Once you realize it’s not “age verification”, but actually “identity verification”, then it’s easy to understand that the real goal is “papers, please” for the entire internet.
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@txtx @violetmadder They're not going to stop their own propaganda bots with "age verification"/internet passports. They're going to stop the people fighting them. This should not be hard to understand.
@txtx @violetmadder "Papers please" specifically means the principle that people don't have free movement or participation in society without having to show their identity documents to an authority. It does not have any relationship with its polar opposite, "come back with a warrant".
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@txtx @violetmadder "Papers please" specifically means the principle that people don't have free movement or participation in society without having to show their identity documents to an authority. It does not have any relationship with its polar opposite, "come back with a warrant".
@txtx @violetmadder One is about authentication of people to authority. The other is about authentication of authority to people.
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@mhoye Unpopular opinion:
Identity verification isn't so unattractive in 2026 — social media is destroying democracies via anonymous armies of bot people steered by aggressive foreign actors like Putin and Musk.
The libertarian model that the Internet was built on is failing societies.
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@txtx @violetmadder One is about authentication of people to authority. The other is about authentication of authority to people.
@dalias Despite our disagreement I just want to say thanks for responding earnestly here. I appreciate it. (Some other responses I'm getting aren't that).
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@txtx @violetmadder One is about authentication of people to authority. The other is about authentication of authority to people.
@dalias Not always. If this isn't a real cop or doesn't have a judge's warrant then it's authentication of people to people. If they have no authority then I'm going to call someone who does to stop them.
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N n8zug@social.tchncs.de shared this topic