The optional birthDate field gives other projects a standardized data source for age verification compliance.

  • Uncut_Lemon
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    24 hours ago

    Maybe it should be a parents job to parent, and not leave it to governments and companies to parent children.

    Most of these issues that age verification is trying to solve is a parenting issues. A teen is still going to likely find a way around this nonsense without any repercussions. It’s a parents job to teach children how to be safe in public spaces and the etiquette required.

    No idea why systemd is even bending a knee to any of this at all. Doesn’t even seem like a problem systems should ever try resolve. That should be a distro maintner issue at worst case.

  • Supercrunchy@programming.dev
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    4 days ago

    Of all terrible proposals coming up in this period, I’m still more-or-less ok with this system because the administrator is still in full control to set whatever date they want, and the field is entirely optional.

    They call it “age verification” in the aricle, but there’s no 3rd party “verification” whatsoever. It’s just a field for the user birth date saved in the user metadata. This is IMHO acceptable because it doesn’t force anybody to provide IDs or personal information to some random shady company.

    I think calling it “age verification” is a bit confusing and will make people unhappy by default, but might be a smart move to make it compliant with the new laws coming out in this period (the user age was “verified” by the system administrator, after all).

    • whelk@retrolemmy.com
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      3 days ago

      For me at least, it’s less about the age field itself and more about the swift act of compliance with an absurd and overbearing demand

    • muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works
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      3 days ago

      whereas I , out of pettiness, will switch an entire server to openRC to fuck over these assholes who only care about “line goes up”

    • pulsewidth
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      4 days ago

      Yep. Its honestly mild as hell.

      Essentially legislation that says:

      • app stores have to have age categories to silo children, teens, and adults.
      • OSes have to have a field to collect this data from users when they set up their login, so it can be sent to app stores via API.

      Its just a standardized system that should have been done ages ago, but was not a priority for standards orgs, so none stepped up - so legislation appeared.

      I strongly argue that it should only apply to commercial OSes and app stores though - as they’re the ones that primarily cause issues these laws intent to address.

      Linux and FOSS have been caught in the crossfire in a privacy and personal data battle they were not involved in.

          • muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works
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            3 days ago

            nope. slippery slope is basically “bad thing can happen, so it will happen” without evidence to support that outcome. here, we have a trajectory. there’s a pattern. it has momentum at this point. it hasn’t changed corse. it’s followed a predictable and proven pattern. It’s done so because the the pressures exerted on this particular system guide the outcome in predictable ways.

            that is entirely different than the slippery slope dismissal

            • pulsewidth
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              2 days ago

              No, entirely incorrect. “bad thing can happen, so it will happen” is essentially a mangling of Murphy’s Law.

              In a slippery slope argument, a course of action is rejected [eg: this minor law] because the slippery slope advocate believes it will lead to a chain reaction resulting in an undesirable end or ends [eg: loose claims of a pot getting hotter implying further details will be demanded next].

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

      • tyler@programming.dev
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        4 days ago

        The legislation is entirely to allow Facebook to get away with harming minors, so I wouldn’t call it mild in any sense of the word.

    • jimmy90
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      3 days ago

      the lemmy doomers must scratch their suicidal itch

    • Janx@piefed.social
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      Good points. It’s like websites with an age-gate: technically they’re trying to keep out users under a certain age (usually minors), but there’s no verification.

      But we all need to remember that “protecting the children” and clutching our pearls is still not a good reason to let world governments and giant corporations create laws, demand our papers, keep massive databases of our data, and tie our real-world identities to our online ones. It will be the end of anonymity online, they’ll use it for evil, and it will get hacked…

    • MagnificentSteiner@lemmy.zip
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      They don’t call the systemd change “age verification” in the article.

      In fact, they specifically make the point that it isn’t.

      • other_cat@piefed.zipOP
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        They do use it in the title though (the title on this post was auto-generated from the article, I didn’t pick it out.)

        I agree with OP, it’s not really age verification in the sense we’ve been seeing in the news, but it IS a step in the direction of following the letter of the law without intrusiveness.

      • kaiyo@piefed.ca
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        4 days ago

        If, and I do stress if applications require it filled out, there are simply going to be an awful lot of epoch birthdates in their data. And frankly a lot of people, myself included, who will step up and write replacements to these applications in order to give a giant middle finger to authoritarian governments/companies as a result.

