Digital IDs Needed To End 'Mob Rule' Online, Says UK's Security Minister (independent.co.uk) 517
Digital IDs should be brought in to end online anonymity that permits "mob rule" and lawlessness online, the security minister of United Kingdom has said. From a report: Ben Wallace said authentication used by banks could also by employed by internet firms to crack down on bullying and grooming, as he warned that people had to make a choice between "the wild west or a civilised society" online. He also took aim at the "phoniness" of Silicon Valley billionaires, and called for companies such as WhatsApp to contribute to society over the negative costs of their technology, such as end-to-end encryption. It comes after Theresa May took another step against tech giants, saying they would be ordered to clamp down on vile attacks against women on their platforms. The prime minister will target firms such as Facebook and Twitter as she makes the pitch at the G7 summit this weekend, where she will urge social media firms to treat violent misogyny with the same urgency as they do terror threats. Mr Wallace told The Times: "A lot of the bullying on social media and the grooming is because those people know you cannot identify them. It is mob rule on the internet. You shouldn't be able to hide behind anonymity."
UK's security minister (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
UK's security minister needs to go bugger a diseased goat, says anyone who's not an authoritarian skumbag...
Here in the actual Wild West, it's the possibility of having people like Ben Wallace who motivate us to cling to our guns.
Re: UK's security minister (Score:2)
There's probably already pictures. Like Cameron and the pig.
Re: UK's security minister (Score:4, Insightful)
The UK internet is going full Hundred Flowers Campaign https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
The UK wants all the arts and the progress of approved SJW comments.
The "good" part of the US internet design. Try some of that US freedom of speech online in the UK?
Talk about the results of gov policy and its a police visit.
Mention illegal immigration? Thats a cyber investigation with interviews.
The cost of rent, housing in the UK? Thats an investigation.
Utility bill in winter and the cost of energy in the UK? Thats a political investigation for hinting at the lower cost of Russian gas exports.
Re: UK's security minister (Score:3, Insightful)
What are you talking about?
Re: (Score:2)
Complain about any aspect of UK gov policy and its a police investigation.
Bollocks....the police have not the time for that (fortunately) due to spending cuts...
Re: (Score:2)
Again going back to the linked text
"welcome progress in banning and removing"
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
The biggest danger is that after Brexit we might be able to leave the European Convention on Human Rights, which among other things guarantees freedom of expression.
Even though the government already curtails freedom of expression, the ECHR limits how far they can go. Once it's gone they will be unrestrained.
Re: (Score:3)
The biggest danger is that after Brexit we might be able to leave the European Convention on Human Rights, which among other things guarantees freedom of expression.
Even though the government already curtails freedom of expression, the ECHR limits how far they can go. Once it's gone they will be unrestrained.
What has the ECHR ever done for us?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Re: UK's security minister (Score:5, Insightful)
A nice example: many members of a group protesting against a planned refugee center in a Dutch town received a visit from the police [dw.com], after a few heated online debates on the topic. The police and the responsible minister claim that the visits were well-meant, aimed at giving protesters a "friendly warning" before they cross the line. Sure. But you can also be sure that such a visit will be felt as deeply intimidating by many. Post something relatively innocuous online and have uniformed cops in your living room the next day? Yeah, those guys will probably be a little but more careful about what they write online. Mission accomplished.
Another example: a cartoonist working under a pseudonym was arrested in the middle of the night by a 9-strong SWAT team, for the crime of making nasty cartoons. In the end they found only 1 or 2 cartoons that actually ran afoul of discrimination laws, but... the guy stopped drawing after that arrest. Mission accomplished.
The real scary part is that few people care. Many might think that such tactics are a little heavy-handed, but then immediately say: "we're better off without that filth online"
Re: UK's security minister (Score:4, Insightful)
one of the reasons UK government dabbled with the idea of leaving EU was to get rid of those pesky EU laws about spying, politics and such...
why should whatsapp care though what the UK government wants? look, the fucking governments tell people to stay secure online. then they fucking provide an end to end encryption scheme to stay secure online and they lose their shit..
