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  3. So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it.

So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it.

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  • drahardja@sfba.socialD drahardja@sfba.social

    @david_chisnall So I also read the text https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=202520260AB1043

    I have MANY issues with how poorly defined many of the terms are in the document (e.g. is a website an “application”?), and how it still holds developers liable for verifying the provided age information (“internal clear and convincing information…that a user’s age is different”), but…

    The part that to me implies implementation is that there is no leeway for the OS to *under*-report the account’s age group, e.g. reporting that a user is younger than they actually are—strictly, they are liable for civil penalties either way. This implies that the OS *must* collect the user’s date of birth and store it somewhere, and derive the age bracket from that date on a daily basis (like your algorithm says). This means that it’s not enough for a parent to set up an account as “13–16 years old” and leave it at that forever.

    IMO the fact that the OS *must* collect a child’s birthdate to comply is an erosion of privacy.

    drahardja@sfba.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
    drahardja@sfba.socialD This user is from outside of this forum
    drahardja@sfba.social
    wrote last edited by
    #15

    @david_chisnall In fact the text says so:

    “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.”

    REQUIRES is the key word here. There is no reason why a birthdate (or age, but I don’t know how an OS provider can *strictly* comply with this bill without the actual birthdate) is needed to create an adult account, but it will still be required.

    Can’t wait to enter my birthdate into my Samsung Smart Fridge (it has apps, so it’s an OS, maybe, probably). Surely it won’t be abused in any other way.

    Ironically, the bill says that the OS provider “shall not share the digital signal information with a third party for a purpose not required by this title” but says nothing about sharing the actual birth date that I entered.

    This is not a good bill.

    pwloftus@pwl.farted.netP victimofsimony@infosec.exchangeV solitha@mastodon.socialS nolitimere@toot.walesN 4 Replies Last reply
    0
    • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

      So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:

      • Remote attestation.
      • Tamper-proof storage of the age.
      • Any validation in the age.

      In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.

      In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:

      • Define four groups for the four age ranges (ideally, standardise their names!).
      • Add a /etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.
      • Add a daily cron job that checks the above file and updates group membership.
      • Modify user-add scripts / GUIs to create an entry in the above file.
      • Add a tool to create an entry in the above file for existing user accounts.

      This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.

      If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.

      I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.

      icewolf@masto.brightfur.netI This user is from outside of this forum
      icewolf@masto.brightfur.netI This user is from outside of this forum
      icewolf@masto.brightfur.net
      wrote last edited by
      #16

      @david_chisnall That's surprisingly not that horrible.

      For /now./

      Still a bad precedent to set, though.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

        So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:

        • Remote attestation.
        • Tamper-proof storage of the age.
        • Any validation in the age.

        In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.

        In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:

        • Define four groups for the four age ranges (ideally, standardise their names!).
        • Add a /etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.
        • Add a daily cron job that checks the above file and updates group membership.
        • Modify user-add scripts / GUIs to create an entry in the above file.
        • Add a tool to create an entry in the above file for existing user accounts.

        This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.

        If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.

        I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.

        bzdev@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
        bzdev@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
        bzdev@fosstodon.org
        wrote last edited by
        #17

        @david_chisnall One problem with the law is that one section says: “Covered application store” does not mean an online service or platform that distributes extensions, plug-ins, add-ons, or other software applications that run exclusively within a separate host application. But another says: A developer shall request a signal with respect to a particular user from an operating system provider or a covered application store when the application is downloaded and launched.

        It's confusing (more)

        bzdev@fosstodon.orgB 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

          So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:

          • Remote attestation.
          • Tamper-proof storage of the age.
          • Any validation in the age.

          In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.

          In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:

          • Define four groups for the four age ranges (ideally, standardise their names!).
          • Add a /etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.
          • Add a daily cron job that checks the above file and updates group membership.
          • Modify user-add scripts / GUIs to create an entry in the above file.
          • Add a tool to create an entry in the above file for existing user accounts.

          This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.

          If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.

          I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.

          dasgrueneblatt@wien.rocksD This user is from outside of this forum
          dasgrueneblatt@wien.rocksD This user is from outside of this forum
          dasgrueneblatt@wien.rocks
          wrote last edited by
          #18

          @david_chisnall no, just no

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

            So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:

            • Remote attestation.
            • Tamper-proof storage of the age.
            • Any validation in the age.

            In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.

            In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:

            • Define four groups for the four age ranges (ideally, standardise their names!).
            • Add a /etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.
            • Add a daily cron job that checks the above file and updates group membership.
            • Modify user-add scripts / GUIs to create an entry in the above file.
            • Add a tool to create an entry in the above file for existing user accounts.

