this post was submitted on 26 Dec 2023
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I’ve always thought that it ought to be analogous to the real world. There are places in the real world where you can be anonymous, and the internet needs that.
But there are also public places on the internet. In the same way that there are laws to stop you walking into your local town square and starting to yell racist shit, there ought to be something that stops you doing that in the “town square” of the internet - i.e. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube etc. Or at least, there should be a consequence to that.
I think that figuring out some kind of threshold beyond which a site needs to require an official, publicly visible ID could be of benefit, but agree that people will always need the opportunity for online privacy.
I don't necessarily disagree but those spaces/sites would have to be public. I don't want a private company determining whether or not I'm allowed to speak in a public space.
That's how it is today. "walk" into a banking website and you need to prove who you are. And there are social media sites that do the same. I think truth social asks for a picture of your ID to verify you.
The fact that the likes of Truth Social hoover up your personal information and documents is little surprise to me.
It's terrifying