[from [email protected]] Spain - Adults who want to enter porn websites must have a 'digital card' with 30 accesses valid for 30 days
From ![email protected]
https://www.elmundo.es/espana/2024/07/01/6682a6e7fc6c8382428b45a2.htmlOpen linkView original on lemm.ee
Hmmmmm, if only there was a way to educate minors about sexuality before they ultimately turn to internet because adults just ignore the problem.
Edit:
It's a miracle politicians aren't targeted by scammers more frequently, given they have no idea how internet works.
Lots of children have access to the internet at a very young age. I guess what you're suggesting is sex education for 7-year-olds who might accidentally watch a video on the school yard, etc.? In fact, even 3-year-olds often use their parents' tablet to watch P*w P*trol and may wander off with it.
Whether a 7-year-old sees adult content accidentally, intentionally, because of peer pressure or any other reason, I still think age appropriate sex ed would be helpful. I acknowledge that minors do view inappropriate content and that it is generally unhealthy, but since it can happen, and does happen, a good approach would be to educate them preemptively.
For example, these guildelines for sex ed in EU, which caused some outrage in conservative circles a few years back, suggest that "sex in media and dealing with it" is a topic for 6 to 9-year-olds.
Of course you can't cover every outlier, but can you really stop 5th graders from sending weird shit to their friends because they're trying to be edgy?
Edit:
Another way to think about it:
It's pretty easy to install device-based "parental control"-types of software that can't be circumvented by a 3yo. That is definitely the parents' job.
uh yes, in fact, I think that would be very healthy. Not in a horrific South Park way, but in a "sometimes adults get naked because they like each other. And sometimes they film it. If someone shows you a video if that, it's okay to not want to watch it. It's okay to walk away. I someone pressures you to watch it, it's okay to tell an adult" way.
There is this browser using the Onion Network.
Indeed, and other several ways to avoid the measure. I'm not even sure how they are technically going to try to implement this, but except banning VPNs, good luck.
Guess I'll just not be able to work without vpn lol.
The Onion network is too slow for porn. You'd also take away bandwidth from other people who arguably benefit more from it.
Without experience myself, I‘ve heard that some onion routes are fast enough. Some are not.
No need to resort to using tor. I'm sure there will be plenty of clearnet websites around the world that provide what people are looking for without much caring about what the government of Spain has to say about things. Increasingly many, I expect, as it becomes impossible to comply with every one of these ridiculous laws around the world.
Uh, is that supposed to be 3 times per month? Like, you can only visit sadpanda 3 times a month or something?
Good luck blocking whatever "kids" with intent end up finding on a DDG with Safesearch: Off.
For now, it only applies for sites hosted in Spain, but they want to have it apply to anything based off Ireland (IT tax haven)
Oh nice, just what people need/want, the fucking government spying on your porn searches.
Regarding the 30 accesses/tokens pack, it's supposed to be something you can just input on a porn site and access it without being asked for an age verification. And yeah, you only get to use/access one site 3 times per pack, no reason was given.
It's good that the article also has a talk with a cybersecurity guy, who plainly points out that the govt isn't trustworthy for keeping the data secret/anonymous, and that the whole idea "is horrible [and what you expect] from the worst dictatorships"
I don't use this term often, but which smoothbrain thought of this? 30 tokens per month (so, 30 individual visits per month, never mind if you can't find what you're looking for on that particular site or just plain want to see it more often), and then only 3 visits per site. I'm sorry, what? Did someone in that panel own a bunch of unknown porn sites or something?
They don't want to block site from Spain+ireland. They want to block sites from Spain. Later on they also want social media to also enforce this ban.
Ireland is only mentioned because it's the preferred tax haven for tech companies in Europe. They're not targeting Ireland in particular.
Lmao
El Mundo according to google translate:
An infringement on the right to privacy, a government being invasive where it has no business being.