AI ‘Slop’ Websites Are Publishing Climate Science Denial
AI ‘Slop’ Websites Are Publishing Climate Science Denial - DeSmog
At the start of June, MSN, the world’s fourth-largest news aggregator, posted an article from a new climate-focused publication, Climate Cosmos, entitled: “Why Top Experts Are Rethinking Climate Alarmism”. The article – by “Kathleen Westbrook M.Joey Grostern (DeSmog)
AI ‘Slop’ Websites Are Publishing Climate Science Denial
AI ‘Slop’ Websites Are Publishing Climate Science Denial - DeSmog
At the start of June, MSN, the world’s fourth-largest news aggregator, posted an article from a new climate-focused publication, Climate Cosmos, entitled: “Why Top Experts Are Rethinking Climate Alarmism”. The article – by “Kathleen Westbrook M.Joey Grostern (DeSmog)
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UK government dragged for incomplete security reforms after Afghan leak fallout: Senior officials summoned to science and tech committee to explain further
UK government dragged for incomplete security reforms after Afghan leak fallout
: Senior officials summoned to science and tech committee to explain furtherConnor Jones (The Register)
Mastodon says it doesn't 'have the means' to comply with age verification laws
Decentralized social network Mastodon says it can’t comply with Mississippi’s age verification law — the same law that saw rival Bluesky pull out of the state — because it doesn’t have the means to do so.The social non-profit explains that Mastodon doesn’t track its users, which makes it difficult to enforce such legislation. Nor does it want to use IP address-based blocks, as those would unfairly impact people who were traveling, it says.
Mastodon says it doesn't 'have the means' to comply with age verification laws | TechCrunch
Decentralized social network Mastodon says it cannot comply with age verification laws, like in Mississippi and elsewhere, and says it's up to individual server owners to decide.Sarah Perez (TechCrunch)
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California Gov. Gavin Newsom and lawmakers strike a deal with Uber and Lyft allowing drivers to unionize while remaining classified as independent contractors
cross-posted from: programming.dev/post/36549166
California Gov. Gavin Newsom and lawmakers strike a deal with Uber and Lyft allowing drivers to unionize while remaining classified as independent contractors
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Breaking News: Newsom Strikes new deal with the republicans in state legislature on Gun Control despite democratic supermajority, New Gun Control laws will not apply to rich people.
(Okay I made that up, but wouldn't be surprising if that happens)
We Failed The Misinformation Fight. Now What?
We Failed The Misinformation Fight. Now What?
Defending democracy in the digital age will require moving beyond the focus of fighting online misinformation.Zeve Sanderson (NOEMA)
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US court rules many of Trump's global tariffs are illegal
US court rules many of Trump's global tariffs are illegal
The tariffs can remain in place until mid-October to allow the Trump administration time to request the Supreme Court take up the case.Max Matza (BBC News)
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Mastodon says it doesn't 'have the means' to comply with age verification laws
Mastodon says it doesn't 'have the means' to comply with age verification laws | TechCrunch
Decentralized social network Mastodon says it cannot comply with age verification laws, like in Mississippi and elsewhere, and says it's up to individual server owners to decide.Sarah Perez (TechCrunch)
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Government sets up page to verify age. You head to it, no referrer. Age check happens by trusted entity (your government, not some sketchy big tech ass), they create a signed cert with a short lifespan to prevent your kid using the one you created yesterday and without the knowledge which service it is for. It does not contain a reference to your identity. You share that cert with the service you want to use, they verify the signature, your age, save the passing and everyone is happy. Your government doesn't know that you're into ladies with big booties, the big booty service doesn't know your identity and you wank along in private.
But oh no, that wouldn't work because think of the... I have no clue.
Ideally, it would be handled directly on the hardware. Allow people to verify their logged in profile, using a government-run site. Then that user is now verified. Any time an age gate needs to happen, the site initiates a secure handshake directly with the device via TLS, and asks the device if the current user is old enough. The device responds with a simple yes/no using that secure protocol. Parents can verify their accounts/devices, while child accounts/devices are left unverified and fail the test.
Government doesn’t know what you’re watching, because they simply verified the user. People don’t need to spam an underfunded government site with requests every day, because the individual user is verified. And age gates are able to happen entirely in the background without any additional effort on the user’s side. The result is that adults get to watch porn without needing to verify every time, while kids automatically get a “you’re not age-verified” wall. And kids can’t MITM the age check, due to the secure handshake. And if it becomes common enough, even a VPN would be meaningless as adult sites will just start requiring it by default.
For instance, on a Windows machine, each individual user would be independently verified. So if the kid is logged into their account, they’d get an age wall. But if the parent is logged into their verified account, they can watch all the porn they want. Then keeping kids away from porn is simply a matter of protecting your adults’ computer password.
But it won’t happen, because protecting kids isn’t the actual goal. The actual goal is surveillance. Google (and other big tech firms like them) is pushing to enact these laws, because they have the infrastructure set up to verify users. And requiring verification via those big tech firms allows them to track you more.
I give it 2 years till Netflix requires you to have an ID every time you open the app because it has rated R movies.
This is the same principle. The account holder agreement should make the account holder responsible for the use of the service.
The government shouldn't be parenting our minors, their guardians should be.
Otherswise we should put digital locks on every beer bottle, pack of cigarettes, blunt raps, car door, etc. That requires you to scan your ID before every use.
"Kids shouldn't be driving cars, it isn't safe!"
Yes, but somehow we have made it 100 years without requiring proof of age/license to start the car.
And the car is far more deadly than them seeing someone naked.
“Kids shouldn’t be driving cars, it isn’t safe!” Yes, but somehow we have made it 100 years without requiring proof of age/license to start the car.
Driving is a much more visible activity than looking at your phone in a locked room though.
It does not contain a reference to your identity.
but they know who they issued it to, and can secretly subpoena your data from your instance.
no thank you.
They (the govt) would know that they issued a certificate to ex. lemmy.dbzer0.com
They can't know that the certificate is issued to conmie
Unless, of course, the instance logs the age certificate used by each user
And also, unless the govt's age verification service logs the certificate issued by each citizen
The fact that they haven't gone for this approach that delivers age verification without disclosing ID, when it's a common and well known pattern in IT services, very strongly suggests that age verification was never the goal. The goal is to associate your real identity with all the information data brokers have on you, and make that available to state security services and law enforcement. And to do this they will gradually make it impossible to use the internet until they have your ID.
We really need to move community-run sites behind Tor or into i2p or something similar. We need networks where these laws just can't practically be enforced and information can continue to circulate openly.
The other day my kid wanted me to tweak the parental settings on their Roblox account. I tried to do so and was confronted by a demand for my government-issued ID and a selfie to prove my age. So I went to look at the privacy policy of the company behind it, Persona. Here's the policy, and it's without a doubt the worst I've ever seen. It basically says they'll take every last bit of information about you and sell it to everyone, including governments.
withpersona.com/legal/privacy-…
So I explained to my kid that I wasn't willing to do this. This is a taste of how everything will be soon.
Age check happens by trusted entity (your government, not some sketchy big tech ass), they create a signed cert with a short lifespan to prevent your kid using the one you created yesterday and without the knowledge which service it is for.
Sorry, not sufficient.
Not secure.
" I certify that somebody is >18, but I don't say who - just somebody "
This is an open invitation to fraud. You are going to create at least a black market for these certificates, since they are anonymous but valid.
And I'm sure some real fraudsters have even stronger ideas than I have.
What stops non-anonymous certificates from being sold?
If John Doe views way too much porn, then you expect the site to shut him down? They have no ability to track other site usage. The authorities have to block him after the 10,000th download.
At that point, why does the site need to know? Either the government blocks someone's ID or they don't
What stops
Not useful to look at it in such a black or white manner. The possibilities are presumably less, and surely not that obvious.
I think this starts to not work when you start to include other states that want to do this, other countries, cities, counties, etc.. How many trusted authorities should there be and how do you prevent them from being compromised and exploited to falsely verify people? How do you prevent valid certs from being sold?
Some examples of the type of service you mentioned:
- realme.govt.nz/
- id.me/
Home
RealMe is an initiative from the New Zealand government and New Zealand Post to make doing things online easier and more secure.www.realme.govt.nz
How do you prevent valid certs from being sold?
Sold by whom? The created cert can be time limited and single use, so the service couldn't really sell them. You could rate limit how many certs users can create and obviously make it illegal to share them in order to deter people from using them. That's not enough to prevent it completetly, but should be an improvement for the use cases I hear the most about: social media (because it reduces the network effect) and porn (because kids will at least know that they're doing some real shady shit).
Age check happens via trusted entity (your government)
Bold of you to assume a government entity is trusted. In the UK we have a large misrepresentative error due to our voting system.
How do you think a third entity would identify you?
You may want to join us reading along in the privacy communities of the fediverse.
But long story shortened - third parties are very much identifying each of us in staggeringly novel and effective ways.
For example, depending on circumstances, third parties may not be sure which room in my home I am sitting in, right now, while being aware that I'm writing this. This shit has gotten deeply weird and invasive.
Easy:
- companies have a vested interest in identifying you (ads, data brokers, etc)
- governments have a vested interest in tracking you (local police, terrorism tracking, etc)
I don't trust the government and private interests to come to an agreement that somehow benefits citizens more than their combined interests.
I'm not saying I'm for age verification. I'm just saying if it were for it, there'd be solutions.
What I wrote I did while being barely awake in five minutes. Sure it needs work. But there'd be ways to do it without a camera up your butt.
My point is that any solution here will be used for tracking, because that's in the interests of both regulators and regulated entities. It's not going to solve the original problem because kids are great at finding workarounds, and it will cause harm to those who follow the rules.
I also could devise a technical solution here that respects users' privacy and is effective, but once it's implemented, it will be changed to violate privacy. That's how these things work.
Eh, Denmark is. They are building exactly a ZKP system.
Britain has chosen to not make this a legal requirement so it is possible to tie back age verification with who verified. That makes it a lot more suspect.
Sorry, I mean just for the UK, US, and apparently China also.
Fortunately, the EU isn't going down the same path, and has Estonia, Finland, Denmark and the Netherlands as guides. And to just do this in the right order and do step 1: sensible digital ID system.
meh just do what Amazon does "Hey if you're student you can get Amazon Prime for $5! how old are you?"
me: "I'm 20."
Amazon: "Ok here's your cheap prime!"
/me groans getting out of the chair cause I'm in my 40s
Point being just slap up an unverified age gate and be done with it. Really, truthfully, whose going to actually check? who even cares to check? it's all just a dog and pony show to please the conservative and "think of the children" religious nut jobs who have no idea how any of this shit works anyways. Just spend 2 minutes whipping up a site with a centered div that has a drop down menu asking "how old are you?" less than 18 send it to a "no internet for you page" greater than 18 "go look at porn" page.
Doesn't take a rocket scientist to know what's REALLY happening that they're requiring scanned IDs or faces or what have you. and no company in their right mind is going to fight this as it's free and easy data collection. Bluesky doesn't give a flying fuck as they're just going to end up selling the data they collect.
How about people parent their children?
I believe the issue is that parents themselves are overworked from their job and have no energy to be a parent, because in our society, it is more successful to be a worker than to be a parent.
(Sorry for turning it into a critique of capitalism, I just can't help it these days)
The problem is that meat-space logic is applied to the cyberspace (as it might have been said in the 90ies).
You go into a store and the clerk sees you and knows your age. If it's borderline, then they ask for ID. They are applying that thinking to internet services. And so are you. You are just trying to figure out a better way to ask for ID.
The UK doesn't have a system of mandatory national ID. Brits feel that that is totalitarian. So obviously, they do not use the scheme you propose. It's not their meat-space logic.
Where this falls down is that no ordinary Mastodon instance can comply with the regulations of the close to 200 hundred countries in the world. Of course, just like 4chan, many wouldn't want to out of principle.
The only way to make this work is to introduce another meat-space thing: Border posts. You need a Great Firewall of the [Local Nation]. At physical border posts, guards check if goods comply with local regulations. We need virtual border posts to check if data is imported and exported in compliance with local regulations.
Such a thing, a virtual Schengen border, was briefly considered in the EU about 15 years ago. It went nowhere at the time. But if you look at EU regulations, you can see that the foundations are already laid, most obviously with the GDPR but also the DSM, DMA, DSA, CRA, ...
Eventually, the border will be closed to protect our values; to enforce our laws. We will lock out those American and Chinese Big Tech companies that steal our data. We will only allow their European branches and strictly monitor their communications abroad. We will be taking back control, as the Brexiteers sloganized it. Freedom is just another word for having to ask the government for permission when you enter a country. And increasingly, it is another word for having to ask permission for how you use your own computer.