            This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.

            If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.

            I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.

            murteza@edmontonian.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
            murteza@edmontonian.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
            murteza@edmontonian.social
            wrote last edited by
            #19
            @david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

            That is a brilliantly simple, and sensible way to approach this. Let parents/guardians to set things up for their kids.

            But the issue politicians will find with this approach right away is that it gives control away. We can't have that. It is governments' job to parent kids, not parents' job.
            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

              So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:

              • Remote attestation.
              • Tamper-proof storage of the age.
              • Any validation in the age.

              In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.

              In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:

              • Define four groups for the four age ranges (ideally, standardise their names!).
              • Add a /etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.
              • Add a daily cron job that checks the above file and updates group membership.
              • Modify user-add scripts / GUIs to create an entry in the above file.
              • Add a tool to create an entry in the above file for existing user accounts.

              This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.

              If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.

              I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.

              pkw@snac.d34d.netP This user is from outside of this forum
              pkw@snac.d34d.netP This user is from outside of this forum
              pkw@snac.d34d.net
              wrote last edited by
              #20
              What about an OS that doesn't want to or have the need to or the bandwidth
              to do that ?
              A pemensik@fosstodon.orgP 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • bzdev@fosstodon.orgB bzdev@fosstodon.org

                @david_chisnall One problem with the law is that one section says: “Covered application store” does not mean an online service or platform that distributes extensions, plug-ins, add-ons, or other software applications that run exclusively within a separate host application. But another says: A developer shall request a signal with respect to a particular user from an operating system provider or a covered application store when the application is downloaded and launched.

                It's confusing (more)

                bzdev@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
                bzdev@fosstodon.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
                bzdev@fosstodon.org
                wrote last edited by
                #21

                @david_chisnall ... to add some more: I have some Java applications such as a graphics editor that lets you draw curves and can convert those into inputs for other programs. You need /bin/sh and java to run it. So is it an application or just a plug-in according to this law? The only thing in it not appropriate for a child are terms in the documentation like "principal axes" and "affine transformations". I bet the lawyers who wrote the law would have trouble with those terms too.

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • pkw@snac.d34d.netP pkw@snac.d34d.net
                  What about an OS that doesn't want to or have the need to or the bandwidth
                  to do that ?
                  A This user is from outside of this forum
                  A This user is from outside of this forum
                  avincentinspace@furry.engineer
                  wrote last edited by
                  #22

                  @pkw @david_chisnall doesn't have the bandwidth to...store a file of birthdays and run a service to allow programs to query the user's age?

                  pkw@snac.d34d.netP 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • lerxst@az.socialL lerxst@az.social

                    @david_chisnall And then another state or country passes a law that requires four age ranges, or another one that requires two, but they do not map nicely to the three CA requires.

                    You have now replicated another timezone mess.

                    arcaik@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                    arcaik@hachyderm.ioA This user is from outside of this forum
                    arcaik@hachyderm.io
                    wrote last edited by
                    #23

                    @lerxst @david_chisnall Yeah, like 18 is not even standard across the globe.

                    pemensik@fosstodon.orgP riley@toot.catR 2 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • drahardja@sfba.socialD drahardja@sfba.social

                      @david_chisnall In fact the text says so:

                      “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.”

                      REQUIRES is the key word here. There is no reason why a birthdate (or age, but I don’t know how an OS provider can *strictly* comply with this bill without the actual birthdate) is needed to create an adult account, but it will still be required.

                      Can’t wait to enter my birthdate into my Samsung Smart Fridge (it has apps, so it’s an OS, maybe, probably). Surely it won’t be abused in any other way.

                      Ironically, the bill says that the OS provider “shall not share the digital signal information with a third party for a purpose not required by this title” but says nothing about sharing the actual birth date that I entered.

                      This is not a good bill.

                      pwloftus@pwl.farted.netP This user is from outside of this forum
                      pwloftus@pwl.farted.netP This user is from outside of this forum
                      pwloftus@pwl.farted.net
                      wrote last edited by
                      #24

                      @drahardja @david_chisnall Tizen OS - a Linux based OS by Samsung.

                      Hold on, need to verify my age so I can open my fridge and drink my Mountain Dew Verification can before losing access to my devices.

                      txtx@mastodon.socialT 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                        So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:

                        • Remote attestation.
                        • Tamper-proof storage of the age.
                        • Any validation in the age.

                        In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.

