frontpage.
newsnewestaskshowjobs

Made with ♥ by @iamnishanth

Open Source @Github

fp.

Looking for advice on reaching low-tech B2B users (craftsmen)

https://news.ycombinator.com/ask
1•FelixLepi•39s ago•1 comments

AI chatbot fraud: the 'gift card' subcription that may cost you dear

https://www.theguardian.com/money/2026/may/03/ai-claude-chatbot-gift-card-subcription-scam-myster...
1•Brajeshwar•43s ago•0 comments

Lines or Less: Test Case Minimization

https://matklad.github.io/2026/04/20/test-case-minimization.html
1•swq115•3m ago•0 comments

Looking for advice on reaching low-tech B2B users (craftsmen)

1•FelixLepi•4m ago•0 comments

Show HN: A 4-year-old "TurboQuant" implementation

https://github.com/amitport/EDEN-Distributed-Mean-Estimation
1•amitport•4m ago•0 comments

Hindu Perspectives on Free Will

https://worthypatterns.substack.com/p/the-soul-of-the-world
1•A-K•5m ago•0 comments

For thirty years I programmed with Phish on, every day

https://christophermeiklejohn.com/ai/personal/phish/flow/agents/2026/05/03/rift.html
2•azhenley•7m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Is it possible to get hired as an African software engineer

2•vixalien•8m ago•0 comments

Year old Nepali and unemployed, any advice for me?

1•shivajikobardan•9m ago•0 comments

Real inbox deserves better Temp emails with full API access and webhooks

https://openinbox.io/
1•devnplay•10m ago•0 comments

Finding Structurally Duplicate Go Functions with AST Hashing

https://medium.com/@mailbox.sq7/finding-structurally-duplicate-go-functions-with-ast-hashing-529e...
1•alzhi7•10m ago•1 comments

Sam Altman talks with Mark Zuckerberg about how to build the future [video]

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lb4IcGF5iTQ
1•chistev•10m ago•1 comments

Testing macOS on the Apple Network Server 2.0 ROMs

http://oldvcr.blogspot.com/2026/05/testing-macos-on-apple-network-server.html
1•zdw•13m ago•0 comments

Salad Oil Scandal

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salad_oil_scandal
2•azeemba•14m ago•0 comments

The Sour Cat Jailbreak: just be open of what you want

https://claude.ai/share/71cd0982-fa52-4b65-844d-68560cc43b36
1•pshirshov•14m ago•1 comments

Recreating the Smells of History

https://knowablemagazine.org/content/article/society/2026/recreating-the-smells-of-the-past
1•bookofjoe•15m ago•0 comments

Do you think AI Agents need an identity?

1•DannyHeng•16m ago•1 comments

SmartTune CLI – APM/BF/PX4 Log Analysis for AI Agents

https://github.com/raylanlin/smarttune-cli
1•RaylanLIN•21m ago•0 comments

Running OpenClaw on Amazon EC2 with Claude and Telegram

https://blog.harun.dev/running-openclaw-on-amazon-ec2-with-claude-and-telegram
2•mooreds•23m ago•0 comments

They Built a Legendary Privacy Tool. Now They're Sworn Enemies

https://www.wired.com/story/they-built-privacy-tool-grapheneos-now-sworn-enemies/
2•zdw•23m ago•0 comments

What Will Be Scarce?

https://aleximas.substack.com/p/what-will-be-scarce
1•mooreds•23m ago•0 comments

Why this tribe is buying up acres of farmland – and flooding it

https://text.npr.org/nx-s1-5806062
1•mooreds•23m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Kubesplaining CLI that maps RBAC privilege-escalation paths in K8s

https://github.com/0hardik1/Kubesplaining
1•0hardik1•24m ago•0 comments

Israel Said It's Applying the Gaza Model in Lebanon

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2026/05/03/world/middleeast/israel-lebanon-hezbollah-gaza-des...
20•duxup•25m ago•1 comments