It won't be some shady backroom deal. Look here. People in this community love these regulations. Europeans here are happy to tell US companies to "FO if they don't want to follow our laws". Well, the Great Firewall of Europe is how you do that.
The "Virtual Schengen Border" or "Great Firewall of Europe" - European Digital Rights (EDRi)
This article is also available in: Deutsch: [Die “Virtuelle Schengen Grenze” oder die “Große Firewall Europas” | http://www.unwatched.org/EDRigram_9.European Digital Rights (EDRi)
You sell that cert to a local kid for $50
You generate another cert to sell to a local kid tomorrow
???
Profit
I'm not sure if we are doing that fine. The thing about the decades is there wasn't really a web for kids to browse. Nowadays it's different. But still, I agree with you. We should keep responsibility to the parents as long as possible. But I really don't think my friend's daughter should be browsing TikTok at her age.
(Which is my friend's task, not mine or that of some pedo in government)
Funnily enough that is roughly the implementation the EU seems to be working on.
digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/…
On a side-note. I do not consider the government to be a trusted party. Whatever solution gets implemented needs to not provide the government any information that they can use for mass surveillance.
The two main requirements in my view are:
- The website that needs your age shouldn't get to know your identity. They only get to verify your age.
- The government age verification shouldn't get to know what service you are requesting access for. They only provide age verification.
Edit: You mention the certificate being short-lived, but one of the concerns mentioned in the proposed implementation for the EU age verification states that if that window is too short it can be used to determine identity.
The EU approach to age verification
The European Commission is working towards an EU-harmonised approach to age verification.Shaping Europe’s digital future
I think I have to specify what I mean by trusted. I do not trust them with my browser history, but I do trust them handling my government-issued identity. I do however not trust a company with that identity because I know they will definitely use it for their own good. What I want is the complete and absolute separation of information. Everyone knows exactly what they need to know, not a byte more. I'm still not convinced we desperately need the possibility to identify us for every fucking service though. Keeping kids from accessing porn should be the task of the parent. Keeping kids out of porn, yes indeed, we all need to tackle that problem.
So basically, yes, I think we have the same solution in mind, but with different wording.
That means being paid by the tax payers.
The free option is to trust your children.
“there is nobody that can decide for the fediverse to block Mississippi.” (...)“And this is why real decentralization matters,” said Rochko.
No effort could have evacuated the entire population of Gaza without free movement across land borders. It was never a practical option.
Even if it had been, parents making a dumbass decision doesn't justify killing their kids.
Fucking creepy comment.
are you suggesting the Palestine government does not have a right to exist you antisemitic troll
Calling me antisemitic is funny.
And no, necer said that. Just calling the people stupid that let their children die for propaganda
Say you’re trash without saying you’re trash
You racist antisemitic terrorist.
Please leave, your voice is not wanted here.
If you continue to spread blantant disinformation about the genocide of palestinians I will report you.
Yes but that would require them to regard all children as being worthy of protection by the law.
They don't.
but with something like Mastodon, it doesn’t really work. Like this bill was written and passed by people who don’t know shit about fuck about tech. Several Lemmy and Mastodon instances have shut down/Geoblocked the UK because of this
So they knew what they were doing. Age verification is about removing all sources that can't be controlled.
That's already happening, alas, but I suspect things will get very quiet when people realise something like this would affect the bottom line negatively. Look at what happened (twice) with encryption.
- Government said they wanna ban encryption.
- Starts planning the legislation.
- Someone (a civil servant who's job it is to point out the fucking obvious) points out that Banking and Commerce requires Encryption to function and banning Encryption would crash the Economy.
- Plans are quietly dropped.
How it will likely go with VPNs.
- Government says they wanna restrict VPNs.
- Government Starts planning legistlation (we are here).
- Someone points out that Banking, Tech Security, The Military, The Foreign Office and others rely on VPNs to function and getting rid of them will fuck the economy and put national security at risk and risk negatively affecting their ~~pay masters~~ corporate donors.
- Plans are quietly dropped.
One of the main purposes of the OSA is to make money for YOTI and the Data brokers, because you and I both know these are the main corporate sponsors, and the MPs and Lords who passed it likely have investments in said companies. Hoovering up IDs and linking them to web activity doesn't just help the government fuck us, it makes money for MPs, Lords, and their Friends. But here's the thing: It'll bite not just US, but them in the arse. So here's what's (hopefully) going to happen.
- OSA is installed.
- Someone important enters their info into a fake age check/Someone important gets age verified for something and the service gets hacked.
- The hack gets made public and a lot of important people get burnt.
- The Bill gets quietly modified or abolished.
British Politicians are greedy, self serving authoritarian cunts, but they are also remarkably dim. Like sometimes impressively so. Look up this passage in Hansard to see what I mean. It might cause you to have a fucking crisis.
But yes, they do like control, problem is they don't know what they wish for,
Do you think those debates are for real and not a show that ends with whatever has been decided elsewhere?
The houses don't need to know because they don't do the planning.
Since the EU does the same thing at the same time, after it was not a problem for years, the origin for these laws must lie elsewhere.
Do you think those debates are for real and not a show that ends with whatever has been decided elsewhere?
If that was the case, then the Lords wouldn't have blocked the 2016 Disability Bill. You remember the one. I don't think that was theatre, I think people in the Lords looked at that and went "lol fuck no." They also wouldn't have done a lot of shit if it was all planned behind the scenes and some shadowy cabal actually just called the shots.
Here's the thing: "It's all planned" is the cornerstone of most conspiracies, from 9/11 to "Covid is a bioweapon" or "Covid isn't real" to literally every major conspiracy theory. But wanna know something? All of that is a weighted comfort blanket to sooth people, it is soothing to believe that there is someone or something in control and it's just a case of getting rid of them, and it's an ego boost to believe that You are part of a club that figured it out. They used to call it being "woke" until the far right took that term as an Alias for "Degenerate" as the Nazis used it.
But the truth is this: There is no man behind the curtain, there is no shadowy cabal who actually control everything. It's call Capitalism, Sociopaths, and Morons who either want to make money or think they're doing good.
I have lived through two governments (a Labour one and a Conservative one) that have floated the idea of banning encryption publicly. Both times they quietly dropped the idea when they were told that doing something like that would crash the economy. My parents are both former Civil Servants. My dad watched the Scottish Secretary at the time nearly type "Thatcher is a Bitch" into a Teletype machine that sent out press releases to every major newspaper.
I watched my own MSP (and Leader of the Scottish Lib Dems) address a crowd of mostly transgender mostly leftist people and ask them to applaud Tories who voted for the Gender Recognition Act.
There is shit in Hansard that looks like it came from a bad sitcom. There are people who are in parliament right now who I wouldn't trust with a fucking Self Scan Checkout, let alone a seat in either of the houses.
Are there scheming bastards, genuinely Machiavellianism Motherfucks in parliament? Yes! Politics attract people who score high in the Dark Triad. Starmer, Streeting, and Farage are all genuinely horrible people. Starmer and Streeting openly want to harm transgender people, Farage wants to fund the fucking Taliban, and if we wanna talk about non-MPs, Boris Johnson stated he's rather have mass death than another Lockdown and the last government used Covid as a way to Launder Money.
But alongside that, a good chunk of the people in our parliaments are simply fucking morons. They might be good at a collection of specific things, but they are also impressively Moronic on a level that would make the Thick of It and Yes Minister look fucking optimistic. Indeed, some of the more bastardous people I have listed and not listed here are also, weirdly, fucking morons. Look at Trump's first term for example.
And if you wanna cling to "there's a puppet master behind all this", be it Satan or the Illuminati, to save you from the genuinely terrifying thought that the people at the Helm of the ship of state are Francesco Schettino, Yiannis Avranas and Lafayette Ronald Hubbard, fair, but personally, I'm a realist and the only conspiracy I hold is that the "Phillip Killed Diana" conspiracy was invented by the British Press so they wouldn't face a shitstorm when people realised what the paps did when they got to the crash scene.
If you wanna know what is actually happening here it is:
A Dunfermline based investment firm, charitable trust and think tank (yes you heard) by the name of Carnegie United Kingdom Trust invested money in data collection firms and age verification firms like YOTI, so they lobbied the government and even basically wrote the Online Safety Act. The government sometimes lets outside groups write legislation for them because Corruption, they have other shit to do, and they don't often know shit about the fucking shite they're voting for.
Some of those MPs also likely had investments in YOTI and VPNs. When this was presented to the government, some poor sod of a Civil Servant had to sit down the PM/Minister responsible and try convince them that it's a bad idea, clearly they failed. So, utilising the moral panic around Porn, Extremist Material, Pro-Ana content and the like, they passed this bill, even when a good number of these fucking numbskulls don't even know what a VPN is, just "we need to do something" and "it's just common sense™".
Now not only do they (and future governments, God help us if Reform get in and use this against "woke" content like they're doing in Kent Libraries) have the ability to age gate literally anything, but the companies they have invested in have got a GOLDMINE of very sensitive Data they can sell to people, be them from the Private, Public or "underground" sectors. Line goes up for the Investment firms, MPs with shares in YOTI and the rest. When it comes down to it, it comes down to Money, Moronity, and Kneejerk reactionism.
If you wanna know what is actually happening here it is:
To me, that is a conspiracy. Turning it into a business is the way to remove political oversight, but the profits don't hurt.
A market economy is our politico-economic system. If billionaires conspire to distort the markets against the interest of the people, and unbeknownst to them, then that's a conspiracy, normalized by calling it Capitalism.
In this case it's old American money. The idea doesn't come as an investment opportunity from the trust. They are not creating a better future for children with the age verification as the last missing piece. Conspiracies are not magic. You know how it was implemented but you can only guess why.
If billionaires conspire to distort the markets against the interest of the people, and unbeknownst to them, then that’s a conspiracy, normalized by calling it Capitalism.
That's not distorting the markets, that is what they are for. The market isn't some magical deity who's only been stopped because their will is being misinterpretated by the billionaires, they are the market. They control the market. The purpose of a system is what it does. The "Free" market is as much of a myth as when MLMs say the state will "dissolve away" to produce true Communism with the workers owning the means of production. The moment a "free" market is made, it instantly gets manipulated by people with money and the market stops being free anymore. That's part of the reason why so many rich cunts babble on about "free" markets, because it gives them power The billionaires fucking with the market and the law isn't an aberration of the system, it is the system. Once you realise that, everything falls into place.
This isn't a conspiracy, this was pretty much done out in the open. To call it a conspiracy suggests there was some amount of subterfuge. Like Carnegie UK published papers on why they think the OSA is a good idea in 2022, the Online Safety Act 2023, plus the additions made in '25, are publicly viewable here. The transcripts of the debates are here on Handsard.
You know how it was implemented but you can only guess why.
Oh Oh! I can guess why!
The whole reason why the bill was made and written as it was is money. We live in a period of surveillance capitalism where various companies make fuck tonnes of money from your data. Google, Facebook and the like didn't make their money from merely "running ads". They took the data you gave them through cookies and your posting and used it to more accurately target ads at you. Then, they started selling your data to other data brokers who then sold it to anyone with enough money. We've all heard the story about how target knew a teenage girl was pregnant before her father did, and we all know about Cambridge Analytica, Brexit and Trump. Facebook will literally monitor your emotional state through your posts and target you with ads for loans when they think your emotionally vulnerable.
So, we all know data brokers are hungry for data to sell, and as one Murray Bookchin once said: "Capitalism can no more be 'persuaded' to limit growth than a human being can be 'persuaded' to stop breathing". So guess what? Investment firms saw a load of moral panics and calls for digital ID. They invested in firms like YOTI (they are not required to say who invested in them, nice and convenient) and started doing research for the government through their think tank arms to convince the government that the OSA is a good idea. The bill says that stringent age checks must be done to view certain pieces of content, but not how, so that means websites have to hire YOTI and co to do that for them or do it themselves. If they can't afford to they either have to shut down because they don't care about the little guy.
So now data brokers have some very valuable data they can take from you: Your unedited face, your passport/drivers licence (plus all the biometrics that come with that) and (alongside that), your sexual habits, more controversial views, and your neuroses! The government can buy that off them (not that they couldn't already find that out), but also so can the people with the big bucks, COMPANIES! On Grindr? Well now your health insurer can increase your premiums if they think you are promiscious. Got political views? Well now they can be manipulated for an outcome favourable to large corporations. Your employer can buy your data and see if you have been saying things they don't like, annorexic people can be given ads for gym memberships and health fads. Oh, and all this can be sold to the government, be it yours or someone else's.
It's all money, it's no shady conspiracy, literally it is business as usual and it sucks.
The Online Safety Bill: Our initial analysis - Carnegie UK
This is our initial response to the Online Safety Bill. We have written extensively about our concerns on the draft Bill and are pleased to see that many of those have been addressed in the Bill.Carnegie UK
It's business as usual and it is a conspiracy.
