by your ethnicity? Scan your face to prove you're white? Yeah, that sounds absolutely ridiculous but so did the age verification with KYC just a few years ago.

        • Rebuff5007 9 hours ago ago

          Why are those things naturally "whats next"?

          We allow bars and car companies to verify age before conducting business. Does that in itself lead to racial discrimination? I think not.

          • usrnm 9 hours ago ago

            The issue is the scale and centralization of information. Let's imagine that every bar has to not only check the id of every customer but do it automatically: every time you enter a bar anywhere in the country you must have your id scanned by a government-issued system. Are you still ok with it?

            • stymaar 8 hours ago ago

              That's why we need privacy preserving designs.

              But saying “we must abandon the idea of age verification in bar” is never going to work in any democratic setting.

              Voters genuinely want to protect the children, without second thoughts.

              • jonathanstrange 8 hours ago ago

                Why do parental software / settings and filters not work? Aren't there even approaches based on whitelisting?

                • intended 5 hours ago ago

                  One aspect is that you are pitting parents and developing brains against the most over-designed products humanity has created.

                  A second order effect of this is that a small number of parents have the ability to manage their kids use of tech.

                  A side effect of that is kids seeing their peers use tech. I’ve seen 9 month babies getting hypnotized by screens.

                  This is excluding situations with an antagonist preying on the child, such as grooming or bullying.

                  Yes, in an ideal world, it would all go down to parenting. Since we live in reality, some of that work is shifting to ensuring defaults are in place.

                  I thought it was a great question. I wish I remembered more details and had the links ready.

                  • jonathanstrange 26 minutes ago ago

                    > Yes, in an ideal world, it would all go down to parenting. Since we live in reality, some of that work is shifting to ensuring defaults are in place.

                    No, they aren't in place at all. It's the parents' job and vast majority of parents do it fine. Nobody wants the Nanny state you propagate.

            • Rebuff5007 6 hours ago ago

              Sure why not. How is that any different that what already happens at airports?

              • ligne 2 hours ago ago

                I reckon if you applied an airport level of surveillance to go out for a drink, you'd destroy the hospitality industry in under a week.

      • g42gregory 11 hours ago ago

        "Age verification" is designed to attribute your identity to your online presence. As such, it's done just right.

      • mdp2021 11 hours ago ago

        > and it would be perfectly fine

        Unless a tiny chance exists that some system in the middle is not secure. Then you have the problem of those who orient their acceptance to the "oh well" shrug, and then systemic faults get downplayed by default. (Edit: I re-read and notice 'half-baked systems': seemingly, we agree.)

        > as a political posture

        Which is the core problem of masses accepting pseudo-heartly and not-brainy unacceptable figures. And again, systemic faults incarnated as administrations get downplayed by default.

      • anax32 9 hours ago ago

        And it is focussed on social networks, which require an email address, which usually implies a device.

        But instead of inserting controls around email addresses (as with paid services) or devices (as with contraband), the requirement is pushed to the application layer. It really makes no sense from a technical POV.

    • frankie_t 9 hours ago ago

      Do you (or anyone else) have a good resource for learning systems thinking? I might have some from working in SE and just observing the world, but I've never studied it

    • romankolpak 7 hours ago ago

      What’s the alternative? How do you solve the problem of not allowing children into online spaces where they shouldn’t be allowed in?

      • Tade0 7 hours ago ago

        Parents who wish to have both the child and themselves remain sane are already watching over the way their offspring uses the internet.

        Truth be told the worst kind of content is nominally child friendly - just incredibly addictive and overstimulating. We're all so preoccupied with preventing our children from looking at gore or porn or even meeting predators online that we forget that those who stand to make money on addictive content will pull every lever necessary.

      • philipallstar 7 hours ago ago

        We should assign one or two adults to children who provide for them, and prevent various dangers, including online ones, from reaching them. It sounds like a lot of effort, but it is also the most important task on the planet.

        • harshreality 7 hours ago ago

          A generation of kids have grown up with just such assigned adults, who overwhelmingly did not apply sufficient oversight to the kids' use of social media.

          In large part that's because, if they'd done so, the kids would've been socially isolated from their peers, at least the most normal ones with the most normal parents, which are the kinds of friends most other normal parents want their kids to have.

          It's a collective action problem, except instead of "I can be better off if I ignore what I know is best for society", it's "if I ignore what I know is best for my kids psychologically, they will still have friends, and social media brainrot is a lesser evil than socially isolating my kid from all the normal kids at school."

          And also, giving kids social media interaction devices is a convenient form of babysitting. It reduces up-front effort of parenting.

          • recursive-call 4 hours ago ago

            >In large part that's because, if they'd done so, the kids would've been socially isolated from their peers, at least the most normal ones with the most normal parents, which are the kinds of friends most other normal parents want their kids to have.

            I never had any of the popular social medias when I was growing up, and I wasn’t isolated from anybody aside from the one bloke who insisted on doing all his texting via instagram. I’m in uni now and people kind of laugh when I ask them for a phone number, but if anything it’s improved my social status.

            >And also, giving kids social media interaction devices is a convenient form of babysitting. It reduces up-front effort of parenting.

            This is the real issue to me. Parents are overworked and exhausted because you can’t support a family on one salary, so there’s no more stay-at-home parents. I was extremely lucky in that my mom’s firm got bought out when I was in 5th grade and she retired on the severance package. Parenting is a full time job and society needs to treat it like one. If stay-at-home parents got a salary from the government, 90% of what’s wrong with kids would be solved (and the falling birthrate issue too).

          • shhsjajaaj 5 hours ago ago

            Hard disagree. It’s the “phone kids” with behavior issues and their parents are usually similar. It’s time to get serious about stupid people being stupid and not calling it “normal”.

        • CJefferson 2 hours ago ago

          So do we get rid of all laws which distinguish children? Why bother with limiting selling alcohol to children if we can just let the parents do it?

          My problem is I don’t think anyone is (seriously) suggesting we get rid of the laws protecting children in the physical world, and having nieces and nephews, they nowadays spend more time in the virtual world than the physical world, often with their friends so it’s hard to track what they do.

        • intended 5 hours ago ago

          It isn’t working, and the assigned adults are asking for these changes.

          What is the next step?

          Ok, that sounds snarky, but this is where we are. Parents are asking for age controls, and governments are happy to give them what they want, with them getting an added level over privacy.

      • big85 7 hours ago ago

        The existing paradigm is on-device parental controls. It's worked for the past 30 years, and the alternative is forcing everyone to show government ID to use websites.

    • 7e an hour ago ago

      Nth order effects are unpredictable. You can only observe them after the fact. Systems thinking is a debugging methodology, not at all a crystal ball. Witness: your comment makes a bunch of predictions that are very unlikely to be true.

    • 7e an hour ago ago

      Nth order effects are unpredictable. You can only observe them after the fact. Systems thinking is a debugging methodology, not at all a crystal ball.

    • rdiddly 11 hours ago ago

      Journalists are supposed to be helping the people by doing it.

    • miohtama 11 hours ago ago

      Most people just want to blame someone else of their problems

    • HerbManic 11 hours ago ago

      And those that are keen to make some noise about it are labelled as being conspiracy minded or against the safety of children.

      It causes a situation where because of the potential backlash, even if they are right, few people will come to the defense for fear of being ostracized as well.

    • jmyeet 3 hours ago ago

      Look, this is just a baseless opinion because we restrict things from various groups all the time. Gambling, tobacco, alcohol, drugs, firearms, pornography, voting, driver’s licenses, classified material, the list goes on.

      Yet people will employ lazy slappery slope fallacies for this one issue in particular.

    • _pdp_ 9 hours ago ago

      You can exploit both ways.

    • biophysboy 5 hours ago ago

      Give me a break - tech is not remotely interested in comprehensive “systems” thinking about the problems that motivated these age verification policies

    • dzonga 4 hours ago ago

      have you considered that maybe the "elites/beneficiaries of such laws" - would find it disadvantageous to teach systems thinking to the unwashed masses. an example look at how slavery is taught in the southern united states.

      most people that learn systems thinking is coz life forces them to.

    • vortegne 6 hours ago ago

      Classic STEM guy thinking that STEM is the cure for everything

    • soulofmischief 5 hours ago ago

      In other words, without a solid, fundamental, national level of education, democracy just will not work. And any democratic institution which does not codify the right to education in very specific terms is inherently weak to degradation over time due to subverted interests in the ruling class.

      How do we solve this problem? I wish I readily had an answer. But as we witness our democratic institutions crumble in real time, it's hard to imagine the average voter becoming more educated in our lifetime.

    • basisword 8 hours ago ago

      >> If we taught systems thinking in schools things like internet age verification would never get past being an idea on the back of a napkin. People struggle to consider the second-, third-, and nth-order effects of anything

      Does this not imply we also wouldn't get the internet because people would have considered the damage it would also cause?

    • thrance 7 hours ago ago

      That's by design. Bringing up any kind of systemic issues, or applying a materialist reasoning to anything will get you taxed with communism. This is a classic strategy of the capital class, and is at the foundation of neoliberalism. In Thatcher's own words:

      > There is no such thing as society. There are individual men and women, and there are families.

      They have to keep the population blind to any kind of systemic thinking to rob them blind.

    • delusional 11 hours ago ago

      I know systems thinking, and am in favor of a version of these types of legislation. Give me your best argument from systems thinking, and I'll give you a thoughtful reply.

      • jchanimal 11 hours ago ago

        The only reasonable solution shape I've seen is the one that trusts the parents to set an operating system setting that says whether or not the user is allowed to access adult content. And so it doesn't actually verify age, it just verifies parental intent.

      • HerbManic 11 hours ago ago

        The argument usually is that it is a slippery slope. Something that is introduced in the name of virtue ends up being co-opted into a system of control as those in power and peoples attitudes change with subsequent layers of normalization.

      • ball_of_lint 10 hours ago ago

        A significant part of the cultural value of the internet comes from free anonymous expression. As a key example, look at 4chan - anonymity taken to it's extreme has resulted in on one hand yes a lot of disgusting stuff, but also a cultural hotbed.

        Age verification is de facto identity verification. Eff says it well:

        > But no matter the method, every system demands users hand over sensitive and immutable personal information that links their offline identity to their online activity. https://www.eff.org/issues/age-verification

        Tying every action taken online to the user's real identity will have a deep and catastrophic chilling effect, destroying those very places that are creating our culture.

    • microgpt 13 hours ago ago

      Almost anything can be a slippery slope to almost anything. We'd never get anything done.

    • palata 11 hours ago ago

      > If we taught systems thinking in schools things like internet age verification would never get past being an idea on the back of a napkin.

      What about climate change and the current mass extinction?

      • beezlewax 11 hours ago ago

        Yes those might be slightly more iimportant.

    • ElProlactin 14 hours ago ago

      > If we taught systems thinking in schools things like internet age verification would never get past being an idea on the back of a napkin.

      But why would we do that?

      If we taught people how to think, they wouldn't sit their toddlers down in front an iPad for 8+ hours a day to entertain (read: keep them occupied and quiet) them with YouTube videos, sign them up for a Facebook account before they could wipe their own butts, etc.

      The sad irony of this age verification thing is that if we had a decent society and parents with common sense, age verification wouldn't even be a topic.

      • dozerly 13 hours ago ago

        Parents with common sense comes from teaching children common sense. You have to fix the child education issue first, a lot of adults are too far gone to educate at this point.

        • Synthetic7346 13 hours ago ago

          How can you fix the child education problem without fixing the parent education? School is but a few hours a day, and kids spend more time with parents and learn from them. I was lucky that my parents liked to read and encouraged me to read, but my friends didn't have the same exposure that I did and never liked to read books.

