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[-] Fjdybank@lemmy.ca 59 points 2 weeks ago

Hard disagree. This represents the pot getting turned up on the frog.

I acknowledge you are factually correct. However, once this field exists, it enables later reference and/or mandatory dependencies.

There is no positive use case , but lots of possibly negative use cases. For that reason, it shouldn't exist.

[-] cmhe@lemmy.world 7 points 2 weeks ago

You do know that this is a slippery slope argument, right?

You would have to demonstrate that there is an intention there to require third party services to validate the age of users using Linux... Or that there is an intention to do so by systemd and the broader open source developers.

I don't think it will be easily possible to lock out every Linux system from the internet that doesn't implement some kind of hardware DRM mechanism to make sure that the user cannot just change the date of birth with root permissions.

[-] Fjdybank@lemmy.ca 8 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

I do understand that, but I think you are applying a post hoc rationalisation to the change.

For example, examining the change through the lens of intended use -> you can't as there is no such use of the field today - it's tomorrow's use that is potentially problematic.

I don't want to wait until a bad actor applies the field, I want to stop the field from existing.

This change is not happening in isolation. There is currently a general trend towards de-anonymising users, and this DOB field is a step in that direction.

The only real question is, do I want my computer storing more, or less, personally identifying information. Given that I don't trust ANY use which may be later enabled by this change, my answer is 'less'.

[-] cmhe@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Maybe this is the issue. I have no problems with parents setting the age of the children in their account in order limit their access to certain content.

And there clearly exists a use-case for that.

My main issue is when it comes to third-party age/identity verification services. Age or identity verification in the hands of private for-profit companies is bad.

I'd rather give parents the tools to set individual restrictions locally on their devices, then pushing for a global internet based age filter.

[-] ToxicWaste@lemmy.cafe 3 points 2 weeks ago

most people can get behind parental control. that is why bad actors are pushing for age verification everywhere nowadays.

i think the issue many people have with that field is, that it enables bad actors to do things. all the while, it does not really do the thing it is supposed to do: if i trust my kid with sudo, the field can easily be altered. if i do not trust my kid with sudo, it cannot install anything either way.

with your last paragraph i (and probably most people) agree. but we already have those tools, right? at least until i knew computers better than my parents, there was no way i could install anything without them being OK with it. even when i was admin on my very own desktop, i was heavily reliant on the parents for everything costing money. yes, even my dumb ass figured out how to pirate stuff. but to do that while being afraid to brick your precious device with some virus - you need some tech literacy, which is for sure beyond changing one value.

[-] cmhe@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

most people can get behind parental control. that is why bad actors are pushing for age verification everywhere nowadays.

Yes. And I would complain if there is a requirement to need third-party for-profit companies in order to verify peoples ages. Companies want data, and government want control. Both are bad in this case.

i think the issue many people have with that field is, that it enables bad actors to do things.

This needs to be proven. Currently it doesn't do anything. But there is work to integrate it with flathub, that would allow administrators e.g. parents, to limit access to certain apps. Maybe later there could be some kind of web interface, where a site that offers adult content, would ask the browser, and the browser would look into the account data and then respond if the logged in person is an adult or not. No third-party required, just the person that locally set the date of birth on an local account.

all the while, it does not really do the thing it is supposed to do: if i trust my kid with sudo, the field can easily be altered. if i do not trust my kid with sudo, it cannot install anything either way.

Many apps can be installed without root privileges, for instance via flatpak. And in the future it might prevent certain apps for kids.

with your last paragraph i (and probably most people) agree. but we already have those tools, right?

IDK... I think there are more tools available on Windows for that then on Linux... But I my parents never deployed those and I also never had the need for such tools.

But I guess, very often DNS block lists can be used to block adult content... But knowing the internet and adblockers based on DNS alone, that will often lead to many false negatives and positives. So I would argue that we don't really have anything like it right now for Linux Desktops.

[-] Senal@programming.dev 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

No, they don't.

You , as the party making the accusation of fallacy would be required to prove that the expectation of escalation is unreasonable or that the intention was not there.

edit: asking for an explanation of their thoughts around the issue is fine, but a requirement it is not.

[-] cmhe@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

Why do people so often invert the burden of proof?

If someone says "Picking your nose will cause brain-cancer in 40 years." Then they have the burden to proof that. Nobody has the burden to disprove that.

They made the accusation that this is a step to make this age fields mandatory, and controlled by third-party age verification services, so they have the burden to proof that there is way to do that.

I find it highly unlikely, because most people using Linux systems at home have admin privileges. Which makes this whole point moot, since they can fake whatever they like to the software running on top.

[-] Senal@programming.dev 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Why do people so often invert the burden of proof?