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
one of the reasons UK government dabbled with the idea of leaving EU was to get rid of those pesky EU laws about spying, politics and such...
The only reason they dabbled with it was to secure the right wing xenophobic voters. Then they did the thing as a publicity stunt and look what's happened.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Nazi left (Score:2)
Go and tell some neo-Nazis they're a bunch of lefties. Please. It'll be hilarious.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
National socialism (nationalsozialismus) != socialism.
You cannot simply split up the word into "national" and "socialism" and then consider each word separately, because it's supposed to be one word in its native language, where the definition comes from. English doesn't do conjugated verbs, which leads to this silly (or intentional, by idiots) misunderstanding.
It should be "nationalsocialism", which is distinct from both "nationalism" and "socialism".
But I bet you already knew that, and you're just being a
Re: Nazi left (Score:2, Insightful)
Sort of... the Nazi Party's official abbreviation was "NsDAP" ("National socialist German Workers Party"). The "s" was lowercase, but they apparently still thought it was necessary to disambiguate their party's name. If "Nationalsocialist" were truly one monolithic, unique, and inseparable word, "NDAP" would have been sufficient. It wasn't.
A country can be totally socialist with respect to its own citizens, yet be completely awful to everyone else within its borders. Just look at Saudi Arabia. It's practica
Re: (Score:3)
Socialism was quite popular at the time. The word was added by the marketing department. These days, they'd be the blockchain party.
In other news, Greenland is actually mostly white.
Re: (Score:3)
Socialists like to describe any economic system that differs from theirs as "capitalist". But the words they choose do not define reality. In reality, the fascist economic system is similar to socialism; it most certainly was not what conservatives advocate when they advocate "capitalism", namely free markets.
Re: (Score:2)
English certainly does conjugate verbs. I think you meant that English doesn't form adjective+noun compounds in the same fashion that German does. (FWIW, Swedish does this, too.)
But your analysis is otherwise spot-on.
Re:Nazi left (Score:5, Informative)
Erich Roehm, who was killed in the Night of the long Knives, was a socialist with leftie tendencies, being a mamber of the Workers Party before he joined the NSDAP. He wanted the National Socialist party to actually live the socialist part of the name. Roehm had control over the militia at the time, the SA. Hitler was worried he would use his SA thugs to toss him out and live his dreams, and evidence would suggest that the idea did cross Roehm's mind.
Hitler decided to move first so out Roehm went. Since Hitler was going for the kill anyways, so did quite a few others. But the name stayed.
Re: (Score:2)
Hitler as literally in the national socialist party. The liberals don't want to admit it but he was just a leftist extremist.
Like the Democratic People's Republic of Korea which is none of those things? The name you put on something really has no bearing to what it is/does (see patriot act) but if you think hitler was extreme left you must be so far right that you're off the scale, on to a new scale and off that one again.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Nazi left (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
I'd go so far as to say the the US is so far right that they are now in the Tinpot Dictatorship spectrum
In what dictatorship can the citizens and media be hypercritical of the dictator?
Re: (Score:3)
Chances are good that Russia did not just manipulate ppl, but also our e-votes as well. In addition, having to choose between 2 horrible choices was just that; HORRIBLE. We continue to have faux news destroying good ppl on the left and the right is really far right, which says why they continue to run nightmares.
Re: Nazi left (Score:5, Insightful)
So Francisco Franco was a leftist?
What'd be good for you would be a little knowledge of actual history.
Your claims regarding American politics are also highly suspect. The truth of the matter is that US Democrats would be considered "moderate right" in just any other Western country, and Republicans would be considered "far right". NO viable player on the US espouses anything like an actual leftist agenda, because, to begin with, not one of them presents any serious challenge to the 1% or the corporations. When there's a party, represented by candidates on national ballots, that has the balls to espouse things like nationalisation of industry, breakup and redistribution of large estates, universal free education at all levels, and universal free health care, then you'll know that the US has finally grown a left wing.
Placing or keeping the means of production in a few favoured private hands is a hallmark of right-wing régimes.
