As opposed to Bill C-63, which pushes [age verification bullshit] far into the future and behind closed doors through an opaque regulatory process, our new Conservative legislation will directly legislate [age verification bullshit] that online operators must adhere to.

  • Nik282000@lemmy.ca
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    18 hours ago

    Imagine opening your email or direct messages to find explicit messages about how someone is going to kill or rape you. Or, maybe it’s a message threatening some form of blackmail - like releasing deepfaked nude photos - if you don’t comply with the abuser’s demands. Then imagine the police telling you there’s not much they can do to help you, and even if they do, living with the fear and constant anxiety of knowing there’s nothing much to stop the perpetrator from immediately beginning that pattern of harassment again. Then imagine this harassment escalating into physical violence or self-harm.

    Now, imagine this happening to a minor.

    Imagine a slope so slippery that god himself could not climb it.

    I do agree that harassment online is an issue and has been since long before the first “I fucked your mom” was screeched into an xBox, but there needs to be extremely well defined situations where law enforcement are given access to information about ISP subscribers or users of a particular website.

    Any kind of bulk-deanonymizing measures should be avoided at all costs as it undermines one of the most useful feature of the internet. If some one wants to find information on a sensitive topic, for example an embarrassing health issue or seeking help for abuse, not having a way to anonymously do so negates any help they obtain.

    Ever since the “dark web” and “VPN” made it into the mainstream media it’s been a ticking clock to the day when each government decides that anonymous communication is intolerable. “Think of the children” is the war cry of malicious politicians and useful idiots alike.