frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

Poet, Artist, Tantric Christian

https://thecritic.co.uk/poet-artist-tantric-christian/
1•lermontov•42s ago•0 comments

What Happened to AltaVista? The Rise and Fall of a Search Pioneer

https://em360tech.com/tech-articles/what-happened-altavista-rise-and-fall-search-pioneer
1•CharlesW•2m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Freezewell – A Private Egg Freezing Tracker (Offline App)

https://onionwave7.gumroad.com/l/xddyzd
1•kian_sage•3m ago•0 comments

The Louder the Monkey, the Smaller Its Balls, Study Finds

https://www.vice.com/en/article/the-louder-the-monkey-the-smaller-its-balls-study-finds-42361364663309/
1•CharlesW•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: MindSafe Journal – An Offline Mental Health Privacy Journal

https://onionwave7.gumroad.com/l/MindSafe
1•kian_sage•4m ago•0 comments

Calibre-Web-Automated

https://github.com/crocodilestick/Calibre-Web-Automated
1•ValentineC•8m ago•0 comments

Double Pendulums are (not) Chaotic

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dtjb2OhEQcU
1•leidenfrost•19m ago•0 comments

Op-ed: Donor Organs Are Too Rare. We Need a New Definition of Death

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/30/opinion/organ-donors-death-definition.html
2•johntfella•23m ago•0 comments

Universal Orland EV buses caught fire

https://wdwnt.com/2025/07/breaking-two-new-electric-universal-epic-universe-buses-destroyed-by-fire-just-outside-park/
1•burnt-resistor•25m ago•1 comments

Why cold feels good: Scientists uncover the chill pathway

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2025/07/250730030354.htm
2•freedomben•26m ago•0 comments

Fed up with both traditional and AI search

1•zyruh•28m ago•4 comments

A record-breaking baby has been born from an embryo that's over 30 years old

https://www.technologyreview.com/2025/07/29/1120769/exclusive-record-breaking-baby-born-embryo-over-30-years-old/
1•gscott•32m ago•0 comments

ChatGPT Confessions gone? They are not

https://www.digitaldigging.org/p/chatgpt-confessions-gone-they-are
2•tzury•35m ago•1 comments

Why open-source AI became an American National Priority

https://venturebeat.com/ai/why-open-source-ai-became-an-american-national-priority/
1•briggiesmallz•37m ago•0 comments

Separated men are nearly 5x more likely to take their lives than married men

https://medicalxpress.com/news/2025-07-men.html
2•PaulHoule•39m ago•0 comments

Windows 10 10: How Microsoft led developers round in circles

https://www.theregister.com/2025/08/01/windows_10_dev_comment/
2•RachelF•42m ago•0 comments

Speak, Don't Type

https://www.typeless.com
1•lhuser123•45m ago•0 comments

Hashcat v7.0.0 Released

https://github.com/hashcat/hashcat/releases/tag/v7.0.0
1•GalaxySnail•47m ago•0 comments

ChatGPT scrubbed today nearly 50k shared conversations from Google

https://twitter.com/henkvaness/status/1951252284953763844/photo/1
2•taytus•48m ago•0 comments

It's not you, it's their bullshit

https://brilliantcrank.com/its-not-you-its-their-bullshit/
1•donutshop•49m ago•0 comments

The Emacs dumper dispute (2016)

https://lwn.net/Articles/707615/
1•aragonite•51m ago•0 comments

The Great Crime Paradox

https://www.ft.com/content/7488fe4c-5e1d-4b2b-adab-f42ad5273fc9
1•paulpauper•52m ago•0 comments

What does it mean for AI to be sovereign–and does that come before AGI?

1•trendinghotai•53m ago•0 comments

Therac-25

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therac-25
4•aragonite•54m ago•1 comments

Robert Wilson has died

https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2025/08/01/robert-wilson-playwright-director-artist-obituary
7•paulpauper•1h ago•2 comments

Lots of thriving life, 30k feet deep

https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2025/07/30/deep-sea-discovery-pacific-ocean/
1•paulpauper•1h ago•1 comments

How Cursor Serves Billions of AI Code Completions Every Day

https://blog.bytebytego.com/p/how-cursor-serves-billions-of-ai
3•warrenm•1h ago•0 comments

Free AI tool to remove image backgrounds instantly – no signup needed

https://circlecropimage.net/bg-remove
1•maysunyoung•1h ago•0 comments

Character consistency with just one reference image

https://about.ideogram.ai/character
1•smusamashah•1h ago•0 comments

Show HN: Open Contribution Protocol — No Gatekeeping, No Inflation, No Limits

https://github.com/contribution-protocol/contribution-protocol-project/blob/main/stability_proof.md
1•mzk_pi•1h ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

Online Safety Act: What went wrong?

https://therectangle.substack.com/p/online-safety-act-what-went-wrong
49•olyellybelly•13h ago

Comments

croes•13h ago
What went wrong?