Re: (Score:2)
GP is probably c6gunner, although normally he manages to work guns into it somehow.
The practice of defining anything he doesn't like - from sports umpires to the weather - as leftist is pretty much his trademark.
Re: (Score:3)
NO viable player on the US espouses anything like an actual leftist agenda,
Because no viable player in the world espouses anything like an actual leftist agenda?
Re:Nazi left (Score:5, Informative)
The US ranks in 18th place on the index of economic freedom [wikipedia.org], behind many European nations, including the UK. The US spends more per capita on social welfare and spends more per capita on single payer, government healthcare, retirement, and education that many European nations. In what sense is it "very rightwing and right extremist"?
Re: (Score:3)
And forcing prices lower lowers demand for new drugs as a financial incentive.
The static analysis sounds fine -- give out for cheaper what already exists.
But the lion's share of saved lives happens from rolling ongoing development that leaves the static in the dust.
You...can't give it out for free until somebody else invents it first.
Re: (Score:2)
Theresa May is full of shit.
Theresa May took another step against tech giants, saying they would be ordered to clamp down on vile attacks against women on their platforms. .....she will urge social media firms to treat violent misogyny with the same urgency as they do terror threats.
And out in the real world, you know who the most violently misogynist people are? Who commits the most "vile attacks against women"?
Theresa May herself?
Muslims.
Ah I thought I had it.
Stupid fucking cunt.
At least that bit is right.
Re: (Score:3)
Free speech is about anonymity as well -- you should have the ability to spew bile without your employer, school, etc (non-governmental entities) punishing you for it. Furthermore, people have been physically threatened by non-governmental actors for unpopular views (i.e. criticism of foreign governments by disapora, anti-war, etc).
Of course, with enough effort, any handle can be traced to a real identity. The point is that it isn't worth it to unmask every "anonymous" Internet user, so people are relati
His "plan" aside... (Score:4, Insightful)
His plan to make everyone who uses the Internet "show papers" aside, his commentary about the hypocrisy of Silicon Valley billionaires is to the point.
But the solution to this isn't LESS privacy, it's MORE privacy, if anything.
Re:His "plan" aside... (Score:4, Insightful)
His plan to make everyone who uses the Internet "show papers" aside, his commentary about the hypocrisy of Silicon Valley billionaires is to the point.
But the solution to this isn't LESS privacy, it's MORE privacy, if anything.
Firstly , it's "her", not "him". Secondly, I was one of those who repeatedly warned that claiming misogyny and racism where there was none is the thin end of the wedge.
Unfortunately people who challenge unwarranted claims of sexism, racism, etc get called sexists, racists, etc. Pointing out, for example, that the gender pay gap doesn't exist gets you lynched.
The problem the moderate left has is that the moderate left allow the hard left to use shaming language rather than arguments and then fail to distance themselves from that shit. It is far easier to call people who are against affirmative action racists than to find an argument to support it (I haven't seen a good argument yet).
The end result, of course, is this - monitoring everyone for their own good. Because most people are basically good people, calling them misogynists if they don't allow the state to read their private correspondence is probably going to work.
That's also the reason that the hard left uses insults int the first place - calling an actual racist a racist is pointless - why would they care if someone identified them correctly? Same with calling an actual sexist a sexist.
Insults only work on people who aren't correctly identified. Calling a non-racist a racist or calling a non-sexist a sexist "works" because it either aggravates them (shutting down the conversation) or causes them to remain silent about your excesses. Either result is preferable to having facts introduced into a conversation.
The next time someone says trump is racist because he hates immigrants, see what happens you you introduce a fact such as "legal immigrants are different from illegal immigrants". The next time someone says something about a gender pay gap try introducing a fact or two and see what happens. Or even better, when in company of a hard left (or even moderate left these days) point out that Islam is extremely hard right, more to the right than even the KKK - IOW relative to Islam, the KKK is slightly left (how insane is that?)
Everyone must be tracked to prevent misogyny? Sure, why not? We've already given everything else to the alternative-truth brigade and anyway if you object you must be a misogynist!