I know, right ?

If someone says “Picking your nose will cause brain-cancer in 40 years.” Then they have the burden to proof that. Nobody has the burden to disprove that.

Absolutely, and if you'd asked for proof of their accusation you'd be correct in this instance.

They made the accusation that this is a step to make this age fields mandatory, and controlled by third-party age verification services, so they have the burden to proof that there is way to do that.

They did and you could ask them to make a case for that, you didn't.

You provided your own accusation:

You do know that this is a slippery slope argument, right?

And proceeded to tell them that they are required to provide proof to dispute your new accusation.

You would have to demonstrate that there is an intention there to require third party services to validate the age of users using Linux… Or that there is an intention to do so by systemd and the broader open source developers.

Which is what i was addressing specifically when i said:

You , as the party making the accusation of fallacy would be required to prove that the expectation of escalation is unreasonable or that the intention was not there.


I find it highly unlikely, because most people using Linux systems at home have admin privileges. Which makes this whole point moot, since they can fake whatever they like to the software running on top.

It makes the field itself mostly a non issue in the single isolated context of "does this field, on it's own, constitute age verification".

The point most people are trying to make is that it's a part of a larger context.

[-] cmhe@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

You are seem to disagree with yourself... On the one hand you say I should ask them to make a case for their argument, but on the other I'm not allowed to ask for evidence.

But instead I need to provide a proof for... them not providing proof that their argument is not a non-sequitur? Did I get that right?

[-] Senal@programming.dev 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

You did not, points for effort though.

I'll try to make it simpler.

Ask for proof of claim they have made - YES 👍

Ask for proof to dispute/disprove claim you have made - NO 👎

if you suggest something is a fallacy , that's a claim you have made.

edit : emojis for visual cues

edit : changed no description to be more accurate

[-] iglou@programming.dev 6 points 2 weeks ago

Do you really draw the line at a date of birth field, when every linux system has fields for full name and address for every user account?

[-] Fjdybank@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 weeks ago

This change is not happening in isolation. There is currently a general trend towards de-anonymising users, and this DOB field is a step in that direction.

The only real question is, do I want my computer storing more, or less, personally identifying information. Given that I don't trust ANY use which may be later enabled by this change, my answer is 'less'.

[-] iglou@programming.dev 1 points 2 weeks ago

Does this systemd change facilitate future verification softwares? Definitely. Will it become a part of systemd? Extremely unlikely. Should systemd rebel and refuse to include anything facilitating these disturbing laws? Eh, probably.

But let's not blow this change out of proportions. This is a way for systemd to not aggressively fight the laws, without enabling them either. This field changes nothing, and you will still be able to use distros that don't even employ the field at all. They might become illegal to use in the land of the free, but that's a separate issue that this change does not impact.

[-] goldman60@lemmy.world 5 points 2 weeks ago

I'm not really sure you can argue birthdate is the thin edge of the spear when the standard Linux user database already had fields for location, email, phone number, and real name. None of which have been used for anything up to this point, and systemd-homed is not as widely used.

[-] Fjdybank@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 weeks ago

I get it, but I believe it to be a false equivalence. This change is not happening in isolation. There is currently a general trend towards de-anonymising users, and this DOB field is a step in that direction.

The only real question is, do I want my computer storing more, or less, personally identifying information. Given that I don't trust the intended use, or ANY use which is later enabled by this, my answer is 'less'.

[-] goldman60@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

I agree with your second paragraph but I fail to see how the existing unused fields are somehow less dangerous or a "false equivalence" to a new unused DOB field which is significantly harder to use to deanonymize someone than their name, address, and phone number.

[-] Fjdybank@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 weeks ago

Sounds like we are violently in agreement then, that all of those fields should be removed.

Good outcome.

[-] dubyakay@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 weeks ago

We are more than mere frogs in a pot though. We have made note of this. We outraged. We argued and counter argued. We will not forget so easily, no matter the view point on it.

If nothing comes of it, some of us can say "I've told you..."

If the next step gets implemented and the field becomes mandatory, some of us can say "See!! Froggies"

If it becomes mandatory and a further implementation also adds the framework to submit the data to some idp service, then we can get the pitchforks out.

[-] Tarambor@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

So why do you not have any problem with the RealName and Email fields in systemd?

[-] zbyte64@awful.systems 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

This is why we should lock down the OS to prevent people from creating databases of people. There are so many applications out there asking for people's DOB and that's because we let people just install whatever app they want. There's absolutely no positive use case for that.

[-] UltraBlack@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

How do commercial distros prevent getting blocked if not through this?

[-] Fjdybank@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 weeks ago

I think you might be replying to wrong conment

this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2026
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