Summer Is Coming: GoT lessons about the cooling and heat crisis

https://theoryofchange1.substack.com/p/summer-is-coming-what-game-of-thrones
2•ewidar•26m ago•0 comments

Troubled Boyhoods

https://theheartsforge.substack.com/p/nestors-revenge-a-balancing-of-accounts
2•dentedarmour•26m ago•1 comments

Show HN: Oberon System 3 on Raspi Zero 2 (with ready SD card)

https://github.com/rochus-keller/OberonSystem3Native/releases/tag/2026-04-28
2•Rochus•27m ago•0 comments

Timeline of Computer History

https://www.computerhistory.org/timeline/computers/
2•matthewolfe•27m ago•1 comments

Tape16: A modern tape machine DAW

https://emrmusicgroup.com/tape16/
2•brudgers•27m ago•1 comments

Unified macOS service console for launchd and Homebrew

https://github.com/sderosiaux/launchdeck
2•chtefi•29m ago•1 comments
Open in hackernews

Utah to hold websites liable for users who mask their location with VPNs

https://www.tomshardware.com/software/vpn/utah-becomes-first-us-state-to-target-vpn-use-with-age-verification-law
128•GavinAnderegg•1h ago

Comments

OutOfHere•1h ago
People need to do their best to stop paying so much in taxes to their state governments, failing which the governments get increasingly authoritarian. The state governments clearly have run out of real problems to solve, and when they do, they then attack basic freedoms. Keeping them strongly tax-constrained keeps them lean. As it stands, these governments are representing special interests, not the people. It doesn't matter how many places or where this is happening; the logic is the same. What happens is that the tax money is a prerequisite for strong enforcement. Without an excess in tax money, there isn't going to be substantial enforcement. I am not asking anyone to break tax law; only to aggressively hunt for exceptions to your advantage.

Outside of a W-2 salary for which taxes are pre-deducted, there are many ways, more applicable to businesses, also to independent contractors. Even for those with a salary, they ought to do their best to collect all the legally qualified benefits that they can. Lots of independent contractors get paid as W-2 when they could be getting paid as a corp, for which they could write off a portion of the taxes via deductibles and in various other ways. Lots of people could be ordering online at websites that don't deduct a sales tax. Using a Delaware corp for various transactions can also go a long way. Living in a geography where the property taxes are not absurdly high or rising also matters.

nephihaha•1h ago
This is happening worldwide.
abustamam•1h ago
You're saying that like we have a choice. If we don't pay taxes we get jailed. Simple as that.
kordlessagain•1h ago
Stop paying so much is not the same as not paying. Why are you making it otherwise?
abustamam•1h ago
Oh OK, thanks for clarifying that I can pay less than I owe and be scot free.
iamnothere•11m ago
Make less, pay less.

If you’ve had a successful career already, you may be able to “drop out” and find a place to live cheaply. I’ve heard good things about Panama.

OutOfHere•1h ago
Outside of a W-2 salary, there are ways, more applicable to businesses, also to independent contractors. Even for those with a salary, they ought to do their best to collect all the legally qualified benefits that they can.

Lots of independent contractors get paid as W-2 when they could be getting paid as a corp, for which they could write off a portion of the taxes via deductibles and in various other ways.

Lots of people could be ordering online at websites that don't deduct a sales tax. Instead, they pay a substantial amount in sales tax.

Using a Delaware corp for various transactions can also go a long way.