          • pfannkuchen 13 hours ago ago

            What? School is basically the same hours as a full time job. How is it but a few hours a day? Did you time travel from the 1800s?

            • samplifier 12 hours ago ago

              Indeed, and then after school care because both parents are still working until 6 pm, quietly eat dinner, watch cocomelon, and then to bed. Horror.

      • johnny22 13 hours ago ago

        I don't get why you would start there. Their parents probably didn't have youtube or ipads and they and/or their parents are the ones pushing it.

      • lyu07282 13 hours ago ago

        Uhh imagine you know about countries other than the US that implement age verification. Like the UK, Brazil, Australia, France, Spain, Italy and dozens of other countries with vastly different educational systems. Then perhaps you could begin to understand the magnitude of your own ignorance of actual power and political ideology. Instead of embarrassingly trying to reason yourself a political education from first principle.

        Uh dumb law I don't like. Cause people dumb. If people not dumb, no dumb law. Uhh I am very smart. "Systems thinking" oh fucking hell stfu

  • RachelF 13 hours ago ago

    Age verification is just one part of this crackdown.

    Device attestation is another - making sure you're using an unmodified government approved operating system and apps linked to your ID.

    • matheusmoreira 10 hours ago ago

      One day we'll need remote attestation to even get an internet connection. "Untrusted" devices that have been "tampered with" need not apply.

      Little by little, everything I hold dear is getting destroyed. Computers of our own, that we control, that we can freely hack on. Everything the word "hacker" stands for. How I wish I could turn back the clock...

      • superdisk 3 hours ago ago

        And people called Stallman alarmist. Truth is, if you give them an inch they take a mile every time, so a hardline stance is strictly required.

      • gherkinnn 9 hours ago ago

        And always have that phone on you at all times please.

        This goes way beyond any notion of a "hacker tweaking his electronics".

        With ID checks, device attestation and a device required for any transaction, and all this data piped in to a central brain (none of which are far fetched), we're all pretty much buggered.

        It is a matter of time until advertising companies claw their way in, insurances calculate individual premiums based on behaviour, and remember, we're all one legislation away from being governed by lunatics.

        • echelon 6 hours ago ago

          Just wait for the brain scan tech to pan out.

          They'll call you in for a routine scan of your thoughts to make sure you haven't been up to any wrongthink.

          • gherkinnn 5 hours ago ago

            I fail do see how can't be pessimistic in the face of this. And yet one must continue the good fight.

    • Aurornis 4 hours ago ago

      Every time age verification comes up, it’s shocking how many comments here start proposing schemes where we use government-issued tokens combined with secure device attestation to solve the problem.

      Some people get so focused on providing a technical solution to the problem of age verification without revealing your full ID to the website that they forget that they’re proposing we start requiring only government-approved devices and operating systems.

      • Atreiden 4 hours ago ago

        Through the lens of information warfare, it's hard not to view those comments as an astroturfing campaign from the exact organizations who would want device attestation

      • jkestner 4 hours ago ago

        Not too shocking. Many people’s jobs here require that they pretend that they’re not coding for fascism.

    • ranyume 12 hours ago ago

      AI mass surveillance is another. The powerful are just ceasing opportunities to accumulate power and capital, seeing that right now it is not good enough for them.

      • Cthulhu_ 6 hours ago ago

        We already have the mass surveillance, but the scale alone has traditionally been the obstacle to do something with it. But, we've had affordable "big data" processing for 20 years or more now (considering Hadoop) so AI is more of a next or different step to draw conclusions out of data. And it's limited by token consumption / context size, unlike big data stuff.

      • morganf 7 hours ago ago

        I think you mean "seizing". "Ceasing opportunities" means the precise opposite of what I think you intend to say.

    • Ouman 7 hours ago ago

      Age verification is the visible, easy-to-sell layer. Device attestation is the more structural one...

      • intrasight 5 hours ago ago

        That's why the politicians need to make it clear that what they're talking about is device attestation.

        I'm an optimist, but I don't think any age verification laws will gain traction without first solving the device attestation problem.

    • shevy-java 12 hours ago ago

      > making sure you're using an unmodified government approved operating system

      Will be interesting to see if this leads to more Linux systems being deployed. Then again with systemd supporting age sniffing (https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/40954), evading this becomes harder and harder.

      • egorfine 9 hours ago ago

        Lennart Poettering is here to make sure Linux won't be a safe place for you: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46784572

      • zahlman 10 hours ago ago

        Why would it? Such a government would just... not approve Linux, if it interfered with their objectives.

      • darkwater 11 hours ago ago

        Evading what exactly? If the age verification is a flag sent by the OS and you are the OS administrator, you can do whatever you want.

        • LtWorf 4 hours ago ago

          Sure, but your device won't be able to connect to anything useful.

      • Klonoar 10 hours ago ago

        Systemd changes don’t make it harder, you control the damn OS at the source code level if you choose.

        • M95D 8 hours ago ago

          Theoretically, yes, but Gentoo with all their resources couldn't keep even eudev alive. How much free time does one person need to maintain a fork of the entire systemd?

  • Nevermark 5 hours ago ago

    Age verification starts the gating of Internet access by governments.

    Any site, with any concern about age of user liability, is likely to adopt the practice. Strong laws, sold on their face value safety benefits, will increase that liability.

    You won’t see any laws removing or limiting that liability.

    The trend will be many more sites becoming government-gated, than we are imagining now.

    Beyond surveillance, it’s a real step into government permissioned internet access, on an individual citizen level.

    • jmyeet 3 hours ago ago

      That might be an argument if it wasn’t already happening. US social media platforms already kowtow to domestic and foreign policy and you need look no further than the suppression by Google and Meta of content about Palestine.

      What’s fascinating to me of that there are people who win vehemently oppose age verification yet have no absolutely no problem with anti-BDS laws, Gaza suppression, etc. Or worse, they’ll support those things.

      • starik36 an hour ago ago

        > suppression by Google and Meta of content about Palestine

        That is nonsense. This type of content appears on my TikTok/Reels feeds nonstop even if I don't interact with it.

    • akoboldfrying 4 hours ago ago

      I agree. But it's not clear to me that the downsides of this outweigh the upsides.

      The government has control over many areas of life, and in most cases I feel that to be on balance a good thing, even though governments can be corrupt or inefficient.

      Consider some other domain, like roads. In every country, the government issues licenses that include photographic ID to residents to drive on roads; driving without a license is illegal and can result in fines or even imprisonment. But this level of government control feels normal to people, and most would say the safety benefits outweigh the government interference.

      • stronglikedan 2 hours ago ago

        I can walk those roads, or in many cases use a vehicle that doesn't meet licensing requirements such as a moped. Vehicles that do require licensing requirements do so because they've met a minimum threshold for potential danger. All this to say - none of that is like age gating the internet.

      • recursive-call 3 hours ago ago

        That’s because the consequences of unsafe driving is people dying or being maimed. Other than suicide and that one incident with facebook, people do not die in appreciable numbers due to things that happen on the internet.

        • probably_wrong 2 hours ago ago

          > Other than suicide and that one incident with facebook, people do not die in appreciable numbers

          Is your argument that "no one is dying other than those who are dying"?

          I became radicalized against social media when I saw the statistics for suicide rates in teenage girls [1]. With Facebook having been found legally guilty of addicting teenagers, I can't in good conscience say "kids will figure it out" when there's clear evidence that the richest men alive are investing millions and armies of behavioral scientist to keep them addicted.

          There are most definitely consequences for things that happen on the Internet, including depression and death. I don't like that age verification mechanism are raising so many problematic issues, but I also don't like that so far we've tried nothing and are running out of ideas.

          [1] https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2023/05/03/suicide-... or https://archive.is/wY1OH

        • akoboldfrying 3 hours ago ago

          People die on roads anyway, even with government control. And if there were no official government control, most roads would still not be a free-for-all -- in most places, informal community standards for road use would have developed in their stead. It is only the difference between these two states of affairs that government control of roads buys us. (FWIW I certainly think the difference is likely very large and government control of roads is therefore warranted.)

          One of the consequences of the government knowing who wrote or said everything on the Internet would be that it would be much harder for organised crime like drug and human trafficking to operate. Of course, another well known consequence is that the opportunity for government corruption is greatly magnified. My point is that the safety improvement is significant enough that the debate is worth having.

          Attitudes to government involvement vary from place to place. In Germany, you need to register your home address with the local government; while most Americans would chafe at this level of government "surveillance", a majority of Germans are comforted by it.

  • firefoxd 14 hours ago ago

    It gives a new spin to:

    > Everything you say CAN and WILL be used against you.

    Especially when what you said has already been recorded and tied to your identity before you faced the authorities.

    Edit: from last week https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48632269

  • freefaler 12 hours ago ago

    Cory Doctorow had a very profound talk about it very long time ago (10+years).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUEvRyemKSg

    As the internet become the place where people do a lot of things, no government (and especially no security services) will be able to keep themselves from trying to control it or at least monitor it. And with the new LLM features they can automatically do much more than before.

    Human nature is a constant and when the government sees an easy way to enforce something, many more bureaucrats will try to do it.

  • btbuildem 13 hours ago ago

    This is a reminder to curate and prune all your past social media contribution, because when this goes thru, you KNOW they will apply it retroactively. You'd loathe to lose your cushy job over a moment of lucid honesty back in 2011.

    • simplyluke 7 minutes ago ago

      I think we should go one level higher and question when having opinions and being a multi-dimensional human became a professional risk. That has certainly not always been the case.

    • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

      It's already too late for that but you can at least, by deleting now, reduce the chances they see it.

      • kgwxd 7 hours ago ago

        Not your HN account though. They even stopped replying to my annual emails asking if it's "possible" yet. They originally help me change the name, and scrub any replies that mentioned the original name. That's not enough though, thanks to old copies of the site data that still have my original name, linked directly to the real HN post it appears on, showing up in search results.

        • microgpt 7 hours ago ago

          If you're in Europe, you can sue them under GDPR? They won't obey - HN explicitly chooses to disobey European laws - but having an arrest warrant out might be inconvenient enough for them to do it anyway.

          • nicce 6 hours ago ago

            That would likely result for just adding the geofencing so that EU countries can’t access directly.

    • phendrenad2 2 hours ago ago

      I can see it now: boards of directors will only hire CEOs from the amish population, it's the only way to avoid criticism.

    • jay_kyburz 12 hours ago ago

      I've been posting under my real name for over 20 years because this was always going to be the case. Using my real name is a constant reminder to not to post things I might later regret.

      • jay_kyburz 10 hours ago ago

        sigh, another typo on my permanent record.

        • kgwxd 7 hours ago ago

          For interpersonal discussion, it's a great way to keep yourself in check. For activism and journalism, that's exactly what "they" want from you. They'd rather you self censor, and live in fear of even just criticizing them by utilizing you own good reputation.

    • remarkEon 12 hours ago ago

      I haven’t had any social media accounts since I gave it up for Lent in 2018 and I’m increasingly starting to wonder if that’s a liability for me because there’s no social graph that whatever agency would otherwise use to, idk, confirm I’m not a threat or something. The lack of a digital footprint like that may look weird.

      • weberer 9 hours ago ago

        What do you consider social media? Because I'd definitely classify this site as one.

  • iamflimflam1 13 hours ago ago

    This is already happening if you want to visit the US. Customs officers will look at your social media accounts to make sure you are compliant.

    • raffael_de 7 hours ago ago

      surveillance of foreigners (particularly) with residence in a different country is a different issue from surveillance of own citizens.

      • account42 4 hours ago ago

        And the neat part is that you can have agreements within a group of countries (say about five) to have them surveil your citizens and share what they find with you while you do the same for them.

