This Bill Threatens Access to LGBTQ+ Online Communities.::Archive of Our Own (AO3), a fanfic site loved by young LGBTQ+ people, was compromised by hackers. But the Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) is the real threat.

  • @imgonnatrythis@lemm.ee
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    471 year ago

    Yeah sure does but it threatens a lot more than just these communities. This will affect almost everyone and is a clear power grab to gain even more goverental control of online activity across the board. Children are often used as pawns for these types of bills. This is similar to the sesta/fosta nonsense.

    • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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      241 year ago

      It’s teen vogue. They’re trying to make kids interested. Don’t be dismissive, grandparent.

      • P03 Locke
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        201 year ago

        Yeah, I like it when they put out articles like this. Teen Vogue only occasionally gets political, and when they do, that’s when the threat is pretty serious.

  • @Dasnap@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    ‘New law threatens trans communities’ should probably be a news article template by now.

    Transphobia, so hot right now. Do lawmakers not have anything better to be doing?

    • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Angry white male Americans with inferiority complexes are so hot right now.

      Edit: editing comments to reply without notification, so hot right now lol

    • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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      21 year ago

      They see transphobic action as campaigning. And it’s all they do.

      You expected actual governance? They broke that in the Reagan era and Citizens United killed it. Welcome to the new feudalism.

      Torches in the left shed. Pitchforks in the right.

  • @TheObserver@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 year ago

    Kids shouldn’t even be on the Internet. If they get access and ruin themselves from stumbling apon some fucked up shit. That’s on them and their parents 🤷

    Downvotes are just proving some of you guys are fucking weird wanting kids online. Probs those weirdos over at beehaw.

    • @TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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      101 year ago

      They shouldn’t, but we aren’t putting this genie back in the bottle. There are kids who already grew up since the 2010s having phones with internet access, who already are adults, and that’s not going to change.

      Rather than pointing fingers at the parents and the parents pointing fingers at the world we could take a moment to acknowledge that the horror scenario already came to pass and it turned out mostly fine.

      Frankly these days old people with phones believing every nonsense they read worry me even more.

    • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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      11 year ago

      US society has demonstrated a) it’s generally too incompetent to be telling kids what to do and what not to do, and b) does not have kids’ best interests at heart anyway, seeking to forge kids into soulless cheap interchangeable laborers and soldiers to be used and worn out in the vanity projects of billionaires. For every kid in the US, their whole job is learning that everyone, including their parents, are in on the ruse, and to find a way to escape this destiny.

      For that the internet will be most useful, and any barriers we have to information it will be up to them to break.

      Oh, and our society fucked up the climate and ecology enough that there’s going to be a food crisis in their adulthood. And we’re trying to pretend that won’t happen.

  • @jet@hackertalks.com
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    91 year ago

    I think it’s far more sensible to say kids should not have access to the internet. Give them like Disney net or something.

    • @SatanicNotMessianic@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Kids have been online for 30 years. AOL and BBSs were available - I think I got my first modem around 1987. That’s a generation-plus. Which is to say - we have plenty of data on the effect of being “on the internet” on kids. Most people under the age of 30 have been online for virtually all of their lives.

      You can tell these laws are bullshit because they always have some vague platitude like “protecting kids,” but they never define their measurements. An actual intervention - like a government policy to solve a problem - defines what it is trying to address, how and why they expect the program to work using peer-reviewed evidence, and what they expect the result to be after some time.

      Let’s say the problem you’re trying to address is teenage suicide, and you think that being exposed to talk about suicide online contributes to it. First, you’d look for studies that evaluated the problem. They’d have to show causality, because just finding a correlation might mean that kids likely to commit suicide reach out to communities online, rather than vice versa. I’m skeptical, but for the sake of argument let’s say you find there is a causal relationship.

      So you develop a model that allows you to estimate that keeping kids from accessing anyone talking about suicide would cut the teen suicide rate by 30%. Removing some middle steps, the government now bans the discussion of suicide on any platform that doesn’t have a strict age verification. So, now what happens? Is there ongoing monitoring to make sure that your hypothesis is correct? If suicide rates go up because kids can’t talk it out anymore and are more isolated, does the law get removed from the books? Are there classes of kids it hurts versus helps, and what are you going to do about them?

      You can say the same thing about other metrics, like sexual abuse. The point is that, like they tell you in b-school, you have to measure it if you want to improve it. They never do that, though.

      At best, these kinds of things are empty platitudes that allow politicians to pretend they’re doing something to get votes. At worst - and with this bill the more likely outcome - will be that this permits states like Texas to arbitrarily define what they think “kids” should see. They’ll remove the decision from kids and their parents, and instead make the global decision of censorship according to a conservative religious agenda. That’s what we’re seeing in libraries and schools today.

      The other reason you can tell it’s just culture war bullshit is that none of this is coming in response to a sudden surge in child abuse statistics. When there’s a spike in something bad, like gun violence, opioid use, or a pandemic, politicians respond with policy. This push, like the bathroom bills, legal restrictions on trans athletes, and anti-drag laws, is not responding to any current crisis. It’s just someone jingling the keys to make people look in the other direction so that they can get away with what they’re actually trying to do.

      • @Sharkwellington
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        51 year ago

        I like this evidence-based method of yours for making laws, we should do that instead of this “it’s true because I say it is, also the children” method Republicans keep using.

  • Thom Gray
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    31 year ago

    Same playbook used throughout history, we need to make you safer by taking away your right to privacy and access to communities you identify with. Without the LGBTQ+ community center in my hometown I doubt I would have survived young adulthood. That was a physical space funded by a non-profit, now that so much of our access to community is online the authoritarians from both parties in the US can just remove communities they don’t like assisted by legislation like this.