abustamam•1h ago
I don't think anyone voluntarily pays more taxes than they ought to. People DO collect all their legally qualified benefits. It's why software like turbo tax is still around despite being a shitty company.
functionmouse•1h ago
so it's okay because we're just following orders?
abustamam•1h ago
Sure if you wanna put it that way. I don't like paying taxes because our government doesn't use it well. But I also know that if I don't pay taxes I'm gonna have a bad time.
dandellion•1h ago
Only if you're poor, the rich don't pay taxes just fine.
abustamam•1h ago
Incidentally these rules probably don't apply or won't be enforced on the rich because of some loophole.
j0yb0y•1h ago
Representing special interests != too much tax money. Orthogonal. It’s a mind boggling leap.
OutOfHere•1h ago
The tax money is a prerequisite for strong enforcement. Without an excess in tax money, there isn't going to be substantial enforcement. Think ahead.
ambicapter•46m ago
Here's another prerequisite, even farther back than "strong enforcement"--not voting in governments with authoritarian tendencies.
iamnothere•15m ago
Unfortunately it’s been impossible to avoid Red or Blue flavored authoritarianism for the last few decades due to authoritarian control over both the political process and the entrenched bureaucracy.
wat10000•1h ago
How exactly am I supposed to do that?
dntrkv•32m ago
Yes because the countries with lower taxes are so free and democratic. Pretty sure the relationship is inverse if you take even 5 min of your time to look.
iLoveOncall•1h ago
Here's the website of Utah's governor if you want to access it via a VPN: https://www.votecox.com/
abustamam•1h ago
https://www.votecox.com/fighting-federal-overreach

> Fighting Federal Overreach

"The US govt can't overreach! That's my job!"

Lucasoato•34m ago
No GDPR banner, even if visiting the website from EU
nephihaha•1h ago
What a coincidence that Utah is following the same pattern as Australia, the European Union, Norway and the UK, while pretending they came up with it independently.
bryan_w•1h ago
I wonder who's in common there?
nephihaha•1h ago
They obviously get the ideas from the same sources. Somewhere they don't invite ordinary people to like Davos or other conferences.
wat10000•1h ago
Could just be monkey see monkey do.
croes•47m ago
You don’t need a formal conspiracy when interests converge.
gib444•58m ago
Utah is actually trailblazing ahead of the UK here. It was only ministers possibly suggesting VPNs would be next in the firing line and AFAIK nothing has progressed beyond that yet

Yet articles about UK age verification stuff got HUGE amount of attention and backlash here...

functionmouse•1h ago
only the beginning
Nifty3929•1h ago
VPNs are on their way toward being banned and/or heavily regulated. I imagine what will happen is a requirement for VPN providers to "know your customer" just as banks do, and for them to be able to tie a particular traffic stream back to a specific human.
mrbluecoat•1h ago
How will they ban self-hosted VPNs? https://mrbluecoat.blogspot.com/2025/08/self-hosted-vpn-opti...
wilkystyle•55m ago
"Utah to hold Cloud providers liable for failing to police self-hosted VPNs on their infrastructure"
kiba•49m ago
Seems like they will do that too.
thfuran•46m ago
Ban them, demand GitHub et al take down the illegal repos, hit up Microsoft for records of everyone who ever downloaded them, hosting providers for customer records, and ISPs for lists of customers with VPN-shaped traffic between themselves and their hosting provider. Or if they’re lazy, just demand that the hosting providers sort it out.
bethekidyouwant•21m ago
What are you talking about what? What illegal repo? SSH? Socks? That doesn’t make any sense dude
lokar•39m ago
The question is not how will they ban it, they just pass a law.

The question is how and when will they enforce it. When they get access to your devices for some other reason, they will see it. It will give them another easy to prosecute law to use against you.

nunez•22m ago
Easily.

Host them on the cloud providers? You get banned.

Host them in your homelab and the ISP finds out? You get your Internet cut.

How will either of them find out? IP addresses and/or DPI.

All it'll take is an executive order or an act of Congress.

eu•1h ago
is this even doable/enforceble?
kstrauser•1h ago
Not even remotely.
functionmouse•1h ago
no, they're inventing make-believe crimes they can accuse anyone they don't like of
dgrin91•1h ago
Sure, it would force sites to block traffic from vpns.

The fun part is when you post videos of yourself using a vpn to go to gov website or the candidate website and watch them do nothing

sammy2255•1h ago
That's called complying, not enforcing
lcnPylGDnU4H9OF•59m ago
Well, how is a law against murder enforced when someone doesn't comply with it?
righthand•1h ago
> It also prohibits covered websites from sharing instructions on how to use a VPN to bypass age checks.

