• Crackhappy@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Wrong. This is to violate everyone’s rights and target children. This is fucking abhorrent and needs to be stopped.

  • TerdFerguson@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Conceptually, I think this is a lot closer to where things need to be. I do understand that the application does fall short in some critical aspects of security though, and on that basis it would still need more work to be suitable.

    I understand and agree with the general sentiment of resisting the surveillance state that is dominating tech ever more in this space of ID verification, but this looks to me like it would be okay if the app was built with some very strict secure-by-design approach… which it does NOT seem to be.

    There should be stronger technical controls availble to keep kids away from the dangerous things online, and I do think governments can potentially play a positive role in that.

  • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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    8 hours ago

    I get my porn from illegal download sites that aren’t interested in age-verification.

    Like all Prohibition Policies, this is only going to push people toward more illegal outlets, which demonstrate more morality than the legal ones.

    • Soup@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Or, as is the case with a lot of sex work, push people into more dangerous situations.

    • orioler25@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Liberals. It’s systemic like it has always been. As cathartic as it is to remember the French Revolution, it’s not like it worked and ended stratification and imperialism. Liberalism will always seek as much control as possible, and the internet has proven to be a huge fucking problem exactly because it is so impossible to control.

      • Soup@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        Exactly. Centrism, and the very idea that there is “moderation” to be sought between progressive ideals and back-assward conservatism, is a fucking plague. We all suffer because people don’t want to seem “extreme” and I’m fucking tired of it. We have to commit to being progressive and admit that all centrism has ever done is seek validation for and to normalize right-wing viewpoints long enough that we stop paying attention.

  • DoomBananas@sh.itjust.works
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    12 hours ago

    If they are so dead set on protecting children, I suggest starting with:

    Gaza Strip and the West Bank (Palestine) Ukraine Sudan Myanmar Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) Syria Yemen Ethiopia Afghanistan Haiti Niger Mali Burkina Faso

    Zuzks wallet will do just fine in the mean time

  • eleitl@lemmy.zip
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    13 hours ago

    I don’t use apps from official software installation sources. I will boycott any site or service that asks me for unnecessary information.

    • musket528@sopuli.xyz
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      2 hours ago

      still 99% of ppl especially youngsters use this bullshit social media and will fall for this spy company

    • matlag@sh.itjust.works
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      9 hours ago

      Until you can’t because they will deploy this absolutely everywhere to “protect the children” from whatever real or imaginary threat.

      • ThetaDecay@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        It will be banking that is used as the wedge for this. You’ll have to use an approved device / OS / App to get access to the banking system. To protect the children.

        • lost_faith@lemmy.ca
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          8 hours ago

          I can use a phone to do business with my bank, dumb phone -> call number -> do banking, then again, I can also send up to $3k with no fee

      • eleitl@lemmy.zip
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        9 hours ago

        We can always self-host. We’re using such a resource right now. Of course they can start blocking and persecuting, like they’re doing in Russia right now. At which point you should start learning about fpv drones as a hobby, particularly the fiber-optic kind.

    • sunbeam60@feddit.uk
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      6 hours ago

      I largely agree with you.

      But please can you tell me how you believe this differs from age-gating the purchase of cigarettes, lottery tickets, age restricted cinema tickets, alcohol, firearms and so many other things we already have age-gating on?

      Edit: I’d love any one of the downvoters to comment and actually explain what I’ve said that’s so atrocious? We DO age gate many things in society and many, I dare say most, would not want cigarettes to be available to a 13 year old. So what is it about online that makes it so different? If we CAN make age checks online anonymous (and indeed the EU standard downright requires it) why don’t we want this online?

      • qaeta@lemmy.ca
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        3 hours ago

        When you go to purchase those things in person, you present your ID, but then it is given back. They do not keep your ID. They do not get to make a copy of it’s information for them to store and sell and track you with. It is presented at that particular moment, and then control of it is returned to you.

        That is not the case with these digital ID requirements. With these digital ID requirements, they absolutely make and keep a copy. They absolutely use the information from that copy to track you and sell your data on to others. They use it to build a profile on you about your behaviours and purchases etc which will absolutely be used to tighten the noose of control. And we’ve already seen, over and over and over again that pretty much every time they claim they aren’t doing those things, they absolutely still are. Even if they weren’t, they’ve also repeatedly demonstrated a complete and utter inability to secure that data from third parties accessing it too.

        It is completely different and enormously more invasive than presenting your ID in person.

      • Mesophar@pawb.social
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        10 hours ago

        You don’t need to show ID to enter the store just because they sell cigarettes at the front counter. The staff person checking the OD at the front counter isn’t memorizing the information on the ID and using it to track every other purchase you make in the store, or to piece together what you’re doing once you leave the store.

        Locking individual content behind age verification (and it entirely depends on how they are handling the age verification), is different than a blanket identification check to use the platform at all. Age verification is used to prevent children from buying cigarettes from a store while under aged, but it’s up to parents to prevent them from getting cigarettes other ways.

