Basically, he's trying to play up the number of "predators".
Anyway, here's another one "they know someone who has done the same thing". This revelation apparently completely changes things... Except it doesn't...
As the data here (different data set) shows, 50% of teens in the late 80s, and 40% in 2013 had sex with each other, therefore the probability that someone "knows" someone who has done this approaches 100%.
If there's a correlation between that, and "perversity", or whatever, it might be they're more willing to talk about their private sex lives with each other. Who knows.
Still, it's easy to think of non-conspiratorial explanations.
@evangreer @lukeoneil47 It's not just investors / advertisers having surveillance sold to them as a "solution" here. In a way, it is also the government.
Oh sorry, his best friend was the conspiracist. He only put the theories about ritual abuse in schools in his speeches before the Parliament. Right.
Julie appears concerned about the prospect of "generative AI" being used to generate messages for use in "catfishing". This is admittedly one I've never thought of before. Then again, I'm very surprised this potentiality, of all things, would rise to an official's attention.
I also noticed the citation provided for this is an article which talks about this phenomena broadly, but not specifically within this context. This appears to be a theoretical issue?
In any case, I don't much like the prospect of random officials barging in to tell companies to design products in particular ways over random risks which they've thought up.
https://edri.org/our-work/8-december-case-why-is-encryption-on-trial/
"On 3 October, the trial of the so-called “8 December” case began. Seven people are prosecuted for being a “terrorist group”.
The intelligence services in charge of the judicial investigation (Direction générale de la Sécurité intérieure, DGSI), the National Antiterrorist Prosecution Office (Parquet National Antiterroriste, PNAT), and the investigating judge based their case on the fact that the defendants were using different tools to protect their privacy and encrypt their communications on a daily basis.
This trial is part of an increased political push by states and law enforcement for surveillance measures and the criminalisation of encryption. That is why the trial is crucial in the battle against the state’s ongoing attempts to criminalise commonplace, secure and healthy digital practices."
"One of the main issues in this trial is whether such privacy habits can be used by the police and the courts as incriminating evidence to feed the presumption of a terrorist plot. If the judge shows such bias, it would have dangerous consequences. This would mean that any form of confidentiality would become a reason for suspicion."
Looks like Julie is carrying out a "public consultation", that is probably an important one to keep in mind throughout it.
🧵 The #FreeSoftware/#OpenSource status of #Matrix, #Element and other related projects is in serious trouble. The main company running the ecosystem, @element, will fork the main projects from their previous steward, the @matrix@mastodon.matrix Foundation, make AGPL-3.0 the new default license, and put a #CLA in front of it.
This is a common scheme called Rights-Ratched-Model as coined by @webmink. I see a number of upcoming changes that are bad for user freedom, interoperability and communities:
[🧵 1/7]
@aebrockwell 1) I think the worst thing is when they believe the nonsense the machine puts out without thinking critically about it.
3) A lawyer got fined for making filings with a court which cited a bunch of non-existent cases. That excuse didn't fly with the judge.
The Lantern cartel is not to be confused with the "brand safety" cartel, although they're both problematic in their own ways.
There are many questions about freedom of expression, proportionality, due process, and so on here as well, particularly as these companies tend to be overly censorious and frivolous.
Also, some of the terms used here are extremely suspicious.
The anti-trust question though is one which keeps getting overlooked, and it's an important one.
While investigating other things, I discovered multiple tech companies engaging in very creepy and opaque cartel-like behavior with a program called "Lantern". They also appeared to be funding reports to justify it.
It's actually not unheard of for tech companies like these to attack their competitors, then to invoke some high minded "concern" like "safety" to try to deflect responsibility from that. In 2021, Google even tried to remove Element, which is practically akin to a web browser for the Matrix Network, from the app store.
There also appeared to be a company called "Thorn" (which is well-known for being fairly problematic) involved.
Some points about censoring fictional content there (censorship is a bad idea):
1) It might fuel someone's persecution complex. The idea of a dangerous world where people are out to get them. Feeds anxiety, alienation. It's happened a fair bit. It doesn't actually do anything positive.
2) Someone might see someone as an idiot or crazy (that's not wrong, lol). In any case, it poisons the well as someone is not seen to be credible or competent in these matters at all.
3) It violates someone's free expression. People have these things called rights, that's important.
4) Bad people don't need it. They can still do bad things. Good people are who'd suffer.
5) It violates the Constitution. Multiple constitutions.
6) Punishing someone because they resemble someone unpleasant isn't good. Also, due process still applies, in any case...
7) Can be a coping mechanism.
Software Engineer. Psy / Tech / Sex Science Enthusiast. Controversial?
Free Expression. Human rights / Civil Liberties. Anime. Liberal.