Australian government prepares social media ban amid opposition to privacy and free speech violation (www.wsws.org)
from NimdaQA@lemmy.ml to world@lemmy.world on 08 Dec 2025 07:26
https://lemmy.ml/post/40013265

#world

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coaxil@lemmy.zip on 08 Dec 2025 07:51 next collapse

They did well with this one

www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZxRB5qWphJE

sounreal@lemmy.zip on 08 Dec 2025 08:19 collapse

But at least we’re doing something. Just not the things that would start to fix all that

Gold

yeahiknow3@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Dec 2025 09:09 next collapse

Why is this bad? What is the upside of anyone under 16 using social media?

EDIT: the last 20 years have been an experiment in online anonymity, and the result is a dead internet infested by AI bots and foreign disinformation. At this point, I think civilized nations with free-speech protections should experiment with this sort of thing.

TheWinged7@lemmy.zip on 08 Dec 2025 10:05 next collapse

The problem isnt the idea of preventing people under 16 from getting on social media, but how you enforce that.

The only real way is to make every user submit a government ID, which becomes a massive privacy AND security issue with how often every online service gets compromised or leaks user data

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 08 Dec 2025 10:27 collapse

If a banks suddenly and frequently lost data on all their users people wouldn’t be screaming that banks should be completely anonymous. The banks would have fines and need to meet high standards to keep doing business

We have lots of societal issues that are made worse with the internet being a wild west and founding logical arguments on the premise that it is insecure also has issues. If a website is so questionable it might leak, it probably shouldn’t be in common use

MalReynolds@piefed.social on 08 Dec 2025 11:26 next collapse

Cybersecurity: where defenders have to win every day and attackers only have to win once.

Anything like age verification should probably be handled with absolute minimum identifiable information (i.e. you’re older than X true / false) from an authoritative source like say the people who give out IDs (because if they’re broken into everyone’s screwed anyway). Instead OzGov has dumped it in the laps of the corpos, who will hoover up pictures of IDs or faces instead. As of a couple of days beforehand there’s still no actual information on these age verification protocols to my knowledge, very untransparent, very disturbing. Corpos being required to moderate their platforms would be good, this is not that.

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 08 Dec 2025 11:39 next collapse

Yeah, agreed that every government that makes decisions like this (I think porn restrictions and UK age verification has come up) should be offering a government API to tie into. Governments need to have this data to function and have the resources to handle this (but not a great track record).

I just don’t think essentially making the argument “there are all these problems but that’s the way it’s always been” gets us to a better future. And I think most improvements are iterative and need to start somewhere. I’m also not expecting this to be a slam dunk but I do think some countries need to try this and other tech company restrictions to find out what will make a better future.

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 08 Dec 2025 11:42 collapse

Anything like age verification should probably be handled with absolute minimum identifiable information (i.e. you’re older than X true / false)

Ahh… thats not age verification. And yes verification is one of the hard parts with problems but this isn’t even an attempt at age verification

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 08 Dec 2025 11:43 collapse

Oh, you’re not saying the user answers this question. You’re saying someone like the Department of Licensing does?

MalReynolds@piefed.social on 08 Dec 2025 12:04 collapse

Pretty much that government API you mentioned, rather than the platform self regulating. Fox guarding the hen house and all…

a4ng3l@lemmy.world on 08 Dec 2025 15:12 collapse

Yeah and when your government is experiencing some troubles themselves the whole shit comes down. We’ve experienced a little downtime here for regional government and it lasted quite a while. Centralisation introduces its own weaknesses. Additionally, at some point, we could address this by just having parents accountable in this specific use case. Wtf do we need a technological solution to address parenting? This small subset thereof.

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 08 Dec 2025 17:12 collapse

Exactly! Parents should be in charge of child not smoking or drinking! What sort of countries would also hold stores accountable… wait up…

a4ng3l@lemmy.world on 08 Dec 2025 17:46 next collapse

I trust that parents are the first line of defence for those as well. Then education. Then store controls indeed but it doesn’t involve the mass surveillance implementation required for the web. And the risks are also absolutely not the same; physical check are not leading to increased risks of leakage. Or reuse for not necessarily compatible purposes. It’s also not systematic ; as soon as you vaguely looks out of your teens you’re never asked ID anymore for either…

a4ng3l@lemmy.world on 08 Dec 2025 17:55 collapse

I’ll also add that, contrary to shop surveillance, parents have physical control of their kids devices to a large extent. And most OSes comes with features allowing parental controls. So yeah we have the tools for enforcing our accountability as parent on the internet.

widowdoll@ttrpg.network on 08 Dec 2025 13:03 next collapse

If a website is so questionable it might leak, it probably shouldn’t be in common use

Tell me you know nothing about software without telling me you know nothing about software.

[deleted] on 08 Dec 2025 17:07 next collapse
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porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 08 Dec 2025 17:31 collapse

Yeah, it was a bit ill thought out but I’d argue its more idealistically unrealistic

We could live in a world something along the lines of websites sending HTTPS certs based on users location with the cert granted by those governments and if you sell or store customers data then you need a security audit for the code.