                        In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:

                        • Define four groups for the four age ranges (ideally, standardise their names!).
                        • Add a /etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.
                        • Add a daily cron job that checks the above file and updates group membership.
                        • Modify user-add scripts / GUIs to create an entry in the above file.
                        • Add a tool to create an entry in the above file for existing user accounts.

                        This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.

                        If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.

                        I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.

                        etchedpixels@mastodon.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                        etchedpixels@mastodon.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                        etchedpixels@mastodon.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #25

                        @david_chisnall I posted an implmentation for Fuzix in an include file yesterday. However it will turn into a nightmare once you've got 200 conflicting jurisdictions and querying some of them in other locations is a violation of local law 😎

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • lerxst@az.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                          lerxst@az.socialL This user is from outside of this forum
                          lerxst@az.social
                          wrote last edited by
                          #26

                          @Lemmus @david_chisnall Well, they can pry my general purpose computing devices from my cold, dead, arthritic hands.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • A avincentinspace@furry.engineer

                            @pkw @david_chisnall doesn't have the bandwidth to...store a file of birthdays and run a service to allow programs to query the user's age?

                            pkw@snac.d34d.netP This user is from outside of this forum
                            pkw@snac.d34d.netP This user is from outside of this forum
                            pkw@snac.d34d.net
                            wrote last edited by
                            #27
                            "doesn't have the bandwidth to...store a file of birthdays and run a service to allow programs to query the user's age?"

                            Correct. Does not have the bandwidth or need or desire to change their OS to
                            do that. That was my question.


                            A 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • drahardja@sfba.socialD drahardja@sfba.social

                              @david_chisnall In fact the text says so:

                              “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.”

                              REQUIRES is the key word here. There is no reason why a birthdate (or age, but I don’t know how an OS provider can *strictly* comply with this bill without the actual birthdate) is needed to create an adult account, but it will still be required.

                              Can’t wait to enter my birthdate into my Samsung Smart Fridge (it has apps, so it’s an OS, maybe, probably). Surely it won’t be abused in any other way.

                              Ironically, the bill says that the OS provider “shall not share the digital signal information with a third party for a purpose not required by this title” but says nothing about sharing the actual birth date that I entered.

                              This is not a good bill.

                              victimofsimony@infosec.exchangeV This user is from outside of this forum
                              victimofsimony@infosec.exchangeV This user is from outside of this forum
                              victimofsimony@infosec.exchange
                              wrote last edited by
                              #28

                              @drahardja
                              @david_chisnall

                              There are multiple humans with the same legal name and everyone hates giving what they think is real identifying information, so to look someone up in local police databases they use the birthday to tell you apart.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • pwloftus@pwl.farted.netP pwloftus@pwl.farted.net

                                @david_chisnall So we build yet another layer for users to select Jan 1st, 1970?

                                Seems like an enormous waste of time.

                                How about parents parenting?

                                I agree with you building something that is easy to bypass and doesn’t require storage of PII is much better than the uploading of secure documents but in this case not making a change is also superior.

                                Parents adding their children to the sudoer list? Does any parent capable of this require an age verification system to assist them?

                                victimofsimony@infosec.exchangeV This user is from outside of this forum
                                victimofsimony@infosec.exchangeV This user is from outside of this forum
                                victimofsimony@infosec.exchange
                                wrote last edited by
                                #29

                                @pwloftus
                                @david_chisnall

                                This is just 2FA all over again. Some #Boomer that's a federal judge says, ''you can't follow them until you have two confirmed data points,'' then the plaintiff/defendant runs around with their new two-factor identity service. 🤷

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                                  So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:

                                  • Remote attestation.
                                  • Tamper-proof storage of the age.
                                  • Any validation in the age.

                                  In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.

                                  In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:

                                  • Define four groups for the four age ranges (ideally, standardise their names!).
                                  • Add a /etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.
                                  • Add a daily cron job that checks the above file and updates group membership.
                                  • Modify user-add scripts / GUIs to create an entry in the above file.
                                  • Add a tool to create an entry in the above file for existing user accounts.

                                  This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.

                                  If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.

                                  I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.

                                  breathoflife@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
                                  breathoflife@infosec.exchangeB This user is from outside of this forum
                                  breathoflife@infosec.exchange
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #30

                                  @david_chisnall
                                  @mullvadnet

                                  Gandalf - You shall not pass!

                                  favicon

                                  (invidious.nerdvpn.de)

                                  #andthen

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                                    So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:

                                    • Remote attestation.
                                    • Tamper-proof storage of the age.
                                    • Any validation in the age.

                                    In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.