So guess what? Investment firms saw a load of moral panics and calls for digital ID. They invested in firms like YOTI (they are not required to say who invested in them, nice and convenient) and started doing research for the government through their think tank arms to convince the government that the OSA is a good idea.
You have a very loose definition of conspiracy. If you don't define conspiracy as something you actively hide, then the word "conspiracy" becomes like the word "Woke" in Right wing circles, that is, "something I do not like or approve of". When I think of "Conspiracies" I think of things like the Business Plot, an act, by a group of politicians and business men, done in secret, to install a Fascist Dictator in the United States as a coup. We only know of this because the person they wanted to be the Dictator (Smedley Butler) told them to fuck off and spoke about it to Congress under oath.
Everything about this was out in the open. The moral panic over the internet has been going on since I was a child. We have had repeated calls to censor the internet to stop Porn, Terrorism, Media that Ofcom can't control, Hate Speech, extremist content, pro ana content, and the like since the PS1 was the top selling console. We have had data brokers successfully argue that they should be able to take our data and sell it legally in front of parliament many a time. Carnegie UK have published papers that became the OSA that were PUBLICLY VIEWABLE. Newspapers advocated for this on the front page, Hansard and BBC parliament recorded the debates, the only reason you think it's a conspiracy was because you personally wasn't aware of it.
The Tories, Labour, and to an extent even UKIP/Reform have been calling for censorship of the internet for a while, they just didn't agree to what should be censored, where and how. Want an actual British Conspiracy that we know is a thing? The British Government have been destroying documents from the Empire days that show that the British Empire committed atrocities to avoid having people sent to the Hague. They've hid that fact, they even today sometimes deny this fact.
It's like saying that Donald Trump's election was a conspiracy because you don't watch the news and didn't know the US was having an election.
You assume that it's about money and that everything is in the open. A good conspiracy doesn't rely on total secrecy but can handle information leakage. Trump flooding the zone is a conspiracy happening in the open.
But what is Trump about? Russia? Why do all billionaires go along? Why did Fox push Trump? Why did other news networks kept him in the news and made him relevant?
We did ok without the surveillance. It's pushed in UK and EU at the same time, on a tight schedule. Combine that with China taking technological lead in 2027 and the US not stepping down. I think we are preparing for war, and we will start it. Of course, some mention it, but to me, that's the conspiracy.
You'd think that, but we're in a political culture right now that puts kneejerk reactionism before reason, logic, and evidence. "It's Just Common Sense™" is used to shut down anyone who might have any good points to make from history or reason. There used to be a point where a politician in the ruling government would spitball something in public, and then a civil servant who knew what they were talking about would sit them down and explain to them why their idea was bollocks. The OSA has shown to us that said thing is bollocks, and efforts from groups like Collective Shout have shown otherwise.
We have major politicians here saying shit like We should Pay Taxpayers money to the Taliban to take people they wanna kill anyway. We have a whole section of the population banned from using gendered toilets and government policy written by far right activist groups. We have books being banned from libraries in certain council areas for being "woke" and we have the ever looming shadow of fascism over us from Russia and America.
Payment processors are telling us what we can and cannot buy because a reactionary group pressured them into it and the most widely used OSes on our phones and computers are ready made to basically fuck all of us if it's profitable.
Russia can flip a switch tomorrow and cut off all access to the outside world under their "Sovereign internet" plan. Shit'll get worse before it gets better.
This is exactly the kind of government overreach people like me have been screaming about since, in my case, the 1990s.
"I told you so" just doesn't feel so good when what's happening is nothing less than the entirety of human freedom and liberty is being eroded before our very eyes, and those who disagree with it get labeled as kooks, and accused of hating whatever "oppressed group" of the day is in vogue.
I too have been screaming about private online since the 90s. I have an intuitive reaction that sort of mirrors yours.
But can I ask you a question?
And it’s one that I’m asking because I genuinely wish to learn from others.
Because I can’t quite see the difference and maybe there’s something I’m missing.
Why is it not government overreach to ensure pornography isn’t sold to minors in an adult video store, but government overreach to have the same expectation of online pornography providers?
I would love your enlightened view on this so I can learn from it. Because I can’t quite see the difference.
I understand that many adults go into an adult video store and need not prove their age, because they clearly look like adults.
And so the difference here is that everyone have to prove their age online, even people that are clearly adults by how they look.
But entering a pornography website is the equivalent of entering an adult video store where the clerk cannot see you, cannot hear your voice. In that world I would also expect the clerk to check every purchase as they would have no other means of assessing the buyer’s age.
Or maybe you think that adult videos should be sold to everyone and it’s the very concept that pornography is restricted to minors that you disagree with. I don’t personally hold that view but then I can least understand why you would also reject online age verification.
Or maybe you think it is ineffective and won’t make a difference. That argument I most definitely agree with, but how we choose to implement a law, and whether it’s effective, is two different discussions I would posit.
Edit: I love that I’m getting downvoted for expressing a POV respectfully.
I’m am 100% any form of checks that identify you.
But for what it is worth the European Union’s proposed framework for this legally mandates zero knowledge proofs.
The UK’s implantation sucks. Big hairy monkey balls.
If you buy alcohol at a farmer’s market, the seller has a responsibility to ensure they’re not supplying it to a child. At least in most countries.
Parents have the ultimate say-so of what their kids have access to.
I don't believe there needs to be a law that says that, no.
If a parent decides their kid is responsible enough to have their own money, then it's the parents who are to blame if that kid buys "bad" things with that money.
Same thing online. If a parent decides their kid is responsible enough to have unrestricted internet access, then it's their fault if the kid then goes to a "bad" website.
It's not the store's fault. Nor is it the website's fault.
We have given away far too much of our parental responsibility over to 3rd parties, and now we don't know how to parent anymore.
Support? Absolutely not.
Allow? Not my child.
Make illegal? Nope. Not my business to tell other parents how to raise their children.
And that's exactly the problem here. People like YOU, who think that if I don't want something illegal, than that of course means I like that thing, or that I personally want to do that thing.
Nope. It has to do with personal autonomy. I'm not your boss, I shouldn't get to tell YOU what you can do to yourself. Period.
Nope. It has to do with personal autonomy. I’m not your boss, I shouldn’t get to tell YOU what you can do to yourself. Period.
Wait, this way every **laws **is useless then, I am not your boss, I shouldn't get to tell YOU that you cannot drive while drunk.
Except you forget about the whole "as long as it doesn't directly affect others" thing.
Or, more likely, you intentionally ignored it in order to score some "gotcha" for Internet points.
Except you forget about the whole “as long as it doesn’t directly affect others” thing.
I followed on your steatment. If I forgot it, you also forgot it.
But my point stand, by the traffic code you cannot drive drunk also if you don't affect anyone else on the road.
Generally it is not that you can do something that is illegal thinking that it is ok as long as it doesn't affect others.
Let me turn that around on you.
You think people should be charged with a crime they haven't done yet? Because that is exactly what happens in some DUI arrests.
Sleeping it off in your car but have the engine on because it's cold/hot outside? DUI.
Then there are the idiotic open container laws where even an open alcoholic drink is legally a DUI, even if the driver isn't drinking.
And if you can't afford a good lawyer? It's a conviction. Which goes on your permanent record.
A guy I worked with had a motorcycle try to pass his company vehicle as he was turning left. The motorcycle driver was killed.
It fucked the guy up so bad, mentally. He began drinking. Never at work, but he drove a company vehicle. See where this is going yet? If not let me finish.
A block from his house, he cracked open a beer. Now even if he had chugged it, there's no way he'd be even slightly drunk before he got home. But he didn't realize the worker who sold him the beer had already called the police and he was being followed.
The arrested him for DUI in his own driveway, due to idiotic open container laws, despite blowing a 0.
He took a plea for reckless endangerment, but it didn't matter. He was 4 years from retirement. He was fired.
Let me turn that around on you.You think people should be charged with a crime they haven’t done yet? Because that is exactly what happens in some DUI arrests.
Of course not, but then maybe the problem is not the DUI law, it is the fact that you cannot fight it if you cannot get a good lawyer, which cost money. Basically your justice system is fucked up.
Sleeping it off in your car but have the engine on because it’s cold/hot outside? DUI.
Slippery slope. How can police know that you just turned on the engine but not moved instead of driving and then stopping because you fall asleep ?
Then there are the idiotic open container laws where even an open alcoholic drink is legally a DUI, even if the driver isn’t drinking.
That is a stupid law, I agree, but it is the law.
A block from his house, he cracked open a beer. Now even if he had chugged it, there’s no way he’d be even slightly drunk before he got home.
Well, he should not have done it. He know the laws. I can feel pity for him in the specific case, but he breaks the stupid law.
The arrested him for DUI in his own driveway, due to idiotic open container laws, despite blowing a 0.
That was the problem here. The laws is written so you fail either way. Here if I have an open wine bottle in the car but I blow a 0, nobody could do anything to me.
But assuming I agree with you, what would be your suggestion to avoid people driving around while drunk ? Or to avoid minors to access porn material ? Aside the charade "parents need to educate they children" that obviously you cannot take for granted.
I don't like the idea and where it could take us.
In the case of DUI, I think the idea behind the law is to avoid that a drunken driver hurts someone, with potentially lethal consequences, not only punish them if he do it.
Once a drunken driver killed someone is too late, even with the harsher punishment.
Again, your problem is not the law itself, it is the fact that your law and the justice system is designed in such a way that you are always set up to fail, in a way or another, be for the stupid DUI charge if you are sleeping in your car, the open container law or the way too expensive justice system. That is what you should fight.
I don't like the idea of actions that don't hurt others being a crime.
It's about consistency. If we make it illegal to do things that MIGHT wind up hurting someone there's no limit to what we can make illegal.
I don’t like the idea of actions that don’t hurt others being a crime.
Me neither, but I like even less the idea that an action that is, demonstrably, dangerous to other should not be stopped until it provoke damages.
It’s about consistency.
You are right. And it is about consistency the starting point from which we are discussing: minors should not be able to access porn. Now, in the real life there is such law and it in on the seller to check, exactly because you cannot count on the fact that a parent is 24/7 with his child, so I don't see why we should not try to enforce the same law on the Net, it is only on a different media.
Now, I agree that checking on the net is way harder than in real life, but minors are minors and porn is porn. If it is dangerous to see a naked woman on Playboy is also dangerous to see her on Playboy.com.
If we make it illegal to do things that MIGHT wind up hurting someone there’s no limit to what we can make illegal.
I see your point, but I simply think that if something is proven to hurt someone, like DUI, then maybe it is right to make it illegal.
Proven? To whom?
Excessive alcoholism is known to cause harm. Should we make being an alcoholic illegal? Wouldn't that make it harder for alcoholicsnto try to get help, for fear of being arrested instead of getting help, much like what happens to drug addicts?
People get hurt constantly while fishing, too. Should we make fishing illegal?
The problem is where do we draw the line. You want to draw it at some possibility of harm to others. I want to draw it at actual harm to others.
Which of these is more or less likely to wind up being stretched over time?
You aren't thinking about bureaucrats and politicians 20, 30, 50, or 100 years down the road. "We'll just fix the laws when it becomes a problem!"
Sure. Because we're really REALLY good at removing or rewriting broken laws..... Oh, wait. No we aren't.
Proven? To whom?
Never heard about people killed in crash caused by drunken driver ? Or pedestrians hit by cars driven by drunked drivers ?
Excessive alcoholism is known to cause harm. Should we make being an alcoholic illegal? Wouldn’t that make it harder for alcoholicsnto try to get help, for fear of being arrested instead of getting help, much like what happens to drug addicts?
No, we should just have laws try to avoid consequences for others
Are you an alcoholic ? Ok, we will help you to be ok but at the same time we try to avoid you drive while drunk. It not seems too unreasonable
People get hurt constantly while fishing, too. Should we make fishing illegal?
Point is: how probable is that someone fishing hurts someone else ? How much damage you can do ?
Again, the point is not to make something illegal because you can hurt yourself, it is about trying to have law that try to prevent you hurt someone else while doing something.
If fishing can hurt others, maybe we should have a law that, while not forbidding to fish, protect the others from what you are doing. I would imagine that you would not like to swim in the sea while someone is fishing with bombs (illegal) 2 meters away from you, don't you ?
The problem is where do we draw the line. You want to draw it at some possibility of harm to others. I want to draw it at actual harm to others.
Fine as long as you accept the consequences. I just don't agree with you.
Which of these is more or less likely to wind up being stretched over time?
Both, because you just need to redefine what "harm" means. And some people is good to do it.
Probability is not certainty.
I do not want people in jail for doing something that is probably a crime.
Every so-called crime that has no jail time shouldn't be a crime. Fees are just another way of enforcing class warfare.