For complete safety you need complete surveillance which contradicts complete safety.

arrowsmith•12h ago
Because it's not actually about safety.
Havoc•13h ago
>Solving problems in the online world is no longer a technical issue

Unfortunately I have zero faith in UK government having a moment of introspection here.

Instead of realizing it's not fit for purpose they'll double down on the broken approach. Fully expecting the "solution" here to be more regulation, more punishment, more cost, more killing small sites, more inconvenience, more technically unfeasible things (vpn ban).

Have written to my MP about it and unsurprisingly zero response. Useless government

arp242•12h ago
I don't really understand Keir Starmer on this. Or well, on anything really. The public has been pretty clear what they want most of all is a competent government that will take care of basic core tasks like cost of living, NHS, etc. Instead he takes a massively unpopular Tory culture war bill and implemented it as if it was his own idea (in addition to a number of other unforced baffling choices over the last year).

I understand Boris Johnson. I understand Tony Blair. I even understand Liz Truss, mad as she may be. I just don't get Starmer at all. I almost suspect he's somehow in league with Nigel Farage to make him the next prime minister.

TheOtherHobbes•6h ago
Yes, exactly.

You do in fact understand Starmer. You just hope you're wrong.

The UK's aristos have decided that Farage should be the next PM, which is why he's been all over the media.

Starmer is wholly owned by business interests which exist for the benefit of said aristos, and his job is to pander to those interests. He is absolutely indifferent to what the public wants, and he is willing to force through incredibly unpopular pointless abusive policies to make that point.

The end game is similar to the one in the US - the end of democratic accountability and public service government, an AI-administered online surveillance state run for oligarchs and corporations, all marketed with rhetoric that combines fake patriotism, violent hysteria against outsiders and noncomformists, the illusion of personal responsibility, and religious grift.

amoe_•13h ago
The knife crime analogy is a bit off, as we already have age restrictions for buying knives in the UK.
snickerdoodle12•13h ago
Politicians listened to the "smart" guys from Google/Apple/Microsoft/Whatever who were there with their own ulterior motives.
exasperaited•13h ago
This adds little to the debate.

A really interesting question would be to ask Aylo -- the world's largest pornographer -- why they are complying with the UK law and working with the regulator (population ~70M), but blocking whole states in response to the French law (population ~70M also) and Texas (population ~30M).

Because there obviously is some nuance and realpolitik here, when Aylo could very easily just block the UK too.

Has anyone done this journalism?

rokkamokka•13h ago
Perhaps they earn more from the UK market? Or decided it was easier to comply with that specific law.
exasperaited•12h ago
It was a partly rhetorical question.

They have an age verification business.

But they also have a policy position about this and I'm not sure anyone has asked them to talk about those three decisions in the same sentence, as it were.

the_mitsuhiko•12h ago
You can just go to their press releases [1].

> For years Aylo has publicly called for effective and enforceable age assurance solutions that protect minors online, while ensuring the safety and privacy of all users. The United Kingdom is the first country to present these same priorities demonstrably.

At least according to their release, the UK worked with them on it.

They also have an updated statement on France [2].

[1]: https://www.aylo.com/newsroom/aylo-upgrades-age-assurance-me...

[2]: https://www.aylo.com/newsroom/aylo-suspends-access-to-pornhu...

exasperaited•12h ago
I mean, in the second or third round of this with the tories in 2016, Aylo (Mindgeek) were offering up their own solution for age verification. So they are not exactly unconflicted.

But the fact remains here that the world's largest porn company is not presenting this as a big civil liberties issue; they have moved on from that.

I think it's important to understand that Ofcom isn't just imposing nonsense policies without any consultation with the very people they are trying to regulate.

They may not be succeeding, and people can disagree with the policy outcome, but there's a huge amount of misinformation suggesting that this is simple thoughtless autocratic censorious wishful thinking, when it is in fact an attempt at a policy of industry self-regulation backed by penalties, which is how the ombudsman system is meant to work.

Also I think a lot of US commentators don't understand that mobile phone providers in the UK block adult content by default and have been moving to that position over the long term because it is the only practical parental control mechanism that exists in a market of devices with different operating systems, menus, and often absence of on-device parental control mechanisms at all.

_joel•13h ago
Seems as though, if anything, the government are doubling down on it. I swear Labour are speedrunning "How to become the most hated party". I thought it'd take a bit longer than a year, but here we are.
XorNot•12h ago
They're not though. These types of policies are very popular. HN users come out in favor of them or some variant and you'd think they should recognize the dangers.

People will happily demand these policies in the abstract, and then some will be unhappy with the implementation but not all.

_joel•12h ago
Have you seen the recent polls?
alexisread•13h ago
It's mostly deliberate. Current petition to revoke it has half a million signatures, and the government have stated they will ignore that.