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
I found the triggered SJW, do I get a prize? :)
Re: (Score:3)
Unspoken followup (Score:5, Informative)
Digital ID's needed for all - so we can arrest Twitter users speaking out against the State.
Sounds farfetched? The UK is doing that today [businessinsider.com].
I mean, they do that already without digital ID"s, but it would save the police state a lot of time and bother if they could have the address pop up alongside the reported thought crim... er I mean tweet.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Digital ID's needed for all - so we can arrest Twitter users
FTFY
Re: Which cave have you been in again? (Score:2)
Neither have you it seems.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
I know it's scary. We have 15 Muslim MPs out of a total of 650. The 5% Muslim population is completely over-represented by the 2.3% of Muslim MPs... They're even more over-represented in the Lords, with a whopping 10 out of 800! Where will the insanity end?
On a slight tangent, those 10 peers (who's peerages, like most, were awarded merit*) are outnumbered 26 to 10 by the "Lords Spiritual" [wikipedia.org] who are given a seat in the Lords solely on their religion.
* Yes, I accept not all on are merit - there's plenty of cron
Re: (Score:3)
100% of London Mayors are muslim.
The issue isn't the representation of muslims in office, it's the use of 'inciting hatred' laws to limit people's ability to highlight the prevalence of a certain religion when discussing rape gangs, or to highlight the religious commonality around genital mutilation, or the intolerance shown by certain religions to things like homosexuality.
Or indeed, discussing the religion of fuckwits murdering british soldiers in the streets.
Unintended consequences (Score:2, Troll)
Some of the biggest trolls on the internet are not the kiddies on 4chan or the infamous "alt-right", but the leftists, progressives, and their minions.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course it will be funny when such a system turns into a circular firing squad resulting in the banning of feminists, SJWs, leftist political action committees, and the media from the internet for doing exactly what she is complaining about.
Some of the biggest trolls on the internet are not the kiddies on 4chan or the infamous "alt-right", but the leftists, progressives, and their minions.
Your activism is harassment, my harassment is activism.
King George Called (Score:2)
Hey, King George was on the phone, he had some ideas about stamp taxes, too. You might like those. Are you interested, Mr Security Minister?
Nothing cools dissent (Score:2)
like forcing folks to to give the government something to target if you say something they disagree with. :|
Won't happen (Score:2)
The cat's out of the bag. How are you going to stop swarms, PGP, TOR? Free and anonymous speech and transfer of data is necessary for advanced societies and probably can't be effectively denied by legislation. That's what the network was designed for.
Great British Firewall (Score:2)
Obviously you're going to have to ensure any connection to the barbarians on the outside be sanitized by government protectors.
Its hard work (Score:2)
What could return the internet to a 1970's phone exchange? Every dwelling gets an internet, an ip for that dwelling and it has an ISP paper billing address on it?
How to ensure every internet user in the UK has an IP connected to one ISP?
To return to a phone network all over the UK with all UK social media use returning to an approved ip range and a dwelling.
Let the great network beg
Re: Its hard work (Score:2)
Username not appropriate?
Re: (Score:2)
Every UK address gets one government network. 3/1 for consumers? 5/5 for workers who have registed part of their dwelling as an approved home office?
Only one gov approved new GCHQ ready modem per ip, per isp per dwelling.
MI5/6/GCHQ ready if that UK account gets political and expects 1990's style online US freedom of speech.
might as well shutdown the internet (Score:2)
Nopety nope (Score:2)
Off you be fucking, Mr Wallace, off you be fucking.
The same old same old (Score:2)
But what about the children?
Don't take seriously anything that government says (Score:2, Insightful)
When it tries to claim that certain domestic politicians don't officially exist:
https://www.independent.co.uk/... [independent.co.uk]
even to the extent of imprisoning people who mention his name, it has lost any authority to comment on what might be fake news.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Don't take seriously anything that government s (Score:5, Informative)
Tommy Robinson breached a reporting ban (his second offense of this type). This type of ban is typically put in place in order to prevent mob justice and harassment of suspects who are still not convicted, in cases of a sensitive nature.
