The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child clearly expresses that minors have rights to freedom of expression and access to information online, as well as the right to privacy.
These rights would be steamrolled by age verification requirements.
Is there realistically any way to stop 1984 from becoming fully realized or is it already too far along into the landslide for humanity to save itself?
If it is about protecting children, just create age based VPNs and whitelist the services with appropriate content.
This must be used above all to track the activity of every adult among all popular services. Having to proof adultness cannot be done without creating a link between the identify of the adult and the account at the service.
In theory, it’s possible, if the age verification authority keeps the link secret. But that’s impossible to uphold.
What are the elites planning to do that requires this huge amount of surveillance? The article says that they need it already in the second quarter of 2025. We will find out soon.
Having to proof adultness cannot be done without creating a link between the identify of the adult and the account at the service.
It can be done.
Do you really have no other complaints?
How can it be done?
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You connect to an age-gated site.
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Your browser receives an age verification request that does not contain information about the site.
It would contain the time, a random number, and the query: Is user over 18/16/14/whatever?
- Your browser sends the request to a government-licensed service.
You identify yourself to that service in some way. The service could also be a program on your own device that uses a chip on your ID-card. If the service confirms the age, it digitally signs the request.
- Your browser returns the signed request to the age-gated site.
The site checks if the signature is valid and done. There’s never any connection between the age verification service and the site. If the request is more than a few seconds old, then it will be rejected to prevent sharing.
Of course, this assumes that sites will cooperate and implement such schemes at their own expense. Obviously(?) that will only be done by the larger sites, so it will be quite pointless. I don’t know why that is not a consideration. Understanding that doesn’t actually require any deep technical knowledge. But that’s typical for EU tech regulation.
How do you prevent people from selling access to children by calling the age verification service for them?
Btw,
Do you really have no other complaints?
Which other complaints could I have?
How do you prevent people from selling access to children by calling the age verification service for them?
The high volume of requests would be detected pretty quickly. The verification service would not know what sites you visit, but it would know that you are making requests.
To succeed, that would need a fairly large number of stolen or fake identities. There’s really no point when you can just sell adult products, including pirated media, directly.
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Am I age verified if the first thing that popped into my mind upon seeing that logo was “GameCube!”
no, the GameCube intro is iconic and the government overreach is chronic
No, these rights work perfectly well with age verification systems in general. It’s the planned implementation that is bullshit. And that’s not a coincidence but intentional to -again- sell us surveilance through the back door.
(For reference: No one but the EU and member’s governments are more qualified to produce an actual, working age verification system in the form of “Yes, that person has the required age. No, you don’t need to know any other personal information because we already checked and certified it”. Because they already have the data base neccessary. But you can’t outsource such a system to private companies that actually want to get paid mainly in aquired data…)
The point of an age verification system is to make sure that certain classes of people cannot access certain categories of information.
Is there really no problem there?
There is no way to remotely verify someone’s age across the Internet without violating their privacy. If there was, there would be no way to use it that doesn’t violate their other rights.
It security engineer here: zero knowledge proofs are exactly that. Proof your age isg higher than X, but not even how much higher. They can’t even profile you based on that information as they can’t recognize you across visits.
Some government identity cards already support that. For everybody else there are companies that offer that service.
BTW I’m against age verification. We had access to porn at a certain age, I want my children to be able to look when that gets interesting to them. But then again I’m pretty progressive and open with sexuality in general and I take time out of my day to actually talk to my kids about dangers on the internet.
If I search for zero-knowledge proofs relating to age verification the only thing I see is the hash chain method “based on a 2013 paper by Angel & Walfish” which is clever enough but does not in itself solve the problem of proving age while maintaining one’s privacy. It allows Alice to demonstrate to a verifier that she is over the age of 65 while revealing nothing else other than her name or some other identifying piece of information. Avoiding the reveal of any such information is what we would want to avoid.
Is there some better way to do it?
What do you mean by violating privacy?
If you have a passport, citizenship, or birth certificate your age is already documented.
yes, however the government should NEVER have access to what social messaging apps ANYONE uses without a warrant.
Isn’t that a matter of implementation whether they even receive this information or not during validation?
the fact that they received a validation request is informative that they probably shouldn’t be able to access, however regardless of implementation, assuming causality and the speed of light remain, this will be information the government will recieve. Some entity (probably the government) would* also need to know who to send the response to, technically they could just broadcast this over some low frequency transmission broadcast to everyone, but realistically the government would need some kind of address (IP, fax number, po box, etc.).
