Terns and cormorants.On topic but not adding to the discussion... can a mod please fix the title? It should be "its" not "it's" and I find it irksomeand obviously spell "terms" right.
Because you’re being asked to verify your ID to watch porn? Which let’s be honest this is the reason the majority are so up in the arms. Give over, that’s your choice, no one is forcing you to access these sites.
The next time you’re in the supermarket, don’t look up, you might notice all the CCTV cameras watching you and please don’t use that loyalty card, someone might see the tissue brand you’re buying.
Wikipedia has definitely hosted - and probably still hosts - images that fall well and truly foul of the law. That likely ends in an argument about the encyclopedic value of certain content, but there’s definitely some pretty sketchy stuff there. It’s not a wonder they’d be targeted. It’s a very grey area.Well except Ofcom is already hounding wikipedia and a bunch of other innocent websites (a few sites have been forced to close as they couldn't afford the costs of compliance) in the name of "child protection"...
The law is already seeing over-reach.
But a lot of forign based porn sites are just ignoring them. So we have random sites in the UK being shut down and porn sites dodging the OSA entirely. If it carries on like this we'll only have porn left..
Wikipedia has definitely hosted - and probably still hosts - images that fall well and truly foul of the law. That likely ends in an argument about the encyclopedic value of certain content, but there’s definitely some pretty sketchy stuff there. It’s not a wonder they’d be targeted. It’s a very grey area.
And Wikipedia says if they have to, they will just block or limit traffic from the UK. To push the site in to a lower catagory for enforcement. Yay OSA...
Not that any of this has a point as everyone is now using VPNs. Which can't effectively be blocked.
Be the at as it may, that’s not because Wikipedia is entirely “innocent” here. There’s definitely images on there which I imagine would earn me the most perma of bans if I were to post them in the random image thread here, for example.And Wikipedia says if they have to, they will just block or limit traffic from the UK. To push the site in to a lower catagory for enforcement. Yay OSA...
Not that any of this has a point as everyone is now using VPNs. Which can't effectively be blocked.
Be the at as it may, that’s not because Wikipedia is entirely “innocent” here. There’s definitely images on there which I imagine would earn me the most perma of bans if I were to post them in the random image thread here, for example.
Not quite what I had in mind.Nothing you can't see in a science, medical or history book. You don't need ID for those.
Next thing you know they'll be asking for age verification to stop kids watching Terminator 2.
Well except Ofcom is already hounding wikipedia and a bunch of other innocent websites (a few sites have been forced to close as they couldn't afford the costs of compliance) in the name of "child protection"...
The law is already seeing over-reach.
But a lot of forign based porn sites are just ignoring them. So we have random sites in the UK being shut down and porn sites dodging the OSA entirely. If it carries on like this we'll only have porn left![]()
A tech forum is the worst place to debate these things because naturally, some of you think you can surf the internet like Jason Borne, anonymous, behind your VPN’s, no responsibilities.
The difficulty comes in trying to write legislation that catches the privately owned, commercially operated social media sites that we think are a problem, without catching whatever we think Wikipedia is. And if there is a gap for Wikipedia to exist in, then the social media sites will start to look a lot more like it, in order to escape the legislation.I was asking about privately owned, commercially operated social media sites that need to cater for all and have responsibilities for the safety of users and minors, not Wikipedia.
Looks like members can't read so time for this to be locked.Online safety act, and if anyone wants to discuss it then head to the thread in SC![]()