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  3. people on reddit are doing a whole lot of yapping about age verification in Linux

people on reddit are doing a whole lot of yapping about age verification in Linux

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  • dvshkn@social.treehouse.systemsD dvshkn@social.treehouse.systems

    @cas Have the projects received guidance from actual lawyers? It doesn't seem like the text of the legislation is final in a lot of jurisdictions. I don't know if anybody knows what interpretation or enforcement might look like either. If the devs' hands get forced then it is what it is, but it feels like an own goal to pre-comply too early.

    cas@social.treehouse.systemsC This user is from outside of this forum
    cas@social.treehouse.systemsC This user is from outside of this forum
    cas@social.treehouse.systems
    wrote last edited by
    #14

    @dvshkn i have no idea, but as far as i can tell the work so far is basically just laying the groundwork, nothing specific to the legislation

    that being said, IANAL obviously but surely there has been prior art in this sense, at the end of the day are distros (that don't explicitly sell/ship their software in california in this case) even responsible for people who live there installing their software even if it doesn't follow local laws?

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • eliasr@social.librem.oneE eliasr@social.librem.one

      @pid_eins @cas I think the way the code change is motivated has some importance here.

      Normally, in a FOSS project when some change is made it's to make things better for users. The change was requested by users, and doing the change makes users happy.

      If instead you start motivating code changes with "we change this because of this-and-that law", then that does not feel right to me.

      Perhaps many users do want the change, but in that case better refer to user demand instead of laws.

      1/2

      eliasr@social.librem.oneE This user is from outside of this forum
      eliasr@social.librem.oneE This user is from outside of this forum
      eliasr@social.librem.one
      wrote last edited by
      #15

      @pid_eins @cas I guess in some way it comes down to "who is the software for?"

      A piece of libre software is for the users, it serves the user and does what the user wants (which may or may not be the same thing that lawmakers in some country want). It's not a tool for governments to enforce laws.

      Of course, when there is a FOSS license users can always do what they want anyway. But saying that changes are because of laws risks giving the wrong impression.

      Do you see what I mean?

      2/2

      cas@social.treehouse.systemsC 1 Reply Last reply
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      • jane@smolhaj.socialJ jane@smolhaj.social

        @freya
        your argument sound like an ad hominem.

        one can also implement parental controls to be not creepy; without it turning into an audit of the child's every activity or doing gps tracking. reasonable parenting is working on limits in cooperation/input of the child.

        new features i didn't expect and am happly suprised about this release in gnome: https://ubuntuhandbook.org/index.php/2026/01/gnome-50-will-support-bedtime-daily-screen-time-parental-controls/amp/

        @cas

        cas@social.treehouse.systemsC This user is from outside of this forum
        cas@social.treehouse.systemsC This user is from outside of this forum
        cas@social.treehouse.systems
        wrote last edited by
        #16

        @jane @freya agreed, this was basically the point i was trying to get to. parental controls in Linux are absolutely a good feature to have, and the GNOME community have earnt a lot of respect from me for implementing this functionality. The ability to impose restrictions on non-sudo users (particularly children) is NOT a restriction of freedoms, I'd argue it's the opposite.

        Knowing you can give your kids a device running a FOSS OS while being able to ensure they aren't accessing software they shouldn't is a good thing, give them the freedom to enjoy tech without looking over their shoulder

        zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ navi@social.vlhl.devN f4grx@chaos.socialF 3 Replies Last reply
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        • eliasr@social.librem.oneE eliasr@social.librem.one

          @pid_eins @cas I guess in some way it comes down to "who is the software for?"

          A piece of libre software is for the users, it serves the user and does what the user wants (which may or may not be the same thing that lawmakers in some country want). It's not a tool for governments to enforce laws.

          Of course, when there is a FOSS license users can always do what they want anyway. But saying that changes are because of laws risks giving the wrong impression.

          Do you see what I mean?

          2/2

          cas@social.treehouse.systemsC This user is from outside of this forum
          cas@social.treehouse.systemsC This user is from outside of this forum
          cas@social.treehouse.systems
          wrote last edited by
          #17

          @eliasr @pid_eins superficially sure that makes sense, if FOSS existed in a vacuum I'd be totally on board. But despite the efforts of many to create and share software while taking zero responsibility for the consequences of their actions, software still exists in the real world.

