52 pointsby xavaki4 hours ago19 comments
  • budududuroiu4 hours ago
    So... de-facto mass deanonymisation of all Spanish social media users? I see a lot of supporters of these policies either not acknowledge that you can't identify under-16yo without identifying over-16yos.
    • lossyalgo4 hours ago
      Yeah this isn't the solution we need. We need to ban addictive dark patterns on ALL platforms for ALL ages.
    • arrrg4 hours ago
      Age verification is possible without revealing personally identifiable information (beyond old enough yes/no, which is not in any way personally identifiable info) and from my perspective should be a strict requirement with any such laws.

      In fact, if these laws make the requisite infrastructure (ID cards that offer that functionality) a hard requirement then creating an anonymous web that nevertheless has age checks easier, not harder.

      What you basically want is an ID card where you as the owner can decide what you want to share with the private business. And for age verification that’s basically just requirement fulfilled yes/no.

      So if the law is well written then this could be an advantage, not a disadvantage. Preemptive cynicism isn’t helpful here.

      • u_sama4 hours ago
        Given the track record of both the country and other EU attempts (despite the existence of a zero trust verification framework) I am quite sure this will be used to de-anonymize users online, see UK.
        • arrrg3 hours ago
          There it rears its ugly head again, the preemptive cynicism that prevents anything good from ever getting done.

          It’s simple really: zero trust age verification should be a strict requirement of any such law and anything else illegal for age verification.

          That to me is what has to happen and it’s important to me. That’s my perspective on this – not that‘s never going to happen anyway, so no point in trying to.

          • u_sama3 hours ago
            Its not preemptive, more like reactive, track record is bad and current PM is enshrouded in corruption, so do the maths.
            • toomuchtodoan hour ago
              Social media is toxic to kids (and adults, but that’s a different matter), extraordinary measures are called for, even with risks. It’s hyper optimized to be the equivalent of a drug, and should be regulated as such.
        • m0003 hours ago
          Please, enlighten us on the track record of Spain.

          Because I really can't recall anything outrageous, and surely nothing on the level of surveilance existing in the UK.

          • u_sama2 hours ago
            Hacienda is the most extractive Tax Agency in the world. They have lobbied for ever more intrusion into private lifes of citizens in order to extract more money. Thus they have included a "lifestyle auditing" that has access to many cross-databases, utilities, insurance, etc....

            If you set up a system of ID identification linked to your real ID and IP, Hacienda (and the police, and eventually private companies) will be able to backtrack.

            The current PM's rother, wife and half of his cabinet are involved in corruption scandals linked to COVID funds given to companies that bribed people. This is the government that will implement such efforts. Would you be able to trust them ?

      • budududuroiu3 hours ago
        It is not preemptive cynicism. My issue isn't with private corporations having access to my data, it's with my government having access to my social media profile.
        • arrrg2 hours ago
          How does that follow? I don’t see the connection.

          Zero trust age verification means both sides don’t have to learn anything about each other beyond old enough yes/no. Should mean that.

          I’m fine with age verification if it fulfills at least the same criteria that offline age verification does. When you show your ID card in a supermarket to buy alcohol or cigarettes or whatever then the government doesn’t learn anything about what you did and if the cashier doesn’t memorize and write down anything on the card the supermarket doesn’t learn anything about your identity. Here the digital solution can and should do better and close that theoretical deanonymization vector.

          But yeah, that‘s the ideal to aspire to.

          • mzajc39 minutes ago
            Will age verification require the use of software I can't view the source of and/or can't patch (due to remote attestation), and presumably only runs on user-hostile systems (Android with Google Services and iOS)?

            It's hardly zero-trust in that case.

      • freehorse3 hours ago
        It is definitely technically possible, and it has been for some time in many places. But I doubt anybody (sm companies, state) cares to implement it like that, instead of taking it as a chance to increase surveillance.
    • aacid4 hours ago
      You need ID to buy cigarettes and alcohol, prescription drugs or to get sim card... you will need it to register for social network account... do not seem as big of a deal to me. Even less when considering all the positives.
      • gorgolo3 hours ago
        When I show my ID at the cash register I assume the person working there doesn’t instantaneously memorize all my details and then write down when exactly I was at the shop, along with other details, to use this info later for their own reasons.

        Whereas if I upload my ID to a tech company (that potentially answers to both my own government and foreign governments, as well as having its own ad-related agenda) I am a bit less certain about what will happen to this data.