        It’s very mild this, and as it has no ‘verification’, it’s just a meaningless string of numbers.

  • TrivialBetaState@sopuli.xyz
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    I disagree. While I totally understand that it is an optional feature that can enabled and enforced only by others, I am not happy that the developers of systemd rushed to include it into the JSON file with the user info. I would expect the developers to be a bit more resistant to requests by two US states and Brazil. Why are they making it so easy? I guess we will see a resurgence of systemd-free dirstros.

    • Inevitable Waffles [Ohio]@midwest.social
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      Sorry, minor correction. Not all the systemd developers. One single dickhead wrote it and two chuds who work at microslop merged the PR made this happen. The git structure got hijacked. People are arguing over the validity and necessity of the PR while ignoring the broader goals this serves.

      To be frank, I am so sick of this invasive nonsense. I have a son and you know how I’m going to manage access for him? Not fucking letting him have the damn computer before he knows how to use it safely. I grew up on Web 1 and web 2.0. They were much scarier places back in the day and easier to find.

      Moreover, this also follows with the trend of sensationalizing threats to make the pearl clutchers feel this is a good choice. Its no different that how the news screams the US is unsafe with tons of violent crime to justify this kind of bullshit when violent crime has been declining on the whole.

      This ginned up controversy serves one interest. Control access to knowledge so you never question the State again.

      • Avicenna@programming.dev
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        This is singularly the worst time such a change could be implemented, so much so that I am almost looking for malintent.

        • Inevitable Waffles [Ohio]@midwest.social
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          22 hours ago

          You aren’t wrong to suspect the timing. They have been working on a variety of bills to work on the KYC aspect of the business. This major push, along with Android Developer Verification, are the ways the corpos want remove any anonymity.

      • Ensign_Crab
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        2 days ago

        It also lets the Epstein class know who the minors are.

      • PokerChips@programming.dev
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        2 days ago

        Can we have a rule that if you work for microslop then you are invalidated from working on any Linux project? Doesn’t that sound reasonable?

        • drspectr
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          2 days ago

          Big tech wants this, big tech has immense influence in most of these states.

      • Tinidril@midwest.social
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        3 days ago

        In at least Illinois, this is still in the proposal phase. The bad news is that there are also more draconian proposals that require government issue IDs.

          • Magiilaro@feddit.org
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            3 days ago

            From the law:

            §12 Jugendmedienschutzstaatsvertrag: https://www.landesrecht-bw.de/bsbw/document/jlr-JMedienSchStVtrGBWV10StVtr-P12

            (1) Anbieter von Betriebssystemen, die von Kindern und Jugendlichen üblicherweise genutzt werden im Sinne des § 16 Abs. 1 Satz 3 Nr. 6, stellen sicher, dass ihre Betriebssysteme über eine den nachfolgenden Absätzen entsprechende Jugendschutzvorrichtung verfügen. Passt ein Dritter die vom Anbieter des Betriebssystems bereitgestellte Jugendschutzvorrichtung an, besteht die Pflicht aus Satz 1 insoweit bei diesem Dritten.

            (3) In der Jugendschutzvorrichtung muss eine Altersangabe eingestellt werden können.

            • da_cow (she/her)@feddit.org
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              3 days ago

              Interesting, didnt knew about that one.

              It might be debatable if this would even apply to Linux (its basically the same AS with the laws from california), since the law requires “distributors of operating systems” to implement this (who is the distributor) and it might be debatable if Linux falls under the definition of “operating systems usually used by child’s and teenagers”.

              • Magiilaro@feddit.org
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                Not sure if this is helpfull:

                https://www.landesrecht-bw.de/bsbw/document/jlr-JMedienSchStVtrGBWV10StVtr-P3

                § 3 Begriffsbestimmungen

                Im Sinne dieses Staatsvertrages sind

                1. Anbieter eines Betriebssystems eine natürliche oder juristische Person, die Betriebssysteme bereitstellt,

                A distributor of an operating system is a person or legal entity who provides operating systems.

                It is extremely vague, it could be everyone from the creators of the distribution, to the person/company running the download mirror, down to the person who does the installation.

                Without some court rulings to bring some guidelines and practical applications of the law there is the risk that everyone handling a non-compliant OS could be judged under the law if someone under 18 could get access to to OS or a System running it.

