▲ | nyanpasu64 5 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Frankly I'm scared by governments and corporations going "papers, please" for people to be allowed to access the Internet. On top of endangering privacy by tying pseudonymous online interactions to real-life ID and biometrics, attempts to block under-18 people from finding information or interacting online will only amplify how society regards them as not having rights. This will isolate people (especially gay and trans teens) living with abusive parents from finding support networks, and prevent them from learning (by talking to friends in different situations) that being beaten or emotionally put down by parents is abusive and traumatizing. I know all too well that when you grow up you're psychologically wired to assume that the way the parents treated you is normal, and if they harmed you then you deserve to be hurt. I've made friends with and assisted many teens and young adults in unsafe living situations (and talked to people who grew up in fundamentalist religions and cults), and they're dependent on online support networks to recognize and cope with abuse, get advice, and seek help in dangerous situations. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | nicbou 5 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
To add to this, some people might be left out because companies are not financially incentivised to verify them. In Germany, immigrants struggle to open a bank account because the banks require documents that they don't have (and that they can hardly get with a bank account). Russian, Iranian and Syrian citizens have a particularly hard time finding a bank that works for them. The most common video document verification system does not support some Indian passports, among others. To banks, leaving these people out is a rational business decision. The same thing will happen to those deemed too risky or too much hassle by the internet's gatekeepers, but at a much bigger scale. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | exe34 5 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> prevent them from learning (by talking to friends in different situations) that being beaten or emotionally put down by parents is abusive and traumatizing. parents didn't know I'm gay, but they did control all flow of information (before social media) by controlling all movements outside school. it took me until my thirties to realise how deeply abusive my childhood was. the only hints I had, in hindsight, was the first Christmas at uni, everybody was excited to go home and I couldn't fathom why on earth anybody would want to. I dismissed it as an oddity at the time. |