This country is led by idiots that do not enjoy or like freedom.

abustamam•1h ago
Correction — rules for thee, freedom for me.

The people who lead our country love their own freedoms, as long as it allows them to infringe on everyone else's freedoms.

jitler•45m ago
> This country is led idiots that do not enjoy or like freedom.

This country is populated by idiots that do not enjoy or like freedom. These people didn’t just seize power in a coup.

ndsipa_pomu•21m ago
Maybe a failed coup that ended up not being punished.
kstrauser•1h ago
This is the stupidest idea I’ve heard recently. Way to go, Utah.

My home router has a built in VPN server. When I’m out running around, my iPhone can route traffic through my house. Pray tell, o sage Utah legislature chucklefucks, how is anyone expected to tell that I’m accessing a website from a hotel in Berlin instead of my house in California? (Which is why we used it last time: I configured my travel router to use that same VPN so we could watch American Netflix at night before bedtime when we just wanted something familiar to relax with.)

Honestly, this is the new “pi equals 3” legislation. “Let’s make laws codifying technical ideas we clearly have no freaking clue about”.

Again, way to go, Utah.

jeroenhd•1h ago
> how is anyone expected to tell that I’m accessing a website from a hotel in Berlin instead of my house in California

Remote attestation in combination with location access as a start. DPI on TCP/UDP timinings/round trip time measurements for distant locations, combined DNS leak detection to catch bad VPNs. Use browser APIs to detect WiFi vs mobile data to let some 2G users through. IPv6 accessibility checks to catch many other VPNs.

There are always technical means, as the more restrictive streaming services like to prove. There are many, many more ways websites can verify that users are not on a VPN that most websites don't bother with, and until they all do and people still use VPNs, legislators will find ways to punish websites.

The real end goal isn't to block content these people dislike within their state, of course. The goal is to go after the existence of adult websites and, in worryingly more common cases, websites discussing basic LGBTQ topics.

kstrauser•41m ago
No. That’s how someone with pervasive access to Internet infrastructure could tell when I’m on a VPN. It’s impossible for a given website to tell that I’m accessing it over a VPN. Not difficult: impossible. It cannot be done.
lstodd•34m ago
Technical measures while technically existing failed first in China and then in Russia lately, Russian authorities recently all but admitted that they can not block xray+reality-style VPNs (which were and are developed in China to go over their "great firewall") and now talk about a blanket ban on foreign traffic and basically a whitelist for internet.

The goal is always a perception of control of public narrative. Those people deeply care what "masses" think of them. That they measure mostly by sampling more or less public media (and I actually worked at a company in 2010s which was selling exactly that). And when they don't like what they see, they try to fix that by controlling that media, up to and including banning the whole world.

That is what is happening with all this protecting the children stuff.

mvdwoord•1h ago
I am completely baffled by this wave of new laws and proposals... they feel dystopic and can seemingly only lead to brutal restrictions on the internet. What will we end up with? Only attested modems / endpoints in the home? With DPI? And a government issued smartcard to use it? It comes across as if this is what some legislators are actually after... they must have some technical advisors who can explain to them that the solutions they propose will not work and I am a bit worried they will morph the public discussion into enforcing at a lower level otherwise "the bad guys still circumvent"??
shaftoe•1h ago
I'm confused where all of this censorship is originating from. What wave of efforts is culminating? I can't really explain this from any movement I can see.
OccamsMirror•1h ago
It's all coming from Meta: https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/reddit-user-uncovers-beh...

