zlacker

[parent] [thread] 53 comments
1. abxyz+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-07-28 08:25:43
You are approaching this from a uniquely U.S. perspective. The U.K. is pretty middle of the road as far as “surveillance” and while this may offend the freedom-at-all-costs sensibilities, it’s a fairly milquetoast change.

Visiting the Heineken website in the U.S. requires that you assert you are over the age of 21. Texas has instituted I.D. verification for pornography.

Regardless of how you feel about this law, it is not accurate to say the U.K. is unique in implementing it.

replies(5): >>aa-jv+c3 >>rubyAc+p6 >>Aurorn+Ey >>lucasR+nD >>j-krie+BV1
2. aa-jv+c3[view] [source] 2025-07-28 08:52:59
>>abxyz+(OP)
>The U.K. is pretty middle of the road as far as “surveillance”

Just, no.

5-eyes is the most heinous human-rights-destroying apparatus under the sun, and it wouldn't be happening if it weren't for the British desire to undermine cultures they have deemed inferior.

replies(1): >>Steve1+5u
3. rubyAc+p6[view] [source] 2025-07-28 09:28:36
>>abxyz+(OP)
It his law combined with all the other iffy laws in the UK which make this nefarious. This is the issue about discussing anything about how draconian the UK is. If you compare any single law in isolation, it isn't that different. However if you take how the British authorities and how they operate it, and all the other laws you start to see a more draconian picture.

That is what many people, especially those that do live in the UK don't appreciate.

replies(1): >>abxyz+u9
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4. abxyz+u9[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 10:03:42
>>rubyAc+p6
I lived in the U.K. for decades and I have lived in many other countries. I’ll criticise the U.K. government and society endlessly but to describe these changes as notable or remarkable relative to most other countries is nonsense.

From a U.S. internet libertarian freedom-at-all-costs perspective, sure, it’s a draconian nightmare, but for normal people from the U.K. or any other country, it’s barely a blip on their radar.

The U.K. is a flawed place going to hell in a hand basket that many U.K. citizens have strong opinions on but outside of us, the freedom loving nerds on the internet, this identity verification law is not a part of the conversation. “Draconian” and “authoritarian” aren’t in the vocabulary of most U.K. citizens. They’re far more concerned about immigration and the economy.

The long-standing “the U.K. has the most cctv cameras per person” meme is further evidence of this. A well-loved fact carted out by freedom-loving anti-surveillance types… that the mainstream of the U.K. could not care less about.

replies(6): >>rubyAc+1a >>Saline+Bf >>Aurorn+My >>irusen+rB >>rpdill+uS >>southe+Yv1
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5. rubyAc+1a[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 10:08:24
>>abxyz+u9
> I lived in the U.K. for decades and I have lived in many other countries. I’ll criticise the U.K. government and society endlessly but to describe these changes as notable or remarkable relative to most other countries is nonsense.

I am English. I was born in England, my parents are English, my Grandparents were English, My Great Grandparents were English etc. etc.

I have lived my majority of my life here. So I am English.

You obviously didn't read what I said. I understand that it is nothing special in isolation. However I am not talking about it in isolation. I was talking about the entirety of how the current laws are constructed as well as how the UK state operates.

Also just because other countries have rubbish laws, doesn't mean we should have adopted similar ones.

> From a U.S. internet libertarian freedom-at-all-costs perspective, sure, it’s a draconian nightmare, but for normal people from the U.K. or any other country, it’s barely a blip on their radar.

Many people do not like this and are actively seeking work-arounds. These aren't uber nerds like myself BTW.

> The U.K. is a flawed place going to hell in a hand basket that many U.K. citizens have strong opinions on but outside of us, the freedom loving nerds on the internet, this identity verification law is not a part of the conversation.

So you admit there is a problem. But you then pretend that this can't possibly be part of the entire picture because you say so.