          To be clear (though I think i said so in my post) im not in favour of governments imposing restrictions or requirements on software, these laws are arbitrary and almost as hard to define concretely as they are to enforce.

          With that being said, if I may attempt to challenge your underlying assumptions here: how are the requirements of law different to the requirements of (for example) a security minded individual, or an enterprise customer?

          I want to daily drive a Linux phone but I care a whole lot about security and implementation details basically mean to only way to implement a truly secure OS stack is to use proprietary "trusted apps" from Qualcomm to protect my OS encryption keys (think software backed TPM), I have no doubt in my mind that people may object to the idea of Linux loading proprietary trusted apps into the "secure world" to implement this functionality, but would you object to the kernel adding support for this because it might not be "what the users want"?

          I guess im making two points here so i'll try to separate them:

          1. At what point is a topic so technical that the opinion of an average user with minimal context shouldn't be trusted?
          2. How do you in practice enforce that "libre" software is always serving "the users" without alienation and othering?

          Like I personally am always pretty confused and occasionally frustrated by the systemd unit constraints system, did i want Requires= or BindsTo= or WantedBy= or Requisite= etc.... Similarly the fact that every openrc service file is a shell script is infuriating, does these mean these aren't libre projects?

          And again, yes I think the laws are fucking dumb, i just think criticising systemd and XDG in particular is just virtue signaling here, not advocating for real change. I hope i don't just come across as contrarian, you're making a philosophical argument so I hope it's ok to respond in kind.

          trahflow@norden.socialT eliasr@social.librem.oneE 2 Replies Last reply
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          • pid_eins@mastodon.socialP pid_eins@mastodon.social

            @cas right after installing CrazyOS I'll make a video of it and put it on TikTok, YouTube and Instagram of course (I really dig their services, I have accounts everywhere, ha!). Hey, did you hear the web folks have cookies! 🍪 Yummy! So good!

            alatiera@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
            alatiera@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
            alatiera@mastodon.social
            wrote last edited by
            #18

            @pid_eins @cas What a a gift, I couldn’t ask for a better honeypot

            1 Reply Last reply
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            • cas@social.treehouse.systemsC cas@social.treehouse.systems

              people on reddit are doing a whole lot of yapping about age verification in Linux

              I would generally agree that the whole approach of these laws is total dogshit and clearly a wedge issue to enable stricter surveillance laws in the future

              at the same time though, the actual implementation and potentially having a portal which exposes the users age bracket seems totally reasonable as a way to implement parental controls... I'm also not totally against holding service providers to higher standards for data processing when it comes to minors, and hey if they're doing that why shouldn't adults get the same treatment?

              what im totally miffed about though is why the fuck would you get mad at systemd for adding a birthDate field to userdb, what would you have them do? Would you rather every desktop environment had its own way to store this data??

              An XDG portal for this also means you can *trivially* write a stub that always identifies you as an adult or even lets you pick per-app (heck maybe per website! that might be the new cursed way of avoiding trackers under late stage capitalism)

              and yeah it sure would be shit if we get real-id laws in a few years, but systemd or XDG standing on "principle" and refusing to implement this API is absolutely not going to lead to better outcomes for anyone. The last thing we want is for users in certain regions to wind up relying on implementations maintained by distros or random individuals, if we need to have this crap the least we could ask is that it's maintained by established and trusted people in the open source community!

              migratory@jorts.horseM This user is from outside of this forum
              migratory@jorts.horseM This user is from outside of this forum
              migratory@jorts.horse
              wrote last edited by
              #19

              @cas this is a canonical example of "complying in advance"

              f4grx@chaos.socialF 1 Reply Last reply
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              • cas@social.treehouse.systemsC cas@social.treehouse.systems

                people on reddit are doing a whole lot of yapping about age verification in Linux

                I would generally agree that the whole approach of these laws is total dogshit and clearly a wedge issue to enable stricter surveillance laws in the future

                at the same time though, the actual implementation and potentially having a portal which exposes the users age bracket seems totally reasonable as a way to implement parental controls... I'm also not totally against holding service providers to higher standards for data processing when it comes to minors, and hey if they're doing that why shouldn't adults get the same treatment?

                what im totally miffed about though is why the fuck would you get mad at systemd for adding a birthDate field to userdb, what would you have them do? Would you rather every desktop environment had its own way to store this data??