        • sunbeam60@feddit.uk
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          6 hours ago

          But let’s separate the technical/privacy discussion of age gating from the discussion about age gating social media platforms.

          If I go to a Scottish distillery website and buys chocolate, they are not going to age gate me. If I buy whisky they will. That’s not age gating at the door, that’s age gating for a specific product that we, our democratic society, have decided, through democratic means, should not be available to minors.

          Regulating social media age gating is a different discussion altogether. The discussion is about whether we want to be able to anonymously check (again, the EU standard requires anonymity) someone’s age online.

          • qaeta@lemmy.ca
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            2 hours ago

            Stop moving the goal posts. Also, no one has convincingly shown they can do that anonymously, but lots have shown they CAN’T. You can’t divorce the privacy implications because they are intrinsically linked right now and there is no evidence supporting the ability to unlink them.

      • dansemacabreingalone@lemmy.dbzer0.comBanned
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        9 hours ago

        You dont have your id printed on every cigarette. The government doesnt dilute the alcohol with unique radiomarkers to track your piss (yet). Firearms tracking is nowhere near this comprehensive or invasive anywhere in the world. Not even on military ranges. Cinema tickets? Really?

        Qnd as pointed elsewhere: you font need to show ID if youre just buyong pink monster vegan jerky condoms and new usb cable for your fav sex toy.

        • sunbeam60@feddit.uk
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          6 hours ago

          But have you read the EU standard? Anonymity is a requirement. There is no tracking. The age check does not refer back to you. Indeed, it cannot.

          You can of course believe that the legal requirements aren’t adhered to and that the state is actually lying, but if you believe that the state already has a million ways to track you, including 99.9999% of us who carry our phones around with us and pay with credit cards in physical stores.

          • Khanzarate@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            It can’t be anonymous if you need a google or apple account to use. I’m not concerned about what the government tracks (well, not in this context at least), I’m concerned about who and what they’re working with to do the tracking. If the app verifies me as an adult but I couldn’t use the app without google butting in, google now has yet another data point in a secret ad profile that the government should be putting a stop to, not helping them build up. It’d be like announcing a plan to stop illegal drug usage by partnering with the cartel.

            If they wanted a government-sponsored age verification sort of thing, it should’ve been an app whose only job was to type in a code you got from going in person to some government body and verifying in person. Town office, DMV, somewhere like that.

            More fundamentally, though, “protecting the children” shouldn’t go anywhere near anything that can be used for identity theft. Showing my ID to the cashier at the cigarette shop is significantly safer than showing it to any business on the internet, because sharing a high-quality picture of something is giving them a copy. The cashier gets to see it, but it never leaves my sight and isn’t recorded in any way except probably some dodgy security camera where you can’t read it anyway.

            • sunbeam60@feddit.uk
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              5 hours ago

              Ok, so it’s about Google and Apple accounts.

              When you say “Google butting in” can you be more specific about what it is you believe Google tracks in an app they haven’t made themselves but only ingested in their store? Is it your belief that Google tracks all app interactions even in apps without firebase or Google Ads SDK?

              • Khanzarate@lemmy.world
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                4 hours ago

                Honestly, I don’t know exactly what google can or can’t track if the app developer doesn’t specifically enable them. I don’t have specific evidence that they’ll even be able to tell if the user was verified or not

                What I do know is they have repeatedly shown that they’re happy to hide or lie about what and how they track people, and more broadly about their business as a whole.

                Again I cite the drug analogy. Google is in the business of tracking people and harvesting data for ads. It’s like inviting the cartel to the DARE program and expecting everything to go swimmingly.

                If they want their age verification app to actually be anonymous, they shouldn’t force people to use a tracking service to use it. The app specifically won’t be functional on degoogled android phones and won’t be offered on desktop computers. Maybe Google can’t spy on anything going on in the app, but even so, they could correlate “used verification app, roblox usage went up” or “used verification app, continued to use Tinder, concluded adult, ignoring ‘do not track’ preference as it doesn’t violate laws about tracking minors”.

                It’s true that a minority of users have taken the steps where this inferred information would be particularly helpful to google, but not having the option to opt out is going to get harder and harder, and this service doesn’t provide enough good to give the information cartel that is Google any more information, even inferred, in my opinion.

  • MrSulu@lemmy.ml
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    15 hours ago

    Oh this sounds good… I missed reading the following essential requirements

    • They achieved an unhackable system that also “air gaps” the information used to prove child ID from any external agent, including themselves
    • So it will be pulled immediately if it fails or exposes any childs data
    • Demonstrably withstands hacking? They have independent audit data?
    • Clear accountability clearly laid out for data breaches, including criminal charges?
    • Ministerial accountability?
  • minorkeys@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    The motives are irrelevant. This will destroy the internet as we know it and disempower citizens. I can’t help but wonder if the empowerment LLMs may have to an individual is terrifying leaders into an authoritarian mindset, finally demanding to be able to know and track what we do online, everywhere we do it. This is about protecting their ability to rule, not children from harm.

