amatecha 8 hours ago

Dunno, unless it's like, a bank or government service, no one is getting a copy of my ID or CC just so I can view their fkin website. I guess I'll just use the web even less than I already do.

Oh yeah and despite all this BS security theatre to "protect the children", teenagers will still find ways to connect with whoever they want to and find whatever content they want online. Source: I was a 12-year-old with dialup internet and my own computer, once.

Relevant nitpick: everywhere this article says "internet" they mean "web".

  • lm28469 4 hours ago

    > Dunno, unless it's like, a bank or government service, no one is getting a copy of my ID or CC just so I can view their fkin website.

    Same, companies underestimate how interested I am in using their websites. Last month I uninstalled instagram because it asked me to pay or get more ads, every other post was already either an ad or a promotional post, I left.

    The vast majority of websites are already unusable or full of low value bot content, most search engines are useless, block behind paywalls, subscriptions, &c. Hopefully this will create a new ecosystem of tools for people who want to escape

    • profstasiak 2 hours ago

      so it's actually good for society? :) We can go outside and see a sun again

PieTime 8 hours ago

Maybe this will finally encourage us to move away from centralized services and create truly decentralized social networks outside of our own governments reach.

  • 1W6MIC49CYX9GAP 5 hours ago

    They'll just ban those

    • impossiblefork 3 hours ago

      They probably won't be able to.

      There's a legal right to end-to-end encryption and there's nothing preventing you from making a system look like HTTPS.

      • sunaookami 2 hours ago

        >there's nothing preventing you from making a system look like HTTPS.

        Did you hear about the Great Firewall?

        And they just have to say it's to protect "the children"/"democracy"/"to fight disinformation"/"hate speech". You can't beat politics with technology.

      • exe34 3 hours ago

        It'll need to be developed extraterritorially, otherwise they'd just pick up the people developing it. They'll ban the original website, so you'll have to get it through dodgy means, which means they can insert backdoors for you (unless you're able to verify the code and compile it for yourself).

d4rkn0d3z 2 hours ago

Right, because age verification has totally put a stop to underage drinking and drug use.

Q: If I am a teenager wanting to access content that is prohibited by age verification, who is mostly likely the party that will provide access?

A: The local drug dealer or extremist.

This means a new market is born.

  • profstasiak 2 hours ago

    we can obviously use highschool logic for that, or we can see studies.

    I don't really have time to go deeply into this, but here is your official government source saying that age limit for alcohol works by limiting deaths etc from alcohol use for people under 21

    https://www.cdc.gov/alcohol/underage-drinking/minimum-legal-...

    • d4rkn0d3z 30 minutes ago

      This study says that when you tell young people underage drinking is illegal then underage people report their drinking less.

thinkingemote 5 hours ago

My theory: Age verification is essentially human verification. It is to stop AI. It's primarily for age of the human but more fundamentally it's about AI.

  • impossiblefork 3 hours ago

    If that were the motivation I would find it acceptable, but it almost definitely isn't.

  • ryan-c 4 hours ago

    AI generated images/video pass verification...

profstasiak 4 hours ago

I love this. I don't think children should be seeing what they can see on the Internet (we limit what movies or games they can buy, but hey - you can go online and watch hardcore porn, or people getting killed on video even when you are 12).

I also love that EU is working on a digital wallet that can facilitate that age check - I would for someone to make a social media with only verified people living in EU. Why do I need to browse russian generated posts that try to pretend they are citizens of my country?

I understand Internet has ideological foundations that are deeply entrenched in Sillicon Valley / American culture, but I don't but those anymore.

  • JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago

    > don't think children should be seeing what they can see on the Internet

    We’re still on hacker news, right? When did any control function installed by our parents or schools ever limit us?

    More importantly: where are the restrictions on addictive social media? Where we have documented evidence of harm being done?

  • impossiblefork 3 hours ago

    I don't understand how you can see it as okay from the point of view of European culture though.

    Age verification requires treating a website, not as some random person, but as a platform which has control of content and some responsibility. Age verification requires giving websites information that they should not have.

    Surely the European perspective should be that it is not Reddit's business whether I am 50 or 15. That they are just a website and should not care who I am and should not have that information.

    Furthermore, this violent images are reality. It should be possible to discuss war in public, and use first-hand information and discuss horrible pictures in detail.

    • profstasiak 2 hours ago

      it is societies business to limit certain illegal activities both online and offline.

      Most countries including USA have Indecent Exposure laws, prohibiting women for example from flashing their breasts on the street.

      Yet somehow online adult women are able to "flash" homemade videos of them making sex with multiple partners, and you somehow think it's ok for children age 11 to view this with no responsibility on reddit's part?

      Also most countries limit what children can do. It's illegal to drink even when you are 20 in USA. Why do we think children are mature enough when they are 11 to view unmoderated usergenerated content on tiktok? Many made by 18+ people driven by commercial interest and many of these videos dangerous for children (for example many challanges, where kids die after trying to do them).

      Obviously one can have this kind of naive liberalism view, that anything goes. I personally don't and that's why I shared my comment.

  • sunaookami 2 hours ago

    Didn't know Von der Leyen had an HN account!

  • lowsong 3 hours ago

    Is this intended as satire? Even if the position is so blatantly indefensible and ill-informed to be realistic, it's an unfortunate reality that there are people who actually do believe this.

rufw91 2 hours ago

Dummbass reporter

yesbut 2 hours ago

No thanks. I'm sure I'm not alone when I say that I will just stop using your service if you require age identification from me.

  • blitzar 2 hours ago

    Thats exactly what "they" want.

    • yesbut 2 hours ago

      they also want me to stop using ad blockers.

dyauspitr 6 hours ago

Probably for the best, the internet is a pretty shitty place now.

  • aydyn 5 hours ago

    How is age verification going to make it any better?

    The internet is already segregated by age groups. The kids are on tiktok and discord, snapchat. You're not talking to any of them on HN or even Reddit.

  • exe34 3 hours ago

    It's really important to make sure the 16 year olds that are about to get the vote in the UK remain uninformed about what's going on in the UK and the wider world - we don't want them to start voting the wrong way now, do we?

Madmallard 5 hours ago

I don't really like articles like this propagating it like it's just an inevitable thing that we should just accept.

How about we don't? Where's the hacker news post of a GitHub repo with easy ways to bypass age verification and multiple mirrors and such so that it can't be wiped away. It'd be a new arms race.

Parents should just be responsible for their kids.

Really sick of the enshittification epidemic.