Probability is not certainty.
True, but there is an history of cases about it where the probabilty became certainty.
I do not want people in jail for doing something that is probably a crime.
Me eighter but at the same time I would like to prevent some behaviors that could be dangerous to others.
I know it could be a slippery slope but honestly it would not console me to know that the drunken driver where punished *after *he hit me, I would prefer if he would be stopped *before *being able to hit me.
Every so-called crime that has no jail time shouldn’t be a crime. Fees are just another way of enforcing class warfare.
But fines works only if they are proportional to your wealth, else they are a punishment only for the poor.
We agree on the last part. But my feeling is that if a crime isn't "bad" enough to require actual jail time then it probably shouldn't be a crime at all.
Speeding, DUI, and other risky behaviors should be punished if, and ONLY if, an actual incident occurs. Because then there is actually a victim, and not just some nebulous might-have-been.
Hurt someone while drinking and driving? That's no accident, that's an intentional attack. Kill someone? Again, not an accident, but premeditated murder.
Now, if say, your insurance agency decides that you are a risk due to your alcoholism, and either drops you, or increases your premiums that's not a problem. There's no criminal punishment happening, and if it's in the contract you signed, that's expected.
But, you should only criminally punish someone after they've hurt another person. Not when they engage in risky behaviors.
We agree on the last part. But my feeling is that if a crime isn’t “bad” enough to require actual jail time then it probably shouldn’t be a crime at all.
Define "bad enough", because this is a very slippery slope. What about thefts ?
Speeding, DUI, and other risky behaviors should be punished if, and ONLY if, an actual incident occurs. Because then there is actually a victim, and not just some nebulous might-have-been.
Following this reasoning, there are no crimes until you get caught and/or there is a victim. To me this is unacceptable in a decent society.
Hurt someone while drinking and driving? That’s no accident, that’s an intentional attack. Kill someone? Again, not an accident, but premeditated murder.
And why we should not to try to avoid to have a person in jail and one killed in the first place ?
Theft has a victim, what are you talking about???
Without an actual victim there is no crime.
Without an actual victim there is no crime.
And I understand this. What I don't like is the idea that to try to prevent that there will be victims is bad.
We have given away far too much of our parental responsibility over to 3rd parties, and now we don’t know how to parent anymore.
A responsible parent can do as you say, but there are also not so much responsible parents out there, so maybe we need a backup option in these cases.
The problem with that is that you quickly become responsible for EVERYONE, and then you wind up right back where we are with government bureaucrats telling parents how to raise their children.
If a law or rule can be used to harass otherwise good people, then it will be.
If you give some self-important bastard an inch, they'll take a mile. Just look at the police.
The problem with that is that you quickly become responsible for EVERYONE, and then you wind up right back where we are with government bureaucrats telling parents how to raise their children.
Ok, so do you think it is better to not be responsible for nodoby ? Good, as long as you are prepared to pay the consequences of this, both at personal level and a social level.
If a law or rule can be used to harass otherwise good people, then it will be.
If you give some self-important bastard an inch, they’ll take a mile. Just look at the police.
Sadly true, but this do not means that we should not have laws.
But entering a pornography website is the equivalent of entering an adult video store where the clerk cannot see you, cannot hear your voice.
There's the problem. I was tempted to call this Boomer logic, but that would extremely unfair to Boomers. We are only seeing this now, that the Boomers are on the way out.
I think the Boomers understood better how this works. It's not like entering a store. It's like making a phone call to the store, and the store may be on the other side of the world. The Boomers understood borders, long distance calls, international mail.
Now the digital natives are taking over. And they understand nothing beyond tapping and swiping.
Spoilered is a post I wrote earlier. Just so you know what's coming.
::: spoiler spoiler
The problem is that meat-space logic is applied to the cyberspace (as it might have been said in the 90ies).
You go into a store and the clerk sees you and knows your age. If it’s borderline, then they ask for ID. They are applying that thinking to internet services.
Where this falls down is that no ordinary Mastodon instance can comply with the regulations of the close to 200 hundred countries in the world. Of course, just like 4chan, many wouldn’t want to out of principle.
The only way to make this work is to introduce another meat-space thing: Border posts. You need a Great Firewall of the [Local Nation]. At physical border posts, guards check if goods comply with local regulations. We need virtual border posts to check if data is imported and exported in compliance with local regulations.
Such a thing, a virtual Schengen border, was briefly considered in the EU about 15 years ago. It went nowhere at the time. But if you look at EU regulations, you can see that the foundations are already laid, most obviously with the GDPR but also the DSM, DMA, DSA, CRA, …
Eventually, the border will be closed to protect our values; to enforce our laws. We will lock out those American and Chinese Big Tech companies that steal our data. We will only allow their European branches and strictly monitor their communications abroad. We will be taking back control, as the Brexiteers sloganized it. Freedom is just another word for having to ask the government for permission when you enter a country. And increasingly, it is another word for having to ask permission for how you use your own computer.
It won’t be some shady backroom deal. Look here. People in this community love these regulations. Europeans here are happy to tell US companies to “FO if they don’t want to follow our laws”. Well, the Great Firewall of Europe is how you do that.
lemmy.world/comment/19119670
:::
The problem is that meat-space logic is applied to the cyberspace (as it might have been said in the 90ies).You go into a store and the clerk sees you and knows your age. If it's borderline, then they ask for ID. They are applying that thinking to internet services. And so are you. You are just trying to figure out a better way to ask for ID.
The UK doesn't have a system of mandatory national ID. Brits feel that that is totalitarian. So obviously, they do not use the scheme you propose. It's not their meat-space logic.
Where this falls down is that no ordinary Mastodon instance can comply with the regulations of the close to 200 hundred countries in the world. Of course, just like 4chan, many wouldn't want to out of principle.
The only way to make this work is to introduce another meat-space thing: Border posts. You need a Great Firewall of the [Local Nation]. At physical border posts, guards check if goods comply with local regulations. We need virtual border posts to check if data is imported and exported in compliance with local regulations.
Such a thing, a virtual Schengen border, was briefly considered in the EU about 15 years ago. It went nowhere at the time. But if you look at EU regulations, you can see that the foundations are already laid, most obviously with the GDPR but also the DSM, DMA, DSA, CRA, ...
Eventually, the border will be closed to protect our values; to enforce our laws. We will lock out those American and Chinese Big Tech companies that steal our data. We will only allow their European branches and strictly monitor their communications abroad. We will be taking back control, as the Brexiteers sloganized it. Freedom is just another word for having to ask the government for permission when you enter a country. And increasingly, it is another word for having to ask permission for how you use your own computer.
It won't be some shady backroom deal. Look here. People in this community love these regulations. Europeans here are happy to tell US companies to "FO if they don't want to follow our laws". Well, the Great Firewall of Europe is how you do that.
The "Virtual Schengen Border" or "Great Firewall of Europe" - European Digital Rights (EDRi)
This article is also available in: Deutsch: [Die “Virtuelle Schengen Grenze” oder die “Große Firewall Europas” | http://www.unwatched.org/EDRigram_9.European Digital Rights (EDRi)
Because I can’t quite see the difference
Parents can (and MUST) monitor what happens in their home. It was expected for the past thousand years, and now it's the duty of everyone to take care of anyone's children for some reason. To get to a porn store, you need money to take the bus or you need a car, then the owner of the store can kick your ass or call the cops if you're underage. Remember that less than 50 years ago, the local priest could smash your face if you didn't behave properly in the street, With the internet, parents are the sole responsible for what their kids do, but they don't want to take any responsibility for it. The solution would be a mandatory parental control on every computer, but parents wouldn't like that.
government overreach to have the same expectation of online pornography providers
Because that overreach happens to remove all my privacy thanks to a few idiot parents who don't want to do their parenting jobs in another country, and I consider that unacceptable. We can do some whataboutism and say that since parents in Afghanistan don't want to watch porn, all the porn of the internet has to disappear. Same for blasphemy and freedom of women to browse the internet.
Ok. I get the concept that pornography doesn’t harm children. We can debate that.
But by that reckoning should we also allow children to buy guns online and have them delivered at home? Is there nothing we want to restrict online, on account that whoever is buying it might be too young?
There is no possible way to actually stop teenagers accessing online porn that doesn't require such a massive invasion of privacy that it leaves no safe way for adults to access it. To go with your adult video store analogy, it's like if the store staff would have to accompany you home and watch you watching the porn to check there wasn't anyone standing behind you also looking at the screen, and while they were there, they were supposed to take notes on everything they saw. Even if they had no interest in doing anything nefarious, a criminal could steal their notebook and blackmail all their customers with the details it contained, and there'd be enough proof that there wouldn't be any way to plausibly claim the blackmailer had just made everything up.
If you want to prove someone on the Internet is a real adult and not a determined teenager, you need lots of layers. E.g. if you just ask for a photo of an ID card, that can be defeated by a photo of someone else's ID card, and a video of a face can be defeated by a video game character (potentially even one made to resemble the person whose ID has been copied). You need to prove there's an ID card that belongs to a real person and that it's that person who is using it, and that's both easier to fake than going to a store with a fake ID (if you look young, they'll be suspicious of your ID) or Mission Impossible mask, and unlike in a store, the customer can't see that you're not making a copy of the ID card for later blackmail or targeted advertisements. No one would go back to a porn shop that asked for a home address and a bank statement to prove it.
Another big factor is that if there's a physical shop supplying porn to children, the police will notice and stop it, but online, it's really easy to make a website and fly under the radar. It's pretty easy for sites that don't care about the law to provide an indefinite supply of porn to children, and once that's happening, there's no reason to think that it's only going to be legal porn just being supplied to the wrong people.
Overall, the risk of showing porn to children doesn't go down very much, but the risk of showing blackmailable data to criminals and showing particularly extreme and illegal porn to children goes up by a lot. Protecting children from extreme material, e.g. videos of real necrophilia and rape, which are widely accepted to be seriously harmful, should be a higher priority than protecting a larger number from less extreme material that the evidence says is less harmful, if at all. Even if it's taken as fact that any exposure to porn is always harmful to minors, the policies that are possible to implement in the real world can't prevent it, just add either extra hassle or opportunities for even worse things to happen. There hasn't been any proposal by any government with a chance of doing more good than harm.
- Teenagers can find out their parents' passwords (or their friends' parents' passwords) if they really want to, and if things are anonymous enough not to leave a paper trail that would allow spouses to see each other's porn usage, they're anonymous enough to let teenagers hide that they're using their parents' credentials. 2FA helps, but it's not like teenagers never see their parents' phones.
- There's not anything that all adults in the UK have that could be used for everyone. There's no unified national ID or online government identity. There's no one-size-fits-all bank login system. You'd have to build and secure tens of independent systems to cover nearly all adults.
- As I said in the post above, if it's too much hassle for teenagers to access mainstream, legitimate porn sites, then there's very little anyone can do to stop them accessing obscure ones that don't care about obeying the law or can't do so competently. If governments could stop websites from existing and providing content, there wouldn't be any online piracy.
Online banking passwords? "Find"? How the hell? Have you lived in a barrel?
There is a 8-number code that I've got in my head, then there is a 4-number password that I've also got in my head. And then a paper with single-use passwords which work so that when I have given the two correct passwords, it tells me which code to use. And no way am I giving full access to my bank account for my children!
Some banks also have a system where you log in with your fingerprint and then a four-number code using an app on your phone.
I think the money on the parents' accounts is a much better motivation for the children than an ability to watch porn. And yet, I have not heard of anybody's children actually having found out their parent's bank passwords.
And also: Maybe there really is a child that installs a keylogger on their parents' computer and steals the password paper from the parents' wallet and also happens to really want to go out of their way to watch porn... Well, then there is. Such a child is already in so many ways in trouble that I don't think seeing porn will traumatize them at all. Such children are few and it makes no sense trying to build a 100-percent foolproof system. In any case, using online banking passwords is a lot more reliable way than the weird hocus-pocus being done now.
My point is that you can't build a completely teenager-proof system. Even if most parents uphold the most unimpeachable password discipline, someone's going to put a password on a post-it note near their computer, and have their child see the piece of paper, or use their dog's name despite their child having also met the family dog.
The original comment I was replying to was framing the issue as teenagers being allowed to watch porn versus no teenager ever seeing porn and maybe some freedom is sacrificed to do that, which doesn't match the real-world debate. If freedoms are sacrificed just to make it a hassle for teenagers to see porn, that's much less compelling whether or not you see it as a worthwhile goal.
As for what a teenager with access to their parents' bank password would do, if they're not a moron, they'll realise that spending their parents' money will leave lots of evidence (e.g. that they have extra stuff, their parents have less money than expected in their account, and there's an unexpected purchase from The Lego Group on the bank statement), and so they're guaranteed to end up in trouble for it. It's not any different to a child taking banknotes from their parent's wallet. On the other hand, using it to prove adulthood, if it was truly untraceable like adults would want, wouldn't leave a paper trail.
