• utopiah@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    In theory yes.

    What’s bad though is that it’s meaningless. Sure the OS can say you are 10 years old or 100 years old and you can’t change it… but then you open a page in your browser which runs a virtual machine and that VM now says you are, arbitrarily 50 years old. The VM is just another piece of software but put it in fullscreen (if you want) and voila, you are back to declaring whatever age you want to any application or Web page within that VM. If that’s feasible (and I fail to see how it wouldn’t, see countless examples in https://archive.org/details/software or https://docs.linuxserver.io/images/docker-webtop/ even though that’s running on another machine, so imagine that was a SaaS) then only people who aren’t aware of this might provide a meaningful information on the actual age but that’s temporary, the same way more and more people now learn to use a VPN.

    • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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      2 minutes ago

      I mean, ultimately it can always be worked around… even if you were to add stronger forms of identification, a kid can take the parents card / ID / DNA sample / whatever when they are distracted and verify themselves. If a kid is smart enough to set up a VM they are smart enough to deceive adults. Teenagers have been finding ways to get to forbidden stuff for centuries.

      I’d much prefer if the source of trust is in the local device, in the OS, that is responsibility of the family to control, and not on some third party service offered by some organization in who knows where with connections with who knows who.