

I think what compounds it is that its a populated instance being set up with piefeds tools to do this. I assume it’ll burn itself out soon.
Piefed.social Staff
Community owner of [email protected] and [email protected]


I think what compounds it is that its a populated instance being set up with piefeds tools to do this. I assume it’ll burn itself out soon.


Because age-ID tools cost money to maintain. And most larger instances do not screen every single application individually. If it could be done financially without age-ID, it would certainly make running the instance a complete chore and cause many to shut down on that basis alone.
And asking people to give them a picture of them in a pub isn’t going to be accepted as a valid age technique legally.


You don’t need to ban literally any website that could be classified as social media to have the desired effect. You just need to ban the big ones: TikTok, Instagram etc.
Sure, but recall how this conversation started - we were talking about this specifically in the context of the Fediverse applying age-ID checks. It’s financially non-viable and any attempt to enforce it would force instances to all shut down. Not that it realistically can be enforced.


There’s tens of thousands of sites out there under the description of “user-to-user communication service” with mixed content. If you set the conditions that every single one of them must provide age-ID tools for adult content access (aussie-zone’s improvised solutions will certainly not be legally viable) the level of continued enforcement would be utterly ridiculous. It would be even worse if your country implemented a social-media minimum age requirement and declared that all sites thet enable user-to-user interaction also come under it. OSA in the UK, which does the former (requiring sites to age-gate adult content), attempts to do this - has been active since July of last year and barely scratched the surface.


Those pot shops and liquor stores have actual physical presence on a high street in the same country. A small server run out of someone’s bedroom in Finland and who they have no idea who they are is completely different.


And how on earth would a regulator chase hundreds of different instances hosted all over the world to force them to implement age-ID?


I’m not necessarily advocating for ID verification, but to answer your question: most instances require an application to join anyway, so this could simply be tacked ontop.
How is it enforced on them? How can many even afford it?
From what I understand aussie.zone already does something like this. To join, apparently they require a picture of you at a bar with a beer to prove that you’re over 18. Not a perfect method but procedurally not that different from checking IDs.
This doesn’t scale at all. Also, I’m not sure why aussie.zone is doing that because Australia’s social media requirements specifically only apply to large websites.
And even if it did, there’s no way that if aussie.zone was looked into over compliance that such a method would be considered acceptable by the regulators.


Create it. Advertise it in [email protected] and [email protected] and federate it.


If you haven’t given it, your neighbor’s doorbell has. If you’ve used a search engine, you’ve been recorded. If you have a smart phone, they know absolutely everything about you.
We’re talking specifically about my face as provided by me via my own social media accounts.
I’d still like to know how you think this is remotely enforceable on the Fediverse, much less all websites. How can people here even afford it?


Ask yourself why you’re on Lemmy instead of Reddit, or FB, or Twitter.
Privacy is a big reason.
How do you even expect a decentralised service run by hobbyists to even implement age-ID in the first place?
However, the big tech companies are not asking your permission to spy on you, as has been proved by the Guthrie case.
Yes, but again, they do not have my face or my actual ID. They can make a profile from my posts and it would resemble what I believe but in theory, after long posting on Lemmy or Piefed - they could implement tools to do the same thing.


How is this even remotely enforceable?
It will destroy curation. It’s an absurd concept.


Your feed should contain a chronological list of posts made by people you subscribe to
Should that be the only way the feed should be organised by law?


I could think of some reasons maybe, but none seem to stand out. The fact that big-tech is going to increasingly flagrantly violate our privacy as a precondition to use the services is an increasingly major one.


Tbh not really


Sorry, why are you on Lemmy then if you’re non-plussed about handing over your ID? Social media sites (that I use) do not have a picture of me, or my actual identity.


Mandatory? So Lemmy/Piefed should be forced to only list by /new/?
Also feel free to join the Zulip Chat or matrix
Let me know when you’re ready because I’d like to promote it on piefed.social.


Okay, so it matters for a few reasons.
Instances have different rules. So you can banned by your own instances local admins for things you might not get banned for on other instances.
If you wanted to make your own community, you’d automatically be hosting it on feddit.uk, so that matters to a degree when it comes to the local culture there.
Instances have their own blocklists. So your instance might be blocking (defederating) another instance that has a lot of users. Or it might just as likely be blocked by another instance. This isn’t the case for feddit.uk, which maintains wide federation.
Feddit.uk specifically is a UK based lemmy. If you look up the local communities, you can see that is the geographical/cultural focus.
These communities are all coming from a new nsfw instance