Would you want your name and face live streamed to Facebook, simply for being the suspect in a trial, where you may or may not be guilty?
Tommy Robinson tried to short-circuit the legal system, including the protections put in place for suspects who are yet to be convicted. In other words he tried to impose his own personal judgment on a case in which he has absolutely no right to interfere. Not to mention that this is the second time he's done so, hence the harsher punishment this time. Tommy Robinson is a radicalized extremist who apparently thinks he is above the law. He is not.
Re: (Score:2)
Here that's how every trial of a celebrity is handled, with the judge only able to control reporting from inside the courtroom. Are you saying that if O J Simpson had been tried in the UK, nobody would know he had even been tried because of being acquitted?
Is the intent to protect the privacy of the defendant, or to prevent publicity about what the prosecutionis doing?
Re: (Score:2)
The court's gag order didn't last long. It had to be abandoned after the story broke internationally. Since it had been suppressed in the compliant press, the government is hopping mad that the Internet saw their gag order as damage, and routed around it.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
His crime was attempting to short-circuit the legal protections of the suspect in an ongoing court case. That is contempt of court, and realistically actually contempt for the entire legal system. Something which the legal system does not look lightly upon.
You may disagree with their decisions, but that is not the right way to change things.
I love it when the government wants to fix things. (Score:2)
I know that was the only time government failed, NOT!
Just my 2 cents
Trump Agrees (Score:2)
civilisation == heirarchal society (Score:5, Insightful)
Or at least that is what the people on the top want the rest of us to believe. An authoritarian's ideal structure is one with a small number at the top and the rest of the people on the bottom. Online communication is the most profound change to society in the last few centuries, perhaps in all of human history. So of course authoritarian-leaning people want to be the gatekeepers to it.
Fear mongering would be telling you that we'll have a lawless wild west if we don't quickly transfer authority to a central entity. As if this is an either or scenario.
Re: civilisation == heirarchal society (Score:4, Insightful)
All civilizations are hierarchical because it is necessary to organize people who do not know one another. Even in some fantasy scenario where everyone is equal, but some act as liaisons to organize society, those liaisons are de facto heads of state.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
All civilizations are hierarchical because it is necessary to organize people who do not know one another. Even in some fantasy scenario where everyone is equal, but some act as liaisons to organize society, those liaisons are de facto heads of state.
That argument is weaker than the intelligent design one: "There must be an intelligent designer because things in nature are so complex they could not have come about by chance".
Simply put, a central planner is not essential for people to achieve productive co-operation. Markets, for example, afford remarkable efficiency using prices as their primary co-ordination mechanism.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The Romans had it right until they screwed it up. When a crisis happens pick the best guy to deal with the crisis who doesn't want the job. As soon as the crisis is over he runs back to the farm because he didn't want the job in the first place.
The U.S. started out that way, with Washington, but quickly degenerated into parties full of people who wanted to be in charge.
Re: (Score:2)
Online communication is the most profound change to society in the last few centuries, perhaps in all of human history.
Probably, but that doesn't mean it's necessarily a good thing
So of course authoritarian-leaning people want to be the gatekeepers to it.
Fear mongering would be telling you that we'll have a lawless wild west if we don't quickly transfer authority to a central entity. As if this is an either or scenario.
I'm expecting that most posts here will reflect the same OMGZ Big Brother! tone, but I agree that some sort of digital ID could be useful. And I'll stress that a digital identity doesn't mean the same thing as a single government ID.
Identity is an interesting subject and there are plenty of existing ways of implementing it without giving up privacy or anonymity.
Re: (Score:2)
However many IDs Theresa May has, they are all bad. (For all possible readings of this phrase).
When they came for our online civil rights... (Score:2)
... I thought for sure it was going to be in the name of protecting us from child porn, not online bullying.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Now its time for the same type of 24/7 collection in the cyber world.
