ImitationLimitation

joined 7 months ago
[–] ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Let the sharp edge of the wedge in and lose in the long run. This thread isn’t about California.

For all those that truly believe this is no big deal, and honestly believe it’s about kids, and think all the commenters in here are silly or tin hat wearers… go read this:

https://lemmy.ml/post/46083470

Short version: US based company providing age verification has US Govt. surveillance within their stack that adds you to all kinds of potential lists, among other concerns. It also serves as a huge honeypot of data just waiting to be breached, and it will be breached.

For those in the back not paying attention: THIS IS NOT ABOUT KID SAFETY, IT’S ABOUT TRACKING YOU AND YOUR KIDS!

[–] ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago (3 children)

It’s about kid safety! Take off your tin hat! Right?

… well https://lemmy.ml/post/46083470

[–] ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Don’t get me wrong, I was not advocating. I was pointing out directed ways to actually “protect” kids that would be a lot less likely to really be surveillance. I don’t think any of that should happen.

And that’s precisely why I’m switching to a distro that doesn’t use systemd.

[–] ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 days ago (7 children)

If the companies already have to do this, then what is the point of the OS asking for more personal notifying information than it needs just to operate? Thank beyond the seemingly “simplicity” of this and think how it can be used against you. Then decide if it’s rational. People thought the patriot act was a great idea after 911… They were wrong.

[–] ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 days ago (2 children)

I did… and everything you say is nonsensical. So I responded in the only way this system would make any sense.

Your way, the OS just takes in an age on trust, then the apps have to verify anyway. How do they do that? They need ID, when it would’ve raise to get that validation from the OS that already had the ID verified. Your way means nothing. It does nothing. It adds an age to a system for no reason and is completely unusable.

Should you have to verify your age to your car before you can turn it in, to drive to the DMV before you can obtain your license and registration? Who should have the burden?

Should your front door verify your age before you leave to go buy alcohol from the local liquor store?

Should your bed verify your age and the age of your lover before you have sex?

Also, this isn’t even the biggest problem, the problem is this is just more surveillance. Don’t comply in advance. Default to protect and keep your freedom by protecting your privacy.

[–] ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml 4 points 6 days ago (4 children)

😐 How do you think they will verify the age entered into the OS? Smh

[–] ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml 4 points 6 days ago (9 children)

That’s also just a minorities to the data intrusion and surveillance this is really building. Data is king, and adding age and other demographics obtained at the OS level to more sell more targeted adds to manipulate people. The same data bend used to target political opponents by governments. But it’s cool. It’s for the safety of the kids!!!

[–] ImitationLimitation@lemmy.ml 3 points 6 days ago (7 children)

Let’s just say meta delivers some problematic content that traumatizes a kid and really upsets parents. This content was on the 12-year-olds Chromebook. The kid, then setting up the laptop with his parents had his age in there appropriately, and Met used theAPI to obtain it to prevent adult content delivery. However, kid is tech savvy, creates a secondary accounts, says they are 45. Maybe uses parents ID or something to do it. They then get the adult content. Parents file suit. Meta lawyers: Our API works as designed, and we can be held liable when the OS API says the person is 45 and not 12. Case dismissed. Profit.

But okay, definitely nonsensical.

view more: next ›