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Sighs. Signing up and giving personal informations to a few services is fine. Your ISP, your bank, your doctor. That's fine. You know who they are, you remember them, you can keep an eye on them.
Doing this for every possible service on the internet is not. I guarantee you can't remember all the sites you've made an account to and that you probably didn't read the ToS for each one. If you add a requirement that each one of these sites to verify users through ID or face verification, it massively increases the risk that your data will leak to undesired parties. The state can't keep track of all of them the same way you can't do it. They're just too many. It's possible that at one point one of these companies will have a data breach or will break regulation. Then your online data (in this case your face and your ID) is up for grabs.
What if a police officer were to randomnly stop you on the street and check your pockets to ensure you're not carrying child porn? What if they suspect you're hiding child porn in your underwear? Should we make a law giving the right to police officers to strip you naked just so we can make sure you're not doing anything illegal? We have to protect children right? Nothing is more valuable right?
SIGHS.
YouTube isn't the police.
Verifying your age to access adult/mature content isn't some novel concept. We absolutely can come up with a way to do this online that at least mitigates the risk of leaked/stolen data to an acceptable level. Doing nothing at all and just letting kids access anything they want on the internet is not a solution, and hiding behind "freedom" as an excuse to abdicate social responsibility is lazy.
Encroaching on privacy and hiding behind the idea of "protecting kids" as an excuse to take away from your liberty and private life is lazy.
If you want to protect your child from what they might find on the internet, then spend time with them. Don't pawn this off to the state.
This feels exactly like people fighting against gun control while schools are shot up on the regular. Get over your individualism and sparkling ideals and realize that something has to be done. If your privacy and personal freedom are tied to Facebook and Twitter, maybe that's a you problem.
I'm not saying we shouldn't do anything. Tax them, fine them, shut them down. I'm all for it. But don't let them collect any more data by slapping this legislation.
No, that's an us problem. If you're a Latino living in the US I don't think you'd like Trump to know your face and your ID when you post a negative thing about him on an online platform.
Go ahead and point out where I said your liberty should be taken away. Using the internet is not an inherent right.
I never mentioned the state. This is like blaming the opioid epidemic on the addict and alleviating Purdue of all responsibility. No amount of personal accountability is going to fix the problem while multi-billion dollar corporations pump an addictive and harmful product into society 24/7.
I'd argue that it is, but that's beyond the scope of this topic.
Then tax them, fine them, ban them. What we shouldn't do is let them collect any more data about us using this type of legislation.