Anonymity isn't the cause. (Score:5, Informative)
Every few years, someone comes out with a social thing for forum thing or whatever, and they insist that using "real" names will make people better-behaved. Every time they are proven wrong. People we well-behaved in small groups, people are not well-behaved in large groups. Full stop. There's surely a marginal size where knowing who people are will make a difference, like when you grow from 50,000 people to 100,000 people maybe, but "online" or "The Internet" are far far far beyond that region, so it doesn't matter.
This isn't just a problem in online forums. I've seen it in workplaces, a workplace with under a thousand people can feel fairly homey and interconnected and grounded, 5,000 people starts to get a little dicey but workable, but when you get up to like 25,000 people, even with the best intentions things routinely get out of control and mobs are always forming. It's not only that people fell they can get away with stuff, it's that people stop standing up for what's right. In a smaller group, when someone gets drunk at a company event and starts making an ass of themselves, unrelated people step up and usher them out. In a larger group, everyone feels like they aren't responsible for the group, so nobody steps up, and the asshole just keeps on going until something horrible happens.
Re:Anonymity isn't the cause. (Score:5, Interesting)
Every few years, someone comes out with a social thing for forum thing or whatever, and they insist that using "real" names will make people better-behaved. Every time they are proven wrong. People we well-behaved in small groups, people are not well-behaved in large groups. Full stop.
Welcome to the Monkeysphere [cracked.com]
Re:Anonymity isn't the cause. (Score:5, Insightful)
Some of the most virulent behavior I've seen online has been on Facebook, from people who are ostensibly using their real names.
Democracy *IS* mob rule (Score:3)
Digital IDs should be brought in to end online anonymity that permits "mob rule" and lawlessness online
What... Like the fact when voting during an election, your vote is supposed to be anonymous
The secret ballot is a voting method in which a voter's choices in an election or a referendum is anonymous, forestalling attempts to influence the voter by intimidation, blackmailing, and potential vote buying. The system is one means of achieving the goal of political privacy.
Democracy *IS* mob rule... right?
Telling the wrong people (Score:2)
If Digital IDs were available, tech companies wouldn't have to require them. Just make them optional, and give people the ability to filter out messages from anyone who isn't IDd. I doubt it would take long for users to choose to filt
Yeah, let's pre-dox everyone! (Score:2)
This authoritarian idiot's solution to tyranny of the majority is to effectively pre-dox everyone? What could possibly go wrong with that idea?
Tired discourse (Score:2)
I'm getting so fucking tired of immature ignorant whinning of dim prepotent politicians trying to vilify and polarize technologies they don't understand and trying to paint a black and white picture that only exists in their fantasy land... or more likely, don't exist at all because they never tried to understand the stuff they are talking about.
That is the true problem we have today. This sorta shit. If we had less shitheads berating against anonymity, privacy and encryption - and by now we had a very long
Perspective... (Score:5, Insightful)
"saying they would be ordered to clamp down on vile attacks against women on their platforms"
The thing with anonymity is that your gender and race do not need to be disclosed, you can claim anything or be anyone. Everyone is equal online and that's the whole point.
As for the word "attack", you can't attack anyone online, you can only throw insults at them, it's only words from random people who you don't know and who don't matter to you. Ignore them, respond in kind or better yet just laugh and ridicule their feeble attempts to insult you.
People need to take the internet for what it is and embrace the anonymity. You can be who you want to be online, if you feel that being a woman online makes you weak and opens you up to "attacks" then pretend to be a man and see what happens. If someone anonymous doesn't like you then so what? You can be just as anonymous as them, they can't do anything to you.
People troll because they get a response, by running away crying about being "attacked" you are giving them a response and making them feel powerful because they had the ability to affect you. If you laugh at them and show them that not only are you suffering no negative effects from their trolling, but you are actually finding their pathetic attempts to insult you amusing then they will soon give up anyway.
OOOh (Score:2)
OOOh vile attacks on women, good excuse to get rid of secure encryption.
Great (Score:2)
Calm down (Score:5, Informative)
As someone who lives in the UK, I take a slightly different view from the somewhat rabid and over-hyped fear-mongers on this site.