      • redmaple892 an hour ago ago

        Technically true but as the commentator below you says, easily circumvented. Perhaps it's better to think of privacy/freedom of thought as a global human right...

    • kypro 5 hours ago ago

      We're been doing this for years in the UK. Not just at airports either, but the police actively surveil social media and arrest people for anything that might be considered remotely offensive.

    • microgpt 13 hours ago ago

      And if you say you don't have any, they'll assume you're lying and deny you.

      • ranyume 12 hours ago ago

        It's good that I don't have any reason to go to the US.

        • a96 9 hours ago ago

          As you can see, it's quickly coming to other countries near you.

      • HerbManic 11 hours ago ago

        I have wondered that. I have this one and a very VERY bland Facebook that I post something stupid on every 12 months or so. So in a strange way I have accidentally shielded myself.

  • TrackerFF 9 hours ago ago

    In the intel industry, it is known that metadata is more or less enough to identify people. That's state/military intel. Several countries have already implemented bulk acquisition / collection of data that "crosses the borders", which is a ridiculous concept.

    If you're located in, say, Norway - and send someone who is also located in Norway a message via Messenger, there's a good likelihood that message will go to some foreign located Meta server, and back to Norway.

    When this was being implemented, there was some noise and protests from experts, but that's about it. For the general population it went quietly and without notice.

    • zrn900 5 hours ago ago

      The objective of these digital id laws being pushed through age verification is to be able to easily ! legally ! prosecute the dissidents. That's one thing the intelligence agencies could not do with their illegally collected data.

    • knollimar 7 hours ago ago

      Isn't that the point of e2e encryption? Maybe I have a privileged US take but I've always not cared much for a border crossing in a round trip. It always seemed like a needless expense to have a full vertical server stack in each country to me.

      Wondering if someone can explain the logic

  • mawadev 11 hours ago ago

    If you look at how workers are mistreated in authoritarian corporations and how some people say it is perfectly fine because you get paid a lot of money to be used and abused, I can't imagine what a reality like this would look like. It does not stop with what you post online, we still can't really tell how our phones know about stuff we talk about irl to serve ads.

  • andai 3 hours ago ago

    I thought they were gonna wait until internet is flooded with AI content indistinguishable from human content, i.e. wait until people are begging for a "real human" badge which can only be enforced by ID. Instead they're forcing it early with the "but the children!" thing again.

  • redmaple892 an hour ago ago

    I hear these alarm bells but what I don't understand is what the solution is to non-human or state actor internet commenting or social media campaigns. Most (maybe all?) sites are full of this. Without any sort of verification - how can this ever be solved?

  • not_your_vase 6 hours ago ago

    Do you remember the pipa/sopa protests from like a decade ago?

    The internet, as we knew it, is over. It has been dead for a few years, but it is getting clear now only. It had its great moments, while it lasted.

  • AvAn12 an hour ago ago

    Why participate? Why not just skip any site that wants a photo of ID? Also, those sites run massive liability risk for the inevitable data breaches that will occur.

  • stretchwithme 13 hours ago ago

    Maybe it should be possible for a parent to set a child age in a device.

    Everyone else can stay anonymous.

    I look forward to hearing why that won't work and what problems it will cause.

    • big85 7 hours ago ago

      Parental controls. Client-side blocking of content. Apple's parental controls are so good that parents give young children unsupervised internet access--the entire generation if iPad babies. Current iPads even use on-device AI to detect nudity in photos and prevent them from being taken, sent, recieved, or viewed.

    • riffraff 4 hours ago ago

      If the server can trust the device, then you don't need the parent, you can use a digital-enabled id card or passport.

      This is in fact the EU age verification app

      https://commission.europa.eu/news-and-media/news/european-ag...

      The concern here is the trust in the device appears to be tied to proprietary os/device vendors.

    • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

      You're describing California AB1043 which passed a few months ago and is now the law in California. We all got very angry about it when it passed.

    • vasco 13 hours ago ago

      How does the parent prove they are the parent. All you need is to think about the next step, come on now.

      • kulahan 13 hours ago ago

        …upon device purchase? Very obviously?

        • chrisjj 5 hours ago ago

          How someone proves parentage of a given child upon device purchase is far from obvious.

        • vasco 12 hours ago ago

          The verification is not done per device but per usage session.

          • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

            Why are you telling someone else how their hypothetical implementation works?

            • vasco 12 hours ago ago

              There's no hypothetical, they tried to equate this to basically buying a gun where you do the certification on purchase. Internet connected devices are not planned to be controlled like that but per session. Under that model what they proposed is obviously not going to work.

              • kulahan 12 hours ago ago

                Comment 1: “maybe it should be this way”

                Comment 2: “it can’t be that way because of this”

                Comment 3: “but it can, because it could maybe be this way”

                You: “There was no hypothetical”

                Oh my god the comments are getting so stupid. Please, I beg you to stop.

              • microgpt 9 hours ago ago

                The existing California law that passed a few months ago makes it per user account

          • kulahan 12 hours ago ago

            This is incorrect, and you have failed to read my mind on how it works. Extremely weird attempt, but I applaud the bravado anyways.

  • riffraff 4 hours ago ago

    > These "age verification" laws are - by design - identity attribution systems. They attribute digital identities (accounts) to physical identities (SSN, ID, etc..

    No, they don't. The proposed EU verification system provides a proof of age to the service but no physical identity data.

    This is possibly a slippery slope, but I don't think it's correct to state the two things are equivalent.

    • ipodopt 4 hours ago ago

      Maybe not the laws, but the systems being built are attribute based.

  • initramfs 14 hours ago ago

    "The Carnival in Venice was first documented in 1296, with a proclamation by the Venetian Senate announcing a public festival the day before the start of Lent. Unquestionably one of the most well-known Carnival festivities in the world, the Carnival of Venice is rife with mystery, adventure, and conspiracy. The day served to break down barriers between people of different economic standings and religious beliefs. During the Renaissance, masked comic performers performed in Venice's piazzas."

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnival_in_Italy#Venice

    "The tradition of wearing masks seems to stem from the 13th century. During the ages the Venetians disguised themselves with mask whenever they thought necessary. It allowed them to escape from the rigid rules of the class hierarchy. All classes could mingle, men could be women, women could be men. It also led to unwanted behaviour, from throwing eggs filled with ink to all imaginable kinds of vulgarities. Masks made people unrecognisable, so they could not be prosecuted.

    Near the end of the Republic, the right to wear masks in daily life was severely restricted. By the 18th century, it was limited to three months starting at December 26 and ending on the last day of Carnival, Shrove Tuesday. Masks were also used in ceremonies, eg. when ambassadors arrived and at the five ritual grand banquets offered each year to Venetian dignitaries by the doge. This resembles the Masquerade Balls during Carnival nowadays. Venetian noblemen and noblewomen wore a costume called a bautta consisting of a white mask (volto), a tricorn hat (tricorno), a hood worn under the hat (zendale) and a tabarro, a loose-fitting cloak. There were subtle differences between noble and non-noble (cittadini or popolani), and the popolani were known to wear more colorful, fun masks to festivities like the bull runs."

    https://www.carnival-in-venice.eu/venetian-carnival-masks.ht...

    • pineapple_opus 13 hours ago ago

      Mask in real life then, mask in social internet now. Meaning stays the same. I like this analogy.

  • naasking 27 minutes ago ago

    Politicians keep looking for excuses to break consumer encryption, and the youth social media harms are just the latest excuse that has received broad support. So disappointing.

  • zarzavat 13 hours ago ago

    I don't like age verification. However I'm not concerned about it.

    The internet needs new spaces that are more decentralized and less in bed with governments.

    We already lost our freedom when we agreed to move from IRC to Discord, from phpBB to Reddit, etc.

    The teenagers who are blocked from mainstream social media will deliver us new free online spaces that are better than what they're blocked from.

    • pibaker 13 hours ago ago

      What happens when federal agents kick down your front door because you ran a free range mom and pop BBS that did not comply with latest ID verification requirements?

      Big companies will benefit the most from these regulations. It's just good ol regulatory capture. They will have the most resources to comply with the laws. They have a captive audience that will be more willing to give up their personal info when asked — keep in mind Facebook and instagram is widely used for business. It is your small time forum admin who would rather shut down his hobbyist online community that never made him any money anyway than to ask for IDs. We have already seen stories of websites shutting down due to existing UK regulations. Curiously, all small, personal operations, not the kind of corporate social media they tell you the laws are meant to target.

      • iamnothere 4 hours ago ago

        This is coming, eventually, and it will be a rehash of the 90s. Someone will have to be a sympathetic test case, and the EFF will get back into full gear.

        Then either freedom wins again or freedom-loving individuals move to Soviet-style samizdat, “lying flat”, and clever subversion. And the world continues turning as usual.

      • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

        If you violate memory protection you get a segfault, consistently. That isn't how the law works. Federal agents only kick down your door if they want to - which in this case probably means your forum users disparaged ICE or Trump.

      • watwut 13 hours ago ago

        I mean, social networks already made genocide happen. They they were instrumental in the curren winning march of fascism - in USA, in EU in Asia.

        • pibaker 11 hours ago ago

          This is why China and Russia are shiny beacons of democracy and liberalism — they heavily regulate their social media!

          Seriously, do people not look at history or at least the world around them when they make such claims? Genocides have happened before we had internet, or TV, or radio, or any modern technology people attribute genocides to. Hatred and violence are parts of human nature and trying to blame it on technology is just us trying not to make ourselves look bad.

          • watwut 8 hours ago ago

            My point is, the "what happens when federal agents kick down your front" thing is already happening and happened. And curiously, tech libertarians ranting about the freedom were facilitating every single step along the way, actively helping those every single step along the way.

            > Genocides have happened before we had internet, or TV, or radio, or any modern technology people attribute genocides to.

            Genocides became more frequent every since we have technology. Technology facilitates genocides. Both by creating actual means of killing (industrial killing in WWII) and by creating conditions for distribution of "work". Radio specifically was instrumental in Rwanda.

            • iamnothere 4 hours ago ago

              Not to mention the printing press! Hitler couldn’t have published his vile screed without it.

              Haven’t seen any Amish committing genocides, have you?

        • josteink 13 hours ago ago

          That’s a very dramatic take - and I dare say a counter-factual one too.

          Which actual genocide would you be talking about?

          I really don’t think people should water out words like that over what is essentially tiny political differences.

          • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

            Myanmar?

          • hdgvhicv 11 hours ago ago

            https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-46105934

            Facebook has said it agrees with a report that found it had failed to prevent its platform being used to "incite offline violence" in Myanmar. The independent report, commissioned by Facebook, said the platform had created an "enabling environment" for the proliferation of human rights abuse. It comes after widespread violence against the Rohingya minority which the UN has said may amount to genocide.

          • watwut 10 hours ago ago

            > I really don’t think people should water out words like that over what is essentially tiny political differences.

            I really don’t think people should minimize actual historical and current events for political purposes. Knee jerk "bad things are inconvenient, therefore they did not happened" denial is how we got here.

            > essentially tiny political differences

            The political differences between actual fascism that is on the rise, its actual opposition and those in between are large. Not small. Also, in more recent events there were pogroms in Belfast now. Elon Musk personally contributed to their incitement.

      • zarzavat 13 hours ago ago

        It seems unlikely that running a website without age verification will be illegal across the entire planet.

        • pibaker 11 hours ago ago

          So if you want to run a BBS for say vintage motorcycle owners, you have to move to a country without such laws and make sure to never set foot in any country that does?

          • alt227 10 hours ago ago

            No, you just have to host it there and use a VPN. Like all piracy sites are done right now.

            • lopis 7 hours ago ago

              Oh oh. You ISP has detected non sanctioned use of an unauthorized VPN service. The police is on its way.