Big tech wants regulatory capture.

mannanj•57m ago
And Meta is captured by spy agencies. Don't be tricked at any point into thinking this is just a tech thing. And, spy agencies, who captured them?
2ndorderthought•54m ago
I wouldn't say captured. Zuckerberg has been cutting deals with the new administration so often people were seeing him at the Pentagon. It's a partnership
mannanj•38m ago
It goes way before that, it isn't recent.
iamnothere•19m ago
In-Q-Tel
uncircle•56m ago
I keep reading this but I don't understand how a company might want to push censorship on users. What is the economic benefit of censorship? Does Meta's bottom line increase if there is no illegal content and every user is age verified on the site? Would Meta care if you use a VPN?

The ones that stand to benefit the most are the governments themselves and their surveillance network.

tylerchilds•52m ago
Rug pull Ladder pull

It’s just that

“Move fast, break things, regulate impossible to repair.”

luisfmh•52m ago
I've read a take somewhere that seemed to make sense. They don't want to get stuck with the liabilities of the content that gets posted on their platforms. So by forcing the age verification onto the users, forcing users to identify and track themselves, they can have a "clean" route to someone who posts illicit content on their platforms.

It just sucks that that's all in sacrifice of our privacy.

washadjeffmad•50m ago
Not that many years ago, Facebook tried to broker a deal to provide free internet to India if all of their web traffic and communications would happen within the Facebook ecosystem.

It's long been the dream of more than a few American companies to be the gatekeepers of the web.

cj•45m ago
IIRC the model was closer to a freemium model where you would get free internet to approved websites (including Facebook) with the ability to access the entire internet for an extra fee.

Facebook and approved sites wouldn’t count towards your mobile bandwidth quota, but the rest of the internet does and requires a data plan.

Which raised net neutrality concerns.

soared•49m ago
Barriers to entry. If I want to make a small forum, these laws make that potentially much more difficult. Now users who may have used my forum may spend more time on facebook instead.

Multiply that times tens of thousands of new sites not being created, tens of thousands of existing sites no longer existing or being accessible due to new laws, this occurring over multiple surfaces (content moderation, age verification, etc) and the positive impact for meta is meaningful.

If there are less sites, meta wins.

teratron27•48m ago
The idea from the case in the link is that their competitors would be more regulated then them but in general, if regulation is a requirement and they’ve already implemented the regulation then it’s hard for a competitor to emerge.
xkcd1963•40m ago
They realized all the data on user behaviour is useless after trying to leverage on it with LLMs and now they go after seemingly new riches
bilbo0s•35m ago
I keep reading this but I don't understand how a company might want to push censorship on users.

We're being astroturf-ed guy.

The comment you're responding to. The comments responding to you. All shaped by influence campaigns from the beginning.

Meta, X, google, data based big tech, the billionaires, and the government were in on the plan from the start. We were always the ones kept in the dark as to the ultimate intent. Even the anti-censorship and anti-surveillance posts and content that we saw, were being paid for by the same puppet masters. Professional influence campaigns controlled by these same groups shaped the internet discussion of both sides.

And it seems a lot of us still haven't figured that out yet.

We got played. We'll continue to be played if we don't recognize that fact and act to prevent it in the future.

Because I can assure you, censorship and surveillance is not the endgame. And their endgame is very likely not to our benefit.

kelseyfrog•26m ago
Can you describe in detail the end game and how you came to know it?
yojo•23m ago
Meta’s bottom line is driven entirely by their ability to uniquely and persistently identify users for the sake of advertising.

Anything that makes it harder for a user to escape their dragnet is a win.

progval•42m ago
There is no evidence it is actually coming from Meta. The Reddit researcher the article cites generated their entire "analysis" in three days using Claude: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47659552

Their website also added this page since I posted that comment: https://web.archive.org/web/20260411112604/https://tboteproj... where they claim their website is under "surveillance" because it got a few thousand requests from Google Cloud et al, most of them to a single page. This shows how low their standards are.

JumpCrisscross•12m ago
> There is no evidence it is actually coming from Meta

My personal view that social media should be age gated is caused by Meta. But broadly, polling shows a commanding majority (60+ percent) of Americans believe in restrictions for under 14s.