Sorry it very much well is part of the problem. You stating it isn't doesn't make it so.

replies(1): >>abxyz+Aa
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6. abxyz+Aa[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 10:13:41
>>rubyAc+1a
Share some examples, then? I just took a look across all major U.K. mainstream news publications and I cannot find any outrage about these changes.
replies(2): >>rubyAc+uc >>mike50+TU
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7. rubyAc+uc[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 10:31:14
>>abxyz+Aa
So because it isn't discussed through UK mainstream news and publications that means people aren't concerned about it? A lot of things people are actually concerned about isn't mentioned at all in the mainstream news or publications that is why increasingly fewer people are paying attention to them.

People are talking about these things ironically on places like twitter/X, facebook, whatsapp, discord and in person (shock horror I know). I was at a boys football match this weekend and people were talking about it there.

BTW quite hilariously twitter/X are censoring some footage from the commons as that content has to be age-gated.

replies(1): >>abxyz+sd
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8. abxyz+sd[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 10:41:34
>>rubyAc+uc
The myth of things “not being talked about” in the mainstream is a convenient way to excuse being unable to provide any meaningful evidence that a notable portion of the country care about something.

I know it might shock you but people on twitter and discord are not representative of voters. Most voters do not engage with any social media.

People on the internet get so caught up in the international perspective we are exposed to that we forget what national voters actually care about.

Go look at polling about this law for a real insight, 80% of people support it: https://yougov.co.uk/topics/society/survey-results/daily/202...

replies(1): >>rubyAc+Mf
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9. Saline+Bf[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 10:59:33
>>abxyz+u9
It's a "blip in your radar" until you want to say something that is forbidden by the government. Or when someone thinks that you said it, such as with "non-crime hate incidents" where anyone can report "hate speech" to the police, which will be added to your public file.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-crime_hate_incident

replies(2): >>scroll+1v >>foldr+kB
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10. rubyAc+Mf[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 11:00:39
>>abxyz+sd
> The myth of things “not being talked about” in the mainstream is a convenient way to excuse being unable to provide any meaningful evidence that a notable portion of the country care about something.

If social media wasn't important, politicians, mainstream news publications themselves, and other political activists wouldn't bother with it. So this is patently False.

Pretending this hasn't been a trend now for 15 years is completely asinine and shame on you for attempting to pretend the opposite is true.

> I know it might shock you but people on twitter and discord are not representative of voters. Most voters do not engage with any social media.

False. Almost everyone I know is on social media of some sort. They might not be actively engaging but they do engage regularly in some form or another. Most of them would be called lurkers, or they will check out stuff if some piques their interests.

You conveniently missed out where I said "facebook" and "in person"

> People on the internet get so caught up in the international perspective we are exposed to that we forget what national voters actually care about.

I don't care about the international perspective. I am English (I've already told you this). I care about this issue and I know plenty of other people who are British care about this issue.

> Go look at polling about this law for a real insight, 80% of people support it: https://yougov.co.uk/topics/society/survey-results/daily/202...

The same YouGov polling that had almost every about Brexit issue at 71% vs 29%. Their polling isn't to be trusted.

Even if I took that at face value, that means 1/5 people don't support it. Which isn't an insignificant amount of people. So there are a decent number of people that care about it, even using your own figures. This disproves your statements about it not being cared about and only uber nerds caring about it.

replies(1): >>abxyz+3i
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11. abxyz+3i[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 11:18:07
>>rubyAc+Mf
You are simply over indexing for your own circle. Your circle (by virtue of being a nerd) is deeply biased towards people heavily influenced by U.S. attitudes towards freedom. I’m an internet nerd too, I know how easy it is to get caught up in this idea that what you see online is representative of the people, but it isn’t. Go out and talk to real people. Go and stand in the street and ask every passer by whether they feel the U.K. is “draconian” or not. You’ll be shocked to discover that almost nobody cares about anything that doesn’t directly impact their day to day life. Look at the rise of Reform, Farage’s embrace of trumpism. That’s authoritarianism, and the people love it. You’re completely out of touch with the common person if you think any of this matters.