That would obviously need tweaking and is a long way away from where the world is today, but a world where any website could be malicious is about as necessary as a country where walking into any restaurant has a probable chance of you being shot. A nice part of that analogy is that the main thing holding both together is strong trustworthy institutions. But the web is that way more from history rather than a deep technical issue that forces the internet to be that way. Also probably time, that sort of audit is probably prohibitively expensive, but that could be considered part of the true cost to society that we’re ignoring

porcoesphino@mander.xyz on 09 Dec 2025 11:58 next collapse

I’ve got a bit of an ignorant question and I think all the downvotes here make this a good place for someone to set me straight.

One of my pet peeves in the last few years has been booking an Airbnb and the host pushing you to their system where you need to fill in all the same information Airbnb has and this includes uploading some form of ID. Around the same time period, airport checkins have also required uploads of your passport.

Are these two examples that different from the changes that a lot of people are saying will be terrible and risky, or am I just missing something? Agreed it’s increasing the attack surface but I’m also a bit curious why there isn’t public pushback on these systems if that is genuinely a large concern

Edit: Most of these are international so that probably explains the lack of pushback on these systems

Taleya@aussie.zone on 09 Dec 2025 12:17 collapse

Why if? It happened and it was a fucking drop in the bucket to their profits.

And they’ll do it again

rozodru@pie.andmc.ca on 08 Dec 2025 12:58 next collapse

the verification process. you could be 42 and never signed up for social media and now you decide you want to post comments on tiktok. Welp now you gotta verify that you’re not a teenager. So provide your ID, provide a photo of yourself holding your ID, and hope some company that is obtaining that information either doesn’t sell it or doesn’t have a security breach. and a bonus to all that is the potential to further track all activities you do online. they can now easily build a profile of you via the social networks you sign up for.

that’s the problem.

A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world on 08 Dec 2025 17:15 next collapse

Tying all your previously anonymous activities to a real life photo, ID, and address.

Good luck trying to criticize an oppressive government again. Or just having an “unapproved” opinion online in general.

Noja@sopuli.xyz on 08 Dec 2025 18:19 next collapse

Do you realize that lemmy is also social media? I wouldn’t be here posting if I had to verify my ID, which is what all these age verification measures do instead of just checking age.

yeahiknow3@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Dec 2025 18:23 collapse

Yes, and while I like being anonymous, I don’t like literally half the internet being made of bots and foreign trolls. Lemmy is such a tiny community that we haven’t attracted their attention, but these bot farms and state-sponsored disinformation campaigns could crush this website in a weekend if they directed their attention here.

ZoDoneRightNow@kbin.earth on 09 Dec 2025 02:52 next collapse

Would you upload your government ID just to access the web? Would you be content knowing that a leak at a social media company could lead to your identity being stolen just because your government wants to keep under 16s off of mainstream social media. Would you be happy with your child using 4chan because they are banned from using safer social media websites? I personally know several people who would not be around today if online safe spaces didn't exist to give them an escape from bullying, queerphobia or domestic violence. I can understand why someone might agree with the sentiment "people under 16 shouldn't be on social media", but I cannot understand why someone would be okay with the specifics of this legislation. People are going to have their lives ruined because of this new law and it doesn't even succeed in what it sets out to do (nominally) in the first place. The true reason for this bill is not to "protect children from radicalisation", but to drive viewer/readership of Murdoch media, if it were about protecting children from radicalisation and bullying, why are the worst of these social media sites not included in the ban?

EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 09 Dec 2025 19:06 collapse

I would argue that the internet has died partly as a result of removing anonymity from the internet, not because of it. The massive centralization of the internet into corporate walled gardens where they can control the narrative is what made your criticisms possible. The early internet was a wild west where you could find anything and everything, for better and worse.

The big issue I have with this is that it isolates queer kids from any sense of community. Trans kids can’t avoid permanent damage from the wrong puberty if they don’t have access to the knowledge that they could be taking puberty blockers. Without access to that community, I didn’t even learn that trans people existed and I could put a word to that existential distress until I was in college.

[deleted] on 09 Dec 2025 21:47 collapse
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widowdoll@ttrpg.network on 08 Dec 2025 13:04 next collapse

Not a single government today is beholden to its citizens.

We are all cattle and donkeys so people richer than us can live like gods.

biggerbogboy@sh.itjust.works on 09 Dec 2025 13:28 collapse

Ironically, if age estimation was done via usage history algorithms, it’d be a much more privacy preserving technique than literally scanning your face or ID into a website that then hands it off to a barely known biometrics company so you can keep using your account…

It’s so strange how this legislation apparently is supposed to safeguard the safety of kids on the internet, but hands tremendous risk to adults who verify, or parents who’s kids sneakily took their ID to verify their accounts, since it seems that we may be the cyberattack victim capital of the world; see Qantas, Lattitude Financial, Optus, Medibank, and so on until the end of time.