            • vaylian 7 hours ago ago

              If privacy is outlawed, only outlaws will have privacy.

        • zrn900 5 hours ago ago

          People are downvoting this, but the objective is precisely that.

        • vasco 13 hours ago ago

          It seemed unlikely to me that cookie banners would be a thing across the whole internet if nothing else because no website operators would put them in. How wrong was I.

          All they need to do is popularize the idea of "if your website doesn't do X, it'll place lower on google" and people will do anything.

          My websites still don't have cookie banners and the police still hasn't come to my house. And the websites uses cookies like every other website always did.

          • CalRobert 12 hours ago ago

            Ironically 99% of them don’t meet legal requirements. They serve no purpose.

            • hdgvhicv 11 hours ago ago

              The purpose is to make people think laws like gdpr are bad for people, rather than bad for the surveillance industry.

          • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

            Cookie banners aren't across the whole internet.

          • Nursie 12 hours ago ago

            You really only need the banners if you're doing privacy-impinging things.

            Much like the GDPR notices that a small industry of 'compliance' product companies sold seemingly to everyone as necessary, they aren't if you're only using cookies for functional reasons and not tracking people. Unfortunately that leads to lower margins for advertisers and we can't have that.

    • rockskon 13 hours ago ago

      Such spaces will never scale if there's widespread legal prohibitions.

      It is foolish to assume we can innovate our way around the law as opposed to talking with lawmakers to oppose the law before it gets on the books.

      • fyredge 10 hours ago ago

        And they absolutely should not scale. Scaling is the root cause of all social media ills. If all you see are the 100 people nearest to you, the village idiot will not be able to spread his gospel so easily

        • rockskon 10 hours ago ago

          The social media you don't want will continue to scale.

          • fyredge 9 hours ago ago

            Right, and therefore we regulate them

            • rockskon 8 hours ago ago

              And what sort of regulations did you have in mind that don't primarily punish the users?

              • fyredge 5 hours ago ago

                Ones that prevent the scaling itself:

                No algorithmic recommendation.

                No mixing between known users (friends, followers etc.), recommended users (swipe feed) and advertised content.

                No publication of user content. It's social media, not global media.

                I posit that these points will be enough to curtail most of social media ills. Don't allow recommendation of slop and there will be a similar reduction in production. There will still be the village idiot that shares slop content, but their reach is limited since they have to actively persuade people to their message, rather than be recommended for being psychologically stimulating.

    • kjshsh123 13 hours ago ago

      That sounds like mistaken optimism due to a mistaken interpretation of the invisible hand.

      Mandating age verification and the inevitable implementation requirements are bad for freedom.

      Behaviour changes and innovations will mitigate some of the negatives, but bad things are bad.

    • Gigachad 13 hours ago ago

      What we need is more personal spaces. Less feeds, more small group chats with people you actually know. I'm totally fine with destroying Reddit/Twitter/etc

      • ligne 3 hours ago ago

        Reddit and Twitter can buy their way out of those problems (hell, they can buy their way out of trouble for literally generating sexual abuse content). What makes you think they'll be affected more than the operator of a little Mastodon server do the same?

      • tancop 9 hours ago ago

        i want more feeds than centralized services can ever have. on bluesky youre not limited to fyp and following you can install literally hundreds of options. almost all of them are open source and self hostable.

        theres a place for group chats and tight communities but we also need global spaces where you can reach anyone. you cant promote your new album or start organizing a union or share some really good pics with the world if all you have is individual servers.

    • marcus_holmes 12 hours ago ago

      Nope, they just break the law:

      https://www.bmj.com/content/393/bmj-2026-363695

      > Conclusions: Despite the intent of the Social Media Minimum Age Act 2024 to delay access to social media platforms and reduce the potential for online harms, little evidence was found of immediate substantive reductions in reported social media use by adolescents under 16 years.

      We are training teenagers that laws are stupid and can be circumvented easily and without consequences. As well as continuing to subject them to the harms of social media, only now without any means of monitoring them or holding the social media companies responsible.

      • tompagenet2 11 hours ago ago

        The law doesn't make it a crime for children to access social media, but for the companies that provided it to allow that child to access it.

    • pineapple_opus 13 hours ago ago

      They already have started right ? Like example - bluesky (bsky.social)

    • Havoc 10 hours ago ago

      The only thing teenagers are delivering is doomscrolling addiction. Seems improper me that the revert to something like irc en mass

    • vasco 13 hours ago ago

      This is like saying you're not concerned about war because people will notice war is bad and stop doing it. It's not a smart position to hold that bad things are good because they may bring on reversals.

    • gigel82 13 hours ago ago

      You do realize the next step is ISP-level tagging of traffic? And VPNs are already being outlawed in much of the western world.

      Unless you expect the teenagers to run underground mesh radio networks and risk FCC's hammer (real jailtime), it's just wishful thinking.

      • iamnothere 4 hours ago ago

        Teens will just pass around micro SD cards full of memes, warez, and porn, like kids did in the old days with floppy disks. Finding creative ways around restrictions is pretty much the definition of being a teenager.

      • kulahan 13 hours ago ago

        I don’t expect teenagers to do anything but largely be harmed by the internet.

  • sixsupersoup 14 hours ago ago

    Automated fines, like traffic radar control for free speech, will also become a norm as they won't be able to put everyone in jail. But I'm not sure the liberal anarcho-tyranny power will be indefinitely immutable. Speech control might be one their last try to keep control in the west. They will crumble like soviet union.

    • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

      They have this in Germany for copyright. If you torrent, you automatically get a fine letter in your email. If you don't pay, you get a court summons in the post. If you take it to court, you will lose that case and also have to pay court fees.

      • Nursie 12 hours ago ago

        It's funny how this played out in different countries.

        In Australia there is no chance of anything happening, because the courts ruled that payouts were limited to provable incurred losses. You pirated a movie? The maximum awarded at the end of a court case is going to be about $20, and as you can't buy very much lawyer-time for $20, it's never taken to court and the copyright-holders have effectively stopped pursuing people here.

        • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

          I imagine they still go after prolific totrenters

    • threeshells 12 hours ago ago

      Imagine a machine mounted on the wall that prints you a ticket every time you swear

  • boomskats 7 hours ago ago

    I'm honestly amazed that people are only just figuring this out.

    I know that reads like I'm being snarky, but I'm not trying to be. Within the last decade in the UK we have had (among others):

    - the 2016 Snoopers' Charter

    - the 2022 Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act

    - the 2023 Public Order Act

    - the 2023 Online Safety Act

    - the 2024 Addendum to the 2016 Snoopers' Charter

    Couple that with the whole push to repeal the 1998 Human Rights Act and withdraw from the European Convention on Human Rights, and the fact we've started imprisoning pensioners for holding up signs, and it's really difficult to _not_ see exactly where this leaves us.

    I wish I could look away and get on with my life, but I can't - and I'm starting to realise that that is also part of the design. The increasing reluctance to express controversial opinion online isn't an accidental side effect of all of this legislation. It is intended behaviour, the desired outcome.

    • iamnothere 4 hours ago ago

      It’s a great time to build parallel systems and networks among likeminded individuals.

      If you see tyranny coming, your options (other than silent complicity) are pretty much build a support network or exit.

    • callamdelaney 3 hours ago ago

      Britain doesn't need a European court to grant human rights to its own citizens. You know that the human rights act is not preventing government crackdowns on speech and privacy, and you will also know that the intention is to replace it with a human rights bill of our own.

      The current act is being used by lawyers and judges to force migration on a country which never voted for it.

      Now would we trust the clearly compromised political class we currently have to implement it? Probably not.

  • wuyuan 14 hours ago ago

    You're right. Many countries use the protection of minors as an excuse, but in reality, they just want to strengthen the regulation of speech.

    • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

      We should actually protect minors, then they won't be able to use it as an excuse. Right now it works as an excuse because minors are being harmed by the unrestricted internet, mostly by social media.

      • m0unta1ntube 11 hours ago ago

        They will always bring up a fringe matter to prove that statement wrong, no matter how much you will protect minors, someone else will still harm them and that is enough to justify these actions

    • jorisw 9 hours ago ago

      > they just want

      Because you know their motivations. You've spoken to 'them'.

  • anon-3988 12 hours ago ago

    Right now, our identity is kinda tied to a string of letter (password). This password can technically be passed around, created and destroyed at will. Tomorrow, our identity is going to be tied to you as a person. So messages will be signed by YOU as a person.

  • triceratops 14 hours ago ago

    "Don't let them win. Don't verify your age. Don't give up your identity. If you absolutely must, find one of the numerous age verification services and pay in Monero."

    Better yet, how about - "call your representatives"?

    Some nerds, for lack of a better term, think crypto and cryptography are the answers to every privacy problem. The only way to fix society and the law is by engaging with those things. Not sidestepping them with cryptography, an unscalable approach in any case.

    I'm deeply pessimistic about the future. The only group competent enough to oppose identity verification has its head in the sand.

    • dopidopHN2 14 hours ago ago

      Have you been to a city council meeting lately ? Ever?

      I'm trying to push for surveillance regulation where I live. I'm there monthly.

      Calling your representative is the best way to realise that they don't give a fuck. Yesterday I was editing a clip of one of them lying overtly. It will be a minor inconveniences.

      what we call democracy is a dog and ponies show.

      So maybe cryptography is not that ridiculous, after all

      • godwinson__4-8 12 hours ago ago

        Of course the system has a rather obvious remediation for that. You could also run for office or find a kindred spirit to support.

        Trying to one to one with a representative or a council just sends them a signal to not care. You're one of n constituents. Showing up to the city council meeting without bringing an exponential curve of people with you over a short enough amount of time in support of your cause simply confirms to your representatives your cause is marginal.

        If you are already cutting clips you might as well bite the bullet and run for office. Best of luck with your foray in democracy!

      • rockskon 13 hours ago ago

        Not every lawmaker is the same and there's more than one way to get a lawmaker's attention.

        Get more people with you. Or convince a group that's previously established trust in your jurisdiction to join you in speaking out. Or find out what causes the policymakers do care about and think of a compelling way to frame arguments against age verification in those terms. Heck - if you can get a local government agency to officially back you up, all the better.

        There's more to politics than just going to town hall meetings or sending emails or making phone calls!

      • triceratops 14 hours ago ago

        > Calling your representative is the best way to realise that they don't give a fuck

        That just means not enough people did it.

        > So maybe cryptography is not that ridiculous, after all

        Until they make that illegal. What'll you do then?

        It. Doesn't. Scale.

    • rockskon 13 hours ago ago

      Law alone cannot fix it. Tech alone cannot fix it.

      If we wish to preserve the values we grew up with, we need both.

      • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

        Law can fix 90% of it. Tech can fix 10%.

        • rockskon 12 hours ago ago

          As cynical as it sounds given its frequent use in marketing and often inappropriate use in legal circles, securing what data is collected is important too.

          Raise the bar for a data breach. It has value. Much more value if the law did a much better job of restricting what is collected in the first place and its dissemination.

          • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

            Punishing companies for data breaches will solve more data breaches than any amount of encryption.

            • rockskon 11 hours ago ago

              I find that particularly unrealistic that we can arrive at a good place solely by fining companies for data breaches.

              • microgpt 9 hours ago ago

                Seems to mostly work in Europe. Did you know that a European person's advertising tracking data is the most expensive because it's so hard to get?

            • technol0gic 5 hours ago ago

              hear hear

  • NoPicklez 13 hours ago ago

    > These "age verification" laws are - by design - identity attribution systems. They attribute digital identities (accounts) to physical identities (SSN, ID, etc..). This is government's ideal situation, the ability to quickly (automatically?) get identifying information about inconvenient people regardless if they're a criminal or not.