Censorship is one of the advantages they like: https://freespeechunion.org/protest-footage-blocked-as-onlin...

crimsoneer•13h ago
I mean, this was in the manifesto for both the major parties - this is really not what the petition website is for, and it was never going anywhere. X flagging protest footage as adult content is not the endgame of some great british elitist conspiracy.
arrowsmith•12h ago
> both the major parties

The uniparty strikes again.

exasperaited•12h ago
> X flagging protest footage as adult content is not the endgame of some great british elitist conspiracy.

No indeed, but it might be the beginning of a political campaign.

wakawaka28•9h ago
>X flagging protest footage as adult content is not the endgame of some great british elitist conspiracy.

No it is the prelude to a global elite conspiracy program to do anything they want with impunity.

implements•13h ago
Any device with a Government service (eg NHS) or a Banking app knows who and old the primary user is, so seems the obvious technological solution is some kind of securely anonymous attestation that websites can request from the OS.
exasperaited•12h ago
This appears to be what Aylo think, essentially:

https://www.aylo.com/assets/files/age_verification_fact_shee...

And I think this is right. If Apple and Google can add a thing that lets us track Covid exposure they can surely figure out secure age attestation.

As it is, you can use your mobile phone for simple age attestation in the UK anyway, since mobile phone companies block adult content by default until they are unblocked, as a parental control measure.

fidotron•13h ago
Absolutely nothing about it has gone wrong.

They have collected some personal data from law abiding pornography consumers: obvious perverts who should know better anyway. If their information gets released it will be their own fault. Some other stuff got hidden, but that's no problem as the BBC will tell you anything that you need to know anyway.

They can, and will, readily ban VPNs later, since those have no legitimate purpose for individuals, and will only be allowed for licensed operators like banks, hospitals, and defence manufacturers.

If you think this is sarcasm you haven't been paying attention to what the people pushing these laws actually say.

exasperaited•12h ago
> They have collected some personal data from law abiding pornography consumers:

Who is "they"?

vaylian•12h ago
> obvious perverts who should know better anyway.

Why are these perverts obvious?

> They can, and will, readily ban VPNs later, since those have no legitimate purpose for individuals, and will only be allowed for licensed operators like banks, hospitals, and defence manufacturers.

This is not true. All kinds of companies and private people use VPNs to safeguard their computer infrastructure.

trallnag•5h ago
This is a red herring. Obviously corporate VPNs will not be banned. Same goes for your personal use of something like ZeroTier or Tailscale. The gov will simply learn from China
TheBigSalad•12h ago
Maybe I'm being pedantic, but I really hate this statement: Until we start thinking about the true test of any policy: implementation and enforcement.

The true test of policy should be the desired outcome behind that policy.

gotoeleven•12h ago
You're saying the true test of a policy is its stated intentions? This attitude is exactly why we get so many terrible, unworkable policies with terrible unintended consequences (though often the consequences are so obvious that the claims that they are "unintended" are incredible).
hexis•12h ago
Why would the desired outcome be a more true test than the actual outcome?
snickerdoodle12•12h ago
If the desired outcome is world peace and the means of which is murdering every human then I don't think the desired outcome is all that relevant.
bsenftner•12h ago
Let's include who is pushing for the new policy right up to the head of considerations, because these "child protections" are not child protections, they are using children as fear vehicles to make political careers and to generate new revenues for their tech security company backers. Calls to "protect the children" rarely are about children at all, but are almost universally a vehicle to usher in some Orwellian fear-laced perspective forced on the public.
azalemeth•12h ago
An obligatory link for either anyone living in Britain or with British citizenship:

https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/722903

More people have signed this than the membership of the labour party(!)

VikingMiner•12h ago
The whole country could sign that petition and it will be ignored. There is no legal/political solution to this. The sooner people accept that the better.
vaylian•12h ago
Nonsense. Promoting the petition and keeping talking about the law is one of the most effective things that can be done to make life uncomfortable for the politicians who are responsible for this mess. More pressure is needed and politicians will have to face journalists asking unpleasant questions when people continue to complain.
VikingMiner•11h ago
> Nonsense. Promoting the petition and keeping talking about the law is one of the most effective things that can be done to make life uncomfortable for the politicians who are responsible for this mess.

They frequently ignore these petitions, especially when it comes to privacy, freedom of speech, surveillance etc.

When you do get a response back from these petitions, they are frequently either don't address the issue properly or you get some gaslighting response back.

My pessimism has be undefeated thus far.

> More pressure is needed and politicians will have to face journalists asking unpleasant questions when people continue to complain.

I am sorry this is utterly naive. Have you've seen the responses from Politicians so far? They basically call anyone that opposes them a paedophile.