You can't build a completely teenager-proof system. But you can build a system that is almost completely teenage-proof. And that's definitely good enough!
All such systems exist only to support parents in their parenting. It gets easier keeping your children safe and developing well if the amount of ways the teenagers can be idiots is narrowed down.
While I disagree with the teenagers' ability to find my banking passwords regardless of where I hide them, for example because I can make a copy of them that has been altered with a password I can calculate in my head and that takes the location of the password on the table into account in the calculation, the rest is true.
I remember having seen things I really wouldn't want to see even as adult when I was browsing Internet for stuff that wasn't supposed to be available. Shady websites can be shady in so many ways!
It is true that making an age verification system for a basic porn site will probably direct the youth to other sites with content you wouldn't see on PornTube. I hope my children won't ever watch porn, but if they ever do, I hope it's from a source that doesn't allow the worst things to be shown. For example PornHub does remove the worst stuff and is quite commonly used. If that one cannot be accessed, then probably something else will. And it's likely to be worse. Though, PornHub has a lot of really bad abusive things as well. Checked it out now and one of the first videos it showed was something that looked like the woman is really unhappy, even distressed, about the situation she's being filmed in 🙁
There’s not anything that all adults in the UK have that could be used for everyone. There’s no unified national ID or online government identity. There’s no one-size-fits-all bank login system. You’d have to build and secure tens of independent systems to cover nearly all adults.
i mean, that seems like a solveable problem. either build a national (internationl?) or have some reciprocity with the identification systems that allows the different regions to easily access each other's systems.
Sort of the same system they’re building in Denmark.
You will log into MitID (myID), authenticate with the MitID app, then be issued a bunch of ZKP tokens which you’ll burn off against age verification services. No trace, fully authenticated, fully trusted, damn near impossible to fool.
Funny - I assume on one here was actually involved in creating the law that requires identification when buying pornography (or alcohol. Or tobacco) at stores, but we are all considered responsible for it to the point we are hypocrite if we object a similar law?
If someone says they are against that law now, years after it's already established and spread, it won't be taken as "I'm generally against the government limiting our freedom to consume what we want" but as "I want to push children to consume porn/alcohol/tobacco". So no one argues against these laws. But it's much more feasible to argue against the new laws - a ship that's still in the port.
30 years from now, when they make the law that neural implants must detect illegal thoughts in the users' biological brains and block them, you'd make the argument that it's not fundamentally different than blocking the same topics on the internet - a practice that, by that time, will already be accepted by the general populace.
Yes. I had always worried about the copyright industry. That was the big money pushing for censorship. Controlling access and exchange of information is part of their business model and even personal ideology. But I don't know how much this has actually to do with them, and how much is simply the will to power.
What I did not see coming at all was how the left would completely 180 on these issues. That, at least, I blame on the copyright industry.
Right wing people have screeched about "the intolerant left" forever, but I always ignored the obvious hypocrisy. I took it as a debate on what is permissible in polite society. But now Europe is at a point where there is simply a consensus against free speech. Only the most illiberal forces will be able to use these legal weapons to full effect. That will be the extreme right.
It's just a logical extension of what happens when government becomes the arbitrator of all.
The biggest issue is that so many people see it just as you do, left vs right, instead of liberty vs authoritarianism.
For decades, the libertarian movement, as seen by the left, has been largely associated with the right, simply because of their professed support of the free market, and dislike of gun control
But that same movement has been seen by the right as largely associated with the left, because of their views on things like the drug war, enforced morality, and anti-corporatism.
Has there been a large shift of alt-right into the libertarian movement over the past few years? Yes. Absolutely. And I despise it with a passion.
But there are still quite a lot of us truly anti-authoritarian libertarians out there who despise both left, and right leaning authoritarianism.
But when I bring up issues of authoritarianism, I get "BoTh SiDeS?!" bullshit responses. Because YES, as we can see, BOTH SIDES do their own fair share of this authoritarian bullshit.
They differ in methods, yes. But the bottom line is an encroachment on personal privacy. Plus, property rights are just a logical extension of personal privacy rights.
The right is typically for gun control. Only one country comes to my mind where they aren't. Which one were you thinking about? Or is it more common than I thought?
(Or did you just happen to forget that 95 % of Earth's population exists?)
EDIT: Oh, and also: It is important to keep in mind that it's the same within the left. There are also left-wingers who prefer authoritarianism and ones who despise it. I do agree with your sentiment: The left-right division does not work very well in our current world. Need to take best parts of everything, but most importantly, make sure we don't end up under totalitarian rule!
I said "professed" dislike. Yes, I know Reagan is responsible for one of the largest expansions of gun control ever seen in the US...
And yes, I know Marx himself was tremendously in favor of armed workers.
Doesn't change political narrative being pushed by both major political parties in the US, where in the left supposedly wants guns banned, and the right wants everyone armed.
Yes, I know things aren't that cut and dry, but the media narrative pushed by both parties definitely seems to say that it is.
Doesn’t change political narrative being pushed by both major political parties in the US, where in the left supposedly wants guns banned, and the right wants everyone armed.
How is US relevant in this discussion?
~~Because the US has humans inside it, despite what all the Eurocentric trash think.~~
I let my anger control me, shouldn't have said this.
I wasn't being eurocentric. I was being Asia-Africa-Australia-South America-Europe-Canada-Mexico-Central America-Caribbea centric.
The only country where most of the right want to reduce gun safety is USA. We are talking in an international forum, so here international concepts count, not nation-specific. Typically in the world right-wingers are for safety and typically in the world the politics of the Democrat party count as right-wing.
When in a conversation not specific to USA it is not okay to speak as if everything was about USA. It is not okay to speak as if there was a left-wing party in US Congress or Senate and it is not okay to claim that the right wants more dangerous gun policies.
And here we're talking about something that takes place most prominently in UK and secondly in a bunch of other countries, but absolutely not in USA. USA has nothing to do with this, so don't be as insolent as you were.
(Also, for example Australia is not in Europe. Learn some geography.)
Despite what they think, we are human beings too over here. That's my point.
I don't care about the politics of nation vs nation.
I care about humanity's liberty as a whole.
Nations are shit. Because the only ones in power are typically the ones who want to be. And there's no one worse to hand power to, than one who craves it.
Despite what who think? I don't think there are people who think people in USA are not human beings. (Or if they are, they are less than one percent of the world population... Of course within 8 billion people you will find a proponent for any opinion...)
But yeah, since you care about humanity's liberty as a whole, you could maybe kindly stop undermining that goal by assuming that what is done by under 5% of the population on this planet is the standard that the remaining 95 % are following.
The biggest issue is that so many people see it just as you do, left vs right, instead of liberty vs authoritarianism.
For the most part the divide between "Left" and "Right" politically speaking IS the divide between Liberty and Authoritarianism. If you look up the History of the terms its easy to see this. Those terms originated during pre-revolutionary war France. The "Left" supported freedom from Tyranny. The "Right" supported the Monarchy. This has remained largely true ever since then.
Where the waters get muddy is so called 'Authoritarian Communism'. When Communism was first being discussed it, along with Anarchism in general, were correctly labeled as 'Leftist' ideologies. Under both the 'State' is abolished completely. You can literally go no further left than voluntary association and abolishment of the state. As far back as Karl Marx, elements of 'Authoritarianism' began creeping into 'Communist' thought. While Marx was a relatively enlightened thinker- neither he nor Engels were the originators of Communism- despite having written "The Manifesto". They were the originators of Marxism- an important distinction.
The goal- indeed one of the very definitions of 'Communism', even under Marxism is "a classless, stateless, society." As such Communism is a form of Anarchism. Anarchy technically only requires the abolishment state, but the vast majority of Anarchists also believe in "Mutual Aid", and 'private property' is a nonsense concept in the absence of a state- which is why so many Anarchists identify as 'Anarcho-Communists'.
Now clearly (in my mind at least), removing one of the fundamental ideas of communism- which is that 'The State' (and especially a 'strong/authoritarian' state) inherently upholds and enforces the class system in society and is a bad thing which needs to be abolished and you replace that with it's complete opposite- a 'Strong' State upholds and enforces 'classlessness' in society and is a good thing which should be supported, moves that type of "Communism/Socialism" from being a leftist ideology all the way over to being a far right ideology, as per the original and most commonly used metrics for determining if a position is "Left" or "Right".
The problem with 'reclassifying' 'Authoritarian Communism' to it's correct spot is that A) the ruling class (Capitalists) who are firmly right-wing do not want to be associated with it as it removes power from them and places it solely in the hands of the state. Likewise 'Authoritarian Communists' do not want to be associated with Capitalists either for similar reasons. Leaving the only people who care about the correct placement of these ideologies as the actual Anarchists and Communists- which are considered 'fringe', 'extremist', and 'radicals' by society as a whole and no one really cares about our opinions.
A 'True/Accurate' Left Right Spectrum would look something like...
Anarchism> Communism> Democracy> Social Democracy> Neoliberalism/ "Libertarianism(U.S. definition)" > Conservatism> 'Far Right'> "Authoritarian Socialism"> Fascism
Putting them in that order reflects the 'Liberty-Authoritarian' spectrum that is the "Left-Right" spectrum. You could of course argue placement and some of them could be rearranged depending on circumstances. For example I put 'Social Democracy' as further right than Democracy because 'Social Democracy' is still by and large a Capitalist system, yet if the majority of people in a Democracy were right wingers- then the order would flip, however this is largely right imho.
For decades, the libertarian movement, as seen by the left, has been largely associated with the right, simply because of their professed support of the free market, and dislike of gun control...
You are confusing 'The Left' with "Liberals". This is an extremely common and understandable mistake to make in the U.S. as there is a lot of intentional confusion. The 'Democratic Party', in particular since the 'Regan Era' is largely comprised of Neoliberals- a capitalist ideology. Capitalism relies on, and cannot exist without the exploitation of workers. As such you simply CANNOT separate 'Social' policies and 'economic' policies. Exploitation of workers IS a social issue- one of the most important ones- so if you support 'Capitalism' you are 'right wing' socially, even if you hold relatively enlightened positions in other areas.
Also "Gun Control" isn't a clear 'left/right' divide either. Many leftists share the view of some right wingers that having access to firearms is an important strategy to resist tyranny. If anything access to guns is a Left wing position that was adopted by some on the right, as crazy as that may sound to modern American ears.
“Under no pretext should arms and ammunition be surrendered; any attempt to disarm the workers must be frustrated, by force if necessary”
― Karl Marx
One of the key ways that "Libertarians" try to muddy the waters of what is a considered Leftwing or Rightwing stance is the mantra of 'Free Markets'. But what is really meant is 'Unrestricted Capitalism'. If there was ever a "Libertarian" who believed in "Free Markets" in the absence of 'The State' and 'Private Property'- well they would likely correctly categorize themselves as a Leftist and not "Libertarian" (Please note the distinction between Private Property and Personal Property, and in particular how it relates to the ownership of the means of production.) Also to note: That definition of "Personal Property" is written from the POV of people born, raised, and indoctrinated by a Capitalist system and is not exactly how leftists would define it. "Personal Property" doesn't have to be 'movable' per se- ones residence or even a village collectively could be considered 'Personal Property' by Leftists. What really matters is that it's property that you can personally make use of. If you build yourself a small house for you and your family- that is personal property. If you lay claim to vast amounts of land that you couldn't possibly work by yourself- that would be "Private Property" - which would require some form of 'State' to enforce.
Now some so-called "Libertarians" will try to argue for something called 'Anarcho-Capitalism'. This is a mythical state of existence where there is no State, yet the people respect 'Private Property' rights. Ask most 'Anarcho-Capitalists' how they would propose to enforce private property in the absence of a state and they will tell you that they would hire Mercenaries/ "Private Police"/ a Small "private army"- Well at that point you are a Warlord. Which is the precursor to and one step removed from Feudalism. In other words by becoming a Warlord you have recreated 'The State', which is incompatible with Anarchism.
But that same movement has been seen by the right as largely associated with the left, because of their views on things like the drug war, enforced morality, and anti-corporatism.
It's unironically great that you support those things- but even 'anti-corporate' Capitalists are still capitalists- and still right wing- despite being more enlightened in other areas. You are basically no different than a neolib, but with worse takes on the economy. Neolibs are right wingers themselves. We basically don't have a "Left" in the U.S. The DNC is only "Left" of the GOP by relative positioning. The actual Left is growing day by day- thanks in part to the fascist takeover of the U.S., but we are still the minority for now.