    I'll call it out because your article doesn't, but does reference Australia. Here our eSafety commissioner has set the requirements such that the use of Government ID for verification must not be the only option.

    There are other age verification technologies that do not assign identity but use other means as a method to identify age. For example, when our ban came into play I wasn't all of a sudden required to offer my ID.

  • fool0 31 minutes ago ago

    @DrScience,@theotherhobbes,@frendziz

    The title is almost obvious. Surveilance is already 24/7/365. If you're not completely appalled you haven't been paying attention.

    With regards to 'democracy', as with jurors, common-sense is a mixed bag... A politician in an area close to mine ran a write-in campaign contacted ~8000+ people, got ~5k votes. The Democrat on the ballot was unknown, signed-up last minute, gave no ballot statment, didn't advertise, or canvas and won; surmisably because they were listed as Democrat.

    Another, earlier, was a Democrat state representative who got redistricted out of their seat by their own party for lack of toeing the party line.

    Most of my ballot here is single person for each category, Should a challenger come up... well money is speech and thus taxation is censorship, and propaganda costs. When you hear a politician speak they are psychologically projecting from their own affectual experience.

    Freedom ended with the concept of allodium. We've all been slaves ever since. Don't believe that, walk nude, spouting nazi, or Stalinist slogans at work or even in your front yard or porch and see if you can pay your property tax or rent for the next period.

  • FergusArgyll 7 hours ago ago

    Techies have a real blind spot here. This stuff is very popular, like bipartisan support popular. Yes, it's a precursor to terrible things and they will happen but you have to convince people the the harms outweigh the benefits. Just asking "Why can't they tell the point of this" is not helpful or true. "The point of this" is decided by those pushing it, those pushing it are not politicians, they're parents and they're pushing it because they're scared of social media, not because they want to censor you.

    You need to explain to and convince those parents that this will result in something worse.

  • SwellJoe 10 hours ago ago

    It's also a huge gift to the very surveillance capitalists they're pretending to protect children from. It de-anonymizes everyone, including children, and with the first exploit and dump of of the database (which will absolutely happen), all those children's real identities will be known to every predator in the world in addition to the social media companies who've already shown they can't be trusted with personal data or the ability to track people across the internet.

    It is a catastrophically dangerous idea, and it's exactly what the abusive social media companies want.

  • bluegatty 14 hours ago ago

    The author made an assertive statement without any hint of rhetoric, reasoning, historical parallel, evidence, legislative example etc.

  • LandenLove 14 hours ago ago

    My theory is that age verification is just another way to push human verification. These large tech companies need a way to verify a user is a real person and not an AI bot. Both for displaying ads to real users and cutting down on spam.

    Nobody would support a "give away my anonymity online so I can be shown an ad for Coca Cola" bill. But it's easier to sell a law to boomers and lawmakers if you use the disguise of "It's for the children ." As if any of these companies care about the well being of children. See Meta confirming their platforms affect the mental health of children and doing nothing about it. Also platforms like TikTok and YouTube optimizing their algorithms for stealing user's attention spans.

    • try-working 13 hours ago ago

      many platform companies probably do not want to verify that a user is real, except in certain niche cases, as bots help them pump their numbers.

    • tryauuum 12 hours ago ago

      The ad companies I think would want the opposite

      If they cannot distinguish real people from bots they can just charge more for more ads shown !

    • maigret 12 hours ago ago

      Indeed a lot of social media platforms are used by foreign powers to create discord. Human psychology is much more attentive to negative messages and this is too easy to weaponize. A solution against that would probably be world changing. It would have to preserve anonymity still of course.

    • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

      That's why recaptcha is now doing human verification via mobile phone QR scan

  • Garlef 11 hours ago ago

    The bad thing about this:

    Can you trust future governments to respect "Nulla poena sine lege"?

  • kusokurae 4 hours ago ago

    I should probably stop advocating for systematically killing the ultra-wealthy huh

  • KaiserPro 10 hours ago ago

    Point number 2 doesn't take that long and is largely automated.

    This is the thing that so upsetting with the discourse. Privacy is already eroded, its just by private companies, not the state. All social networks have a gateway for law enforcement that allows getting extra details about users.

    There is another gateway with ISPs to correlate IPs with end users.

    In the USA you can just buy most of that info through brokers.

    Sure, people who takes precautions it takes extra work, but for dave on facebook, its pretty automatic.

    I really wish people would foccus on that bit, because the way to get privacy back is to get a handle on social media companies(and google). They are the ones who've eroded our privacy, and if we just say "Oooo age gating is bad mmkay" without a viable alternative, then we'll all get something worse.

    The solution is to limit what social media companies can profit from, so _they_ can regulate what shit they put in front of kids eyes. They can totally do it (after all how much porn is actually hosted on youtube? its really really hard, because they put in place systems to stop it.)

  • aucisson_masque 12 hours ago ago

    If I say something illegal during a meeting, people will notice it and will report it to the police. Then I may get arrested or fined.

    Why should it be different on the internet ? Provided we live in countries where freedom of speech is enacted.

    Of course in Russia or china it's different but surely they already have tools like that.

    • phrotoma 9 hours ago ago

      It's not different on the internet. If you commit a crime on the internet it's still illegal and it can still be reported to the police.

      What makes you suggest otherwise?

    • ludicrousdispla 8 hours ago ago

      How do you "say something illegal" ?

      • iamnothere 4 hours ago ago

        You speak against the Party or its leaders.

      • Tangurena2 4 hours ago ago

        The Trump administration has been treating dissent as illegal speech/behavior. It would be reasonable to presume that a replacement administration will continue this treatment.

    • febusravenga 11 hours ago ago

      Its not about saying illegal things. It's mostly about saying things that can get you canceled in future in future culture.

      Dark jokes and strong opinions are example - you something filthy - let's say dark Holocaust/Nazi joke but funny in situation In group that accept it and it's ok. But if it's recorded, it'll stay forever and will surface in most unexpected moment, like job interview or some other screening by gov/corpos.

      Don't say that dirty jokes should be punished in future if in given situation they were received as ok and only later someone else, not in situation is going to judge it

      • pprotas 9 hours ago ago

        Are you arguing that Holocaust/Nazi jokes should be accepted socially, as long as you only deliver them to people who respond positively to Holocaust/Nazi jokes?

        • Findecanor 8 hours ago ago

          The world is not black and white and simple. Things could be taken out of context, and people tend to project.

          People have got into trouble for having retold a controversial joke that they had heard, when the reason they retold had been because they themselves had been upset about it.

          I too don't think that holocaust jokes should be accepted, but sometimes people say things because they don't know better at the time. There have been cases of people retelling "dog whistles" without having understood their contextual meaning for certain groups. I've even seen politicians use the phrase "Works sets you free" without understanding why it is inappropriate. People learn and change, but old posts can linger on the Internet for a long time.

    • mawadev 11 hours ago ago

      What if your phone listens to you all the time so it can detect "ok google" or "alexa" 24/7 but you happen to say something illegal with your device ID?

      What if you brain storm a book/plot idea with a friend aloud and moments later the police knocks on your door because some system said you are about to commit a crime?

      • kelseyfrog 11 hours ago ago

        What if your neuralink reports unacceptable thoughts to the police?

    • stavros 12 hours ago ago

      Because perfect law enforcement means society can never change. Imagine if, back when it was illegal to be gay, every gay person was immediately sentenced. Do you think we'd be accepting homosexuality today?

      • fyredge 10 hours ago ago

        Yes, because the zeitgeist still changes regardless of enforcement. If all gay people were sentenced purely for their sexuality and nothing else, how long do you think it will take for ordinary folk to change their view? I reckon not long, unless the society is completely devoid of empathy and justice.

        • stavros 9 hours ago ago

          If you think that a society that actively harassed and persecuted homosexuals would spontaneously take pity on them, we have such different understandings on the world that debate can't be productive.

          • fyredge 8 hours ago ago

            Then I'm disappointed that you would think that way. Change is the only constant, in people, in societies, in politics. Change can be spontaneous, but more of then than not, it is slow, gradual, boring, but still change nonetheless. Would you concede to that?

            • stavros 8 hours ago ago

              Change doesn't happen by itself. If you take all the people who want the change and put them in prison, nothing will change.

              • fyredge 5 hours ago ago

                I hope we're still talking about homosexuality, because you can have support for gay people without being gay. There were more than just black people who protested against what happened to George Floyd. You can absolutely have empathy towards people not exactly like yourself.

    • matheusmoreira 11 hours ago ago

      > If I say something illegal

      A situation that should be impossible due to freedom of speech.

      • Aramgutang 10 hours ago ago

        Here are some crimes you can commit by speaking, where freedom of speech cannot be used as a defence:

        - assault / terror threats

        - extortion / blackmail

        - fraud

        - conspiracy / solicitation to commit a crime

        - treason / sedition

        - perjury

        - slander

        • iamnothere 4 hours ago ago

          > sedition

          Sedition, the bugbear of would-be censors, has never really caught on as a tool of prosecutors in the US. There have been several attempts to use laws against sedition to attack dissidents in the US, but only a few cases have stuck, and it was usually during wartime or with extremely unfavorable defendants. Courts have (rightly) slapped down most uses of sedition laws as violations of free speech.

        • DharmaPolice 6 hours ago ago

          Slander isn't a crime in most places.

    • 14 11 hours ago ago

      Because it has been shown that even if freedom is speech is a right that people will still be afraid to speak up if they know they are being monitored. Because the reality is that even if you are allowed to speak you might still be punished through other means.

      This is much bigger than saying something illegal on the internet. This is about not being able to criticize your government without fear of retribution. Or how about if this was possible 60 years ago. Gays would have been all caught and gay rights never emerged. Or say you are discussing wanting an abortion and are arrested for arrested for it because at that point in time it is made illegal. The right to have private communication is integral to a free and democratic society. Morals change. Beliefs change. This is good. If you are monitored for everything we will be oppressed and stuck with no way to progress and grow.

      • nullorempty 10 hours ago ago

        I feel we are there already.

        The weather is a bit rainy now but there is sun in the forecast for afternoon.

        ^^^ that is all we have left to discuss already in personal conversations at work anyways.

  • h4kunamata 11 hours ago ago

    Age verification is an excuse to hide the fact that parents have become useless and should have their rights of becoming parents revoked.

    If you ask any millenial, none of this bs existed during our time, parents wouldn't think twice to educate you, if you know you know haha

    That statement is weird in itself because said parents are yesterday's millenial.

    Add to that how companies and governments are trying to become a China. You cannot silence those that you don't know who they are.

    Ohh did you say something a politician or a cop didn't like??? Now they can hunt you down and force you to delete the post or whatever.

    Sci-fi movies are no longer just si-fi movies, it is easier than never to:

    1. Know how you are and all the consequence behind that

    2. Be a victim of identity theft. Look at how many millions of personal information including passports have been leaked into the dark web. In 2026, if you have the right skill and like doing the wrong thing, you can be anyone because their name, address, phone, photo, passporte, everything, is right there.

    What gives me peace of mind is that by the time everything goes to shit, I am not longer in this world lmao haha

    • alt227 10 hours ago ago

      > Ohh did you say something a politician or a cop didn't like??? Now they can hunt you down and force you to delete the post or whatever.

      Thats not true, as displayed by the recent Afroman case.

      https://edition.cnn.com/2026/03/19/entertainment/afroman-law...

    • pibaker 10 hours ago ago

      > should have their rights of becoming parents revoked.

      Ok. So what does it mean to revoke the right for someone to become parents? Be honest and be specific.

  • whearyou 3 hours ago ago

    Feels like the run up to the "current world" in a Peter Watts novel

  • NoPicklez 13 hours ago ago

    I think you can look at all things pessimistically, like this article does but at the end of the day we all agree that there are things online we don't want our kids seeing or engaging with and it takes regulators to push how we protect them from those online places. What other options to regulators have?