        • 3 hours ago
          undefined
        • 2 hours ago
          undefined
      • bondarchuk3 hours ago
        Needing ID to buy a sim card was a big deal, though. Didn't seem like it because it seemed like we still had the internet for anonymous communication. That will be gone soon by the looks of it. Frog status: boiled.
      • lossyalgo3 hours ago
        The problem is that they promise to delete IDs but then don't, and get hacked, and then all that personal information is published to the dark web for nefarious purposes. If you need evidence, it just happened again to 70,000 Discord users: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c8jmzd972leo
      • uyzstvqs3 hours ago
        Showing ID at a store doesn't de-facto make a copy. They don't associate my full ID to the purchase, at most a manually entered DoB.

        And if you're suggesting Digital ID (EUDI style); showing ID at the store doesn't share metadata of that purchase with the government.

      • fipar3 hours ago
        When traveling abroad, it always surprises me when I’m asked for my id when buying alcohol. That’s only a thing in my country when you’re in the age bracket in which it’s risky to tell your age just by your looks, but after that, I haven’t been asked for my id since at least I’m 20 or 21 (drinking age is 18 here).

        Prescription drugs are different because those are tied to your name anyway, and that’s why medical information has a different protection standard.

        As a parent of 2 I think it’s better to talk to your kids, check what they’re up to, and, you know, be involved in their lives. Also, as a former kid, if there’s something they want to do but you don’t want them to: they’ll do it. Better that they know they can trust you to say “I still want to do X” than have to do it in hiding and without your support if anything goes wrong.

      • donglong3 hours ago
        American here. it's a very big deal.
        • kubb3 hours ago
          Thank you for your wisdom, oracle of freedom.
          • donglong3 hours ago
            yes, have fun being run by pedos and the global elite while we expose them for you. let us know when you need help.
        • surgical_fire3 hours ago
          Then there's nothing for you here, you don't live in Spain.
      • tamimio3 hours ago
        I hope this is a satire post..
      • Markoff3 hours ago
        that's exactly my proposal with protecting children online - issue unique certificates for some symbolic price like 1EUR which will be sold over 18yo in shops exactly same as alcohol and cigarettes where nobody writes down your ID details, heck don't even have a look if you look old enough, that's as far as I am willing to go to protect kids (without this certificate) online, anything else is just internet deanonymization
    • chrisjj4 hours ago
      > So... de-facto mass deanonymisation of all Spanish social media users?

      So all Spanish social media users are currently anonymous? I do not think so.

      • Markoff3 hours ago
        de iure yes, prosecution would need to prove you was actually using the computer which posted whatever online
        • chrisjj2 hours ago
          > de iure

          De jure?

    • hn6663 hours ago
      While I'm in favour of limiting social media for kids, there doesn't seem to be a right way to do it unless this system doesn't store identification data, just confirms their age and deletes everything.
      • deeringc3 hours ago
        It's possible to build an identity system that can assert certain properties about a person (eg. "older than 16") without revealing any other details about that person. Similarly, it's also possible to build such a system where the identity system can attest these details without knowing which website is being accessed. That way, the social media site (or whatever other "adult" service) can validate the user is old enough, while the identity system doesnt track who is using what.
      • Markoff3 hours ago
        there is, identify users with anonymous code bought exactly same as cigarettes and alcohol in shops where they don't write down your data or don't even have look at your ID card if you look old enough

        any age identification done online is not anonymous

    • nehalem4 hours ago
      This is a straw-man argument. A public service that can answer whether a one-time key provided by the user to the service fulfills a certain requirement would suffice.
    • andrepd3 hours ago
      False dichotomy. Plenty of governments have a digitalised id/login service to log into the tax office, government portals, whatever. This is usually also offered as a "single sign-on". After signing on, the website can request any piece of information, the list of those pieces is presented to the user, who clicks Accept or Go Back. Pretty standard stuff.

      Meaning: these websites simply need to request 2 pieces of data: a boolean stating whether you are older than 16 or younger, and a UUID. Zero other pieces of identifying information. Where does the mass deanonymisation enter into this? What does it even mean in the context of using algorithmic social media whose entire business model is surveillance of its users?

      • budududuroiu3 hours ago
        > Where does the mass deanonymisation enter into this?

        How is it not deanonymisation when your tax ID is inextricably linked to your social media profile?

    • scotty793 hours ago
      There was a point in time where I though of social media as an invention that facilitates the freedom of speech.

      Recent years changed that perception completely. It's a platform where russian oligarchs create discord in Europe cheaply (and the West in general) and American oligarchs profit from it.