Let's have some context:
The UK government is in a mess. The whole Brexit fiasco was poorly thought out and people were asked to vote on little/no information at best and outright lies at worst. This has resulted in many many views on what the result meant and massive in-fighting in the government which is spending so much time on the issue nothing else substantive seems to be happening. Couple this with an election leaving a minority party in power, with little opportunity to make any changes and you have a confused muddle.
So what to do? take decisive action? no too hard!! -- let's have a distraction: royal weddings are good for a couple of months run-up but even they pass. An attack on internet companies is always a short term winner - it panders to the worst elements of the press (who see their business model of peddling hate and discord being threatened) and hits the hot buttons of "terror" and "what of the children/women?".
The level of debate here shows the distraction technique works.
As for implementation -- just look at history: England have more chance of winning the world cup than a UK Government IT system working properly. A few consultancies and IT companies may make some money (but at least nowadays the government does try to claw back overspend on its fiascos)
I seriously doubt that anything will really change and in six months to a year's time things will be just the same.
Facebooks real-name policy disproves this. (Score:2)
The idea of the greater internet dickwad theory is an attractive one. Normal person + anonymity = dickwad. So if this is true, then it stands to reason removing anonymity is the solution.
But heres the thing ,we've tried that in facebooks real name property, and it never worked. In fact it made things worse. If people want to bully someone, that person is right there easy to find on facebook. If they want to hide, they can't unless they want to pull out a significant chunk of their social life. This , by the
Creative accounting (Score:2)
"...the negative costs of their technology, such as end-to-end encryption"
Negative. Costs.
Well, that's a fairly subjective view of the situation, isn't it it, old chap? I think there are a great many people who would like to see your working on that one, before giving you a smash in the face with a frying pan for being an utter twatknacker.
Taking back control (Score:2)
will mean implementing strong censorship rules after Brexit.
The only reason for a digital ID (Score:2)
NordVPN is that you? (Score:2)
Given the timing, this must be some sort of viral advertising by NordVPN - just can't go anywhere these days without seeing their ads :p
Re:100% in favour (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Why can't an Internet ID be anonymous?
Re: (Score:2)
Identification is literally the opposite of anonymity.
When you can figure out how to get up to also be down let us know, until then... don't ask paradoxical questions. If you didn't realize your mistake the moment you typed it out, then you have other problems to focus on rather than this discussion.
I have an ID on this and many other sites but I'm still anonymous. Even if the gov put out a shit form and a need a UID to even log on to the internet (good luck getting that working) and I fill it with false details and get my ID off I go. Even if I get one someone else's ID i'm still anonymous. Go back to pointing out that when you declare something a UFO its been identified as unidentified and figure that one out.
Re: (Score:2)
"GCHQ collected information from every visible user on the internet" (25 September 2015 )
https://www.independent.co.uk/... [independent.co.uk]
"IP addresses could be cross-referenced with other data" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re:100% in favour (Score:5, Interesting)
Except removing anonymity is not really necessary with semi-sensible moderation, white/black lists, and content visibility policies. /. is a really good example of this. Not perfect, but browse at +2 and it's a fairly decent place. Want to dive into the madness of the AC? Change your post level settings or just click "x hidden comments".
I've got in my back pocket a couple of similar but I think better moderation schemes which include shadowbans, reputation, and friends-of-friends and foes-of-friends tweaks. Not likely that I'll ever be in a place to implement them, but if I am, I'll try them out.
Straight up/down votes with no metamoderation are the scourge of the internet. Combined with no sockpuppet policies, you end up with absolutely abusive forums. (Cough reddit, cough.) Websites on the internet are only the wild west if the owners of forums want it to be. Anyone who wants some civility can make that happen, and it doesn't require giving up anonymity.
Re: (Score:2)
free speech reforms
Hahahaha, yeah we'll get right on that after we're finished locking up every random twitter user [rt.com] who's ever tweeted something disparaging about a muslim.
You don't need the qualifier.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
So really, it ain't gonna solve ANYTHING.
That's badly wrong. It will solve the most important thing; shutting the mouths of wrong-thinkers.
Re: (Score:2)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re: That way... (Score:2)