The UK has announced plans to fast-track legislation requiring “age verification for VPN use”.
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The UK has announced plans to fast-track legislation requiring “age verification for VPN use”. The correct term, however, is not age verification but identity verification.
A law like this would require everyone to identify themselves in order to use a VPN. This would pose a risk to whistleblowers, violate human rights, and represent yet another step toward an authoritarian society.
@mullvadnet it amazes me the lengths parents will go to, to avoid parenting and require others to do it for them.
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@mullvadnet
How can the people in U.K escape being victims of such a policy that's slowly taking away their freedom?@nuwagaba2 @mullvadnet Both join, and vote for, the Green party.
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@mullvadnet jesus fucking mosley
@Kierkegaanks @mullvadnet if only mosley could see this he’d be so proud he’d shed a tear
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The UK has announced plans to fast-track legislation requiring “age verification for VPN use”. The correct term, however, is not age verification but identity verification.
A law like this would require everyone to identify themselves in order to use a VPN. This would pose a risk to whistleblowers, violate human rights, and represent yet another step toward an authoritarian society.
@mullvadnet The people don't do anything about this, which means the people are OK with it.
In any case, Russia won. No need to invade: UK and the rest of Europe are slowly becoming Russia.
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@hypolite @mullvadnet There should be a civil service IT sanity department. It is politically neutral, staffed by people who actually have a clue. Proposals like this are submitted to this department and a simple response is returned, one of:
- Oh fuck off
- Needs a lot of work, re-submit
- Yeah, should be ok@alexanderdyas @hypolite @mullvadnet lmao
Listening to the advice of civil servants in their areas of expertise
You are a card!! -
@alexanderdyas @hypolite @mullvadnet lmao
Listening to the advice of civil servants in their areas of expertise
You are a card!!@alexanderdyas @hypolite @mullvadnet ironically I have to connect to the civil service VPN every day to do my job...
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@GlasWolf @mullvadnet
The only reason I'd call that unlikely is the same reason there's any danger from Reform at all: we don't have PR.In a first-past-the-post system, the two far right parties are going to be parasitising and splitting each other's votes in most constituencies.
@petealexharris @GlasWolf @mullvadnet just as the socialists have for the last 80 years
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The UK has announced plans to fast-track legislation requiring “age verification for VPN use”. The correct term, however, is not age verification but identity verification.
A law like this would require everyone to identify themselves in order to use a VPN. This would pose a risk to whistleblowers, violate human rights, and represent yet another step toward an authoritarian society.
@mullvadnet Me: "I mean generally you pay with a credit card anyway so they already know who you are, unless you're using..."
*looks at who posted this*
Oh. Yeah that's who I was thinking of. xD -
The UK has announced plans to fast-track legislation requiring “age verification for VPN use”. The correct term, however, is not age verification but identity verification.
A law like this would require everyone to identify themselves in order to use a VPN. This would pose a risk to whistleblowers, violate human rights, and represent yet another step toward an authoritarian society.
@mullvadnet
Onion router, anyone? -
The UK has announced plans to fast-track legislation requiring “age verification for VPN use”. The correct term, however, is not age verification but identity verification.
A law like this would require everyone to identify themselves in order to use a VPN. This would pose a risk to whistleblowers, violate human rights, and represent yet another step toward an authoritarian society.
@mullvadnet They are so close to total control. They already have govs, banks, bigtech, media and They want absolutne power. They can cancel your choice (like elections) They can do terrible things like on the E-Island and They can even kill other nations without consequences.
There are not enough people who can notice that. And there are even less ones, who want to react. -
Requiring every VPN user to verify their age to stop a few bad actors is like requiring everyone to show government ID to buy a hammer because a few people used hammers to commit crimes.
@greatlaketrout@noc.social @mullvadnet@mastodon.online
But you can actually kill someone with a hammer, much more easily than you can kill someone with a VPN. The UK Government is more afraid of words and communication than they are of deadly weapons. -
And there's no precision with those blocks either. Whole chunks of the internet go down in Spain when the soccer is playing, not just streaming sites
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@mullvadnet
Onion router, anyone?And it won't be long before folks in the U.K. will need to use secret bridges for that too
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Age verification for VPN doesn't make sense. Why shouldn't children use VPNs?
@sloanlance @mullvadnet It was never actually to protect the children, and always to enable mass surveillance & expand censorship
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The UK has announced plans to fast-track legislation requiring “age verification for VPN use”. The correct term, however, is not age verification but identity verification.
A law like this would require everyone to identify themselves in order to use a VPN. This would pose a risk to whistleblowers, violate human rights, and represent yet another step toward an authoritarian society.
@mullvadnet We gotta band together and undermine the authority of the ISPs and the oligarchies that control them. Thank you for fighting back Mullvad 🫡
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The UK has announced plans to fast-track legislation requiring “age verification for VPN use”. The correct term, however, is not age verification but identity verification.
A law like this would require everyone to identify themselves in order to use a VPN. This would pose a risk to whistleblowers, violate human rights, and represent yet another step toward an authoritarian society.
@mullvadnet @paul_ipv6
I can’t say I understand this technology very well but as far as I do, it seems like people would just use a VPN in order to avoid being punished for using a VPN wouldn’t they? -
@greatlaketrout@noc.social @mullvadnet@mastodon.online
But you can actually kill someone with a hammer, much more easily than you can kill someone with a VPN. The UK Government is more afraid of words and communication than they are of deadly weapons.They are acting with extreme duplicity. Day one thing ( we support online privacy and the right of the individual to control their data) oh but by the way the laws we pass are going to destroy online privacy and the right for people to control their own data.
Asshats one and all.
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@Kierkegaanks @mullvadnet if only mosley could see this he’d be so proud he’d shed a tear
@0dayTux @Kierkegaanks @mullvadnet don't worry Mosley is getting plenty rich of this.
Or rather his grandson is.
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@alexanderdyas @hypolite @mullvadnet
It's not just IT specific. It's human rights/freedoms issues. But then the UK doesn't have much of a constitution that would be protected from simple parliament majorities IIRC?
@project1enigma @alexanderdyas @hypolite @mullvadnet the ECHR is relatively enshrined in so much as, yes, a simple majority could abandon it, but doing so would unravel a lot of other things and generally blow up relations with basically all of Europe except maybe Russia, so your have to be utterly off your rocker to try that.
The three largest parties by polling all want to either tear up or substantially undermine the ECHR.
Don't think any constitutional setup would protect us at this point…
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@GlasWolf @mullvadnet
The only reason I'd call that unlikely is the same reason there's any danger from Reform at all: we don't have PR.In a first-past-the-post system, the two far right parties are going to be parasitising and splitting each other's votes in most constituencies.
@petealexharris @GlasWolf @mullvadnet yeah it's important to remember that, whilst yes trending-down-from-30% polling figures are kinda terrifying, it really doesn't translate to 30% seats at all, especially when unlike the LibDems they don't ‘know how to play the game’.
It's still plausible enough they end up the largest seat bloc, or close to, but in practise an outright majority is unlikely — so it all come down to some sorta deal with the Tories most probably.