• NarrativeBear@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Why not provide parents with routers instead that have easy to set parental controls?

    This feels very similar to someone coming into my home and telling me how to raise my own kids.

    The government could also create its own curated list of websites that are considered “kid friendly” at different age gaps and have it made available within a routers parental control menu to be turned on/for deviced marked as being used by ones child on your home network.

    Also at the same time it’s not about protecting children, it’s about controlling the general population with the guise of protecting the children. It’s like getting searched when walking in and walking out of a store.

    • Fedizen@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Imo we need locked down “child” devices. Any other solution is crazy police state shit.

  • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    I’m gonna make a prediction before reading the article: either there isn’t an actual plan for how to do this, or it’s actually a plan to surveil adults

    Woah hey look I was right

    The government says firms must take “reasonable steps” to keep kids off their platforms, and should use multiple age assurance technologies.

    These could include government IDs, face or voice recognition, or so-called “age inference”, which analyses online behaviour and interactions to estimate a person’s age.

    Platforms cannot rely on users self-certifying or parents vouching for their children.

    Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and Threads, began closing teen accounts from 4 December. It said anyone mistakenly kicked off could use government ID or provide a video selfie to prove their age.

    Snapchat has said users can use bank accounts, photo ID or selfies for verification.