But there are still quite a lot of us truly anti-authoritarian libertarians out there who despise both left, and right leaning authoritarianism.But when I bring up issues of authoritarianism, I get “BoTh SiDeS?!” bullshit responses. Because YES, as we can see, BOTH SIDES do their own fair share of this authoritarian bullshit.
To reiterate my point, authoritarians can only ever be 'Left Wing' in name only. Calling it any other way makes no sense. It's like saying a poor wealthy person or a sick healthy person- the two concepts are complete incompatible with each other.
Plus, property rights are just a logical extension of personal privacy rights.
PERSONAL property, not PRIVATE property.
Now I haven't even gone into why the 'authoritarian' shift in "Communist" thought happened- and that is a whole other discussion. This rant was largely semantic but I feel it's important to make the distinction.
The ideal of free speech is a naive fantasy especially with social media which can amplify the craziest of ideas which can go viral.
Yes the Left has gone overboard with their thought policing however the right wing in want their personal bigotry to be allowed and nobody else (no mention of DEI in USA government institutions allowed). The Left want free speech for everyone except the bigots but then their definition of bigots becomes a slippery slope.
I mushed a lot of things together in my post. Copyright and political censorship have very different motives behind them. The point is that, to enforce copyright, you need extensive surveillance of online content and the means to shut down the exchange of information. That requires an extremely expensive technical infrastructure. But once that is in place, you can use it for political censorship without having to fear pushback over the economic cost that would come even from politically sympathetic actors. Conversely, if you introduce political censorship, you might get support by the copyright industry, including the news media, for helping their economic interests.
Where it gets to political censorship, the paradox of tolerance is exactly the lunacy that I'm talking about. In mad defiance of all historical fact, there is belief that liberalism is weak, that political dissidents must be persecuted, information suppressed. Never in history has democracy fallen because of a commitment to tolerance. All too often, they fall because majorities feel their personal comfort threatened by minorities and support the strong leader who will "sweep out with the iron broom" (as a German idiom goes).
Do you notice how that Wikipedia article has nothing to say on history?
Conversely, if you introduce political censorship, you might get support by the copyright industry, including the news media, for helping their economic interests.
Never occurred to me. Interesting point to ponder.
"sweep out with the iron broom"
The would-be fascists don't want democracy. Note how Trump is softening up the public by using the term fascism lately.
Good essay:
The goal is to shift the Overton window: dictatorship is not a threat, but a regrettable necessity... dictatorship as safety, democracy as danger.
michaeldsellers.substack.com/p…
Trump Says Americans Would "Rather Have a Dictator"—And Stephen Miller Lays the Trap for Dems
Alarm bells should be going off at this pointMichael D. Sellers (DEEPER LOOK with Michael Sellers)
You've been screaming about internet censorship since before the internet?
Fucking time traveller right here
... I was online in 1993, bro. I was dialing into BBSs with worldwide fidonet bulletin boards even earlier than that.
Don't be such a dipshit.
Back in my day we had to dial in to get the internet.
GoddamnGl Gubberment ruining everything
Nah. OCs a whinging boomer.
"Screaming" "People like me" "liberties eroding before our very eyes"
It's like he's never read a history book. Or travelled outside his state.
Plus no one I have warned from 97 on admits to remembering my warnings. Them all saying nah keep your head down and live, govt has always been bad, nothing will fundamently change.
The same people still support establishment opposition to save us too, following the lead of authorities passing the buck and never admitting a mistake and correcting their behavior.
Protect Jeffrey Epstein? Last I checked, he doesn't need anymore "protecting".
Trump only cares about himself. If he accidentally "protected" anyone but himself, it's purely a coincidence.
Only the big names will remain.
As intended. Obvious regulatory capture
Trump officials fire EPA employees for signing dissent letter
The letter itself is here
Access options:
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An open letter from EPA staff to the American public
This op-ed was written by a group of current and former employees of the Environmental Protection Agency, who have asked to remain anonymous due to concerns about retaliation.EHN Editors (EHN)
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Of course he fucking did.
Big strong man can't take a lick of pushback against his stupid ideas.
Republicans eye next House carveout with Missouri special session
Missouri Gov. Mike Kehoe (R) moved toward helping the Republican Party gain another seat in the U.S. House on Friday, announcing a special session to redraw the state’s congressional maps.
People won't vote for Republicans, so they need to update their gerrymander. Time for more states with Democratic trifectas to follow the California lead and respond in kind.
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What in your country/area is totally normal but visitors get excited for?
I've only been abroad one time, and there were little gecko/lizard things everywhere, climbing up walls and scurrying across roads, and nobody cared. I was constantly fascinated but to the locals they're just kinda there.
Bonus question to anyone who visited the UK - was there anything that fascinated you but I'd be taking for granted?
Pic unrelated.
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CDC spiraled into chaos this week. Here’s where things stand.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention descended into turmoil this week after Health Secretary and zealous anti-vaccine advocate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ousted the agency's director, Susan Monarez, who had just weeks ago been confirmed by the Senate and earned Kennedy's praise for her "unimpeachable scientific credentials."
It appears those scientific chops are what led to her swift downfall. Since the Department of Health and Human Services announced on X late Wednesday that "Susan Monarez is no longer director" of the CDC, media reports have revealed that her forced removal was over her refusal to bend to Kennedy's anti-vaccine, anti-science agenda...
CDC spiraled into chaos this week. Here’s where things stand.
CDC is in crisis amid an ouster, resignations, defiance, and outraged lawmakers.Beth Mole (Ars Technica)
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Meta might be secretly scanning your phone's camera roll - how to check and turn it off
Meta might be secretly scanning your phone's camera roll - how to check and turn it off
Some Facebook users have noticed new settings that let Meta analyze and retain your phone's photos. Yes, you read that right.Elyse Betters Picaro (ZDNET)
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Alastair Crooke: Russia's Patience Is Over, Escalation Begins
Alastair Crooke: Russia's Patience Is Over, Escalation Begins
Alastair Crooke is a former British diplomat and the Founder of Conflicts Forum based in Beirut.Glenn Diesen (Glenn Diesen’s Substack)
Luo Weiwei: former Nasa scientist who became China’s semiconductor trump card
Luo Weiwei: the former Nasa scientist who became China’s semiconductor trump card
Chinese company Innoscience in high-stakes competition against US and European giants, thanks to rising star founding scientist.Dannie Peng (South China Morning Post)
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Access Denied
Our apologies, the content you requested cannot be accessed.
Great article!
Luckily there's an archived version:
One more step
Please complete the security check to access archive.is
recaptcha...
You must have tried when they were updating or something. It works for me.
- Meta chatbots included Swift, Scarlett Johansson, Anne Hathaway, Selena Gomez
- Meta removed some flirty celebrity bots after being questioned by Reuters
- Meta says its own AI created inappropriate images, violating its policies
- Legal expert says Meta's use of likenesses may have violated celebrities' publicity rights
Anne Hathaway
That actually sounds interesting, flirting in Elizabethan English. Willst thou bopping over for Netflixxe and Chille?
Continue Seeding
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Everything else essentially builds on this.
Not really though...I'm running everything related to torrenting and streaming in docker on the same bare metal with a 32tb array of HDDs in it, everything is just stored in the torrent downloads folder and organized with hardlinks in the jellyfin directory.
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Using a VM or docker to run the relevant programs and using hard links rather than NFS shares is just a more complicated setup
What? Multiple hosts + network shares is easier than hosting everything in one place?
GitHub - retrovibed/retrovibed: personal digital archive for the 24th century.
personal digital archive for the 24th century. Contribute to retrovibed/retrovibed development by creating an account on GitHub.GitHub
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You don't run a torrent server on the NAS? Generally you wanna be doing the actual torrenting on something with uptime and storage.
Then to manage the torrents you either use a webui or app.
Are you just using a desktop client?
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I used to download and seed torrents 24/7 directly from my shitty consumer smr drive.
Not only speed was very slow but I think I killed the drive because of that.
I'm still thinking how I'm going to proceed now that I'm setting up my NAS again, I think I'm going to have to torrent to some smaller, cheaper but higher quality drive and then copy to the smr archive, until I can afford an enterprise drive.
It's also possible that I killed the drive due to bad heat management, but in the datasheet it says something that I'm only supposed to use it for 2h a day per year and not 24/7.
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I seed popular / usuals to 1:1, then clear.
Hard to find stuff i have permanently seed. Revenant, 1080 lexx, goodies, rare documentaries etc. if i had to fight for it you shouldn't have to.
Best 3rd Party Discord Client That Enables 1080p Screen Sharing?
Can yall recommend your favorite 3rd party Discord client (desktop) that enables the high quality screen sharing normally only available to Nitro subscribers? I found this list but there's quite a few options, so I don't know where to start
Edit: forgot to specify I’m mainly gonna be using it on Windows but Linux support is cool too
GitHub - Discord-Client-Encyclopedia-Management/Discord3rdparties: A non-exhaustive collection of third-party clients and mods for Discord.
A non-exhaustive collection of third-party clients and mods for Discord. - Discord-Client-Encyclopedia-Management/Discord3rdpartiesGitHub
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Mainstream Media Betrayal, Deliberate Deception Persists /Lt Col Daniel Davis
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
Microsoft fires 4 employees after protest over Israel ties, break-in at Washington office
Microsoft has fired four employees in response to a protest over the company’s alleged ties to Israel, with two more dismissed after a break-in at President and Vice-Chair Brad Smith’s office at the company’s Redmond headquarters in Washington state, Anadolu reports.
“Two additional employees were terminated due to serious violations of established company policies and our code of conduct,” a Microsoft spokesperson told CBS News on Thursday. The company had announced the initial two firings in relation to the event on Wednesday.
Now totaling four, the firings followed a demonstration on Tuesday by seven current and former employees at the company’s Redmond headquarters in Washington state. The activists, affiliated with the group No Azure for Apartheid, entered Smith’s office to demand that Microsoft end what they described as direct and indirect support for Israel in its war on Gaza.
The No Azure for Apartheid group identified the dismissed employees on Instagram as Riki Fameli and Anna Hattle, following their arrest by police on Tuesday.
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They thought they were going to risk their carreer to protest against a company committing genocide and cause it massive amounts of negative media attention in the process.
Which is exactly what they did.
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AI augmented entertainment media can and does guide public sentiment in a closed feedback loop and it's only going to get better and better at it.
Now matter how much we rock the boat, it will efficiently dampen the waves, it will be like trying to rock a boat sunken into molasses
False. Companies and fairs absolutely despite protesters ruining their mood. It makes them very uncomfortable to hold speeches without being interrupted. Nadella avoided speeches for a long time because of fears people would interrupt him.
A large arms fair in The Netherlands recently banned Israeli stands from attending because they didn't want to deal with the massive amount of protesters ruining their convention again.
I mean, sure you can make a scene and ruin an event, maybe even turn the whole crowd to your side but what I'm a talking about in at the large social scale, we're all mostly ballasted between the endless distraction and the demands of work and life on our attention. Now add into this mix something analyzing sentiment , tweaking relatively small things in the media landscape and dissipating anything that might become a coherent, organized, aligned movement.
I feel like we're in some kind of quicksand or molasses, oh no, it might be "nothingeverhappenism"
Things have been happening. The media has faced so much pushback that they have been forced to partially repeat on Israeli crimes to save face. Which in turn turned all the MSM boomers against Israel too.
But most damning of all is the West choosing to lose its entire moral credibility for Israel. Doing nothing actually comes with a very heavy price which Israel is not paying. Europe and the US are.
Effective protesting is when internet users set their profile picture to Clippy en masse, that ought to scare Microsoft and their contemporaries!
Get a grip, lib.
Actually reminds me of some lines from a closing of a comedy act on this very topic:
youtu.be/JdJwzSsLWZM
Instead of talking about all the things you loose for standing up for the right thing, talk about all the things you gain.
Telegram for Monkrus?
Came across 2 different telegrams for monkrus. His/her site here w16.monkrus.ws/ points to "real_monkrus" but the "m0nkrus" has an insane amount of people in it.
t.me/real_monkrus
t.me/m0nkrus
What is the "legit" way to find monkrus? Do they ever use PGP and how can I tell that a new site is also the same user? Both telegrams have different methods of donation, so it feels unlikely they're both real.
I won't blame these torrents, but I've recently gotten a state-actor-level type of malware and I'm double-checking everything that's been into my machine.
Варез от m0nkrus'a [Warez by m0nkrus]
В данном блоге представлен обновляемый список продуктов (сборок) от m0nkrus’a и даны ссылки на ресурсы, откуда их можно скачать.w16.monkrus.ws
I think it's safe to say the 50k person "t.me/m0nkrus" telegram is a very dedicated malware-for-hire type shit.
Torrents are very similar to M0nkrus' shit but they've implanted very sophisticated viruses in most of them.
Might want to include that in the megathread @db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
EU laptop options?