      I don't have any hopes left that the business will deliver us freedom of speech in any form. Next best bet is democratically elected government.

      When you put on top of this how some things like youth suicides, youth grneral mental health decline, number of people killed in school shootings in US correlates with development of social media I will happily see it burn.

  • tsoukase14 minutes ago
    In total social media has long surpassed drug addiction in bad effects in young people (mental, psychological and physical). Together with the economic situation they are the cause of the unfortunate state of youth today.

    Banning them is in the right direction even at the cost of any deanonym. A dozen entities, both public and private, know us very well already. They know that eveyone watches porn, now they will know how offen.

  • littlecranky674 hours ago
    Good, heavily in favor. Social media has just become media, the social aspect is mostly gone. Especially since all of them just try to shove down 30sec shorts/reels/tiktoks down your throat. I have not a single real-life friend or family member (except those, that are under 16 and use tiktok) that ever recorded a short.
  • pjc504 hours ago
    This is really globally coordinated, isn't it? I'm just not sure why now and not previously. Is it just that Twitter went over the toxicity threshold that everyone noticed?
    • vachina3 hours ago
      Kind of dangerous to let malleable young minds in the hands of another country’s “algorithm”.

      Ideologies are cultivated young.

    • m0003 hours ago
      Why now? Because in the past 2-3 years it has been made abundantly clear that:

      (a) Social media operators choose to do nothing at all against coordinated influencing operations, unless the influencing goes against the interests of very specific countries and groups.

      (b) US government most likely has unfettered access to social media data. As if this isn't bad enough, they will probably give them out to Palantir for "data integration" and under uncertain terms.

      • stinkbeetle3 hours ago
        Those things were pretty clear well before 2-3 years.

        Social media is seen as a driver for people having opinions deemed a threat to the status quo. Western governments have been fighting a long battle to use these tools to control domestic influence and at times have probably thought they were winning, but recently things seem to be turn a bit.

        "Think of the children" is obviously the oldest and most pathetic trick in their playbook. We know it's a bald faced lie because data and studies on social media harms on children has been coming out for well over a decade by now, and not a finger was lifted for years. So we know that is not the reason, and we know they are lying about the reason. Therefore we know the real reason is seen as unpopular with the electorate. And curbing foreign (including US government) influence and access to data is not unpopular anywhere.

    • lava_pidgeon4 hours ago
      why is it globally coordinated? Maybe just bunch of politicians find the idea appealing after Australia implemented it?
      • Ekaros3 hours ago
        Very cheap way to appear to be doing something about anything. Lot of talk, a few memos. All implementation burden on private sector. Aimed at group that can't currently vote. Only ones against it on principle care about implementation not actually the ban.

        And some of us think it doesn't go far enough. I would set limit to 18. Would solve lot more issues. Like make adult content fully allowable by default as everyone can automatically be considered to be an adult then.

    • Maken3 hours ago
      Maybe it's because now we are starting to realize the effects that social media exposure have on human brain, specially on teenagers. Legislation always lag behind.
    • account422 hours ago
      Definitely tickles all kinds of conspiracy theory senses.

      Of course it could just be law makers seeing one country do it and then going "wait, you can do that and people will go along with it???". I'm not sure if that's any better than a global conspiracy though.

    • Markoff3 hours ago
      Well COVID green pass didn't work out to save us all from deadly flu with 0.31% fatality rate[1][2], so now they are trying it to save our children with digital ID...

      [1] https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S187603412... [2] https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6...

    • Devasta3 hours ago
      > I'm just not sure why now and not previously.

      Shock at how many people believe Palestinians are human got the ball rolling, but now its prepping for the fallout of the release of more and more Epstein files.

  • rimbo7894 hours ago
    Great. About 10 years too late but better than nothing. Hope it becomes the global norm.

    Once that’s done we should ban the over the 65+.

    • energy1234 hours ago
      I want to see regulation of the algorithm. Something like forcing a chronological feed, or somehow nerfing the recommendation engine. Figure out a way to make it boring, bypass the whole censorship debate.
      • andy814 hours ago
        There are more options -

        Banning advertising targeted at the user rather than the context

        Enforcing Do Not Track

        Enforcing GDPR (especially sites that use cookie banners)

    • jacquesm4 hours ago
      Oh no! But yes, you are right, the elderly are very susceptible to really bad social media influence.

      Drawing that to its ultimate conclusion: people are very susceptible to being influenced and social media may well turn out to be a net negative.

    • lossyalgo3 hours ago
      Not great, because they promise to delete our IDs but don't, and get hacked (see Discord hack from a few months ago where 70k users had government IDs leaked).

