• Dathknight@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 day ago

    This is bs …

    Instead of fighting the laws and the people behind it, ‘we’ (as in ‘the community’) infight about some minor commit?

    If the reason is data privacy, why not also remove ‘realName’, ‘emailAdress’ and ‘location’? 🙄

    • nuxi@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      They should also remove the phone number prompt that UNIX has had since before systemd even existed. Your phobe number is an optional part of the GECOS field and has been there for a very long time without anyone freaking out like this.

    • Skankhunt420@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      As far as I can tell the Name Email and location are all voluntarily provided by the user.

      This is something that will be used whether you want it to or not (that makes it invasive) because of the laws around it (of course depending on where you are).

      Having fields I can ignore as a user isn’t the same as this guided attempt by lawmakers to eventually get you to give ID and retina scans just to use a computer.

      This is step 1. That is why people are freaking out about it.

      And I know systemd isn’t doing this out of spite, but I do wish the scene would stand up for the user more… Just say no California or whatever other shit place decides to enact that and boom problem solved. Not their fault or problem anymore.

      • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        As far as I can tell the Name Email and location are all voluntarily provided by the user.

        So is birthDate.

        This is something that will be used whether you want it to or not (that makes it invasive) because of the laws around it (of course depending on where you are).

        How? First and most importantly, systemd doesn’t do anything to enforce, require or verify the field.

        Second, I control what is installed on my PC, that’s the ENTIRE POINT of using a FOSS OS. The FREEDOM to install whatever I want, or not. If there is an application that is using that field to enforce some bs law, then I simply won’t install it.

        This isn’t Windows, there isn’t a Microsoft to force you to install software updates that you don’t want. You’re FREE to not install software that does things that you don’t like. This includes any hypothetical future software that would require this field or validate this field.

        • Skankhunt420@sh.itjust.works
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          22 hours ago

          You control what you install on your pc and I’d be willing to bet that whatever open source OS it is, probably uses Systemd. Unless you’re a Unix person.

          They have set this up in a way that yes, right now at 11:21pm UTC on March 24th it isn’t being enforced or required.

          But because of the replies of some of the maintainers in their github about this very merge they are suggesting that as soon as it becomes hard law, it will be enforced by them.

          Particularly the part where one was replying to a system76 developer who mentioned that they are in talks with state legislators right now, that these proposed laws are very possibly going to be overturned, and that open source software might not even be required to do this at all and that we should give it more tim before we do something like this and the reply was:

          “It is possible that California law will be changed. But similar ideas are popping up in other contexts and it’s unlikely that they’ll all go away. This implementation is fairly generic and useful for other things besides age verification, so we shouldn’t decide whether to merge it or not based on a single law in any jurisdiction.”

          This suggests that they are doing this because of laws and ideas like this that are coming into play. And that they didn’t want to wait on the confirmation of whether it was law or not, they did it anyway. Why? That’s not very open. That isn’t really taking a stand to support Linux or its users that is voluntarily getting ahead of the control mechanism that “similar ideas” are going to use.

          They shouldn’t have done this. In mine, and many, many other peoples opinions as well.

          • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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            21 hours ago

            You control what you install on your pc and I’d be willing to bet that whatever open source OS it is, probably uses Systemd.

            They have set this up in a way that yes, right now at 11:21pm UTC on March 24th it isn’t being enforced or required.

            It is using systemd, yes. It could be using openRC, sysvinit, runit, etc just as easily.

            Systemd isn’t a requirement for Linux. It is simply the most useful init system currently. If that ever stops being the case then changing init systems or entire even distros is a fairly trivial task. If systemd were ever to require me to submit to a 3rd party verification of my age I’d just use a different init system.

            There is nothing that any open source project can do that would force me to keep using their software if I don’t want to.

            They shouldn’t have done this. In mine, and many, many other peoples opinions as well.

            If your opinion represents a large group of people then you should have no trouble maintaining a fork.

            • Skankhunt420@sh.itjust.works
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              16 hours ago

              You are right on that.