                An XDG portal for this also means you can *trivially* write a stub that always identifies you as an adult or even lets you pick per-app (heck maybe per website! that might be the new cursed way of avoiding trackers under late stage capitalism)

                and yeah it sure would be shit if we get real-id laws in a few years, but systemd or XDG standing on "principle" and refusing to implement this API is absolutely not going to lead to better outcomes for anyone. The last thing we want is for users in certain regions to wind up relying on implementations maintained by distros or random individuals, if we need to have this crap the least we could ask is that it's maintained by established and trusted people in the open source community!

                zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ This user is from outside of this forum
                zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ This user is from outside of this forum
                zanagb@lgbtqia.space
                wrote last edited by
                #20

                @cas "i do not understand why people are so upset that i am giving a gun to the firing squad and i am pre-emptively placing myself against the wall. Its not like they will shoot me and go after everyone indiscriminately or anything. Would you rather the goons need to find their own guns and justified action to prosecute me?"

                The only thing y'all needed to do is not implement that garbage until 2027, and force everyone to walk the legislation back. And if they dont: "sorry you cannot use this in california". But hey. No. Fuck the entire world over complying with one law for 1/50th of the US of A.

                Everyone involved on the linux exosystem development should be ashamed. The big iron financing your patches has played you like absolute fools.

                f4grx@chaos.socialF 1 Reply Last reply
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                • cas@social.treehouse.systemsC cas@social.treehouse.systems

                  @jane @freya agreed, this was basically the point i was trying to get to. parental controls in Linux are absolutely a good feature to have, and the GNOME community have earnt a lot of respect from me for implementing this functionality. The ability to impose restrictions on non-sudo users (particularly children) is NOT a restriction of freedoms, I'd argue it's the opposite.

                  Knowing you can give your kids a device running a FOSS OS while being able to ensure they aren't accessing software they shouldn't is a good thing, give them the freedom to enjoy tech without looking over their shoulder

                  zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ This user is from outside of this forum
                  zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ This user is from outside of this forum
                  zanagb@lgbtqia.space
                  wrote last edited by
                  #21

                  @cas @jane @freya You ARE supposed to supervise your kids. You know?

                  It is called "Parenting".

                  You let them break the computer. And if you catch them installing something nasty you tell them that they should not be doing that.

                  jane@smolhaj.socialJ f4grx@chaos.socialF tijgertje1987@mastodon.onlineT 3 Replies Last reply
                  0
                  • cas@social.treehouse.systemsC cas@social.treehouse.systems

                    @jane @freya agreed, this was basically the point i was trying to get to. parental controls in Linux are absolutely a good feature to have, and the GNOME community have earnt a lot of respect from me for implementing this functionality. The ability to impose restrictions on non-sudo users (particularly children) is NOT a restriction of freedoms, I'd argue it's the opposite.

                    Knowing you can give your kids a device running a FOSS OS while being able to ensure they aren't accessing software they shouldn't is a good thing, give them the freedom to enjoy tech without looking over their shoulder

                    navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                    navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                    navi@social.vlhl.dev
                    wrote last edited by
                    #22
                    @cas @jane @freya

                    I mentioned here here:
                    https://social.vlhl.dev/notice/B4PU0aMRZdCXV8QAJk

                    but tl:dr I believe that a child young enough to need parental controls should not be left alone unsupervised w/ an internet device, and that teenagers should have already learnt discretion and have built a trust relationship with their parents

                    in a good world then, parental controls would just be guardrails for the former, but in the world we live in, i fear how much abuse, well, abusive parents might cause on the latter by forcing parental controls on their devices
                    jane@smolhaj.socialJ cas@social.treehouse.systemsC 3 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ zanagb@lgbtqia.space

                      @cas @jane @freya You ARE supposed to supervise your kids. You know?

                      It is called "Parenting".