You can take a principled stance, you can have strong views, you can believe in freedom, I’m with you, but it’s patently absurd to suggest that any of what you believe is representative of the people. The people, in the U.K. and beyond, simply do not have a single solitary regard for any of this. Porn bad so porn ban good. That’s the entire thought process.

Could more than 5% of the U.K. voting public even define “draconian”? or “authoritarian”?

replies(1): >>rubyAc+Ui
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12. rubyAc+Ui[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 11:24:49
>>abxyz+3i
> You are simply over indexing for your own circle. Your circle (by virtue of being a nerd) is deeply biased towards people heavily influenced by U.S. attitudes towards freedom. I’m an internet nerd too, I know how easy it is to get caught up in this idea that what you see online is representative of the people, but it isn’t.

False. Most of the people I engage with in real life are not nerds. You keep on stating things that you know nothing about as truisms. How about instead of trying to gaslight people about what is real and what isn't, you actually engage in the points being made by your interlocutor?

> Go out and talk to real people. Go and stand in the street and ask every passer by whether they feel the U.K. is “draconian” or not.

I would imagine if someone thought about it, I would get a statement something about all the cameras everywhere or how buying some with a bank transfer is difficult (if you buy something cash like a vehicle it sets off anti-fraud detection in your bank and transactions can be blocked).

They won't talk about it in terms you are familiar with. They will point to stuff like cameras, unfair charges etc and how difficult some of this makes their lives.

All of this normal people have experienced.

> You’ll be shocked to discover that almost nobody cares about anything that doesn’t directly impact their day to day life. Look at the rise of Reform, Farage’s embrace of trumpism. That’s authoritarianism, and the people love it. You’re completely out of touch with the common person if you think any of this matters.

You mentioned all of those. I didn't mention them. You are projecting onto me what your experience is. The irony here is astounding.

replies(1): >>abxyz+wC
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13. Steve1+5u[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 12:59:55
>>aa-jv+c3
It's called 5-eyes because it's not just the UK.
replies(1): >>aa-jv+B13
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14. scroll+1v[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 13:05:59
>>Saline+Bf
"until you want to say something that is forbidden by the government."

Please give a few examples. I'm intrigued.

replies(5): >>rvnx+4w >>Aurorn+8A >>johnis+V81 >>the_ot+jd1 >>Saline+iK1
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15. rvnx+4w[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 13:11:51
>>scroll+1v
Same in France, many things are forbidden to say, most of time censored, sometimes even punished (either socially or by the law). US is way way way more advanced in terms of freedom.

You are allowed to say there is censorship but not allowed to say what is forbidden (and you are not allowed to criticize some laws, without breaking the law). You can really go to jail or have your life ruined, or your business burned because of a TikTok video.

This censorship benefits a lot of bad people, but naming them is a crime by itself.

For example, in France, there is no insecurity in the streets. If you say the opposite and start naming examples, you will get shamed or even physically attacked by some people and be prosecuted for “spreading hate” and other crimes whereas your attackers will have zero issues.

This phenomenon is known as “juges rouges” (the red judges), somewhat similar to USSR

replies(1): >>pmezar+6V
16. Aurorn+Ey[view] [source] 2025-07-28 13:30:24
>>abxyz+(OP)
> You are approaching this from a uniquely U.S. perspective.

It’s not uniquely U.S. at all

What other countries require ID checks for services like Discord?

The U.K.’s implementation of this law is much more unique than you’re claiming.

replies(2): >>foldr+iA >>abxyz+OA
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17. Aurorn+My[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 13:31:35
>>abxyz+u9
> but for normal people from the U.K. or any other country, it’s barely a blip on their radar.

This isn’t true at all. Age verification to use services like Discord in the U.K. is very unusual.

The U.K.’s approach to online speech and freedoms is not shared by many countries.

I don’t understand why you’re trying to reduce this to a normal outcome when it’s not normal at all

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18. Aurorn+8A[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 13:41:16
>>scroll+1v
In the U.K. people can be prosecuted for speech found to be offensive.

