Bluesky is rolling out age verification in the UK
-
This is the UK we're talking about, absolutely no one in government knows how to block anything. Seriously every time they block something I just use one of those crappy free VPN plugins and get around it. Basically I'm only looking for magnet links anyway.
You don't even need to keep the VPN on to torrent the file. It's so stupid.
I have seen some people in UK (on reddit) complaining about ISP sending notices when torrenting w/o a VPN.
-
Not feasibly, no. If a centralized platform like bluesky refuses to abide by the laws in a given country, their platform can be made inaccessible in that country. Trying to do that to countless activitypub-compliant servers wouldn't be practical since you van just hop to another server.
Do you think they won't try? I mean both the Tory and previous Labour admins tried to ban encryption.
-
Thanks for the information.
I found this specific clause very ... porous.
Clarification — commercial purpose
6 For greater certainty, for the purpose of section 5, an organization that incidentally and not deliberately provides a service that is used to search for, transmit, download, store or access content on the Internet that is alleged to constitute pornographic material does not make available pornographic material on the Internet for commercial purposes.So... I guess Bing will once again be my goto incidental indeliberate porn search engine. And reddit. And Lemmy.
Public Bill (Senate) S-209 (45-1) - First Reading - Protecting Young Persons from Exposure to Pornography Act - Parliament of Canada
Public Bill (Senate) S-209 (45-1) - First Reading - Protecting Young Persons from Exposure to Pornography Act - Parliament of Canada
(www.parl.ca)
Surprisingly, a conservative senator had a fairly well reasoned, and cautious, (although still supportive), response speech.
It still has a long way to goto get through senate committee and house readings and committees and all that. Still, might be a good time to scrape all the porn.
Look at Bill S-210 from the last Parliament, it made it to 2nd reading in the House. There is cause for concern.
I appreciate your dive into the topic though. Michael Geist has more info on his website.
-
Where’s that federation?
And how would this fit in? Are they just going to build a bunch of excuses into the platform, and then claim it’s now impossible?
This is mandated by UK law. If you created a node so that UK users can bypass this, you would be doing something illegal. You'd probably get defederated.
-
This pisses me off, governments mandating control. Would this affect Lemmy or any fediverse software one day?
it already does it's the reason why lemmy.zip isn't accessible in the uk (though it still federates to other servers)
-
Somewhere in a government building in the UK: We did it, Patrick...
So uh, choosing an instance was too complicated, right?
-
According to whom?
According to your father ulrich.
-
According to whom?
Is the system opaque? Does someone else hold the private encryption keys? Could unencrypted data leak from the company and expose users?
If any of those answers are "yes", then assume it's already compromised by a government and unsafe.
-
So uh, choosing an instance was too complicated, right?
What makes you think this doesn't apply to Mastodon instances?
-
Somewhere in a government building in the UK: We did it, Patrick...
Good for them. Too many goddamn kids on the internet with dumbass ideas and shitty grammar and yolos and skibidy rizz, why back in my day we have to go uphill both ways to the internet cafe before we could argue with a strawman online
-
Is the system opaque? Does someone else hold the private encryption keys? Could unencrypted data leak from the company and expose users?
If any of those answers are "yes", then assume it's already compromised by a government and unsafe.
There is no encryption involved. They just give you a token that verifies your age and you present the token to the site.
-
There is no encryption involved. They just give you a token that verifies your age and you present the token to the site.
But you have to submit evidence of age to some site, right? So where does that evidence (your ID) get sent to or stored? Once it's sent, are you sure it's not stored? Is the token unique or traceable to you?
I honestly don't know, and when I don't know, I have to assume it's not staying private.
-
But you have to submit evidence of age to some site, right? So where does that evidence (your ID) get sent to or stored? Once it's sent, are you sure it's not stored? Is the token unique or traceable to you?
I honestly don't know, and when I don't know, I have to assume it's not staying private.
Your evidence is already stored with the gov, regardless of the any age verification systems. And the gov provides your token. If you honestly don't know, you should research instead of making assumptions.
European Digital Identity
Official GitHub Organization of the European Digital Identity project. - European Digital Identity
GitHub (github.com)
-
Your evidence is already stored with the gov, regardless of the any age verification systems. And the gov provides your token. If you honestly don't know, you should research instead of making assumptions.
European Digital Identity
Official GitHub Organization of the European Digital Identity project. - European Digital Identity
GitHub (github.com)
Fair enough. Thanks for the info.
-
Somewhere in a government building in the UK: We did it, Patrick...
Fuck this shit
-
Pretty concerning that a "western democracy" is doing this, because it gives cover for the next one and the next one.
It's easy to say "oh I'll just stop using such and such a service" but what happens when there are no more legal services to switch to?
The UK has been in lock step with the US in terms of moronic voters and stupid leaders.
The UK is in Europe, but it's closer to the morons in Texas than Switzerland.
-
Robot performs first realistic surgery without human help: System trained on videos of surgeries performs like an expert surgeon
Technology1
-
-
In North Carolina, Exploding Bulbs and Fridges on the Fritz Reveal a Town’s Fraying Electric System
Technology1
-
-
Microsoft and the CWA reach a tentative contract agreement for ~300 ZeniMax QA workers after two years of talks, marking Microsoft's first US union contract
Technology1
-
-
-
EU ruling: tracking-based advertising by Google, Microsoft, Amazon, X, across Europe has no legal basis
Technology1