                      You let them break the computer. And if you catch them installing something nasty you tell them that they should not be doing that.

                      jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      jane@smolhaj.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #23

                      @ZanaGB @cas @freya yes. but at what point has the child learned enough? at what age is privacy more important? you can't supervise a child all day long unless your an "helicopter parent"

                      it's giving your kid training wheels with a bicycle so your sibling can take them on a small road tour, there isn't an exact day where a newborn turns into a kid turns into an teenager turns into an adolescent.

                      zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • cas@social.treehouse.systemsC cas@social.treehouse.systems

                        people on reddit are doing a whole lot of yapping about age verification in Linux

                        I would generally agree that the whole approach of these laws is total dogshit and clearly a wedge issue to enable stricter surveillance laws in the future

                        at the same time though, the actual implementation and potentially having a portal which exposes the users age bracket seems totally reasonable as a way to implement parental controls... I'm also not totally against holding service providers to higher standards for data processing when it comes to minors, and hey if they're doing that why shouldn't adults get the same treatment?

                        what im totally miffed about though is why the fuck would you get mad at systemd for adding a birthDate field to userdb, what would you have them do? Would you rather every desktop environment had its own way to store this data??

                        An XDG portal for this also means you can *trivially* write a stub that always identifies you as an adult or even lets you pick per-app (heck maybe per website! that might be the new cursed way of avoiding trackers under late stage capitalism)

                        and yeah it sure would be shit if we get real-id laws in a few years, but systemd or XDG standing on "principle" and refusing to implement this API is absolutely not going to lead to better outcomes for anyone. The last thing we want is for users in certain regions to wind up relying on implementations maintained by distros or random individuals, if we need to have this crap the least we could ask is that it's maintained by established and trusted people in the open source community!

                        navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                        navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                        navi@social.vlhl.dev
                        wrote last edited by
                        #24
                        @cas

                        > what would you have them do? Would you rather every desktop environment had its own way to store this data??

                        I'd rather they, and everyone, waits longer

                        system76 is trying to get US politicians to open exceptions for foss, laws in multiple states are contradictory, and in brasil there's lots of people trying to change that law as they see how bad it is

                        codifying an api for it now feels so premature and somewhat dangerous, bc what if what they implement is then not allowed in some other state or country?
                        haui@mastodon.giftedmc.comH 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • navi@social.vlhl.devN navi@social.vlhl.dev
                          @cas @jane @freya

                          I mentioned here here:
                          https://social.vlhl.dev/notice/B4PU0aMRZdCXV8QAJk

                          but tl:dr I believe that a child young enough to need parental controls should not be left alone unsupervised w/ an internet device, and that teenagers should have already learnt discretion and have built a trust relationship with their parents

                          in a good world then, parental controls would just be guardrails for the former, but in the world we live in, i fear how much abuse, well, abusive parents might cause on the latter by forcing parental controls on their devices
                          jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                          jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                          jane@smolhaj.social
                          wrote last edited by
                          #25

                          @navi @freya @cas my god, the point of parental controls is tbe potential to turn of browsers and the "internet"

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • navi@social.vlhl.devN navi@social.vlhl.dev
                            @cas @jane @freya

                            I mentioned here here:
                            https://social.vlhl.dev/notice/B4PU0aMRZdCXV8QAJk

                            but tl:dr I believe that a child young enough to need parental controls should not be left alone unsupervised w/ an internet device, and that teenagers should have already learnt discretion and have built a trust relationship with their parents

                            in a good world then, parental controls would just be guardrails for the former, but in the world we live in, i fear how much abuse, well, abusive parents might cause on the latter by forcing parental controls on their devices
                            jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                            jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                            jane@smolhaj.social
                            wrote last edited by
                            #26

                            @navi @freya @cas

                            a trust relationship is exactly the thing i am arguing for, i'm not sure how much you dealt with actual parenting and supervising children.

                            you're arguing against a cptsd survior, i had very a abusive parents. the reality is that we as a foss community should enable healthy foss tools, because the stalkerware will get developed anyway due to money incentives. and it will not rely on any age bracket stuff as the primary usecase for stalkerware is stalking partners.

                            navi@social.vlhl.devN 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • jane@smolhaj.socialJ jane@smolhaj.social

                              @navi @freya @cas

                              a trust relationship is exactly the thing i am arguing for, i'm not sure how much you dealt with actual parenting and supervising children.