      To reiterate what I wrote above: We need to ban addictive dark patterns on ALL platforms for ALL ages.

    • wronex4 hours ago
      I think the opposite is in order. Ban phones with screens for those over 18 (driving limit). Phones are a drug that people cannot seem to let go off. Even when driving. Kids don’t have cars. Perhaps a trade? A phone or a car?
    • dist-epoch4 hours ago
      Yeah. We need to introduce social-media literacy tests that certify that you are capable of being a good valuable citizen on social media instead of a disinformation sharer and slop consumer.
      • amelius4 hours ago
        Maybe we can also introduce an informedness test for voters while we're at it.
      • chrisjj4 hours ago
        > We need to introduce social-media literacy tests that certify that you are capable of being a good valuable citizen on social media instead of a propaganda sharer and slop consumer.

        ... and force it first on Zuckerberg, Musk ... and Trump.

    • Der_Einzige4 hours ago
      I'll accept it when we can ban bootlickers off of HN.
  • ZeroGravitas4 hours ago
    Seems easier to justify if social media owners are hanging out with child sex traffickers and enabling features that let you undress anyone who posts photos to the site.
    • yomismoaqui3 hours ago
      If we follow that logic maybe some of the politicians that have created/voted for this would have liked a visit to that infamous island.
      • ZeroGravitasan hour ago
        Could you expand on this as it makes no sense to me?
  • thegrim0003 hours ago
    Ooohhh I finally get it. It's another "protecting the children" guise when in actuality they want to introduce new mechanisms to control speech, classify what they don't like as "hate speech", fine/punish companies for hosting content they've decided is "hate speech", etc. How naive of me to think it was just about protecting the kids.
  • elashri3 hours ago
    I feel like people avoid the elephant in the room that social media companies became too influential and too big that going after them for addictive and dark patterns is not possible. Specially that most of them is in the US with current political situation it will not be possible anyway.

    So they are taking half measures that are more problematic on different aspect like privacy.

    Not to praise China, but it seems they seem to do doing better job against their big companies to prevent such situations (please don't pass the point here).

    I think things would be much better if these companies is to be held accountable for their actions beyond the current fines that they just consider it now cost of doing business.

  • yomismoaqui3 hours ago
    This sure will imply that over-16 users will have to also authenticate themselves using some kind of personal id (DNI, I guess?)

    As a non-user of social media (only have an anonymous Facebook account to check some hobby groups) this doesn't directly affect me but I'm starting to feel like a frog on a pot of what was tepid water and now it's starting to feel kinda hot.

    • 6274673 hours ago
      Of does affect you, it has always done. Not using social media has been a marker, placing some negative incentive on joining social media will help normalize people like you
  • rustyhancock2 hours ago
    Surely this should be for parents to decide? Even if the infra is in place for social media services to check IDs.

    It seems quite bizarre to ban it since the vast majority use it safely.

    Social media is the double edge sword I avoided MySpace, Facebook etc entirely. But I can understand people finding communities online they can't access in their location.

    Oh well. I'm sure those that want to will be able to bypass it, and I've also no doubt that social media at a population level is a net harm. Even if this feels like overreach.

    What seems truly harmful is the 12month old who is handed a tablet with YouTube running constantly depriving their brain of the big early exposure to the real world.

  • 3 hours ago
    undefined
  • vachina4 hours ago
    Funny how China is 20 years ahead of everyone.
  • gruberjl3 hours ago
    I haven't set up my kids on social media. They haven't asked either. I do worry that banning kids from doing something makes it all the more intriguing to them when they are then allowed... Or makes the kids that lie and get on anyway "cool"

    I do hope it works out, though. I think Social Media is one of the main reasons for depression.

  • sailorganymede3 hours ago
    A lot of teenagers complain they spend too much time on social media and this will put some friction that wasn’t present before. I assume this will put a dent in traffic for companies like SnapChat etc. so I wonder how those companies will react.
  • 3 hours ago
    undefined
  • surgical_fire3 hours ago
    They should just ban social media outright, regardless of age.
    • croon3 hours ago
      We just need a distinct definition first. Moderated forums were kind of great in general. Early social media with chronological feeds of your friends were useful too. The nebulous algorithms pulling people into reinforcing rabbit holes of trash or simply optimizing for "engagement" (outrage) is the primary issue IMHO.

      If we can only ban the bad stuff, great, but it's rarely that easy.

      • lossyalgo3 hours ago
        Exactly - ban addictive dark patterns in ALL software for ALL ages.
      • surgical_fire2 hours ago
        Fair enough.