There have been several high profile cases used as examples, like the guy who was convicted for making a video of his girlfriend’s dog pretending to do a Nazi salute: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Meechan

Doing anything considered “grossly offensive” online can result in the police knocking on your door and financial penalties. It’s a foreign concept if you’re in a country where making jokes online doesn’t constitute a risk to your freedoms and finances (which is more than just the U.S.)

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19. foldr+iA[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 13:42:20
>>Aurorn+Ey
You don’t need age verification to access all of Discord, just NSFW servers. You can certainly argue that that’s an unjustifiable interference in people’s freedom to access the internet services that they want to access. But please don’t exaggerate.
replies(1): >>Aurorn+5D
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20. abxyz+OA[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 13:47:02
>>Aurorn+Ey
Discord’s own articles about this change explain that the fundamentals (content filtering) are applied to all accounts owned by teenagers worldwide. The only U.K. specific aspect of all of this is that if you tell Discord you are over 18 you must prove it. That’s a very small difference and not something most people in most countries care about. I’d go as far as to say, I think the majority of people in the majority of the world would be in favour of requiring people to prove they’re over 18 online if they want to claim to be over 18 online.

https://support.discord.com/hc/en-us/articles/33362401287959...

replies(1): >>Aurorn+1C
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21. foldr+kB[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 13:50:46
>>Saline+Bf
There’s no such thing as a public police file in the UK. What I assume you’re referring to is that these records are accesible for the purposes of certain kinds of police background checks (which, as in many other countries, are required for certain jobs).
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22. irusen+rB[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 13:51:40
>>abxyz+u9
Not from US. It’s not a blip in my radar. It’s terrifying and you seem to be dismissing it as “it’s just some Americans”.
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23. Aurorn+1C[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 13:56:37
>>abxyz+OA
> The only U.K. specific aspect of all of this is that if you tell Discord you are over 18 you must prove it. That’s a very small difference

Requiring ID verification in one country is not a small difference.

The rest of the world checks a box. People in the U.K. must submit to ID verification.

It’s so strange to see things like this claimed to be small differences.

replies(1): >>abxyz+TC
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24. abxyz+wC[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:00:03
>>rubyAc+Ui
Shrug. I’m not sure what else to say. I’ve shown you that polling shows the majority support age verification. I have asked you to provide evidence of mainstream objection to this law, which you are unable to provide. You have asserted that polling is wrong because you know people who disagree.

You may not like it and I may not like it but the view of the U.K. voting public is that age verification to look at porn is reasonable and that “protecting” children justifies limiting freedoms.

My exercise for you: decide what evidence is needed to convince you that most British people are happy with this law.

replies(1): >>rubyAc+6F
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25. abxyz+TC[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:02:45
>>Aurorn+1C
Again, this is a radical internet-libertarian-freedom-at-all-costs view. Normal people do not think that proving you are 18 is notable. We’ve been doing it for decades with credit cards. The system is more mature now but it is not fundamentally different.
replies(2): >>Aurorn+TD >>rpdill+xR
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26. Aurorn+5D[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:03:44
>>foldr+iA
> You don’t need age verification to access all of Discord, just NSFW servers.

That’s not correct. The Discord support explains that it’s required to change automatic content filtering or unblur any content that gets caught by the automatic filters.

replies(1): >>foldr+ZI
27. lucasR+nD[view] [source] 2025-07-28 14:05:43
>>abxyz+(OP)
Do you know of other western countries that send cops to your house because you posted memes on X ?

Saying that illegal migrants should be sent back home can literally land you at the police station. A hotel worker was arrested for testifying to what he saw in his hotels, ie. migrants being hosted, given a phone, meals, and NHS visit once every two weeks.

replies(2): >>abxyz+nE >>ChrisK+th1
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28. Aurorn+TD[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:08:14
>>abxyz+TC
> Again, this is a radical internet-libertarian-freedom-at-all-costs view

The current global status quo is “radical” and the U.K. is the only country doing it right?