Tuxedo 🇩🇪 @tuxedocomputers
Slimbook 🇪🇸 @slimbook
NovaCustom 🇳🇱 @novacustom
Laptop with Linux – Comexr B.V. 🇳🇱: laptopwithlinux.com
Buy a Linux laptop? Laptops with Ubuntu or Linux Mint | Laptopwithlinux
LaptopwithLinux, delivers the best custom Linux laptops with Ubuntu, Mint, Debian and more. ✓Free Shipping! ✓14 Days of Reflection! ✓2-Year Warranty!LaptopwithLinux (Laptop with Linux)
The White House Apparently Ordered Federal Workers to Roll Out Grok ‘ASAP’ | A partnership between xAI & the US government fell apart earlier this summer. Then the White House apparently got involved
So we can expect covert mecha-Hitler to run everything
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‘It’s madness’: Trump-voting fishermen oppose Revolution Wind halt
‘It’s madness’: Trump-voting fishermen oppose Revolution Wind halt
The Rhode Island offshore wind project, now nearly finished, employed 80 fishermen to help with construction. With Trump's pause, they are losing vital…Canary Media
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“It’s like having the rug pulled out from under you. … Nobody understands why Trump did it. I don’t know what Trump’s agenda is,” said Morris.
Oh boy. It’s so funny.
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mikulogicoso inufficiale programmato con l’asciaflissa (rilascio “MikuLogi: Octt Unofficial Edition”)
Ultimamente mi succede una cosa stramba, ossia che da un lato posto le cose e poi non le faccio… e dall’altro, faccio le cose ma poi non le posto!!! Ebbene, prima che anche quest’ultima cosa fatta cada nel nonpostatoio (o forse, prima che passi talmente tanto tempo che io nel frattempo faccia numerosi aggiornamenti), ecco […]
octospacc.altervista.org/2025/…
mikulogicoso inufficiale programmato con l'asciaflissa (rilascio "MikuLogi: Octt Unofficial Edition") - fritto misto di octospacc
Ultimamente mi succede una cosa stramba, ossia che da un lato posto le cose e poi non le faccio... e dall'altro, faccio le cose ma poi non le posto!!! Ebbene, pminioctt (fritto misto di octospacc)
Record solar growth keeps China’s CO2 falling in first half of 2025
Analysis: Record solar growth keeps China’s CO2 falling in first half of 2025 - Carbon Brief
Clean-energy growth helped China’s CO2 emissions fall by 1% in first half of 2025, extending a declining trend that started in March 2024.Lauri Myllyvirta (Carbon Brief)
Scena di un episodio di X-files che non ritrovo più
Non ho riguardato molto della serie e preferisco gli episodi "Mostro della Settimana", ma ricordo una scena di un episodio della "Mitologia" in cui Mulder fa una rivelazione piuttosto teatrale in cui un documento che qualcuno voleva distrutto e perso nella memoria viene passato attraverso la tradizione orale di una tribù di nativi americani in perpetuo.
Non riesco a trovare alcuna prova della sua esistenza, né possono farlo i miei amici, tanto che stiamo iniziando a temere l'effetto Mandela.
Potete aiutarmi almeno con il nome dell'episodio se non un link alla scena stessa?
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FTC chair claims Google shunting GOP emails into spam folder
The Trump administration has accused Google of discriminating against Republicans' emails and warned that the tech giant could be in line for a crackdown.Federal Trade Commission (FTC) chair Andrew Ferguson wrote [PDF] to Google CEO Sundar Pichai on Thursday, citing a recent New York Post report that alleged Gmail was routinely flagging Republican fundraisers' emails as spam, while not doing the same to missives from their Democratic counterparts.
FTC chair accuses Google of treating GOP's emails as spam
: Chocolate Factory says people keep marking them as such, so QEDDavid Meyer (The Register)
La mia giungla fediversica.
Oltre a Mastodon con snowfan.masto.host, mi sono divertito a mettere su anche qualche “condominio digitale”:
- Lemmy 👉 lemmy.casasnow.noho.st
- GoToSocial 👉 goto.casasnow.noho.st/@snow
- Pixelfed 👉 pxlfd.searxng.noho.st
…senza dimenticare il mio server Matrix, searXNG e Piped.
(Se serve una chiave di casa, suonate pure… ma vi avverto: ho un mazzo intero 😅).
Ora, ci sono ospiti che si fanno comodi su Snowfan, altri (pochi) che preferiscono Lemmy o Pixelfed, ma il mio cuore… beh, il mio cuore resta sempre al primo amore: Mastodon con Snowfan. ❤️
Non dico che sia perfetto (anche lui ha i suoi difettucci), non dico che gli altri non sembrino ancora in beta test eterni (ciao Lemmy, ciao GoToSocial 👋), ma una cosa la voglio ribadire: io non tradisco.
Gli altri li uso, li provo, li coccolo ogni tanto… ma Snowfan rimane la mia casa, e casa è anche di chi ci abita con me. 🏡
Mastodon
Istanza italiana aperta agli Amici che ne fanno richiesta. -ATTENZIONE- istanza NO-ThreadsMastodon ospitato su snowfan.masto.host
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guerrilla stickers 通信, Marty e 𝕊𝕟𝕠𝕨 reshared this.
Grazie per l'ospitalità 😍👏
Snow Lemmy likes this.
𝕊𝕟𝕠𝕨 reshared this.
Snow Lemmy likes this.
Grazie per l'ospitalità nella tua istanza Mastodon che è da sempre una vera Agorà dell'amicizia. Un luogo di ricco dibattito, d'informazione e di vera libertà.
"Di che cosa è fatta una vita? Non soltanto di quello che diciamo; né di ciò che facciamo. La nostra vita sono anche le cose che amiamo e in cui crediamo".
Edward Snowden.
Snow Lemmy likes this.
Extreme rain in China caused $2.2 billion in road damage, further straining public purse
cross-posted from: lemmy.sdf.org/post/41276896
Extreme rainfall across swathes of China caused over 16 billion yuan ($2.24 billion) in road damage, the transport ministry said on Wednesday, highlighting how climate risks are placing additional pressure on the ailing economy's public purse.The preliminary estimate covers damage to roads since the start of flood season, Li Ying, a ministry spokesperson, told reporters, and includes 23 provinces, regions and municipalities - more than two-thirds of China's administrative divisions.
Flood season officially began on July 1, according to China's water resources ministry, and brought record rainfall to the country's north and south.
So far, some 540 million yuan in emergency road repair subsidies have been allocated to local authorities by the transport and finance ministries, Li said.
[...]
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Vlog 086 – I couldn't have said it better myself
Usually on social media the golden rule is "Never read the comments", but things are a little bit different in the Fediverse. I had a bunch of thoughtful and insightful responses to yesterday's video (Vlog 085) and so today I wanted to walk through some of the great ideas people shared with me. Welcome to Vlog No. 086.
My Newsletter: ewenbell.com/subscribe
My Photography Advice: ewenbell.com/blog
My name is Ewen Bell and I am a LUMIX Australia Ambassador and an Ambassador for Sigma Photo.
#EwenTube #Photography #PhotographyVlog
Vlog 086 – I couldn't have said it better myself
Usually on social media the golden rule is "Never read the comments", but things are a little bit different in the Fediverse. I had a bunch of thoughtful and insightful responses to yesterday's video (Vlog 085) and so today I wanted to walk through some of the great ideas people shared with me. Welcome to Vlog No. 086.My Newsletter: ewenbell.com/subscribe
My Photography Advice: ewenbell.com/blog
My name is Ewen Bell and I am a LUMIX Australia Ambassador and an Ambassador for Sigma Photo.#EwenTube #Photography #PhotographyVlog
Subscribe to Ewen's Newsletter
Join Ewen's newsletter for short updates on new articles and photographic inspiration. A special treat for new subscribers is a FREE download of my 80 page eBook called 'Camera Not Included'.Photography by Ewen Bell
Can we please stop arguing about whether Bluesky is decentralized?
privacy.thenexus.today/can-we-…
> "People who saw Bluesky as centralized nine months ago still see Bluesky as centralized. People who saw Bluesky as decentralized (or decentralizing) nine months ago still see Bluesky as decentralized (or decentralizing). Nobody's changing their minds in response to new information. It's basically the same discussions rehashed again and again.
>
> One thing that's been really striking to me in this latest iteration of this interminable discourse is that so many people in the Fediverse present the fact that 99.99% of Bluesky users are still using infrastructrure run by Bluesky PBC as if it's a gotcha that people advocating for Bluesky and the ATmosphere aren't aware of.
>
> No, actually, ATmosphere developers I talk to are very very aware of these limitations. They just prefer to invest their time and energy in working to improve the situation rather than arguing about the semantics of "decentralization."
>
> That sure seems like a good approach to me.
>
> So can we please stop arguing about this already?"
>
Can we please stop arguing about whether Bluesky is decentralized?
Nobody's changing their minds at this point, and the discourse is reallyJon (The Nexus Of Privacy)
[2023] Gulf Stream could collapse as early as 2025, study suggests
Gulf Stream could collapse as early as 2025, study suggests
A collapse would bring catastrophic climate impacts but scientists disagree over the new analysisDamian Carrington (The Guardian)
I checked the paper cited in that article, and it has an author correction published last week:
The Strang splitting maximum likelihood estimator had a minor error (thanks to Anders Gantzhorn Kristensen for identifying it). In the last step of the Strang splitting in the pseudo maximum likelihood estimation, the flow should have been evaluated in the observation at time t~i~, but was wrongly partially evaluated at time t~i–1~. When corrected, the tipping time estimate changes by 8 years.
(emphasis mine)
Author Correction: Warning of a forthcoming collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation - Nature Communications
Nature Communications - Author Correction: Warning of a forthcoming collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulationNature
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subignition likes this.
Now we only need re-insurance companies to fund a tanker fleet of ~500 mega tons of salt to restart it.
Maybe even some kind of foundation could coordinate it, like it National Science one
Less work? 🤣
I had a garden with wild flowers, it was planted by the previous owner. An horticulturist.
It was beautiful but required a lot of work. Way more than mowing a couple of days a week.
I still tried to keep up, though.
UnderpantsWeevil
in reply to Lee Duna • • •like this
Rozaŭtuno, aramis87 e tiredofsametab like this.
hisao
in reply to UnderpantsWeevil • • •moseschrute
in reply to hisao • • •hisao
in reply to moseschrute • • •irelephant [he/him]
in reply to hisao • • •hisao
in reply to irelephant [he/him] • • •irelephant [he/him]
in reply to hisao • • •hisao
in reply to irelephant [he/him] • • •WhyJiffie
in reply to irelephant [he/him] • • •peoplebeproblems
in reply to hisao • • •Arguably though, at some point they'll just say "if we can't read your traffic, you can't use the Internet."
Which still isn't a problem, as I'm sure we can come up with a means to encrypt traffic to make it look entirely legitimate. But it's going to take a while.
einlander
in reply to peoplebeproblems • • •Mitch Effendi (ميتش أفندي)
in reply to einlander • • •Jason2357
in reply to einlander • • •Soggy
in reply to Jason2357 • • •Jason2357
in reply to Soggy • • •AnUnusualRelic
in reply to einlander • • •sexy_peach
in reply to AnUnusualRelic • • •cyborganism
in reply to sexy_peach • • •sexy_peach
in reply to cyborganism • • •chicken
in reply to sexy_peach • • •sexy_peach
in reply to chicken • • •So what do you propose? People who aren't able should set up nodes?
Also if wifi mesh is our last hope, oof
I say that as a freifunk participant
chicken
in reply to sexy_peach • • •Yeah. What I propose is getting more people involved and caring about freedom preserving technologies before it gets to that point. A tiny minority of somewhat more tech literate people are not going to be magically immune to authoritarian checkmate scenarios through technical solutions alone.
AnUnusualRelic
in reply to chicken • • •For the last 20+ years, I've been trying to get people to understand the point of free and open formats with pretty much zero success. For the most, they just don't care if somebody else owns all they data. Maybe if something really bad was to happen to them or a loved one as a result, they'd change their mind. Then I'd get to tell them "that's what I've been telling you for literally decades", but what would be the point?
Not technical people will never get it.
chicken
in reply to AnUnusualRelic • • •chicken
in reply to hisao • • •hisao
in reply to chicken • • •In my experience, if you have anything but "Network: OK" status (for example, "Network: Firewalled"), it's not working properly. If you're behind a VPN, you need to port-forward and properly configure a port in I2P config/settings. Another sign that it's misconfigured is 0 participating tunnels. This is how properly configured I2P network statistics looks like with high internet bandwidth:
::: spoiler spoiler

:::
chicken
in reply to hisao • • •WhyJiffie
in reply to chicken • • •ezyryder
in reply to hisao • • •apftwb
in reply to ezyryder • • •ezyryder
in reply to apftwb • • •sylvieslayer
in reply to hisao • • •IllNess
in reply to UnderpantsWeevil • • •If this really about protecting kids, they could've done opt in blocking at the ISP level. Just a few new fields with ISPs and they have products that can take care of this already.