              I hope that in the end this does end up all working out and I was just one of the crazy guys worried for no reason.

              But either way I still think it is disappointing they did this so quickly and that they’re using a US push in law be such a deciding factor in originally pushing for it. It felt like that was the same way when they banned Russian maintainers. The USA and especially specific states shouldn’t have this much pull especially over open source community driven projects in my opinion.

              • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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                7 hours ago

                The USA and especially specific states shouldn’t have this much pull especially over open source community driven projects in my opinion.

                I completely agree.

                I hope we see a bigger push for FOSS software in the EU as they try to reduce their dependency on US tech companies. If more countries treat software like we treat science where everyone contributes and everyone benefits then we’ll all be better off.

      • themachinestops@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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        1 day ago

        I think these laws will be similar to prohibition. They will try for a while, but then realize they can’t succeed. Governments can’t even handle cyber security, how will they handle this?

        • reddit_sux@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          These laws are made by corporation like FB who wish to shift the blame away from itself for their transgressions. Australian and EU laws are banning social media for pre teens and kids. So instead of them developing ways to follow that law they are shifting that onus on to the operating system.

        • Skankhunt420@sh.itjust.works
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          1 day ago

          I think you underestimate the technology they have now especially in relation to an event that happened in the 1940’s.

          Its like the Stasi but ten thousand times more sophisticated and every bit as motivated.

          Maybe even more motivated, because it generates money for them when they have businesses do it (Palantir) and provides “value” to the markets. Because money and control is absolutely all they care about (in the USA)

          • theneverfox@pawb.social
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            1 day ago

            Technologically, yes, they could easily identify non-compliance with how much data is being collected these days

            Logistically though? How are they going to enforce this? Sue every open source project that circumvents this? Block downloads of it with a great firewall? Fine end users? It’s just not feasible

            Realistically, they’re going to go after the OSes with the biggest market share. Google, Microsoft, and Apple will be forced to comply on new devices, and maybe they’ll try to make an example or two to get compliance in advance

            • Skankhunt420@sh.itjust.works
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              1 day ago

              It will be used to target certain individuals and “nail” their proverbial “balls to the wall” when they want to ruin your life for not complying.

              A us court just convicted people as terrorists and one of the main reasons they cited is that they were using signal.

              “This individual circumvented security measures enacted by the united States to keep people and the children™ safe from online threats both foreign and domestic. The individual conspired with multiple other people some of them from other countries, oops we meant foreign adversaries, to destroy or circumvent this framework we had in place”

              Only thing I can mainly compare it to is how weed isn’t legal in a lot of places but they usually don’t care, until they suddenly do and your life is fucked.

              Think of people like Ken Klippenstein and your Edward Snowdens (who used tails to leak a lot of their illegal spying shit btw which is us made btw where these laws are starting to gain traction the most [yes I see Brazil too])

              It will be used to target individuals and destroy their lives through the process.

              “Oh also since you’re not using the OS level biometric whatever we enacted this is an illegal machine and we are seizing it. Oh, you had whistleblower reports about government corruption? What government corruption Ken we didn’t find those files but we did find evidence if you being antifa”

              And if you think I’m just some paranoid schizophrenic and this could never happen then you haven’t been paying attention.

              • theneverfox@pawb.social
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                18 hours ago

                And if everyone used E2E encryption for their private messaging like everyone who understands the topic has been pushing for decades, signal users wouldn’t stand out

                The state cannot enforce this, it still relies on compliance in advance

                • Skankhunt420@sh.itjust.works
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                  16 hours ago

                  I agree on everyone should be using E2E Encryption. Its an absolute disgrace that that was even mentioned in the court case at all as a possible link to terrorism.

                  I disagree that the state cant enforce this at least in a targeted way but, I really hope you are right in the end though.

                  I guess we will see.

                  • theneverfox@pawb.social
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                    6 hours ago

                    Fair. And it only goes our way if Linux devs take a stand in the first place…I think they will. I hope they will