    • IratePirate@feddit.org
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      15 hours ago

      I can’t help but wonder if the empowerment LLMs may have to an individual is terrifying leaders into an authoritarian mindset

      LLMs are here to enrich the rich, not to “empower the individual”. They require ridiculously expensive computing power, which makes them impractical or even impossible to self-host (with data centers buying up the market, the required hardware becomes unaffordable to the individual). Now you’re at the mercy of renting out the compute from the oligarchs and their companies, and you’re also relying on their censored and biased models (see Grok and his “Mecha-Hitler” antics if you want a taste of the future). Please don’t expect that to empower you, or anyone else. It can’t, and even if it could, it wouldn’t be available to you.

      Unless we democratise LLMs, they’ll just become yet another tool of enslavement in the clutches of the Epstein class.

    • blackbeans@lemmy.zip
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      14 hours ago

      It could greatly boost the use of decentralized apps. Which will ultimately give people more power than they have right now. So in the long run, it might have some positive side effects.

    • john_t@piefed.ee
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      14 hours ago

      The internet as we know it is a playground for billionaires to get richer. Good riddance.

      • Tryenjer@lemmy.world
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        11 hours ago

        And the new internet that is on the horizon will be the definitive establishment of these same billionaires as feudal lords.

    • myplacedk@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      Unlike most other age verification system, this doesn’t reveal any other personal information but your age. No credit card number, no personal id.

      So I’m curious how you get to your conclusion?

      • Nalivai@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        In order to make sure that the age a person provided is real, the system will gather all that information anyway. I don’t know what you mean by “reveal”, but it will gather it. And that’s the main building block of the problem.

          • Nalivai@lemmy.world
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            11 hours ago

            No, that’s an app on your phone. That accumulates a ton of data in a way that didn’t exist before. The government knows I exist. Now it knows every website I’m visiting, and my identity on those sites. Now the new politician in my country decides to be a little bit more corrupt, and asks the app maintainer “hey, can you gather IDs and home addresses of all the people who criticized genocide online last couple of years, I would like to execute them publicly”, and they can do it with basically one sql equerry. The only defense against that will be “but that’s illegal, there are laws against that!”, which is shit defense nowadays.

            • myplacedk@lemmy.world
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              9 hours ago

              Yes, all of that happens. That is a valid worry. Which is why they tried to avoid it.

              Did you see how much they did to avoid this? Do you see a flaw in their solution?

              • Nalivai@lemmy.world
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                7 hours ago

                Yes, the flaw in their solution is that they require the government ID to access the internet now. That’s the flaw.

            • sunbeam60@feddit.uk
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              10 hours ago

              I’m sorry, but have you read the technical documentation? The design is intentional created this way to avoid tracking.

              You are issued a set of ZKP tokens that you hand back to websites. They cannot correlate these tokens back to you, nor can the operator of the system.

              Now they could lie, of course, and violate the design (but being open source that’s a little harder), but if the government wanted to secretly track you, much more precise tools exist for this already.

              • Nalivai@lemmy.world
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                7 hours ago

                That’s the stupid part, it doesn’t matter what it will look like at the beginning. It might be the best written documentation now, they can even implement the app correctly. The thing is, the jump from “people can use the internet” to “in order to access the internet you need to provide your government ID to your smartphone” is a big jump, one that can cost a politician career. The jump from “you need to use version 1.4.412 of the govenment id checker” to “you need to use version 2.0 of the Government Id Checker Plus” is minuscule. That’s where you introduce a persistent database of the tokens, somewhere on page 5 of the changelog. And only nerds care about that and nobody listens to them.
                It’s so fucking easy, Russia did this exact gambit in 2017, Kazakhstan couple of years before.

                • sunbeam60@feddit.uk
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                  5 hours ago

                  Ok, so it’s the slippery slope fallacy.

                  But that slippery slope, which it sounds like you believe us to be on, also applies to phone location tracking, credit cards payments, mobile phone train tickets, smart homes, smart cars, home CCTV etc etc.

                  Do you leave your phone at home, always pay with cash, don’t use any apps? Most people do these things on the basis that the government doesn’t wantonly have access to what we’ve bought online. Why is age gating so different?

              • matlag@sh.itjust.works
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                9 hours ago

                At last a piece of code free of any flaw, any exploit, invulnerable to any known or unknown attack method!

                • sunbeam60@feddit.uk
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                  6 hours ago

                  Of course things can break and something might be able to refer back to you, until it gets fixed.

                  But if your argument is that “the standard is fine, but something might not quite work”, then the same argument applies to your phone’s location tracking, your debit/credit payments etc. The vast majority of us happily use systems on the basis that they are secure, until they’re not, and then things get fixed.

                  Your argument has to apply evenly.