I wouldn't put any faith in the journalists either. Most either work for the state directly or they have corporate masters.

randallsquared•12h ago
The author's main point is that the law isn't authoritarian enough to accomplish its aims. Sigh.
FerretFred•12h ago
For me personally, I agree that wanting non-adults to be able get at online porn is commendable, and the fact that the tech industry is scrambling over itself to comply is evidence that this Act has teeth. However, what bugs me personally is that 1) The Government had nearly 2 years head start to set up a centralised ID repository, hopefully basing it on the same model as the DVLA and Passport Office sharing photo and other data. They did not. 2) Verification sites are not UK based, and therefore subject to the same mistrust with handling PII - which obviously can't be replaced. 3) There are no Goverment-created apps that can/should handle ID verification despite the fact that these would probably solve 95% of the problem. 4) Feature overreach: if you want to surveil your citizens, be honest for once and don't use the knee-jerk carrot of it "being for the kids" - we're not as stupid as you think (unfortunately).

That is all.

snickerdoodle12•12h ago
Everyone who is currently an adult and not geriatric could have had access to porn when they were a child. Is everyone fucked up? No? Why are you advocating for eliminating privacy for a made up problem?
qzx_pierri•12h ago
This is my main frustration. Every teenager who wants to get porn will get porn regardless. VPN companies saw the writing on the wall years ago, and have been paying any YouTuber that will accept a sponsorship to shill for them.

I think the Online Safety Act is just setting a precedent that will be used further down the line to ban personal VPN usage.

"Children are using encrypted VPN tunnels to see porn online! Criminals also use those same VPN networks!"

Let me guess... There will be a law requiring ISPs to block VPN traffic if the VPN server's hostname isn't registered to a business and approved by the government.

UK: "Do you have a license for that VPN?!"

Anyway, download i2p, or Hyphanet/freenet

john01dav•12h ago
China has been trying for decades to ban VPNs and they have failed. It's just an infinite cat and mouse game. There's no reason to think that the UK could succeed where China has failed.
qzx_pierri•11h ago
Yes, I agree with you. But the average person would no longer use a VPN if VPNs were outlawed. The people who are clever enough to evade detection like you and I are a tiny percentage of the population, and we don't really matter.

People like you and I don't truly matter in the grand scheme of things, because if the government ban VPNs, we will use i2p or TOR, or Hyphanet/freenet.

Surveillance states care about numbers. The more people who lose VPN access, the better (from their POV).

snickerdoodle12•9h ago
My real frustration is that it's just not a real problem. If it was we'd be seeing the negative effects of children having had access to porn today.

Instead it's clearly about control and being able to tiptoe their way to a totalitarian state.

FerretFred•12h ago
I'm not! I know how easy it is to "discover" porn, but if sites adopted the RTA labelling system (https://rtalabel.net/?content=howto) and browsers obeyed that would go a long way to preventing those "accidental" discoveries. What my privacy concerns are were as per my post - no accountability from various global third parties and indiscriminate use of my PII.
snickerdoodle12•9h ago
What is the actual problem being solved here? The only problem I see this solving is that people who wish to exert control upon others can do so.
XorNot•12h ago
There is no possible way to achieve this goal without 4 happening though: or moreover, without it being possible.

Your prior 3 ideas all end up at "potential government surveillance of the people".

There is no way to implement verification like this without surveiling everyone, even if you don't plan to use the data - the possibility will always be there.

FerretFred•12h ago
Yes, and this is one reason why we (Brits) have resisted Government ID cards for so long.
XorNot•4h ago
Those are separate issues though frankly. Unified government ID is efficient. You have it anyway, just as a morass of other forms of ID which contribute to the expense to administrate.

That's quite separate to "verify with your government ID" to visit a website having nothing to do with government services.

And it should be apparent that the lack of the former did not stop people asking for the latter. And they did ask for it.

ok123456•12h ago
One of the positive side effects is that this will normalize the everyday use of Tor and Tor services. It won't just be for "those people" who are paranoid.
Zak•12h ago
> a statement like “we should stop young kids watching porn” is so agreeable that only the nuttiest amongst us could even begin to disagree with it

I mostly disagree with it. I don't want prepubescent children watching porn of course, but the vast majority of them aren't doing that with any regularity, nor do they have any desire to. It isn't a problem that demands a robust solution with serious downsides.

I do think an HTTP header saying "no adult content" that can be turned on via both simple browser settings and password-protected parental controls is a good idea. That would reduce accidental or casual exposure to porn and have no meaningful downsides.

john01dav•12h ago
I'd prefer the HTTP header be on the response. That way, it can't be used for fingerprinting and can easily put the website in a more fine grained category (e.g., porn, gore, political extremism) and the user agent can be configured to filter based on this. You could then create limited but present liability for mislabeling.
chasd00•12h ago
You’d have to come up with a technical spec on the category definitions though. For example, what is porn and what is political extremism? That has always been the struggle.
hdgvhicv•4h ago
How about a header giving the minimum age.
duskwuff•1h ago
I'd be worried that doing that would invite bad followups - e.g. requiring web browsers to block tagged content by default (or always), defining LGBT or other politically sensitive content as pornographic and mandating that it be tagged, penalizing web site operators for failing to tag their web sites, etc.

