EU chief calls for a bloc-wide push on an age verification app to protect children online. If enforced, users will have to prove their age to access legally restricted sites.
You’re doing fallacy fallacy. Some slopes are actually slippery, it’s just the nature of the slopes.
Government ID connected to all your accounts on the internet isn’t much different from other things you mentioned, the only difference is that the other bits of privacy we actually exchanged for convenience. With everything you mentioned and more, you can either opt-out, you don’t actually need your car to be “smart” or have a car at all, or it wasn’t invented as a control mechanism, like credit cards or smartphones. Using it to do nefarious shit requires effort and additional work, and there are at least some protections in place. But yes, it’s another form of control, just way more sudden, invasive, and useless.
If we’re doing fallacies, yours called “nirvana fallacy”. “We can’t have an ideal world, therefore we need not to fight when people are trying to make it worse”.
Connecting everything you do on the internet to your id serves the only purpose, prevent people from being able to do speech that the government doesn’t like. While we have a democratic government, it might not lead to problems. The second we have all this shit in mind, the government might start asking itself, why do they bother with all this democracy when they have all this authoritarian instruments lying around for no reason.
Again, this discussion is about the EU proposal, which explicitly does not connect your ID to everything you do. In facts it’s designed exactly to ensure that sites can verify you being over a threshold age without having any other knowledge about you. Have you read the EU implementation or are you conflating it with the US proposal?
You’re doing fallacy fallacy. Some slopes are actually slippery, it’s just the nature of the slopes.
Government ID connected to all your accounts on the internet isn’t much different from other things you mentioned, the only difference is that the other bits of privacy we actually exchanged for convenience. With everything you mentioned and more, you can either opt-out, you don’t actually need your car to be “smart” or have a car at all, or it wasn’t invented as a control mechanism, like credit cards or smartphones. Using it to do nefarious shit requires effort and additional work, and there are at least some protections in place. But yes, it’s another form of control, just way more sudden, invasive, and useless.
If we’re doing fallacies, yours called “nirvana fallacy”. “We can’t have an ideal world, therefore we need not to fight when people are trying to make it worse”.
Connecting everything you do on the internet to your id serves the only purpose, prevent people from being able to do speech that the government doesn’t like. While we have a democratic government, it might not lead to problems. The second we have all this shit in mind, the government might start asking itself, why do they bother with all this democracy when they have all this authoritarian instruments lying around for no reason.
Again, this discussion is about the EU proposal, which explicitly does not connect your ID to everything you do. In facts it’s designed exactly to ensure that sites can verify you being over a threshold age without having any other knowledge about you. Have you read the EU implementation or are you conflating it with the US proposal?