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361 points gloxkiqcza | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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torginus ◴[] No.45011561[source]
I genuinely do not understand where how the idea of building a total surveillance police state, where all speech is monitored, can even as much as seriously be considered by an allegedly pro-democracy, pro-human rights government, much less make it into law.

Also:

Step 1: Build mass surveillance to prevent the 'bad guys' from coming into political power (its ok, we're the good guys).

Step 2: Your political opponents capitalize on your genuinely horrific overreach, and legitimize themselves in the eyes of the public as fighting against tyranny (unfortunately for you they do have a point). They promise to dismantle the system if coming to power.

Step 3: They get elected.

Step 4: They don't dismantle the system, now the people you planned to use the system against are using it against you.

Sounds brilliant, lets do this.

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IanCal ◴[] No.45012976[source]
I'm not a fan of the OSA but proponents of it will *keep winning* if you *keep misrepresenting it*.

You can, and should, argue about the effects but the core of the OSA and how it can be sold is this, at several different levels:

One, most detailed.

Sites that provide user to user services have some level of duty of care to their users, like physical sites and events.

They should do risk assessments to see if their users are at risk of getting harmed, like physical sites and events.

They should implement mitigations based on those risk assessments. Not to completely remove all possibility of harm, but to lower it.

For example, sites where kids can talk to each other in private chats should have ways of kids reporting adults and moderators to review those reports. Sites where you can share pictures should check for people sharing child porn (if you have a way of a userbase sharing encrypted images with each other anonymously, you're going to get child porn on there). Sites aimed at adults with public conversations like some hobby site with no history of issues and someone checking for spam/etc doesn't need to do much.

You should re-check things once a year.

That's the selling point - and as much as we can argue about second order effects (like having a list of IDs and what you've watched, overhead etc), those statements don't on the face of it seem objectionable.

Two, shorter.

Sites should be responsible about what they do just like shops and other spaces, with risk assessments and more focus when there are kids involved.

Three, shortest.

Facebook should make sure people aren't grooming your kids.

Now, the problem with talking about " a total surveillance police state, where all speech is monitored," is where does that fit into the explanations above? How do you explain that to even me, a highly technical, terminally online nerd who has read at least a decent chunk of the actual OFCOM guidelines?

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1. ragequittah ◴[] No.45014156[source]
This seems like a misrepresentation of OSA more so than the parent post. It prevents people accessing content they may well need. Look at some of the subreddits being blocked if you want to see how far they go. Subs about periods, sex education, stopping smoking, suicide prevention, lgbtq. Not sure how you justify that nobody under 18 would ever have a need to access these things.

When you have to prove you're a child you have to prove you're and adult. The privacy implications of that are why it's a police state problem. It eliminates the anonymity and allows for perfect personal tracking of any wrongthink you may do.

It's also not the only thing the UK government has done to become a police state by a long shot. UK is 1984 adjacent in quite a few ways.

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2. IanCal ◴[] No.45015558[source]
Again that's a second order thing as I said, and those are choices by reddit - not mandated by the OSA.

> When you have to prove you're a child you have to prove you're and adult.

Again, not required by the OSA.

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3. ragequittah ◴[] No.45032861[source]
People interpreting the rules as they see fit and going too far was always the plan with this kind of thing. How do you keep content from children if you don't know if they're a child? What's the alternative to getting proof of being an adult?