But in principle, I still agree. As someone who has managed some adult-oriented spaces online, I would love to have a way to put a sign on the door that, in effect, says "adults only", and have it be technically enforced for users who have chosen to do so.

exasperaited•12h ago
> I mostly disagree with it. I don't want prepubescent children watching porn of course, but the vast majority of them aren't doing that with any regularity,

This genuinely needs qualification and I suspect, based on discussions I have had with friends who are teachers and teaching assistants, that you would be horrified by how often very young children (seven, eight, nine years old) are viewing material that only a couple of generations ago would not have been seen in any legal publication in the UK.

> It isn't a problem that demands a robust solution with serious downsides.

This is an opinion, not a fact. I think I disagree, but I also disagree that websites asking you to verify you can access a particular link on a mobile device is a particularly serious downside (since that is one of the valid ways of age attestation in the UK -- it requires only that your mobile phone provider knows you are an adult, which they can establish in a number of ways).

arp242•12h ago
Since gambling laws have been relaxed in a number of countries over the last few years, there has been a rather concerning rise in teenage gambling addiction.

This is perhaps a better example than porn. I'd be much more worried about my 14-year old spending all of their (or my) money on gambling than having a wank every once in a while.

That said, I have accidentally landed on porn sites over the years (including in a demo in front of the entire company haha). I'm not part of the hyper-prudish American contingent where any form of nudity does irreparable trauma to a child, but ... there's some pretty wild stuff out there. It's not like when I was young and stay up late to sneakily watch a soft-core porn at midnight.

VikingMiner•12h ago
> In reality, this wouldn’t happen, because, generally, people understand that stabbings are a cultural issue, rather than a technical one

Many UK MPs don't understand this. I've heard of MPs making (moronic) suggestions such as selling kitchen knives without the point on it. I've literally seen this advertised as a solution on the news.

For whatever reason they don't seem to understand that literally anyone can make a shiv.

fidotron•12h ago
https://www.forbes.com/sites/ianmorris/2019/03/14/yes-a-poli...

For anyone doubting the veracity of that.

exasperaited•12h ago
> I've heard of MPs making (moronic) suggestions such as selling kitchen knives without the point on it. I've literally seen this advertised as a solution on the news.

As someone who is clumsy and easily distracted, I have such a kitchen knife. They are commonly available. It works absolutely fine and it has three times minimised an injury that would have been nasty because I am an easily-distracted tired old idiot.

The point of a knife is only needed in a handful of kitchen applications. Most knives do not need to be able to stab at all. Only cut.

And combined with rules on the sales of longer blades that do have a point, this idea could genuinely be part of reducing knife crime (especially among the very youngest).

Because it does reduce access to knives that would be useful for stabbing, and it reduces the severity of injuries caused by the youngest in knife crime incidents. Without meaningfully affecting the kitchen usefulness of most small blades at all.

If I go to a supermarket and buy a long enough knife with a point on it, in theory I am asked to prove my age (in practice they laugh at the idea that I might not be young enough). The same is true for many (not all) products on Amazon, in fact.

The knife without a point on it did not trigger age verification. Nor does a boxcutter type thing, in practice; only retractible blades that don't snap off are on the list, AFAIK. (And only flick-knife-type mechanisms are banned).

I anticipate being downvoted for simply writing about this, but harm reduction through knife sales controls is not something that just stupid MPs think: it is supported by expert opinion.

Knife crime in the UK is a problem. It is still not a problem as severe per-capita as it is elsewhere, but we are trying measures to dissuade it.

Behaviour modification is not always stupid or evil; cultures do it all the time.

VikingMiner•11h ago
[flagged]
exasperaited•11h ago
[flagged]
VikingMiner•11h ago
[flagged]
exasperaited•11h ago
I didn't say that at all. You've totally the legal right to use knives in a dangerous way in your home.

It's completely compatible with age restrictions on long pointed blades, though, isn't it?

crtasm•11h ago
Then what's the proper tool for cutting fruit or veg? I can't think of one.
exasperaited•11h ago
I have a small-ish flat-cut paring knife that has a non-pointed blade. It is very sharp, and even the squared off end is enough to pierce a tomato, say.

I can't think of any application where the point of the knive is particularly essential for fruit or veg, and I can think of several veg where using the point of a tool is actually quite likely to cause an accident. Sweet potato being one of them.

There is one true application: deboning or filleting. But most people simply don't do this in a kitchen anyway, because they are buying deboned and filleted meat.

I don't see a particular problem with asking people who do want to cook to that level to prove they are adults before buying knives that have such obvious dual use as a weapon. Because you're asking people who already know they should be responsible with knives (and not for example use kitchen knives to get into plastic packaging, like an idiot).

You really don't need the point of a kitchen knife all that much in a kitchen, and the fact that the counterexamples raised are misuse (stabbing into packaging etc.) is pretty illustrative.