2ndorderthought•59m ago
It looks like a coordinated effort from multiple defense companies like meta, and I believe openai, and I think palantir.
tailscaler2026•51m ago
Yep. I brought this up yesterday on the Roblox thread but HN has been ingesting the propaganda for too long to understand their beliefs about Roblox are misled.

Time to adjust your priors y'all. This is a concentrated effort toward surveillance, controlling who we talk to, and what information we're fed.

mvdwoord•58m ago
Maybe the desire is always there, but somehow the momentum is just in an upswing now?
2ndorderthought•53m ago
They finally have the tools to mass read everything aka LLMs. Does that make sense?
Guestmodinfo•53m ago
My guess is bots. Govts and law makers are afraid of the barrage of bots DDOSing them so they are slowly and surely tightening the noose around the internet. I'm all for net neutrality and anonymity on the internet and I don't like the age laws one bit, but I too am afraid of the bots scorching the internet. I still hate these growing dystopian laws but I also want the bots to be driven away from the "human internet" .
verdverm•47m ago
Heritage Foundation, Meta, and generally the Oligarchy
bilbo0s•43m ago
It's the inevitable culmination of their plan.

Pretend to be anti-censorship. Get voted in. Fast track all of the censorship and surveillance through congress.

When I saw certain billionaires talking up anti-censorship and anti-surveillance a few years ago, I knew we would be screwed. (I knew the same billionaires had large positions in censorship and surveillance tech.) No one ever talks against their own book unless they're planning on screwing you.

deknos•1h ago
> What will we end up with? Only attested modems / endpoints in the home?

you might laugh/cry, but there was a time in germany, when the telephone at home was owned by the state (the "Post") and you were NOT allowed to tinker with it.

personally, i guess, things like sneakernet, lorawan and hamradio will become a lot more popular over time.

butvacuum•1h ago
Same for the US- until the feds broke up Bell between 1974 and 82. but, there were no technical hurdles. Anybody have a toy whistle?
rationalist•54m ago
My understanding is that the phone company owned the phone, not the state.
mvdwoord•52m ago
If there is only 1 telephone company, either owned by the state, directly or indirectly, or even just a monopoly... what is the difference?
NewJazz•50m ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third-party_doctrine
estebank•50m ago
In many countries the state owned the phone company.
mvdwoord•59m ago
Same in NL... we used to rent our telephones from the "PTT".
mr-wendel•23m ago
My pet theory is that network protocols will evolve to require some kind of certificate-based signing to uniquely identify individuals and groups. Hardware and operating systems will have legal mandates to enforce this. Penalties for carrying unsigned traffic will be stiff.

The “upsides” will be plentiful! User verification schemes will be streamlined like never before. If you think there are downsides… well, just think of the kids, damn it!

throw848tjfj•1h ago
We will end with correct and desired behaviour. If you misbehave, you get internet ban, and lose your livelihood. Driving licences, passports, electricity, banking... etc already work this way.

Technical details are irrelevant.

You should not be able to criticise current or previous government!

peddling-brink•35m ago
What previous government? We have always been at war with Eurasia.
throw848tjfj•22m ago
Who today even declares wars? We can be best allies, while you blow up our pipelines!
dgellow•1h ago
> they must have some technical advisors who can explain to them that the solutions they propose will not work

I would expect they mostly listen to special interests advocating for those laws. They don’t come from nowhere

2ndorderthought•59m ago
Utah hosts I think the biggest nsa data center.