                              you're arguing against a cptsd survior, i had very a abusive parents. the reality is that we as a foss community should enable healthy foss tools, because the stalkerware will get developed anyway due to money incentives. and it will not rely on any age bracket stuff as the primary usecase for stalkerware is stalking partners.

                              navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                              navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                              navi@social.vlhl.dev
                              wrote last edited by
                              #27
                              @jane @freya @cas

                              i speak out of the self experience i mentioned above, out of the need growing up of watching over my small brother, and out of the personal experience shared with me by friends while growing, who did have the parental controls in apple devices used against them, and that's all
                              jane@smolhaj.socialJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • pid_eins@mastodon.socialP pid_eins@mastodon.social

                                @cas It's as if UNIX carries AN ENTIRE DATABASE of PII in /etc/ without any consideration for user's privacy! Unbelievable!

                                I think we all need to *demand* from Kernighan and Ritchie to immediately drop /etc/passwd and related files from UNIX, and stop helping the government with collecting this kind of data. It's really appalling that no one has called them out on this yet! The shock! The horror!

                                fence@xyzzy.linkF This user is from outside of this forum
                                fence@xyzzy.linkF This user is from outside of this forum
                                fence@xyzzy.link
                                wrote last edited by
                                #28
                                @pid_eins @cas the ones that yap about it have no idea who those 2 people are I belive
                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • cas@social.treehouse.systemsC cas@social.treehouse.systems

                                  @eliasr @pid_eins superficially sure that makes sense, if FOSS existed in a vacuum I'd be totally on board. But despite the efforts of many to create and share software while taking zero responsibility for the consequences of their actions, software still exists in the real world.

                                  To be clear (though I think i said so in my post) im not in favour of governments imposing restrictions or requirements on software, these laws are arbitrary and almost as hard to define concretely as they are to enforce.

                                  With that being said, if I may attempt to challenge your underlying assumptions here: how are the requirements of law different to the requirements of (for example) a security minded individual, or an enterprise customer?

                                  I want to daily drive a Linux phone but I care a whole lot about security and implementation details basically mean to only way to implement a truly secure OS stack is to use proprietary "trusted apps" from Qualcomm to protect my OS encryption keys (think software backed TPM), I have no doubt in my mind that people may object to the idea of Linux loading proprietary trusted apps into the "secure world" to implement this functionality, but would you object to the kernel adding support for this because it might not be "what the users want"?

                                  I guess im making two points here so i'll try to separate them:

                                  1. At what point is a topic so technical that the opinion of an average user with minimal context shouldn't be trusted?
                                  2. How do you in practice enforce that "libre" software is always serving "the users" without alienation and othering?

                                  Like I personally am always pretty confused and occasionally frustrated by the systemd unit constraints system, did i want Requires= or BindsTo= or WantedBy= or Requisite= etc.... Similarly the fact that every openrc service file is a shell script is infuriating, does these mean these aren't libre projects?

                                  And again, yes I think the laws are fucking dumb, i just think criticising systemd and XDG in particular is just virtue signaling here, not advocating for real change. I hope i don't just come across as contrarian, you're making a philosophical argument so I hope it's ok to respond in kind.

                                  trahflow@norden.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                                  trahflow@norden.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                                  trahflow@norden.social
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #29

                                  @cas @eliasr

                                  Is it virtue signalling though?
                                  Can't it be plain frustration about the state and trend of the world in this matter?

                                  Yes, it might be barking up the wrong tree.
                                  But I think what many people are looking for is acknowledgement of that frustration, a feeling of being heard at least within *their* community. At least within libre FOSS.

                                  How to respond to that is a choice.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • navi@social.vlhl.devN navi@social.vlhl.dev
                                    @jane @freya @cas

                                    i speak out of the self experience i mentioned above, out of the need growing up of watching over my small brother, and out of the personal experience shared with me by friends while growing, who did have the parental controls in apple devices used against them, and that's all
                                    jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                    jane@smolhaj.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                    jane@smolhaj.social
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #30

                                    @navi so your arguing against a specific implementation? memories while growing up are heavily skewed, that was a really though thing to learn for me while taking care of a kid for a year. there were even moments were it made sense to lie or heavily skew the truth, a thing i couldn't have imagined before.