Technically this is an implementation detail, however the only ways to implement this type of thing that wouldn’t be comprimizing would involve citizen prompted government broadcasts and trust that the government won’t have records of who requested the broadcast and what number was sent (which would make it trivial for adults to just sell the age identifier) and would still worsen the average citizen’s security because it still takes effort to generate a unique identifier for every site.
Your government… you know… the people that already have all your data and issue your passport… cannot include a flag (properly cryptographically signed by them) that tells a service “Yes, the guy that just inserted this valid passport is an adult. You don’t need to get any other info. We already checked for you.”, no other connection or transfer of data neccessary?
If you know a way to do it without invading people’s privacy you’d better go tell the government of Spain about it, because they didn’t manage to find it when they designed their eIDAS scheme which they hoped would become the Europe-wide standard. Not sure if that’s still seen as likely but I haven’t heard about any other concrete proposals yet.
I’m talking about things you can do technically.
Governments don’t plan completely idiotic ideas because they don’t know better but because their actual reason for choosing the system they chose is NOT creating a workable system that protects your privacy.
That’s the whole point. Articles like this aren’t completely wrong. The systems planned are indeed a risk to privacy rights. But we need to stop pretending that it’s an accident and the government simply don’t know better or there is no better solution at all. Actual solutions exist and we need to talk about the fact that those are ignored intentionally because a working system that protects your privacy is simply not the goal here.
No one but the EU and member’s governments are more qualified to produce an actual, working age verification system […]
Because they already have the data base neccessary
Just imagine that every time you watch cat videos, the cat video website sends a request to your government’s servers to verify your age.
Of course, this can also be done without accessing any database. E. g. the German electronic identity card supports verifying your age without revealing any other personal information.
Just imagine your passport just has a separate set of information saved “This person is legally an adult” signed of by the government issueing them. No transfer of any other data neccessary. You don’t need to know their name, their age or anything else. And you don’t need some database to be queried. You just get the certified “I have the proper age to access this”-card build into their regular papers.
Yeah it’s really not that simple. If you give someone a unique signed token that just says “whoever has this is over the age of 35” then that token becomes your unique id number that every website you share it with can use to track you. If you create a whole bunch of temporarily valid tokens for old-enough citizens any time they want some, so far you have no way top stop those getting into the hands of teenagers who want to use them to sneak into feddit.
Which is the reason I talked about the passport. It doesn’t have to be unique, just a flag cryptographically signed by the issueing government.
Yes, I can still give away my passport then so that someone can get into adult stuff on the internet… or I can open it for them. So that’s not exactly the use case I’m that actually about.
But that’s all missing the point. There is simply no interest in developing a proper system. Just like terrorism, or child-pornography, age verification is just another pretense to establish surveilance, weaken privacy rights and monetize us by outsourcing everything to private companies (purely concidently usually connected to AI and very interested in all data they can get theri greedy little hands on). We can discuss the technical issues for years, but the people actually planning that stuff won’t care because that’s not the actual agenda.
Uh… if “it doesn’t have to be unique” then you may as well just have a password — everyone who knows that the password is “swordfish” is allowed into the adults-only club. There are things stopping people selling their actual paper-based passports en masse or just making photocopies. If you have an easily-replaceable digital token with no biometric info and it’s not tied to your identity in any way, there are no such constraints.
I was obviously not talking about random paper-based passports but the one ID that is already standard and required for every citizen. And that one -if you decide to give it away- is tied to you, has your identity and is not easily replaced. But requiring to submit all that information on a low level internet verification process is unneccessary, when just “yes, I have that card proving I have the proper age!” is perfectly functional for that purpose.
There is no one-size-fits all solution for security. But for basic stuff like acccess to online stuff an anonymous solution based on your ID is perfectly workable. Nobody is preventing additional biometric checks for more important stuff, it’s the general things in day-to-day life we need to primarily protect from data kraken trying to profile us to make money.
I’m still curious as to what it is that you have in mind. “Yes I have that card” will be communicated to random web services by the user presenting to them some kind of signed digital token I imagine, as is usual, and that token itself, or the user-held secret used in generating it, is what can then be sold, transferred, or used to track the user unless you have some way to prevent that. If you’ve given any hint of how you think it can be done, I didn’t get it.
One thing people sometimes think of is having the user be authenticated with a government (or other authority) server in real time whenever they want to prove their age to some stranger — but the system I saw which worked like that was obviously a pretty big violation of privacy so I assumed it wasn’t the sort of thing you meant. If that’s the idea, how would you prevent the central authority from keeping a record of when and where your “passport” was used?