    Age restriction has been around for longer than the internet itself, so its regulators applying that logic to the online world.

    Whilst I think age verification has its issues, I don't see what other options they actually have. I'll also make the point that in Australia, our regulations explicitly require that Government ID verification CANNOT be the only way and that companies must adopt an additional approach.

    Almost everything in technology used to protect us can be used against us by those want or choosing to do the wrong thing, does that mean we don't do anything?

    • ball_of_lint 10 hours ago ago

      Why do you or anyone besides me (and my partner) get to decide what is ok for my kid to see?

      If you want your kids to not see porn on the internet, cool. Don't give them Internet access. You don't need to make the internet worse for me and my family to make that rule for your family.

      And maybe if you are parenting your child well, at some point you will be able to trust them to use the internet in a responsible way.

    • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

      I like the California law where the device owner sets the parental controls and apps have to obey them or get fined.

      • SoftTalker 4 hours ago ago

        This is the best solution I've seen, and it's also the simplest. No authority is involved other than the parent. No complicated protocols, or heavy CS theory about privacy preserving algorithms. Just one setting, "this device belongs to a minor" and apps either honor it or they are not allowed in the App store. Will some parents turn it off for their 14 year old? Yes, but some parents buy beer for their 14 year olds. That's a different problem.

        Apple, Google, and the social media companies could have done this 10 years ago and we would not even be having this debate today. But they decided they didn't have any social responsibility for what their devices and software did, so here we are.

    • Nursie 12 hours ago ago

      Yep, there are all sorts of technically interesting ways in which age can be proven without identity being compromised, this link has a good exploration of anonymous credentials, for a start - https://blog.cryptographyengineering.com/2026/03/02/anonymou...

      And there are all sorts of reasons governments want to do this, up to and including the stated-on-the-surface reasons they give; a lot of people don't want their kids exposed to internet harms, be that extreme material or addictive services and doom-scrolling, and don't have the technical know-how to effect that themselves.

      The insistence by so many in tech that there is no honest intent and that there is no way to practically provide age verification in a thoughtful, anonymous way is frustrating.

      It's frustrating to see so many people engaged in effective conspiratorial thinking and it's frustrating because there are many good arguments to be had here, but they won't land if the 'anti' side doesn't address the real concerns that real people have about the safety and mental health of their kids.

      • simoncion 11 hours ago ago

        > The insistence by so many in tech that there is no honest intent...

        If there were honest intent, then the regs would be beefing up the "Parental Controls" mechanisms present in every major OS and commanding that there be fines for not respecting those settings. Not only does this mechanism require zero involvement of an unrelated third party, it allows a guardian to protect both a child too ignorant of the dangers of the world to be trusted to competently handle them and an adult whose mind has been so damaged by age and/or disease that they can no longer handle those same dangers.

        Instead, the systems that we're getting are ones in which computer users are -when it's not mandatory- very, very strongly encouraged to present photo ID to a third party. While all the US regs I can find currently "only" require adding mechanisms for punching in a birth date, it's all but certain that continued evidence of minors lying about their age will cause those laws to be "upgraded" to require a photo ID.

        • Nursie 9 hours ago ago

          > If there were honest intent, then the regs would be beefing up the "Parental Controls" mechanisms present in every major OS

          Not everyone knows they exist, and there's a huge install base of older and/or cheaper devices that may not be getting updates that could be strengthened like this.

          > Not only does this mechanism require zero involvement of an unrelated third party

          But what if we do want to regulate the behaviour of those third parties? We know they've been cognisant of the harms and addictive behaviours their stuff promotes (see internal Meta research), and in fact seem to have designed for that. If the controls are only at the consumer side, are we not likely to see an arms race where they continue to try to addict kids around the controls?

          You're also assuming a level of technical sophistication on the part of parents, voters and politicians that would necessarily lead them to come to the same conclusions as yourself about solutions. This may simply not be present.

          This is what I mean by "good arguments that won't land". We can talk about how solutions should work, whether solutions can possibly work, and even make strong arguments that regulation in this area is wrong in and of itself. Jumping straight to "they're all liars and only want to spy on me" makes the entire thing look like a group of fringe nutters unable to take onboard how people (particularly non-tech people) feel.

          • simoncion 9 hours ago ago

            > Not everyone knows they exist...

            "Oddly", the laws that demand you enter your birthday (and will eventually demand you scan your ID) seem to require OS producers to make it so that users will not be ignorant of these new features. [0] I wonder if it's possible to do the same thing for Parental Controls...?

            > ...there's a huge install base of older and/or cheaper devices that may not be getting updates that could be strengthened like this.

            They're not going to be getting updated to be compliant with any of the new state (or Federal) user-identification regs, so I don't see what good-faith reason you could have for bringing them up.

            > But what if we do want to regulate the behaviour of those third parties?

            You use law and regulation? You mention nothing in your subsequent paragraphs that a "Papers, Please!" mechanism will prevent that a "Beefed-up and difficult-to-bypass Parent Controls" mechanism will not.

            [0] For example, AB1043 says (among other things)

              1798.501. (a) An operating system provider shall do all of the following:
              (1) Provide an accessible interface at account setup that requires an account holder to indicate the birth date, age, or both, of the user of that device for the purpose of providing a signal regarding the user’s age bracket to applications available in a covered application store.
            • Nursie 9 hours ago ago

              > You use law and regulation?

              I mean, 'papers please' mechanisms are a type of law and regulation, we're arguing over what sort of law and regulation should be used, no?

              In Australia, platforms are being regulated, the regulation says they must not allow under 16s to have accounts. How they achieve this is up to them to a large extent. "Papers-please" then is their doing. It's certainly not the only way things can be done - see anonymous credentials, verifiable credentials and other such schemes that don't involve showing your identification documents to everyone that asks.

              > You mention nothing in your subsequent paragraphs that a "Papers, Please!" mechanism will prevent that a "Beefed-up and difficult-to-bypass Parent Controls" mechanism will not.

              An arms race to work around the controls, which seems likely to me unless there is some sort of regulation on the service providers.

              But either way, look at this! We're discussing how things might work, rather than dismissing things out of hand and impugning each others' motives. Going to the "Papers please" governments and parents in those populations, saying "Look, we understand there is concern and we think there's a better way", or even "We understand the concern but here's why acting on it in any way is a bad idea" is a lot better than "You're all evil and probably stupid".

              • simoncion 8 hours ago ago

                > I mean, 'papers please' mechanisms are a type of law and regulation...

                Yes, they are. I still have no idea how laws of the form "You must honor the signals you get from Beefed-Up Parental Controls and we fine or jail you if you do not" fails to constrain the behavior of US-based businesses. You seem to have an understanding of how it won't, so do let me know what I'm missing?

                > An arms race to work around the controls,

                Whether the arms race is server-side or client-side is irrelevant. If anything, I'd expect a client-side implementation to be far more robust... if for no other reason than because the private company that is contracted to implement and run a server-side implementation will cut every corner to improve their profit margins.

                > In Australia...

                Speaking from a civil-liberties perspective, Australia has been a shithole for a long time now. They can very safely be ignored by US parents and US lawmakers.

                > "You're all evil and probably stupid".

                The people who are pushing for these "Papers Please!" regs are evil. The lawmakers (and parents) who aren't asking "Wait, what about the existing Parental Controls mechanisms built into every major OS?" are stupid and -if that stupidity is willful- also evil. Those are plain facts. One is not obligated to be all niceys to people who are invested in tearing yet another chunk out of the vial organs of civic life.

                • Nursie 8 hours ago ago

                  > "You must honor the signals you get from Beefed-Up Parental Controls and we fine or jail you if you do not"

                  > If anything, I'd expect a client-side implementation to be far more robust...

                  You're not really describing a client-side solution, you're describing legislation of something like the old Do Not Track header, which is a server-side solution, and fines for services which don't respect it. In such a situation I would expect 'smart' firms like Meta to start finding just-this-side-of-legal ways to get kids hooked on their services. But I suppose the same is likely to happen with server-side-verified blocks on kids using services, Meta can spin up new services that don't quite meet the definition and try to work around it. I guess this is orthoganal to the method of blocking kids.

                  > from a civil-liberties perspective Australia has been a shithole for a long time now. They can very safely be ignored by US parents and US lawmakers.

                  Even though what they are doing is less "Papers please" and more "Services must verify, how it's done is up to you", which seems lower down your evil scale than the US states you're up in arms about?

                  Interesting take.

                  But again, this is fine, it's an exchange of ideas. You don't seem to be against age verification in principle, you're acknowledging that people want something done. The article and many commenters here are immediately writing off everything in this area as effectively a distraction from full monitoring of everything everyone does on the net.

                  So while we may disagree entirely on how to go about effecting any sort of solution, and we may not (honestly I'm not entirely averse to the parental controls idea), you're not dismissing the problem out of hand, and in general I have no quarrel with you or your approach.

                  • simoncion 7 hours ago ago

                    > Even though what they are doing is...

                    I suppose you missed the part where I said

                      Australia has been a shithole for a long time now.
                    
                    This "You must present ID to use a computer" shit is relatively new.

                    > You're not really describing a client-side solution, you're describing legislation of something like the old Do Not Track header, which is a server-side solution...

                    Mmm. No, there are three systems being described here.

                    1) "Beefed up Parental Controls", where all service-restriction information is entered and stored client-side and sent server-side as needed.

                    2) "Age Please!", where a "guardian account" associates the birthdate/year of one or more users to their respective accounts using the client device. This information is entered and stored client-side and is sent server-side as needed.

                    3) "Papers Please!" -which is what #2 will become-, where a user uses their client device to photograph their government-issued photo ID to be sent to a third-party and processed server-side.

                    Because we're talking about accessing an Internet-hosted service, your apparent confusion about the need to send some information to the services servers is -itself- confusing.

                    > You don't seem to be against age verification in principle...

                    I'm 100% against it. I'm 100% for guardian-controlled content-restriction policies. I'm also completely fine with a "How old is your cutie? What things do you want them to not see or do?" wizard that populates those policies with some defaults that the guardian can fine-tune if they wish to.

                    > It's not even about being "all niceys" it's about recognising that the concern people have is genuinely held, and addressing it.

                    An equally important skill is recognizing when those concerns are not genuinely held. Anyone who should know about "Parental Controls" and chooses "Papers Please!" or "Age Please!" is evil. Lawmakers and regulators pushing for this stuff are in this bucket. Anyone who -once introduced to the concept- claims to see no world in which "Parental Controls" can be beefed up and also claims that "Age Please!" or "Papers Please!" is the only viable option is -at minimum- unrecoverably stupid, and is probably also evil.

                    • Nursie 7 hours ago ago

                      > I suppose you missed the part where I said

                      The part that I quoted? That would be quite a feat. Either way I think it's definitely a choice to entirely ignore what a country is doing in this area due to historical reasons, when the country you're interested in making changes to appears to be doing worse.

                      > Mmm. No, there are three systems being described here.

                      There are more than three options here. Here are more possibilities (already in use in some places) -

                      4. Service providers make an informed guess about who might be a kid, based on usage patterns and scanning the pictures they've uploaded.

                      5. Anonymous credentials systems, as described in the link in my first post that you responded to.

                      Neither of these is a 'papers please' solution.

                      > your apparent confusion about the need to send some information to the services servers is -itself- confusing.

                      So you're also implicitly ignoring solution 6, which a lot of people elsewhere in this thread are arguing for, which is parents using existing parental control systems built into their devices, which work 100% client side?

                      > I'm 100% for guardian-controlled content-restriction policies.