This is really about tracking every little thing you do online.
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Alexstarfire
in reply to IllNess • • •Mitch Effendi (ميتش أفندي)
in reply to UnderpantsWeevil • • •All my IT and InfoSec friends have called me alarmist for suggesting even the possibility of a GFW of America, but every day that passes, it looks more and more likely to happen, doesn't it?
Start practicing circumvention techniques now, y'all, while it's still legal and cheap to do so. Learn amateur radio. Learn Meshtastic. Learn all the different censorship-resistant VPN technology out there. Host your own websites or services for friends, family, or your community. It doesn't make it impossible, but it does make it hard, and fascism is nothing if not lazy.
Bane_Killgrind
in reply to Mitch Effendi (ميتش أفندي) • • •TrackinDaKraken
in reply to UnderpantsWeevil • • •I've just been assuming that was the goal all along.
Fifteen years ago, I said on Reddit, "The U.S. is trying to become like China before China can become like the U.S." Of course, I got buried.
StarryPhoenix97
in reply to TrackinDaKraken • • •I've been saying some combination of China and Russia personally. It's easier to parallel now after China took over Hong Kong. Those poor kids fought so hard.
People need to understand the fascists were watching those instances too and they learned from them. The last 15 years have been like a road map for how to handle dissent and protests in a way that keeps you in power.
hatsa122
in reply to UnderpantsWeevil • • •Its already happening in Spain. Everyday there is a football match from the spanish league (thats from Friday to Monday, both included) LaLiga orders the ISPs to shutdown everything that uses Cloudflare under the pretext that the shady websites that offers pirated football use their services, killing easily 1/3 of the national traffic for like 4-6h.
Why the ISPs comply?
- The biggest ISP of the country (Movistar) also happens to be the main one that showcase legal football.
How is this legal?
- The judge that authorised this and the president of LaLiga have been friends since forever.
Eventually this will go the European court where they will rule this was illegal and anti-constitutional all along and give a Spain a fine (the the citizens have to pay), and revoke this bullshit, but untill then we are screwed. Nothing will happens to LaLiga, the judge, or Movistar, fucking privileged and corrupted bastards.
CommanderCloon
in reply to hatsa122 • • •Tuxophil
in reply to hatsa122 • • •humanoidchaos
in reply to Tuxophil • • •Yeah, the soccer industry is full of some of the scummiest people on earth.
There's a lot of money to be made off of idiots who don't know any better for doing pretty much nothing.
biofaust
in reply to hatsa122 • • •Whoa whoa whoa! Callate chico!
You copied this from us Italians where we have the friend of Berlusconi providing the State with a censorship system (the Piracy Shield), allegedly exactly for the same reason since 2023.
Let's give the right Fascists what is theirs.
birdwing
in reply to hatsa122 • • •Gravitywell
in reply to Lee Duna • • •Last time i checked "states rights" didn't mean the right to impose your laws on people or businesses running out of other states.
If anyone from Mississippi wants to use our services I'm totally ready to ignore any and all laws that don't acknowledge to sovereignty of the net.
Steve
in reply to Gravitywell • • •Alexstarfire
in reply to Steve • • •gedaliyah
in reply to Lee Duna • • •Sprawl
in reply to gedaliyah • • •humanoidchaos
in reply to Sprawl • • •iglou
in reply to Sprawl • • •Gigasser
in reply to Sprawl • • •DarkSideOfTheMoon
in reply to gedaliyah • • •I think the instance owner would be responsible, but what if the instance is out of the state?
Unless the instance owner is on a visa, with a criminal record they could get him. But otherwise it’s hard to be enforced.
Maybe they could ask the app stores to ban apps in that states. Something like that
Also states could ask ISP blocking the main instances.
MudMan
in reply to Lee Duna • • •So in this whole embarrassing dick measuring contest Eugen was wrong and Mike Masnick was right, then. Turns out "real decentralization" or not, Masto/Fedi's structure doesn't do anything to bypass this nonsense.
This is not new. People constanty claim AP and Fedi have benefits or features just for being decentralized that they absolutely do not have, but I have to admit I'm kinda shocked that Eugen will do that exact thing without any more self-awareness than the average Masto user. He should know better.
Die4Ever
in reply to MudMan • • •Well even if mastodon.social complies, there are many many other instances to choose from, from all different countries
and even other similar platforms like Sharkey or Mbin that work with Mastodon
MudMan
in reply to Die4Ever • • •It doesn't matter, though. They all have the same choice to make: comply, shut down in that territory... or be fined an insane amount.
Eugen argued... well, pretty much what you are arguing now. The question Bluesky guy posed to him is what Mastodon.social would do and how would the presence of smaller instances prevent the issue, especially for instances without the resources to comply at all in the first place.
Eugen did not respond to that, but Mastodon.social just did, and the answer is... Mastodon.social will do the same thing as Bluesky and so will every other instance.
Because of course it's pretty obvious that having a decentralized platform doesn't help with stupid regulation, because stupid regulation applies to every instance. There's no reason decentralization would bypass a blanket requirement unless the legal requirement has carved an exception for smaller platforms (and even then there's a question of what counts as a platform in that scenario).
And the thing is... I'm okay with you not having though that through, but Eugen certainly must have. Right? I mean, they had a pretty well thought out answer for Techcrunch in 24 hours, they must have given it some thought. It's an unforced communication error.
Die4Ever
in reply to MudMan • • •Those are not the only choices... not everyone can/will be fined (example: Pirate Bay)
Why are we focusing on mastodon.social? I'm not even a fan of mastodon.social. I'm not really interested in their original discussion either. Honestly I kinda hope mastodon.social does comply or lock users out so that users spread out more to other instances instead. But they aren't even close to the majority of the Fediverse anyways.
There are plenty of instances hosted in different countries that won't care about this law, or you can self host.
You do know that Eugen developed the Mastodon software, right? He's not advocating for mastodon.social, he's advocating for Mastodon.
I'm just talking about the Fediverse. Sure ATProto can theoretically avoid this too but they don't have as many choices for instances, if any at all that are outside the US and federated with Bluesky? And it seems like self hosting is much harder.
MudMan
in reply to Die4Ever • • •We are focusing on mastodon.social because you jumped on a thread about mastodon.social confirming they won't be complying with Mississippi's age verification law, which in turn is a follow up to coverage of Bluesky doing the same thing. And also because Eugen Rochko jumped into that announcement to claim that Bluesky stepping away from that territory was an example of how Fedi's wider decentralization was an advantage, even though it turned out to no be an advantage at all.
Why would we be talking about anything else? That's literally the topic. You may be looking for a different thread. If anything, the uncontrolled impulse to talk about the ways in which AP is more decentralized than AT whether that's relevant to the conversation or not is the exact communication mistake Eugen made. Which makes doing that again even weirder.
To be clear, it doesn't matter where your instance is hosted. Mastodon.social is not hosted in Mississippi, either, it's hosted in Berlin. You're still taking on a TON of potential liability if you don't comply with their age verification or block that territory from access if the law stays in the books, just like you're risking a ton of liability if you breach GDPR even if your site isn't in the EU.
Die4Ever
in reply to MudMan • • •The title says Mastodon, not mastodon.social, and it appears that Eugen was talking about the Fediverse or Mastodon, not mastodon.social specifically (hence the word decentralization, the discussion was not centralized on mastodon.social).
I think people are mixing up the discussion between Mastodon vs mastodon.social too much. Eugen and his non-profit are the developers of Mastodon, so it makes sense for them to be talking it up.
That quote from the article does NOT say mastodon.social
There are other countries... watch and see how many instances just ignore the law, there will be many in the Fediverse.
I mean Pirate Bay is still running lol, so yeah I think decentralization works
MudMan
in reply to Die4Ever • • •No, the article is about Mastodon.social's nonprofit following up with an official statement after not responding when approached about the original report.
Eugen himself was just shitting on Bluesky, his entire comment was that Bluesky leaving showed "why true decentralization is important". Ironically, that whole pissing match ended up hinging about how much Eugen was focusing on Bluesky rather than their protocol, too. Turns out to be a popular deflection and it turns out to not change anything practical.
You are retroactively trying to reinterpret the subject matter here to save face and I'm too tired right this minute to entertain it. We don't have to have a conversation, man, no hard feelings, but if you insist on having one here I'd appreciate if it wasn't about something else entirely.
Die4Ever
in reply to MudMan • • •Are you talking about Mastodon gGmbH? joinmastodon.org/de/about
github.com/mastodon
The company behind Mastodon
joinmastodon.orgMudMan
in reply to Die4Ever • • •Yeah, Mastodon gGmbH also hosts mastodon.social, as far as I can tell. Or... I mean, at least that's the address and company info they show in mastodon.social's about page (not Mastodon, but mastodon.social, there are two separate About pages, both reference Mastodon's gGmbH's address).
The one thing I'll give you is that the statement they issued is talking about Mastodon software overall not having the technical tools to comply with the law in the first place and are explicitly refusing to comment on what mastodon.social will specifically do about it.
Which is irrelevant because, one presumes, if the answer was to build the tools to be able to comply with the age verification law they would have said that and put them into the Mastodon software, not just kept them exclusively for mastodon.social.
Korhaka
in reply to MudMan • • •MudMan
in reply to Korhaka • • •Yeah, well, remind me not to do business with you under any circumstances.
Self hosting is cool and all, but if you think decentralized networks and services are a get out of jail free to bypass regulations applying to their centralized counterparts you shouldn't be hosting decentralized networks and services.
For one thing if you have no understanding of legal compliance I don't want you to store any of my data at all.
Korhaka
in reply to MudMan • • •MudMan
in reply to Korhaka • • •If you run a social media platform that hosts American users they actually might.
Same as the bar for whether GDPR applies to you isn't whether your server is physically in the EU, it's whether you're processing data from EU users. Or, in fact, how you're supposed to get explicit permission from EU users to host their data anywhere outside the EU in the first place.
Now, I'm not a lawyer in Mississippi, so I'm not gonna give you legal advice, but I would definitely look into it if I'm setting up a public instance. The same way I'd be looking into what compliance things I need to do to host people's data, both due to GDPR and due to other privacy laws around the world. It's one thing to set up for friends and family, but if you're hosting data from outsiders you probably need to understand what you're doing.
I've also not looked into what happens if you are sharing data with a noncompliant server in a restricted territory (so someone is self hosting in Mississippi and then federating with your server elsewhere). I don't think the legislators who wrote this dumb rule know, either. They clearly haven't thought that far ahead. Common sense dictates that the outside server would be fine and it'd be the local server's problem to be compliant. I presume that's what Bluesky is counting on (i.e. that someone will set up a local instance and act as an ingest bridge for them without it having to be them). Then again, you have British legislators now claiming that all VPNs need to have age controls, so I am not taking common sense for granted when it comes to these things.
Korhaka
in reply to MudMan • • •MudMan
in reply to Korhaka • • •Yeah, see, I'm not a lawyer, but I am confident enough that "committing crimes in another country remotely is safe" is absolutely terrible legal advice. Don't do that. I am confident enough in my understanding of legal matters to issue that recommendation.
I mean, I've given Rochko crap here for not thinking things through when he incorrectly suggested more decentralization would make Masto behave differently than Bluesky in this issue. I don't for a second assume he meant "because fuck it, fine me if you can, USA" or I would be giving him way more crap and closing my Masto account just in case for good measure.
katy ✨
in reply to Lee Duna • • •finitebanjo
in reply to katy ✨ • • •Sprawl
in reply to finitebanjo • • •rapchee
in reply to finitebanjo • • •humanoidchaos
in reply to katy ✨ • • •monogram
in reply to katy ✨ • • •mrdown
in reply to monogram • • •monogram
in reply to mrdown • • •limer
in reply to Lee Duna • • •lambalicious
in reply to limer • • •Goodlucksil
in reply to lambalicious • • •Danitos
in reply to lambalicious • • •Your answer seems so out of touch with reality. It feels equivalent to suggesting a depressed person to simply don't be sad.
Moving out to a different state is not easy, either because of family, job, money, studies, life or any other situation.
humanoidchaos
in reply to Danitos • • •BarneyPiccolo
in reply to lambalicious • • •lambalicious
in reply to BarneyPiccolo • • •You want to put those "more enlightened people" at risk of being Gestapo'd or killed? We need them where they can actually do a net positive effect!
First clean up the shit in Texas (or any other fascist shithole) and make it livable, then live there.
Pat_Riot
in reply to Lee Duna • • •