The UK Online Safety Act wants to keep kids safe online—but its “age gates” force us to hand over IDs, bank details or face scans, creating juicy targets for hackers. Tech-savvy teens will just use VPNs or fake IDs to dodge the rules, while platforms, terrified of £18 million fines, overblock harmless content and crush small community sites. Instead of one‐size‐fits‐all surveillance, we need privacy-preserving tech and smarter, targeted checks. Is this really the best way to protect young people—and our free speech? Let me know your thoughts!
https://youtu.be/s0y-64w4wvA?si=RlY4PBP7qDwddDR3
https://youtu.be/s0y-64w4wvA?si=RlY4PBP7qDwddDR3
The UK Online Safety Act wants to keep kids safe online—but its “age gates” force us to hand over IDs, bank details or face scans, creating juicy targets for hackers. Tech-savvy teens will just use VPNs or fake IDs to dodge the rules, while platforms, terrified of £18 million fines, overblock harmless content and crush small community sites. Instead of one‐size‐fits‐all surveillance, we need privacy-preserving tech and smarter, targeted checks. Is this really the best way to protect young people—and our free speech? Let me know your thoughts!
https://youtu.be/s0y-64w4wvA?si=RlY4PBP7qDwddDR3

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