                      That's age verification of a sort by the guardian, enforced server-side. So no, you're not against these systems in principle, you're just proposing a solution that you find palatable.

                      > Anyone who should know about "Parental Controls" and chooses "Papers Please!" or "Age Please!" is evil.

                      Why? Parental controls at the moment are patchy, poorly understood and certainly don't operate in the way you're proposing they should in future. It's easy to see why people might declare that such schemes are inadequate.

                      I am finding it very funny that you are determined to put yourself in the category of "People Nursie disagrees with because they dismiss the entire thing as a conspiracy", even while you're not actually doing that, you're arguing in good faith and I applaud it!

                      • simoncion 6 hours ago ago

                        > So you're also implicitly ignoring solution 6, which a lot of people elsewhere in this thread are arguing for, which is parents using existing parental control systems built into their devices, which work 100% client side?

                        I'm 100% fine with those, but people report that they're "insufficient" for vague reasons. That's why I suggest we beef them up. Also...

                        > Why? Parental controls at the moment are patchy, poorly understood and certainly don't operate in the way you're proposing they should in future.

                        you seem to agree with the reports I'm hearing. That's why I suggest beefing them up.

                        > The part that I quoted? That would be quite a feat.

                        One that you managed, somehow. Gratz.

                        > ...they dismiss the entire thing as a conspiracy

                        Unless you're using the "Two or more people get together to plan something" definition of the word "conspiracy" -which happens to neatly cover planning to go to lunch-, I don't consider this to be a conspiracy. [0]

                        > There are more than three options here.

                        I was only discussing three, and I'm sure we can come up with way more than five in total, but sure, let's go.

                        > 4. Service providers make an informed guess...

                        That's happening now and has been for a while now. We all see how willing the larger operators are to rely on their guesses rather than relying on the judgment of a third-party. Having said that... when last I checked, 4chan was one of the operators who are doing the noble thing in the face of all this hysteria. [1] It sure is something when 4chan is on the right side of an issue and the big guys aren't.

                        > 5. Anonymous credentials systems...

                        They're absolutely not going to be anonymous in practice. As I mentioned earlier:

                           ...the private company that is contracted to implement and run a server-side implementation will cut every corner to improve their profit margins.
                        
                        > That's age verification of a sort by the guardian...

                        Absolutely not. Do explain where the restricted account has either its age, documents that contain its user's age, or documents that can be used to look up its user's age entered into it. A helpful hint is to ask yourself how you'd distinguish between the content restrictions set for a precocious eleven-year-old and those set for an adult suffering from both PTSD and advanced dementia who needs to be protected from both scammers and graphic depictions of sex and violence.

                        [0] Yes, I read ahead to the end of the sentence I quoted. The statement to which this footnote is attached is included for completeness' sake.

                        [1] <https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c624330lg1ko>

                        • Nursie 2 hours ago ago

                          > Unless you're using the "Two or more people get together to plan something" definition of the word "conspiracy" -which happens to neatly cover planning to go to lunch-, I don't consider this to be a conspiracy.

                          Yes that's the entire point of this whole thread, congrats for getting there in the end.

                          You don't consider this a conspiracy.

                          People like the article author do, and in doing so they miss the mark on having any effect on the wider conversation because they aren't willing to even acknowledge the existence of the problem. You are actually engaging with the topic and putting forwards ideas and engaging with solutions. You have thoughts about how something might be made to work. You are not who I1 am complaining about.

                          (As an aside, why not actually try reading the link about anonymous credentials? It's very informative and it shows you what's possible even if you're too cynical to believe anyone would ever implement it)

  • sunshine-o 8 hours ago ago

    The irony is AI already have more freedom of speech and maybe reach compared to humans in most "western democracies".

  • nephihaha 9 hours ago ago

    I feel we are preaching to the choir here. How do we get this message out to the wider population when it's being corralled so much?

    I think this Cloudflare business ties into it, although it is masquerading as bot protection.

  • aichi 6 hours ago ago

    ... use Monero. Why author didn't start with this claim? Intention would be more clear

    • zetanor an hour ago ago

      What is the clear intention?

  • Ouman 8 hours ago ago

    The scary part is not "age checks today, secret police tomorrow". It is that once there is a convenient identity-verification layer for normal internet use, it will be very hard to keep it limited to the original purpose... Every future regulator, prosecutor, platform and "think of the children" campaign will have an incentive to expand it

  • jimbob45 12 hours ago ago

    What would you say to someone who is afraid that a bad actor will find their kids on Discord/Minecraft/4chan and encourage them to commit suicide or shoot up their school?

    • tryauuum 12 hours ago ago

      I would tell them to not give their children internet access at all until they think they are ready. Does it sound realistic? I don't know. From technical point of view certainly realistic, a child doesn't have money / devices of his own

    • m0unta1ntube 10 hours ago ago

      Listen to your children, give them attention, they are your responsibility, don't give them internet access if you find it unsafe

  • quotemstr 13 hours ago ago

    It doesn't have to be, FWIW. We have all the technology we need to decouple attribution from identity. We can achieve efficient and mathematically perfect unlinkability.

    Yet the powerful continue to insist on "papers, please" anonymity-rending personal authentication over anonymous authorization. It's not often that the villains of history so clearly identify themselves.

    My bunch is that the people driving this stuff were unaware that age verification could be privacy-preserving and can't exactly back down now.

  • OutOfHere 13 hours ago ago

    We do need a decentralized scalable permissionless platform for speech. For it to remain sustainable, there should be a slight cost in Monero to making each post on it, preloadable in batches.

    • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

      Have one. Called the internet.

      • OutOfHere 5 hours ago ago

        It is not censorship resistant without using the domains of some foreign nations.

  • thomastjeffery 14 hours ago ago

    That, and it defines children as perpetrators instead of victims. What right could a citizen ever claim in a world where even children are guilty?

    There is a huge difference between protecting children and prosecuting/punishing children. Age verification can only be an implementation of the latter.

  • jauntywundrkind 14 hours ago ago

    Look at W Social. The governments will team up with anyone, no matter how shady, as long as they promise to try to restrict free, unattributed speech. They'll team up with absolute sharks, as long as those sharks are gonna help sack and battle the Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48584497

  • uwagar 7 hours ago ago

    age verificiation is throttling of speech. so the internet becomes again like TV or newspaper. u can transmit with license only. not anonymously.

    • nosyke an hour ago ago

      This isn't necessarily true as you'd actually be surprised how easy it still is to go place an anonymous ad in your local newspaper. Not all of them will allow it but quite a few still make it fairly easy.

  • BenFranklin100 14 hours ago ago

    Calls to mind a quote attributed to Cardinal Richelieu, 16th century Secretary of State for France:

    ‘If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him”

  • shevy-java 12 hours ago ago

    Fascism will lose in the long run. Right now the lobbyists coordinate rather effectively, looking at how many democracies already succumbed here. Well, we need direct democracy - the system that we have right now with regard to democracies, is undermined by corruption.

    • Nursie 12 hours ago ago

      What makes you think that age verification on the internet wouldn't be wildly popular with the demos?

  • piokoch 12 hours ago ago

    Yup "protecting kids" has a long, long history of being used as an excuse to restrict citizens rights, yet something like Epstein Island was happening with all the proponents of child protection being happy visitors of the said island.

    • nephihaha 9 hours ago ago

      Jevon McSkimming, the second most powerful person in the New Zealand police, under Jacinda Ardern, was arrested not long ago for viewing extreme kiddie porn involving animals and torture. He had been doing so on his work computer!

      Complaints had been made against the man for years and been thrown out because of who he was, and the material was only found by accident.

      This same individual had been yet another one of those arguing for tighter controls on the internet and free speech for the peasants.

      Another one of these "one rule for me, another for thee" types.

  • microgpt 13 hours ago ago

    What are you talking about. They already have automated attribution of speech.

  • jmyeet 5 hours ago ago

    The word "China" isn't mentioned once here and that really highlights how shallow this piece is. I've scannned the comments and there's the usual tropes about lack of freedom of speech but let's look at some recent events:

    - A 30 year prison sentence for tansporting a box of zines in Texas [1]. To do so they invented "antifa" as an organization out of whole cloth and will now use those convictions as further proof. I've seen this compared to the Salem witch trials;

    - Mahmoud Khalil, a lawful permanent resident, was detained and there is still ongoing deportation proceedings. What for? Organizing a peaceful protest at Columbia against the genocide being committed by Israel [2];

    - Renee Good and Alex Pretti who were simply protesting ICE were killed essentially in cold blood and there have been zero consequences;

    - Over 700 charged under the Terrorist Act in the UK for expressing support for Palestine. Defenders will argue Palestine Action is a designated terrorism group without asking why. Also, that's how it always works. Slavery was legal once. Freeing slaves was illegal. Does that make the Underground Railroad a terrorist organization? Today it would;

    - In ~35 states in the US to work for or in government you have to express varying degrees of loyalty to Israel or at least commit never to boycott Israel eg [3]. To date, the Supreme Court has never substantively taken up these cases as the clear First Amendment violation they are;

    - In PA, the Swarthmore 9 are being charged over their protests with the bullshit charge of "defiant trespass" [4];

    - In Australia, in the wake of the Bondi shooting, new anti-"hate crime" legislation was passed that is so broad and sweeping that the Greens claim you could be charged with criticizing Benjamin Netanyahu [5].

    - Numerous examples of the administration pulling funding and bringing colleges to heel over not cracking down sufficiently on Gaza protests.

    So why I find these tired tropes about China so exhausting and lazy is because:

    1. Look at what's happening here and in the West at large; and

    2. Ironically, China has a system for age verification that actually works and the answer is really simple. The government issues the IDs. It can verify the IDs. We do this all the time with employment (eg E-Verify). You can even do it in such a way that the app doesn't get any sensitive information.

    But it's like people say "you can't trust government" (even though the government already has all that data) and then thinks that a private company is the only possible solution (eg Peter Thiel's Persona).

    If you've gotten this far you should know that at no point in any of the above have I argued for age verification. So far all I've said is that there is an absolute double standard in the fearmongering around it and that is it possible to create a relatively effective regime for it without handing everyone's data to Peter Thiel.

    I think it's inarguable at this point that what we're doing now has been a dismal failure and something's gotta give. I think we should start by attacking the financial incentives here, namely:

    1. Tech companies already use behavioural analysis to guess your demographics. If they figure out you're under 18 you should have a restricted experience. That should include no advertising, a much more limited algorithmic feed, etc;

    2. Stop tech companies from being able to sell advertising to minors. Don't allow an advertiser to target an audience that includes minors as best as the tech company knows they are minors.

    I personally think we could eliminate a bunch of harm just by attacking the advertising incentive here.

    [1]: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2026/jun/...

    [2]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detention_of_Mahmoud_Khalil

    [3]: https://www.txdot.gov/manuals/csd/ncp/standards_for_contract...

    [4]: https://iacenter.org/2026/06/27/swarthmore-9-on-trial-for-pr...

    [5]: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2026/jan/21/criti...

  • msy 9 hours ago ago

    I find myself in an odd predicament. For nearly all my life I would have seen all of this as an unconscionable anathema. But having watched what social media has done to our society, the tsunami of bullshit collapsing critical thought, science and reason I just don’t think civilisation can survive this without controls. Too many people are too gullible, too uncritical for it to survive without the state being able to curtail harmful speech at scale. Do I hate it? Absolutely. But I hate the alternative more. And I want the bounds of acceptable speech to be decided by my democratically elected government, not a bunch of American billionaires determined to burn society to the ground so they can pan the ashes for yet more gold.

    • shakna 9 hours ago ago

      Wouldn't it be better to curtail social media's addictive design choices, and improve things for everyone, rather than force the audience to carry the weight of responsibility?