VikingMiner•11h ago
Seriously?

A "vegetable knife".

e.g.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Genware-NEV-K-V4R-Vegetable-Knife-R...

exasperaited•10h ago
You could use this, yes. And buy it, as an adult. I have not suggested you could not. (I just don't think the point is necessary, myself, and I am glad of options without it)

But you quite possibly cannot buy it on Amazon or in any UK shop already without proving you are an adult if your age is in doubt. Do you have a problem with their terms on that page?

"Age Verification Required on Delivery: This product is not for sale to people under the age of 18. To confirm the recipient is over 18 years, valid photographic ID with a date of birth may be required upon delivery. The driver will input your year of birth into their device and may then require an ID check to complete the age verification process. The driver will not be able to access your information once the delivery is complete."

(The "may" here is crucial. I've never been asked to prove I am an adult this way either, because I look like one)

crtasm•10h ago
Yes that's a knife, the suggestion was that a knife is not the proper tool for the job... somehow.
VikingMiner•9h ago
No I didn't. I said there was many different types of knives in the kitchen and they have different usages.
exasperaited•9h ago
No he means me -- I probably did suggest this by accident by quoting all of one of your sentences but without replying to it all.

I personally do not find that the skin of fruit ever needs a particularly pointed blade, and I think that is usually an unsafe use of a knife.

I don't mean to suggest you don't need a knife for cutting things, but I would have thought that was an obvious bad faith interpretation.

dang•9h ago
Yikes - you crossed badly into personal attack here. That's not ok, regardless of what other commenters are doing.

Could you please review the site guidleines and stick to them when commenting? We'd appreciate it.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

dang•9h ago
> You are believing in the same stupid delusion

Please edit out such swipes from your comments. This is in the site guidelines: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html.

VikingMiner•9h ago
It isn't a swipe. He is literally engaging in the same thinking. What else am I supposed to say?
dang•8h ago
You'd supposed to not tell people they're believing in stupid delusions. That's just name-calling, in the sense that the site guidelines ask you not to do.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

AndyGravity•7h ago
The poster thinks that knife crime can be reduced by making knives not pointy. An idea that is rightfully mocked by anyone with two brain cells to rub together. It is ridiculous on the face of it. Anyone believes in it is believing in something ridiculous. Believing in things that are obviously ridiculous is delusional. Therefore it is not name calling. It is a statement of fact.

Repeatedly sending someone a link to the rules do not in anyway stop this from being a statement of fact.

exasperaited•5h ago
It's your opinion.

This guy (a chef and a long-serving royal marine) has a different opinion, for instance:

https://www.dmu.ac.uk/about-dmu/news/2025/may/commando-chef-...

This former circuit judge who now works for a knife crime unit:

https://www.fightingknifecrime.london/news-posts/the-need-fo...

This research unit proved that they are less dangerous: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/rounded-knif...

The Ben Kinsella Trust supports this, and Let's Be Blunt has done good research on the number of impulse crimes that involve kitchen knives:

https://www.letsbeblunt.co.uk

Quite a lot of research is being done on this, quite a lot of police forces support it, and more to the point, British retailers already distinguish between these knives in terms of what young people can buy.

So it's not just one MP and one guy on HN is it?

But I am delusional, for sure, because I believe that experts deserve a hearing.

danaris•10h ago
> The point of a knife is only needed in a handful of kitchen applications. Most knives do not need to be able to stab at all. Only cut.

But this isn't about what "most knives" need to be able to do.

This is about what everyone in the UK will be permitted to buy.

"I don't need to do X often, so why should I worry about it?" is a really, really bad attitude to take when your government is considering banning X for the entire country.

exasperaited•10h ago
No, it's not. At all!

It's about what everyone not old enough will be permitted to buy.

Nobody is saying that pointed knives shouldn't be sold; they are saying two things:

1) children shouldn't be able to buy them (they can't)

2) behaviour modification might suggest that fewer such knives even have to be made, because they aren't as important as they seem, and that might keep more convenient knives out of the hands of very young misguided children

The law has created a situation where I as an adult can:

1) buy a pointed knife if it looks like I am an adult (or it doesn't and I can prove I am)

2) buy a non-pointed knife without proving it.

This seems acceptable to me. I expect to be downvoted without a meaningful reply for saying so, because that is the way of things here.

I appreciate your policing my attitude but I don't know where you get the complete nonsense that the government is considering banning X for the entire country for this X or any other. Because they are not.

We in Europe try not to assume that Marjorie Taylor-Greene speaks for all Americans. There are 650 MPs in the UK Parliament, and some of them are silly or misinformed. One or two are as stupid as she is. Try to take that in.