You were accusing others of being U.S. centric a few posts back, but now you’re pushing the U.K.’s unique laws as the only valid solution.

> We’ve been doing it for decades with credit cards

Age checks for credit cards are required because minors legally couldn’t be forced to pay their debts.

If companies issued credit cards to minors then the minors could spend as much as they want and the bank would have no recourse to collect.

I don’t think you understand these issues if you’re using this as a comparison. Either that or you’re not even trying to have an honest conversation.

replies(1): >>abxyz+qF
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29. abxyz+nE[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:10:39
>>lucasR+nD
The U.S. is the outlier, not the U.K. Go do a Nazi salute in Germany, or Australia. Burn the Quran in Sweden. So on and so forth.
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30. rubyAc+6F[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:16:33
>>abxyz+wC
> Shrug. I’m not sure what else to say. I’ve shown you that polling shows the majority support age verification. I have asked you to provide evidence of mainstream objection to this law, which you are unable to provide. You have asserted that polling is wrong because you know people who disagree.

You said it "wasn't part of the conversation" originally. Not what the majority agreed with. You've subtly tried to change what the discussion was about. That is known as moving the goalposts:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moving_the_goalposts

Then you asked me to provide evidence of something I can't possibly provide. That quite frankly bullshit.

> You may not like it and I may not like it but the view of the U.K. voting public is that age verification to look at porn is reasonable and that “protecting” children justifies limiting freedoms.

I don't doubt that the majority are OK with it. I am taking issue with the fact that you are pretending only libertarian nerds online care about this. I know that isn't true.

> My exercise for you: decide what evidence is needed to convince you that most British people are happy with this law.

Don't talk to me like a child.

I don't have you provide you with anything. You made the claim that only a few people care about this. When even your own evidence disputes. 20% of a large group of people is still a lot. That isn't "nobody cares" like you pretend is the case.

Anyway I am done with you. Go away!

replies(1): >>abxyz+II
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31. abxyz+qF[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:18:35
>>Aurorn+TD
My position is very simple. I believe that most of the world is fine with age checks on the Internet. I think that the U.S. free speech laws and attitudes are unique and because English speaking internet culture is U.S. culture, these discussions always end up with an assumption that U.S. values are the values shared by the subjects.

I don’t think my view on the law matters, I haven’t shared it. I am speaking specifically about how everyone here is talking as if people in the U.K. care about “draconian” surveillance. People in the U.K. are not people from the U.S. Age verification is not a philosophical issue for U.K. people as it is for people in the U.S. People from the U.K. are not principled free speech absolutists. Ask a person in the U.K. if porn should require age verification and they will not think nor care about the free speech or surveillance implications of voting for such a law.

And people in the U.K. are not unique. People in the U.S. are. Spend any amount of time outside of our U.S. Internet bubble and you’ll discover nobody cares about any of this.

Whether I care and whether you care is not relevant to the British voters. Not the Australian voters. Nor the Swedish voters. Or the Thai voters. Or the Japanese voters…

replies(3): >>johnma+4L >>johnis+q71 >>Dylan1+Pn2
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32. abxyz+II[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:39:34
>>rubyAc+6F
“The conversation” is well understood to mean “the things being talked about in the mainstream”. 80% in favour of a law is so overwhelmingly positive that it is rarely seen. My initial comment, a lifetime ago, was in the context of someone asking why the U.K. is unique when it comes to these laws. I said the U.K. is not and that most people support them. I’ve showed surveying that backs that up. The absence of any mainstream articles about this should be evidence enough it isn’t part of the conversation. Maybe that’ll change in future, but at least for now, nobody cares. Maybe you’re right and there’s a conspiracy amongst the mainstream to suppress the real views of the people, we will see.