                                    In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:

                                    • Define four groups for the four age ranges (ideally, standardise their names!).
                                    • Add a /etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.
                                    • Add a daily cron job that checks the above file and updates group membership.
                                    • Modify user-add scripts / GUIs to create an entry in the above file.
                                    • Add a tool to create an entry in the above file for existing user accounts.

                                    This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.

                                    If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.

                                    I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.

                                    K This user is from outside of this forum
                                    K This user is from outside of this forum
                                    kramaker@social.vivaldi.net
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #31

                                    @david_chisnall It doesn't matter how inoffensive it might seem now. 1) It won't remain that way, and 2) politics and politicians should not be designing nor mandating requirements in software when maybe 1 in 10,000 of them have any understanding whatsoever of how what they're dabbling in works (and, perhaps more importantly, often fails to work).

                                    The formerly lesser-evil Democrats in their misguided zeal to legislate utopia, now by dabbling in technology design, are pushing me into the arms of the anarchists.

                                    clayote@peoplemaking.gamesC 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • pkw@snac.d34d.netP pkw@snac.d34d.net
                                      "doesn't have the bandwidth to...store a file of birthdays and run a service to allow programs to query the user's age?"

                                      Correct. Does not have the bandwidth or need or desire to change their OS to
                                      do that. That was my question.


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                                      A This user is from outside of this forum
                                      avincentinspace@furry.engineer
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #32

                                      @pkw I'm not convinced it takes thay much bandwidth, and as for need, I mean, legal compliance is pretty important

                                      pkw@snac.d34d.netP gumnos@mastodon.bsd.cafeG 2 Replies Last reply
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                                      • drahardja@sfba.socialD drahardja@sfba.social

                                        @david_chisnall In fact the text says so:

                                        “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.”

                                        REQUIRES is the key word here. There is no reason why a birthdate (or age, but I don’t know how an OS provider can *strictly* comply with this bill without the actual birthdate) is needed to create an adult account, but it will still be required.

                                        Can’t wait to enter my birthdate into my Samsung Smart Fridge (it has apps, so it’s an OS, maybe, probably). Surely it won’t be abused in any other way.

                                        Ironically, the bill says that the OS provider “shall not share the digital signal information with a third party for a purpose not required by this title” but says nothing about sharing the actual birth date that I entered.

                                        This is not a good bill.

                                        solitha@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                                        solitha@mastodon.socialS This user is from outside of this forum
                                        solitha@mastodon.social
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #33

                                        @drahardja "(or age, but I don’t know how an OS provider can *strictly* comply with this bill without the actual birthdate)"

                                        If you're 18+ then age is enough, since your bracket will not change over time.

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                                        • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                                          So, I have actually read the text of California law CA AB1043 and, honestly, I don't hate it. It requires operating systems to let you enter a date when you create a user account and requires a way for software to get a coarse-grained approximation of this that says either 'over 18' or one of three age ranges of under-18s. Importantly, it doesn't require:

                                          • Remote attestation.
                                          • Tamper-proof storage of the age.
                                          • Any validation in the age.

                                          In short, it's a tool for parents: it allows you to set the age of a child's account so that apps (including web browsers, which can then expose via JavaScript or whatever) can ask questions about what features they should expose.

                                          In a UNIX-like system, this is easy to do, with a tiny amount of new userspace things:

                                          • Define four groups for the four age ranges (ideally, standardise their names!).
                                          • Add a /etc/user_birthdays file (or whatever name it is) that stores pairs of username (or uid) and birthdays.
                                          • Add a daily cron job that checks the above file and updates group membership.
                                          • Modify user-add scripts / GUIs to create an entry in the above file.
                                          • Add a tool to create an entry in the above file for existing user accounts.

                                          This doesn't require any kernel changes. Any process can query the set of groups that the user is in already.

                                          If a parent wants to give their child root, they can update the file and bypass the check. And that's fine, that's a parent's choice. And that's what I want.

                                          I like this approach far more than things that require users to provide scans of passports and other toxically personal information to be able to use services. If we had this feature, then the Online Safety Act could simply require that web browsers provide a JavaScript API to query the age bracket and didn't work unless it returned 'over 18'.

                                          pemensik@fosstodon.orgP This user is from outside of this forum
                                          pemensik@fosstodon.orgP This user is from outside of this forum
                                          pemensik@fosstodon.org
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #34

                                          @david_chisnall oh, I think this is *almost* the correct thing to do. I think underage indication is a way to go. But parents should be able to select sites with more precise age group. By default it should be only true/false. To make advertisement targeting a bit less specific. For example only sites over 13 need better indication. Parent should know sites his kid has account on. Or block some of them.

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