                                    navi@social.vlhl.devN 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • jane@smolhaj.socialJ jane@smolhaj.social

                                      @navi so your arguing against a specific implementation? memories while growing up are heavily skewed, that was a really though thing to learn for me while taking care of a kid for a year. there were even moments were it made sense to lie or heavily skew the truth, a thing i couldn't have imagined before.

                                      navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                                      navi@social.vlhl.devN This user is from outside of this forum
                                      navi@social.vlhl.dev
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #31
                                      @jane i argue against specific features, that are often included in "parental control"

                                      so far the only thing people convinced me could be okay, is screen timeout timers

                                      what i get worried is, for a teenager, making it easy to allowlist-only or blocklist websites and content types, and making it easy to track everything they do with their devices

                                      sure, there is other ways of doings those things, but the easier those tools are to enable and use, the more i saw them get abused
                                      f4grx@chaos.socialF jane@smolhaj.socialJ 2 Replies Last reply
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                                      • jane@smolhaj.socialJ jane@smolhaj.social

                                        @ZanaGB @cas @freya yes. but at what point has the child learned enough? at what age is privacy more important? you can't supervise a child all day long unless your an "helicopter parent"

                                        it's giving your kid training wheels with a bicycle so your sibling can take them on a small road tour, there isn't an exact day where a newborn turns into a kid turns into an teenager turns into an adolescent.

                                        zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ This user is from outside of this forum
                                        zanagb@lgbtqia.spaceZ This user is from outside of this forum
                                        zanagb@lgbtqia.space
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #32

                                        @jane @cas @freya

                                        Y'all SERIOUSLY need to trust your kids more. They arent stupid.

                                        Dunno about your local culture. But everyone here grew up knowing you never had to talk to strangers, nwver dibulge any information and stay away from anything that demands a paynent.

                                        Kids are smarter than you remember. Tell them not to do something and why and 99% of the time they will follow through.

                                        No, you will not get a free PS2. No, that raffle for the shiny creature is rigged against you. No. You may not have horse armour. That game looks sketchy but it comes from Steam you might have it. No i dont care all your friends are posting selfies they are going to get hurt and you cannot make an instagram.

                                        One thing is not letting your kids have any agency (helicoptering) and the other is telling them gently they cannot have things and why.

                                        You cannot leave IBM, Amazon, Google, Meta and Oracle decide how it is best to take the task of parenting. The owners of the platforms with addictive content aimed towards children do not have the besr intentions at mind with these policies. The best way to prevent kids from being in places they should not be is... Being literally around them every now and then to check what they are up to and simply... Dont let them go to those platforms.

                                        f4grx@chaos.socialF jane@smolhaj.socialJ 2 Replies Last reply
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                                        • cas@social.treehouse.systemsC cas@social.treehouse.systems

                                          people on reddit are doing a whole lot of yapping about age verification in Linux

                                          I would generally agree that the whole approach of these laws is total dogshit and clearly a wedge issue to enable stricter surveillance laws in the future

                                          at the same time though, the actual implementation and potentially having a portal which exposes the users age bracket seems totally reasonable as a way to implement parental controls... I'm also not totally against holding service providers to higher standards for data processing when it comes to minors, and hey if they're doing that why shouldn't adults get the same treatment?

                                          what im totally miffed about though is why the fuck would you get mad at systemd for adding a birthDate field to userdb, what would you have them do? Would you rather every desktop environment had its own way to store this data??

                                          An XDG portal for this also means you can *trivially* write a stub that always identifies you as an adult or even lets you pick per-app (heck maybe per website! that might be the new cursed way of avoiding trackers under late stage capitalism)

                                          and yeah it sure would be shit if we get real-id laws in a few years, but systemd or XDG standing on "principle" and refusing to implement this API is absolutely not going to lead to better outcomes for anyone. The last thing we want is for users in certain regions to wind up relying on implementations maintained by distros or random individuals, if we need to have this crap the least we could ask is that it's maintained by established and trusted people in the open source community!

                                          vilelasagna@mastodon.gamedev.placeV This user is from outside of this forum
                                          vilelasagna@mastodon.gamedev.placeV This user is from outside of this forum
                                          vilelasagna@mastodon.gamedev.place
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #33

                                          @cas honestly, having this be trivially by passable sounds like a wholly desirable outcome

                                          f4grx@chaos.socialF 1 Reply Last reply
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