(I don’t want to talk to you like a child, but a little lesson: mainstream news is mostly a cynical cash grab by harnessing outrage. Mainstream news loves things that outrage people. If there was any real outrage about this law, it would be harnessed by the dailymail and the Sun and Reach PLC to make money hand over fist. They would milk it so hard they would have to implement age verification.)

replies(1): >>Sailor+yt2
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33. foldr+ZI[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:41:24
>>Aurorn+5D
Yes, that’s what I meant. You can still access Discord, just not any content that’s detected as NSFW. Generally speaking that content will be on NSFW servers (the kind that e.g. the iPhone app would block you from accessing by default).

Obviously there is not going to be a “nah I really want to see this tho” button, or the age check would be completely pointless.

replies(1): >>johnis+681
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34. johnma+4L[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 14:54:02
>>abxyz+qF
In fact you have shared your opinion: 'Again, this is a radical internet-libertarian-freedom-at-all-costs view. Normal people do not think that proving you are 18 is notable.'

I would actually argue you've expressed dozens of opinions related to this law and very few facts. Any source on whether Swedish or Japanese voters care for example? What led you to this conclusion?

Furthermore in your last comment you first argue you are only speaking to UK sentiment ('I am speaking specifically about how everyone here is talking as if people in the U.K. care about “draconian” surveillance.') and then double down on your argument that US is the outlier.

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35. rpdill+xR[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 15:34:49
>>abxyz+TC
Uploading your government-issued ID to random sites to prove your age is insanity.

We have daily reporting about database breaches where people were duped into uploading their picture/ID, and then it gets posted on 4chan. This is true for the latest "Tea" app this past week, but also ID verification services for big companies like TikTok and Uber. I draw a hard line: I will not upload my ID for some private business to review, because they will never delete it.

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36. rpdill+uS[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 15:40:01
>>abxyz+u9
> From a U.S. internet libertarian freedom-at-all-costs perspective, sure, it’s a draconian nightmare, but for normal people from the U.K. or any other country, it’s barely a blip on their radar.

You're commenting on a story about VPN use surging in the country after the law came into effect. Clearly folks noticed.

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37. mike50+TU[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 15:54:33
>>abxyz+Aa
How many mainstream outlets are owned by Murdoch in the UK?
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38. pmezar+6V[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 15:56:08
>>rvnx+4w
Given the US government is actually defunding major universities because "reasons", I find your comment laughable. Problem with arguing about "freedoms" is usaians still believe their constitution applies. Also, Colbert show, etc.

Your take about French censorship is equally ridiculous. I would gather that 90% of French press would not survive a month in the US before being pressured/defunded or worse. What happened to Charlie Hebdo would have happened in the US, by "patriots" instead of islamists.

And let's not even start about the separation of church and state...

replies(2): >>rvnx+PW >>Saline+pL1
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39. rvnx+PW[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 16:07:19
>>pmezar+6V
laughable; I would say saddening on both sides for both of us :/
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40. johnis+q71[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 17:08:06
>>abxyz+qF
Yeah, you are right, we would be fine with age checks. If and only if it was done through zk-SNARE or ZKPs in general. Uploading a photo of myself to a random company's server is a no-go, whether for having my age checked or whatever else.

I am Eastern European, and there is no way in hell I will ever use a service that requires me to verify my age through a photo of my ID.

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41. johnis+681[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 17:12:10
>>foldr+ZI
That is not true. Try going to a server that asks for your age and then go ahead to choose "2020".

> Obviously there is not going to be a “nah I really want to see this tho” button, or the age check would be completely pointless.

That is exactly how "ignoring" an user on Discord works. Their messages are still there and you have to click on it to have it uncollapsed, so that is kind of ironic of you to say, lmao. So yeah, there actually is a "nah I really want to see this tho" button.

replies(1): >>foldr+V91
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42. johnis+V81[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 17:15:54
>>scroll+1v
Communications Act 2003

  Section 127(1) makes it an offence to:
  "Send by means of a public electronic communications network a message that is a -
  (a) grossly offensive,
  (b) indecent, obscene, or menacing, or
  (c) false, known to be false, for causing annoyance, inconvenience, or needless anxiety."