      • bcjdjsndon 7 hours ago ago

        > Wouldn't it be better to curtail social media's addictive design choices

        Hacker news has a doomscroll front page. Ive never notice you have a problem with it

        • shakna 6 hours ago ago

          HN specifically does not. You have to click "more", leading to most people not moving beyond two or three pages, rather than infinite scrolling.

    • plastic-enjoyer 9 hours ago ago

      The problem isn't social media per se, but rather how social media is designed, and this design is driven by profits and big tech. There are, at least in Europe, no alternatives to the big social media platforms. I'm not too keen on social media bans, because this neither elimates the desire for social media, nor social media in itself.

    • nosyke 43 minutes ago ago

      you just gotta apply like maybe 10-15 seconds of critical thinking here and you too will also realize this is a bunch of nonsense

    • coreyburnsdev 3 hours ago ago

      found the nudge unit employee

    • Pragmata 9 hours ago ago

      >But having watched what social media has done to our society, the tsunami of bullshit collapsing critical thought, science and reason I just don’t think civilisation can survive this without controls.

      None of this is new. Every single one of these things has been pointed out millennia ago.

      You had already evaluated it and made your decision (against censorship) on this decades ago when you first came across it.

      Changing your view now isn't a matter of new information coming to light. It's a matter of you disliking the obvious and inevitable consequences that you had been warned of going into it.

      Perhaps it's time you stop changing your mind based on totalitarian propaganda and realize you don't know what you're doing, and stop supporting censorship.

  • Varelion 6 hours ago ago

    Gonna repost this comment I made last week, as no one interacted with its core idea. I am torn. I have bore first-hand witness to the scale of the PsyOps war waged on the American people by institutions near and far. Artroturfing to sew division to one means of another.

    In all these operations, anonymity is what drives it.

    I was born and raised in the anonymous internet, and tasted its freedoms. I oppose censorship. But, at this point, I have come to wonder it it would be best to always have your real-life personality attached to all you do. At least to any action that feeds an algorithm or creates something someone else can see.

    It is the nature of the internet that you could never achieve absolute censorship -- and maybe anonymity should belong to the hackers and tinkers with the will and drive to hunt and craft for it.

    I do not like holding this opinion, because it feels as though it is on the similar boat as that of those who 'pull up the ladder after themselves'. Increasingly, I see it as pulling shut the trapdoors to hell.

    P.S. This goes without saying -- it's also the only was to defend against "ai" bots.

    EDIT: I'm thoroughly convinced that my initial position here was wrong. Yeah -- easy to forget that, with, COINTELPRO, the feds are not bound by the same laws as the people, and that oligarch-controlled media will bend over backwards to give them backdoors. Thanks for all the feedback.

    • clcaev 6 hours ago ago

      > In all these operations, anonymity is what drives it.

      The most egregious, prolific lies out there have been fully attributed; and perhaps especially because of attribution, people vehemently disagree on which are the lies.

      Those who wield outsized power experience attribution of speech asymmetrically. Filtering societal communication supports the concentration of power.

    • nicce 5 hours ago ago

      > But, at this point, I have come to wonder it it would be best to always have your real-life personality attached to all you do. At least to any action that feeds an algorithm or creates something someone else can see.

      If attaching your real self to everything is so important, why does it only seem to restrain those without power, while those with the most influence can say whatever benefits them and face no consequences?

    • Cthulhu_ 6 hours ago ago

      Interesting point, as at one point large internet companies like Facebook and Google/Youtube made real names mandatory - Facebook going as far as asking your "friends" to rat on you.

      In theory it was a great way to prevent abuse - are people still horrible on the internet if they use their real name? Turns out they are, because it only took a few years of internet for people to no longer have any shame.

      • zrn900 5 hours ago ago

        > are people still horrible on the internet if they use their real name

        Yep. Google forced real names on youtube. People kept acting the same way.

    • loveiswork 6 hours ago ago

      I think I agree, so long as:

      - age/identity verification comes with banning of bot traffic posing as human in any communication platform, by law - end to end encrypted communication is declared a fundamental human right, by law

      I don't think we'll see that though. Too much money / power left on the table.

    • albertgoeswoof 6 hours ago ago

      If this is the case then I simply won’t engage. 90 % will not engage and you’re left with the 10% who are willing to put everything they do out there publicly and permanently- probably because they have an ulterior motive or commercial reason to do so

    • lotsofpulp 6 hours ago ago

      >But, at this point, I have come to wonder it it would be best to always have your real-life personality attached to all you do.

      I also had similar thoughts to you, but seeing the election results of the previous decade in the US makes me question the premise that transparency will lead to desirable results because the majority have good intentions.

    • zrn900 5 hours ago ago

      > I have bore first-hand witness to the scale of the PsyOps war waged on the American people by institutions near and far.

      You can be sure that none of those organizations will be affected by it. Especially the domestic ones.

      > But, at this point, I have come to wonder it it would be best to always have your real-life personality attached to all you do.

      No:

      https://bianet.org/haber/eu-strips-journalist-huseyin-dogru-...

      And that is Europe. The US wouldnt hesitate 2 seconds before shoving you into a federal prison.

      > It is the nature of the internet that you could never achieve absolute censorship

      Oh yes you can. The only reason you have a 'free' internet now is because the US had to rush its internet out without implementing the censorship and control mechanisms it planned because the USSR was about to release its own internet. Now they are making up for their mistake.

  • derektank 14 hours ago ago

    Disliking data centers, illegal immigration, or taxes is not a crime in the United States, nor is posting inconvenient messages about politicians, nor is getting a little too rowdy in a group chat. And none of these things are likely to be made illegal any time soon.

    I always find this form of argument in favor of privacy (which is valuable in its own right to be clear) so roundabout. If you’re concerned about the government impinging on your freedom of speech, then why not write an essay arguing for expansive freedom of speech protections? That seems like a much more direct solution to the problem presented in this essay.

    • arkhiver 14 hours ago ago
      • derektank 13 hours ago ago

        I’m not exactly sure how an abuse of power occurring at a public event relates to the question of privacy or freedom of speech. The law did not allow the officer to arrest the man for the content of his speech so he retaliated by enforcing a different law unjustly. This kind of selective enforcement of the law can be a violation of federal law and the man likely has standing to sue.

        • derektank 13 hours ago ago

          For reference, a similar case of selective enforcement against an outspoken critic of the local government in Texas resulted in the critic receiving a settlement of $500k following an unjust arrest

          https://www.ksat.com/news/local/2025/10/15/i-feel-like-i-can...

        • microgpt 12 hours ago ago

          it's an example of the government silencing people for speech

          • derektank 6 hours ago ago

            It’s an example of someone being arrested for violating a law, in this case a law restricting how long you are allowed to present at a city council meeting.

            This could be a case of selective enforcement, a deliberate attempt to retaliate against the man for his previous speech, which would be illegal under federal law (see Gonzales v. Trevino).

            It’s also possible that this is not a new thing and the municipality in question just regulates city business very strictly. This is bad in its own right, it grants too much power to the state which can be abused, but would not be a free speech question.

          • charcircuit 12 hours ago ago

            No, it's an example of someone being told to leave, not doing so, and then being arrested for trespassing.

            • microgpt 10 hours ago ago

              For speech. By the government.

            • nephihaha 9 hours ago ago

              For being five seconds over? Not even minutes.

              • charcircuit 7 hours ago ago

                He was asked due to his actions he took after he was told to stop. If he had just stopped talking after being told his time was up he would not have been asked to leave.

                • microgpt 7 hours ago ago

                  Honest question: which part of the First Amendment says you only get three minutes to speak?

                  • derektank 5 hours ago ago

                    The 1st amendment has long been understood to protect the content of your speech, not the time, place, or manner of your speech. It guarantees the communicative act, the viewpoint or message conveyed; it does not give you an unlimited right to convey it however you want. The government has been consistently allowed by the Supreme Court to establish noise ordinances preventing people from yelling into a bullhorn at night or laws against marching a protest down a busy city street without first obtaining a parade permit. As long as there is no viewpoint discrimination in how those laws are enforced, it is perfectly legal to restrict public comment periods to 3 minutes.

                    • microgpt 3 hours ago ago

                      Why not three seconds or three milliseconds?

                      There's unreasonable discrimination because the public comment period is only used for speech which disagrees with the government.

                • nephihaha 3 hours ago ago

                  Five seconds is nothing. It's shorter than it took to type this message.

  • Cthulhu_ 6 hours ago ago

    Note that age verification does not rely on you handing over identifying information to the party requesting it, that's just one possible implementation. Another more privacy conscious one is e.g. iDIN or whatever comes after, which works a bit like oauth in that you're redirected to a trusted 3rd party like your bank which only confirms "this person is 18+" to the requesting party.

    The only thing that the requester needs to save is the "this person is 18+ as verified by this party".

    Granted, that's still an avenue for law enforcement to find out who you are, but then, so is your internet service provider or VPN (where the VPN is likely already a honeypot)

    • zrn900 5 hours ago ago

      > Note that age verification does not rely on you handing over identifying information to the party requesting it

      It most certainly does, because it has to:

      https://reclaimthenet.org/starmers-social-media-ban-surveill...

      "Monday’s headline was a ban on under-16s using social media which, to some, sounds about as sinister as a wholesome ribbon-cutting until you ask the obvious question nobody in Downing Street wants asked aloud: how, precisely, do you stop a fourteen-year-old from opening Instagram without first checking the age of the forty-year-old?

      You don’t. You can’t. So everyone gets carded. Britain is lifting the system wholesale from Australia, where a computer first scans your face and guesses your age from your cheekbones, then, failing that, surveils you to death, studies your browsing habits and the hours you keep, and then, when the algorithm throws up its hands, simply demands your passport."

      • chrisjj 4 hours ago ago

        That's not a requirement to hand over identifying information to the party requesting it.

  • jklowden 4 hours ago ago

    Count me among those who think publishers should always know who they’re publishing. When law enforcement comes knocking, a warrant should be all they need. Meta can’t shrug and say they don’t know who Batman1964 is.

    There’s nothing new in publishing anonymously, just ask George Elliot. What’s new is the notion that publishers have no liability. Social media companies do not claim to speak for themselves. They have no reporters, no sources to protect. They’re one giant “letters to the editor” section. They should know for whom they speak.

    Whether or not a writer commits libel is for the courts to decide. Neither the writer nor publisher has the right to avoid responsibility by camouflage.

    • mpalmer 4 hours ago ago

      Freedom of expression is inseparable from the right to privacy.

      Should journalists be forced to reveal their sources if the subject of a claim sues for defamation?

      • rini17 4 hours ago ago

        Freedom of expression is not absolute and never was.

        Should everyone just shrug off anonymous hoaxes and hate speech?

        • simplyluke 4 minutes ago ago

          Define hate speech. The popular definition among politicians who enforce it is "speech I hate"

        • itubaj 2 hours ago ago

          Yes. If, unfortunately, I need to live in only one of two scenarios, i.e.:

          1. I need to identify myself for everything on the internet because of said "hoaxes" and "hate speech";

          2. I don't need to identify myself anywhere on the internet, and let go of said "hoaxes" and "hate speech", but can have the right of saying anything that I need to say without fearing for my safety and the safety of my relatives due to the government;

          Then yes, I would prefer the second option without a blink. Unfortunately, for what we have seen in the last few decades, there is no intermediary option. The proverb is true: give them an inch, and they will take a mile.

        • LtWorf 3 hours ago ago

          Yes, the alternative is that you will only read state propaganda.

          • rini17 3 hours ago ago

            By painting everything so black and white you're doing propaganda too, are you aware?

            • nosyke an hour ago ago

              come on dawg, maybe 10 seconds of critical thought and even you will realize that is a bunch of nonsense.