  • GenosseFlosse@feddit.org
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    Which values should I absolutely not manually write into the birthday field Json data, because they could break the DB on the other side when storing unsanitized input?

  • GreenKnight23
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    I had problems with systemd before… but this capitulation to what is clearly an unconstitutional demand…

    fuck systemd devs. fuck them all.

  • texture
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    4 days ago

    ohh now theyve gone and done it.

    normies are gonna start hating on systremd for this. which will upset the og systemd haters for hating systemd for the wrong reasons, thereby frustrating the og systemd haters and helping them achieve new yet unmet levels of hate for systemd.

    just a guess

    • forestbeasts@pawb.social
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      3 days ago

      eh?

      og systemd hater (ish) here, personally I’m hoping to team up with the new systemd haters. This is just yet Another reason to hate on it, haha. We can work together!

      (granted we came to Linux (from Mac) lonnggg after systemd already got entrenched, but the reasons we hated systemd (before now) were the same sorts of “it’s trying to take over everything” reasons that the og haters hate it for)

      – Frost

    • muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works
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      isn’t enough that we all hate the same thing? lets not overthink this. All I want is a socially-accepted smoldering crater

      • texture
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        i mean sure, but ofc i meant normies in the context of linux

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    Whatever the old farts will come with their stupid laws, SURPRISE MOTHERFUCKERS, it’s Linux. It’s always a sudo away from doing (or not) exactly what you (don’t) want. I know. This is beyond their comprehension. Adding a field here is ok to me. Because if it ends up being used:

    • I can not set it
    • I can set it wrong
    • I can be 1000y old
    • I can have a different age for every request
    • I can prevent the shit accessing it from accessing it
    • I can uninstall the shit that is trying to access it

    The only thing that will hurt from this are companies in CA, CO and wherever.

    The average Linux user will not give a single fuck. I know I don’t.

    • exaybachae@startrek.website
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      I like the idea of a system add-on that randomizes all user age responses with a different date that equals like 25-99years old (assuming 25 years meets the highest age for the applicable standards).

      Not too dissimilar from a random MAC address generating feature.

    • chunes
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      So why not just remove the field then?

      • ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Because they are bootlicking and being complicit in shifting the Overton Window. Let’s have guns everywhere, but the Internet is too dangerous.

    • Optional
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      SURPRISE MOTHERFUCKERS, it’s Linux was my band in high school.

    • voidsignal
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      And in a twisted way, this may be good. For instance, Microslop will probably spent millions to please their pedos overlords. They will require PC vendors to add cryptographic chips to ensure you cannot change your age, that has been verified after a background check required to buy Windows… We all know how product managers think (if you don’t you’re lucky, stay the fuck away)

      The probable result: more and more people will switch to Linux, where they can be a 3000y old tree.

    • whimsy@lemmy.zip
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      All of that is true, at least for now. But if you look at the work the systemd developers have been doing with remote attestation and end to end verification of computers, it starts to paint a grim picture. Web based integrity might not be that far off. But I really hope it doesn’t get that bad

  • kbal@fedia.io
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    How to get age verification into linux? Easy, just tell Poettering that if he doesn’t hurry up and do it first, some non-systemd approach might become the standard.

    • muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works
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      the operating systems job is to negotiate between software and hardware. its there to make sure “my red triangle program draws the same red triangle on anything running this environment regardless of the parts used to build the machine”. its not there to rat you out to a surveillance state or advertisers or meta.

      The idea that this protects children is insane and nobody believes this for a second. Hormones happened and little timmy has discovered the wonders of nudity and friction. age attestation doesn’t stop that. it doesn’t stop horrible people from preying on that. it doesn’t teach timmy the difference between fantasy and what a healthy relationship really looks like. it doesn’t address any of those things.

      it tracks people. that is all it does. that is all it is for. and considering literal nazis are in power, nobody wants this. it does not solve a problem.

      • Skullgrid
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        This isn’t about age verification, this is about him sabotaging linux instead of sabotaging encroachment by authoritarians in every single aspect of life. He didn’t have to go and shove the entire boot down his throat, but here we are.

        https://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/revoluciana-facing-fascism-sabotage

        Sabotage sounds spicy. It sounds dangerous.

        And yet, the underlying concept is simply this: inefficiency.

        I told you last time, make every inch have its cost.