        Typically what I call Social Media is akin to things such as Facebook, Twitter, etc.

        Anything that has a personalized "feed" generated by an algorithm.

        Old moderates forums had no personalized anything.

        Incidentally, as much as I despise Reddit, this would exclude Reddit from being banned. Last time I used it, it didn't really have a personalized feed (unless things changed ever since).

        I could subscribe to subreddits and see the activity on what I subscribed, but anyone with the same subscription list (fully controlled by the user) would see the same activity, so it was not a personalized feed per se.

    • Markoff3 hours ago
      that's great idea until you will try to define what is social media - HN, Reddit, youtube, various PHPBB forums? so pretty much ban any human interaction online other than 101?
      • surgical_fire2 hours ago
        Not that hard. Ban any social media that has a personalized algorithmically generated feed. Those things can be gamed for engagement and are poisonous both to the individual and to society.

        HN, Reddit, PHPBB forums would be excluded. There's no personalization outside the user control on those as far as I am aware.

        Last time I used Reddit, I could aee the activity on the boards I was subscribed to, but anyone with the same subscriptions would see the same activity. There's o dark pattern there.

        And just to be clear, I absolutely despise Reddit. I don't even like HN all that much to be frank. I would be the last person that would try to protect Reddit. I am just being coherent with my thoughts on the matter.

  • andrewstuart4 hours ago
    Governments everywhere are following suit.
    • pandemic_region4 hours ago
      Has there ever been a society that cares less about its future than the current?
    • wesleywt4 hours ago
      In this case, saving the children from the toxic misinformation firehose that is social media might save our democracies.
      • account422 hours ago
        A yes, we most protect others from being exposed to information that might make them vote differently from what we want. After all, democracy is all about getting the votes we want, right?
      • u_sama3 hours ago
        The cynical in me doesnt see that as the main problem, lack of diversity in thought and debate is already an issue, censorship laws about what subjects and what opinions are correct is an issue that will be exacerbated. To save the democracies you need, a better population who votes in competently and informed, as well as a public debate that is honest and doesnt decry any deviation from the standard as fascism. Far-right populism only exists in coutries where debate is not honest and pragmatic enough, and avoided in countries like Denmark because population and government are in a tight loop where each feels heard by the other.
        • account422 hours ago
          You can only have a democracy when the vote actually matters. In a representative democracy where representatives are not held accountable to their campaign promises that can hardly be said to be the case.
  • tamimio3 hours ago
    I hate social media and never used it, and I am in favor to ban it entirely, however, we all know this is not about “protecting the children!!!”, but the old school government’s way for more monitor and control.
  • circuit104 hours ago
    I worry that these measures (if they actually work, which is unlikely) will isolate people who struggle with real-life interactions. I remember reading somewhere that autistic people tend to find community in online spaces, and it seems like a lot of people gain their tech skills that way, including me. So indiscriminately banning young people from these spaces will prevent them from finding community and people like them
    • lnsru4 hours ago
      What real life interactions? With scammers, bots or troll farms? Facebook from first years is long gone. I am pretty sure that autistic people as easy target should be kept away from internet for their own good. There is nothing good to find there.
      • circuit104 hours ago
        Personally I joined Discord servers for open source projects and this is how I got my start using GitHub, learning how code review worked and the process for communicating with other devs etc. I feel like I may not be in a software development career if these laws had existed when I was growing up

        Autism is a wide-ranging spectrum, I find the idea that I should be “kept away from the Internet” because I have (high-functioning) autism quite patronising. Maybe this is true for some people, but my point is that these social media ban ideas are too indiscriminate

        I would agree that addictive platforms are harmful for children, and I haven’t looked into this law so maybe it does make a distinction, but any online communication (e.g. GitHub) is sometimes considered “social media”. A lot of people seem to exclude the platforms they like from what they count as “social media”, as they see social media as the evil thing they look down upon

    • maxehmookau4 hours ago
      I guess it depends on which spaces they're banned from. Before Facebook, online communities were bulletin boards and chat rooms. They weren't hyper-addictive social media platforms designed to suck as much attention as possible; they were genuine places of connection.

      My hope is that children being banned from the mega platforms would lead to a growth in less harmful online communities for folks who can benefit from it. But I don't know.

      • circuit103 hours ago
        Unless an exception is made these types of laws only make things much harder for small communities, since they can’t afford to implement the required measures and take on the legal liability. The result will be that everyone moves to larger platforms that are able to do these things