  Section 127(2) adds that: "A person is also guilty of an offence if they cause a message or other matter to be sent that is similarly offensive or menancing.
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/2003/21/section/127

You can be caged on a whim.

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43. foldr+V91[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 17:19:33
>>johnis+681
There must be a misunderstanding here. I said in my post that some servers are indeed gated on age verification. Just not all of Discord.
replies(1): >>johnis+Fb1
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44. johnis+Fb1[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 17:27:14
>>foldr+V91
Look, create an account and when you join a server that asks for your age, make sure you set the birth year to one that makes you less than 13 years old.

For what it is worth, it has to do with Discord ToS (per / by country).

In some countries you must be over 13 to use Discord, other countries 14, but if you are below, you MUST verify yourself to be able to access your Discord account after you set it to below 13. This verification process is done through sending Discord an e-mail requesting them to restore your account, with a video of yourself holding your ID card as an attachment.

The list per country can be found on Discord's website.

What I am talking about is separate from the server settings (require phone verification and/or age verification).

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45. the_ot+jd1[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 17:36:31
>>scroll+1v
You can write to several climate activists in prison if you would like first hand accounts. I means ones who held up placards, rather than the ones that climbed onto trains or glued themselves to roads.

Just weeks ago a couple of pop bands got hauled in front of judges or had police investigations aimed at them for voicing solidarity with Palestinians in Gaza. (Ok, so they used incediary language, but they’re 20-somethings at festivals and the Gaza situation is abhorrent).

Fairly recently, an activist group which uses tactics reminiscent of the anti-nuclear-proliferation movement and animal rights movements of the 70s-90s got proscribed a terrorist organisation. At present, the law around this and recent implementations of its enforcement are such that I can’t tell if I’ll be arrested for writing this paragraph. I’ve tried to stick to the facts, but interpretation can get you locked up.

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46. ChrisK+th1[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 18:01:11
>>lucasR+nD
> "Do you know of other western countries that send cops to your house because you posted memes on X ?"

This guy was prosecuted in the US for posting a meme on Twitter [0].

I imagine this can happen in almost every country. What ones do you think it can't happen in?

[0] https://www.courthousenews.com/on-trial-for-memes-man-asks-s...

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47. southe+Yv1[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 19:17:10
>>abxyz+u9
>to describe these changes as notable or remarkable relative to most other countries is nonsense. From a U.S. internet libertarian freedom-at-all-costs perspective, sure, it’s a draconian nightmare, but for normal people from the U.K. or any other country, it’s barely a blip on their radar.

This is a very dangerous measure of how worryingly authoritarian or not a particular place is becoming. People's perceptions are notoriously subject to all kinds of blindness and unknowns. The perceptions of most average Germans living in the first years of the Nazi state were also of minimal concern for authoritarianism, and little more than a series of modest blimps on the radar, and where did that take them?

This is not to compare the underlying savagery of something like the Nazi state with the soft bureaucratic smarminess of the modern UK, but the underlying risks of any creeping authoritarianism are the same: a steady normalization of deviance.

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48. Saline+iK1[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 20:36:06
>>scroll+1v
Do I really need to?

An Atheist who burnt a Quran in Yookay and got stabbed by a muslim as a result (proving his point?) got a 325£ fine for "religiously motivated public disorder” whatever that means.

Peter Tatchell got arested by the police for holding a sign with "STOP Israel genocide! STOP Hamas executions! Odai Al-Rubai, aged 22, executed by Hamas! RIP!" because of "breach of peace" whatever that means.

During the recent riots in Yookay, a man was jailed for 20 months for "shooting at a dog", and "using racist slur". While it's sure distasteful, it's no different than Putin's technique of protest repression.

I could go on with Germany, where sharing benign memes about politicians lead you to get swatted and your house searched, the Yookay with its "non crime hate incidents" that require no proof, France and its extensive hate speech laws that prevent asking to boycott another state, Finland where burning the Bible is ok, but not the Quran, and so on.