        Resistance does not have to be violent, and that’s not something I’m advocating here. Resistance is the word no. Resistance is standing in place. Resistance is pushing.

        Resistance is the albatross around the neck of your opposition. Resistance is the anchor that drags along the sea floor.

        Here are some incredibly mundane but effective examples from the manual:

        Make mistakes with purchasing travel tickets

        Make engineering mistakes

        Make long speeches and waste time

        Act ignorant, or ask a lot of questions: if you’re not familiar with the concept of sea-lioning, you should really learn it

        Take longer to do your work

        Even if you’re terrified of doing more, this is simply a place to start.

        You are someone and you have a responsibility to do something.

        You cannot make it easier for the fascists to achieve their goals. You can’t do it today, and you can’t do it later if they claim authority. You must stand in the way of oppression.

          • Skullgrid
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            fucking who cares if it’s not him, I’m talking about the assholes that did those things

            I ain’t reading all that fam

            good, keep not reading things on this site and go somewhere else without text

      • muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works
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        its building a surveillance infrasttucture.

        this feature does not solve a problem. but it is abusable by creating dependancies. it has no reason to exist. it is not there to solve a technical problem, but instead a political one.

  • Well, it’s clear Linux is getting a lot of attention on the desktop side of things. So it’s important that all organizations involved make the right decisions for the public interest and the environment of Linux.

    That means a community level of compliance that matches Big Tech capacities.

  • unknown1234_5@kbin.earth
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    its age attestation, not age verification (saying it vs proving it). also, dont give systemd shit about this bc they are just covering their asses in case more restrictive laws go through.

    • Jesus_666
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      I am kinda giving them shit for when someone pointed out that they’re essentially storing PII completely unsecured and their response was “you should use app isolation anyway”. That is not a good security model.

      • unknown1234_5@kbin.earth
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        thats fair, but a lot of people are giving them shit for complying in the first place with a law that is going to be in the state they’re based in.

    • Unleaded8163@fedia.io
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      They’re not even really covering their asses. They don’t make an OS, they make a small but important art of many distros. They’re providing a clean, standardized way for Linux distros from RedHat to Ageless to comply with the law if they choose to. Some distros will comply with the law to the letter, others will not comply out of spite. At least the ones that comply will do it in a standard way.

    • muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works
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      no, they are bending to the knee. you dont say “let’s compromise with the nazis.” you say “let’s barbecue nazis in their own ovens. dave has a fucking great nazi sauce…”

      • unknown1234_5@kbin.earth
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        hey dumbass, private corporations have to follow the law and they need to react fast enough to have a system in place when the law takes effect.

  • renegadespork@lemmy.jelliefrontier.net
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    I see a lot of people freaking out about this, but adding this as an optional field was the right call.

    This way, distros can choose for themselves whether or not they want to use it during account creation.

    • muusemuuse@sh.itjust.works
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      optional sounds reasonable now. its gets its foot in the door. it sounds like compromise. but then, other things start depending on it. and if you dont comply, they just dont work. its a dependancy. break that dependency become incompatible.

      this is not solving any problem. Sites already have the “are you 18” thing that says you aren’t allowed to know about naked people doing naked people things that we all ignored as teenagers and grew up just fine.

    • realitaetsverlust@piefed.zip
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      At least someone gets it.

      It’s kinda crazy how many people here claim to use linux or even actually use linux, but apparently don’t know what the operating system does and what the system manager does.

  • Magiilaro@feddit.org
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    It is mandatory that Distributions follow the laws, because without it they can’t be used in classrooms, libraries, youth centers, or in any other places where kids or other young people can have access to them. That means that, as long as such laws exist, only close source Systems (most likely windows) can be used there if linux is not compliant. Not SystemD is the issue or the problem here, hanging them is like shooting a messanger when he brings bad news.

    • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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      being a law does not make it just.

      I’d love for countries to declare linux illegal. and see how quick tech companies will put an end to this stupid age requirement bullshit

      • knexcar
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        Or more likely Linux will go back to being irrelevant and Windows will continue to reign supreme.

      • Magiilaro@feddit.org
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        this is true, but as long as the law is active it has power to ruin lives or created huge costs when ignored or even acted against.

        It is up to the courts or the legislative to declare laws unjust, until that happened even potential unjust laws are binding.