Honestly, I would like my ISP to block all traffic to and from Utah if this law passes. I can't think of anything I want or need that involves that state.

mvdwoord•54m ago
Without it being good or bad (long term, second order effects), I do think all of these (proposed) laws and where we are heading will balkanize the internet. Alternative tech may sound appealing to the tinkerers, and they may keep certain important channels alive (think radio amateurs... they know this game) but for the masses? I already happily block entire countries or regions to my VPS as there is zero benefit for me to not drop them at the FW level.
Bender•37m ago
Unfortunately it does not work that way unless perhaps I am misunderstanding your comment. The traffic monitored by the NSA will pass through their collection points in each state and will be silently mirrored to them regardless of the routing of your ISP. Even if your specific ISP does not mirror data the traffic will very likely pass through ISP's that do.
mannanj•58m ago
Remember the conspiracy theorists talking about this for decades? I do. This is the goal of a bourgeois class of people who want to save their livelihoods and status in the world though don't want any circumstances they can't control - legislators are out of touch with the majority of people as they are funded by any really serve those bourgeois.
gilrain•38m ago
The country is descending into fascism. If you’ve previous endulged in the politics of “I don’t care about politics”, it’s time to stop and look around you.
pyaamb•36m ago
when can we hold lawmakers personally responsible for any consequences resulting from passing bad laws?
bluecheese452•19m ago
You can.
toss1•30m ago
>>they must have some technical advisors who can explain to them that the solutions they propose will not work

You are assuming good faith on the part of those legislators.

That is an error.

There is no good faith to be had and they could not care less about physical restrictions, incompatibilities, or impossibilities.

Their goal is to maximize their power and minimize or eliminate people's power, regardless of whether it is legitimate or desired by the people they claim to represent.

You would be more productive summoning the ghost of Richard Feynman to explain quantum physics to a dung beetle than to have a network expert attempt to enlighten those pseudo-legislators.

morkalork•30m ago
We will end up with what China, Russia and Iran have. The American right has come to grips with the fact that their ideas and beliefs will not will not win on merit alone so they're moving to restrict and eliminate alternatives.
gnerd00•23m ago
LOL - its just "the right" eh?
xbar•9m ago
Who is supporting this law?
Spooky23•19m ago
The people making these decisions are religious fanatics. They don’t care.

This is one of the reasons why the purge of the federal government and military has happened. Surveillance state stuff was pretty scary from day 1… doubly so now that the leadership is all toadies who will remain embedded for decades.

JumpCrisscross•13m ago
> they must have some technical advisors

I dare you to get half a dozen people with a technical background to call their electeds and explain why these rules are stupid. (And, if they insist on implementing age gates, as seems to be popular, the least worst ways to do it.)

pbasista•44m ago
What is the motivation for such a measure? In other words, which problem is it trying to solve? And how it is supposed to do so?

I think that we should not carelessly invent laws that just "sound good" to some lawmakers but have no real fact checking done to support them and are not backed by science.

Because, in my opinion, then there is a high risk that these "good intentions" will backfire spectacularly. While not getting even close to achieve the desired effect.

FrustratedMonky•35m ago
Doesn't this seem impossible?

So if I have jo-blow web site.

And a user uses a VPN, how am I supposed to do anything about it. And why should i?

bradley13•31m ago
This is happening simultaneously in many Western countries. It is clearly somehow coordinated. You don't need a tinfoil hat to see the conspiracy.

Equally clearly, this is a first step to requiring identity, and ultimately government approval for your activities in the internet.

Somehow, we really must reign in the political class, before we truly land in a dystopia.

markus_zhang•23m ago
I guess this is just to accelerate the preparation for a total war.
JumpCrisscross•11m ago
> It is clearly somehow coordinated

Well, yes—parents’ groups are coordinating. Similar to how drunk driving and cigarette rules were passed globally in about a generation. You don’t need reptiles when polling is so strongly against kids on social media.

tekawade•25m ago
I understand the need for age verification. And better way to do this is have all device way to communicate the age set by parents to websites.

This is just one of the way. “The Anxious Generation”- Jonathan Haidt put it across. Rey well. It’s import at this day and age to check age online.

Banning VPN is not the way.

Even ChargePoint app does not work with vpn on I am baffled.

nunez•24m ago
So they're asking ISPs to build the Great Mormon Firewall, basically. Cool, cool cool, cool, cool.

I'm more scared that there is a push to do this federally, as that will, effectively, be tantamount to establishing explicitly state-controlled media.