AngryData•7h ago
A tipless knife may prevent accidents, but if you purposefully tried to stab yourself or someone else with one of those knives, do you honestly believe it wouldn't tear right through your flesh? Neither my butter knives or bread knives have tips, and yet I could easily stab people with them.
exasperaited•4h ago
FWIW the data suggests that thin cotton clothing can stop these knives much more effectively, and therefore could at least make impulse knife crime (indoor assaults) much, much less deadly.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/rounded-knif...

Let's Be Blunt have more data: https://www.letsbeblunt.co.uk

AngryData•3h ago
I don't really find anything in those sources convincing. One is a researcher for an anti-knife crime advocacy group that makes vague statements about how it will reduce injuries, but don't specify how much, and says their research still needs to be validated before publishing. And the other stuff is just statistics of how many people get stabbed with kitchen knifes with the assumption that if everyone had blunt knives instead that either less people would be stabbed or their stab wounds would not be so serious, which is the point I find suspect to start with.

Yes if you wear enough cloth it can block blunt stabs okay, but I very much doubt peoples regular clothes are going to do anything except drag some dirty cloth into the wound unless they walk around with thick work bibs on all the time or 3-4 layers of denim. And even that is still very limited protection to someone actively trying to stab through it. A screwdriver is even more blunt than these blunted knives and it would have no problem going through any clothes except maybe a reenactors linen gambeson.

arp242•11h ago
"We believe that paedophiles are using an area of internet the size of Ireland, and through this they can control keyboards." – Syd Rapson MP in 2001.

But really, with 650 MPs there's bound to be a few that are a bit silly at least some of the time. You can hear some wild takes at the local pub too (or nextdoor), but that doesn't mean everyone in your area is a moron.

VikingMiner•10h ago
I too have watched Brass Eye, and they literally had MPs telling people about the dangers of "cake" in a previous episode. It showed that MPs and TV celebrities would literally say anything Anchorman style if it was put on a teleprompter / script in front of them. They are nothing other than paid actors.

While I don't believe everyone in Parliament is a moron. I think more than enough of them are moronic, out of touch, malicious or home combination of the three for it to be a problem.

Generally the only solution presented for any issue in the UK is banning something. There is no other course of action that they can envisage. So you end up in a false dichotomy, discussing whether something should be banned or not. There is no discussion why the issue is happening in the first place, only whether <thing> should be banned or not.

tzs•55m ago
I would love it if my steak knives did not have a point. Never once have I needed to stab my steak. The only thing I’ve ever stabbed with them is myself by accident.
k1t•12h ago
Some sites (eg Google) offer child friendly versions where safe search is enforced, by accessing the site using a different set of IPs. Some DNS providers (eg Cloudflare 1.1.1.3) automatically resolve to those safe IPs when available.

The government should require sites with "unsafe" content to make "safe" versions available (eg force safe mode, readonly, no signup). Sites that are wholly inappropriate for children should self-report so they can be made unresolvable by child-safe DNS.

I'm not saying this specific implementation is the one true way, there's alternatives and ways to work around it. My real point is that the government should have forced sites to implement a consistent method of enforcing child safe mode, that can be easily set in a blanket fashion by the parent.

I'm sure whatever approach will be "too technical" for many parents at first, but once a consistent safe-mode method becomes clear, I'm sure UIs and parental controls will evolve to make it easy to enable.

gushie•7h ago
By default for me (in the UK) it still seems possible to view porn in a Google image search in an incognito browser tab. I don't think non technical parents can be expected to change their DNS settings to something safe to block it. I'm a bit unclear as to what the online safety bill is solving if Google can ignore it.
hdgvhicv•4h ago
ISPs can provide dns or ip filtering by default which can be opted in or out in the account control page.

In fact I thought they did.

betaby•12h ago
UK now cached up with Russia of 2015. One may even say Russia is 10 years ahead!
arp242•12h ago
> I mean, there are already a raft of tools available to stop children accessing harmful content online. There are filters and protections and safeguards on almost every device on the market today. If children are constantly accessing harmful content, it’s because these settings haven’t been enabled by parents or guardians.

These parental controls rather suck though; see e.g. [1]. This basically matches my own experience.

I do agree with the general gist of it, but it's not as simple as "these tools already exist, we just need to educate people". There is real work to be done here before this is usable.

And why isn't there a "Content-Rating: sex" or "Content-Rating: gambling" HTTP header? Or something along those lines? Why isn't there one easy "under 12" button on a phone to lock down tons of stuff, from PornHub to gambling sites to what-have-you? All of this is also a failing of the technical community to actually build reasonable and usable standards and tools, too.

[1]: Parental controls? What parental controls? - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38314224 - Nov 2023 (archive, since site is down: https://web.archive.org/web/20231119003608/https://gabrielsi...)

fidotron•12h ago
> And why isn't there a "Content-Rating: sex" or "Content-Rating: gambling" HTTP header? Or something along those lines? Why isn't there one easy "under 12" button on a phone to lock down tons of stuff, from PornHub to gambling sites to what-have-you? All of this is also a failing of the technical community to actually build reasonable and usable standards and tools, too.