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49. Saline+pL1[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-28 20:41:12
>>pmezar+6V
French press is mostly owned by billionnaires, do you really believe that it's different there than in the US?
50. j-krie+BV1[view] [source] 2025-07-28 21:35:51
>>abxyz+(OP)
This is objectively untrue when compared to other western countries. You have people arrested for posting memes on their mums Facebook page.
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51. Dylan1+Pn2[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-29 00:54:21
>>abxyz+qF
The problem is the privacy, not the age check itself if it could be isolated. I think you're confused on what the US objectors are upset about.
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52. Sailor+yt2[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-29 01:51:39
>>abxyz+II
> “The conversation” is well understood to mean “the things being talked about in the mainstream”. 80% in favour of a law is so overwhelmingly positive that it is rarely seen. My initial comment, a lifetime ago, was in the context of someone asking why the U.K. is unique when it comes to these laws. I said the U.K. is not and that most people support them.

No it is not. I've asked other politicos I know and they didn't know what you were talking about. I ended up asking the perplexity. Which disagrees with your definition and says that social media and in person is also important.

https://www.perplexity.ai/search/the-conversation-when-refer...

You cannot judge public sentiment accurately from mainstream media or polling. Mainstream media typically act as stenographers for either the state, their corporate masters or both. Polling has a multitude of issues that are well known.

> I’ve showed surveying that backs that up. The absence of any mainstream articles about this should be evidence enough it isn’t part of the conversation. Maybe that’ll change in future, but at least for now, nobody cares. Maybe you’re right and there’s a conspiracy amongst the mainstream to suppress the real views of the people, we will see.

I've told you why I don't believe them to be convincing. "The conversation" isn't happening on mainstream media. It is happening on social media, in person, on YouTube etc.

You re-iterating the same tired old talking points and showing me a YouGov poll (which are known to be BS) and saying you are right isn't evidence.

BTW. A lot of these polls aren't there to find out what the public actually thinks. They are there to manufacturer consent by making it look like it is supported by the majority.

> I don’t want to talk to you like a child, but a little lesson: mainstream news is mostly a cynical cash grab by harnessing outrage. Mainstream news loves things that outrage people.

You are literally still talking down to me in a condescending manner. Do you think I don't know that msm doesn't engage outrage?

BTW, you are presenting this like this is a revelation. When in fact it is a trite observation about how the media operates.

There are actually much more interesting ones if you look at how sometimes the exact same headlines are pushed by newspapers that are supposed to be opposing one another.

Earlier on in my career, I used to integrate news feeds for news sites (sports news, but still news). Most of the news you see is literally bought from several source providers and copy-righter/editors (or AI now) literally rewrite the article in the style of the site. That is why many news sites literally just repeat the same thing and then put their own spin on it based on their audience.

God forbid we start talking about subjects like how the media manufacturers consent, how the British State (MI6) has engaged in psyops against it own citizens.

I really suggest you spend some time reading some books about these subjects because you are way out of your depth.

> If there was any real outrage about this law, it would be harnessed by the dailymail and the Sun and Reach PLC to make money hand over fist. They would milk it so hard they would have to implement age verification.

Firstly, everyone who has two brain cells to rub together know that these are rags.

Secondly. Your argument is that if there was real outrage about this law it would be covered by outrage mongers. Why would they need to create outrage if there was already real outrage? Doesn't make any sense.

Thirdly. There has been coverage by MSM. I was visiting my parents house at the weekend, and as I walked into the living room, ITV news had two so-called experts talking about the issue. So somehow I stumbled on the mainstream coverage by accident (I don't ever watch TV these days), but you can't find it! Strange that.

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53. aa-jv+B13[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-29 07:28:17
>>Steve1+5u
It wouldn't be oppressive at massive scale, violating the human rights of billions of people, if the UK hadn't roped its lackeys into its co-criminal behaviour ..
replies(1): >>Steve1+G53
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54. Steve1+G53[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-07-29 08:00:55
>>aa-jv+B13
Well, there was a world war going on!
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