The mobile app world solved this years ago, and successfully generates age ratings for different countries based on developer interviews. (It's part of the app submission process).

There are problems with the mobile app world, but that isn't one of them.

gs17•7h ago
> And why isn't there a "Content-Rating: sex" or "Content-Rating: gambling" HTTP header?

There kind of was one: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platform_for_Internet_Content_...

Nasrudith•6h ago
Look, if parents are that willfully ignorant they will just build a better idiot, no matter how easy it is to use.
snozolli•12h ago
Children shouldn't have unsupervised access to the Internet. Stop off-loading parenting onto politicians who infringe on liberty in the name of a (false) sense of security.
BizarroLand•5h ago
They're not offloading it onto the politicians. The politicians are taking that onto themselves against the will of many of the parents.
dcow•12h ago
The core argument presented is that children watching porn is a cultural problem and therefore can’t be addressed by a technical solution.

I agree with the preface that the online safety act is a big dumpster fire. Regulators and lawmakers can and often do fail to effectively regulate.

I disagree that calling it a cultural problem and saying “oh well, can’t do anything” is a legitimate conclusion. I mean governments aren’t supposed to attack cultural problems, only protect the safety and wellbeing of its citizens. Nobody wants the government telling you what clothes to wear and what shows to watch.

The rhetorical “example” given is just plain false. It’s not like the government sending someone to your house to age check you when you pick up a knife. It’s like them requiring a bouncer at the door of a knife store.

We ID people for purchase of alcohol. It’s not perfect. Older kids get around it. And it’s definitely a “cultural problem” to some degree. But there isn't harm being caused by requiring an age check to purchase.

So often lately I see people letting perfect be the enemy of good.

If you wanted to fix problems with the implementation of the online safety act you would loosen the burden imposed on user content driven communities by exposing the individuals posting to legal liability for their posts rather than imposing unimplementable moderation requirements on the service operators. You would attack institutional porn not message boards where someone uploads a nsfw photo. Regulators don’t understand the stratification of the internet. You’d require sites that fall under regulation to use digital ID documents. You make it illegal for that data to be stored at all and simply tell sites to update a column in the user db “age verified: true”. You would not use IP address-based or credit card based filtering.

There are many ways this could have been not a regulatory dumpster fire and still moved the needle towards sustainable and effective online ID document presentation. One example of failure doesn’t damn the whole concept.

In this instance, though, the online safety act should definitely be repealed and reworked.

Also no parental controls are not readily and widely available nor are they easy to configure and install, not least because of lack of a digital ID story.

holowoodman•12h ago
The world isn't child-safe. Nobody would want children to play on a motorway, nobody would feed children xxxtra-hot curry of death, nobody would want children to drive a car or play with kitchen knifes.

Yet none of those far more problematic things comes with an age check, a fence, government controls or any special kinds of locks. We just educate children, and parents pay attention. Children that are too young to understand are put in special places like kindergarten, and even at a later age are often supervised by responsible adults.

I don't see why the internet should suddenly be all of that in reverse: Things like the online safety act require a whole world full of child-safe sites, and a child-impenetrable fence put around the few ones considered unsafe. This is totally ass-backwards.

Aerroon•5h ago
>Yet none of those far more problematic things comes with an age check, a fence, government controls or any special kinds of locks.

I was thinking about this the other day: everyone has knives at home. Sharp and deadly. Yet I've never heard of somebody putting a lock on their knife drawer. Instead, the knives are almost always easily accessible to anyone, including kids. Yet somehow that is not a hugely dangerous safety issue that must be taken care of.

BizarroLand•5h ago
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23849364/

Results: An estimated 8,250,914 (95% confidence interval [CI] 7,149,074-9,352,755) knife-related injuries were treated in US EDs from 1990 to 2008, averaging 434,259 (95% CI 427,198-441,322) injuries annually, or 1190 per day. The injury rate was 1.56 injuries per 1000 US resident population per year. Fingers/thumbs (66%; 5,447,467 of 8,249,410) were injured most often, and lacerations (94%; 7,793,487 of 8,249,553) were the most common type of injury. Pocket/utility knives were associated with injury most often (47%; 1,169,960 of 2,481,994), followed by cooking/kitchen knives (36%; 900,812 of 2,481,994).

Children were more likely than adults to be injured while playing with a knife or during horseplay (p < 0.01; odds ratio 9.57; 95% CI 8.10-11.30).

One percent of patients were admitted to the hospital, and altercation-related stabbings to the trunk accounted for 52% of these admissions.

djoldman•4h ago
There's a lot to talk about here. I think this is pretty interesting:

> In reality, this wouldn’t happen, because, generally, people understand that stabbings are a cultural issue, rather than a technical one. The issue is less the existence of knives and more the factors that drive people to use them aggressively.

I think this may be true but also nearly impossible to address.