A small set of people are merging changes to various Linux components to make sure every application knows your birth date.
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@wwahammy apart from security fixes I don't see any earth-shattering reason to improve these modules, so is a security-fix only maintainable version possible?
@mahadevank @wwahammy If you're prepared to do the work, it's possible.
#OpenSource is maintained by people who do the work, mostly unpaid, mostly unthanked.
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In case anyone is unclear, since I hear he's also campaigning on this Linux age-gating trash:
Bryan Lunduke is a fascist hatemonger. He represents the absolute worst in free software and I believe he should be ostracized from any and all parts of our community. He wants software freedom for himself and in the abstract but despises individuals expressing their freedom. He believes in a software freedom that is hollowed out and missing love.
@wwahammy unless people have ample proof on what he believes in I suggest that they moderate their tone. This looks like a hate campaign to me.
Some people only wanna implement/support laws they like. That's not how laws work.
The cyberspace is not independent.
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@artemis @wwahammy this isn't complying in advance, it's complying with the law. Which passed unanimously through the California assembly and senate and was signed into law by Gavin Newsom in 2025. It's not going to be repealed.
Open source projects do not have the type of budget that allows them to merely ignore the law and shrug off fines and legal fees.
When I read about it a few months ago, I had the impression that OS vendors needed to not only offer a way to do age verification, but also guarantee that the age verification would be reasonably foolproof (e.g. with ID verification). Apple/Google/Microsoft can do that; Linux distros can't. Assuming that my impression was correct, and that the law wasn't modified before being voted (two bold assumptions for sure), I don't see how that systemd comedy is going to help if bad actors decide to sue Linux distros for non-compliance

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@mahadevank @wwahammy If you're prepared to do the work, it's possible.
#OpenSource is maintained by people who do the work, mostly unpaid, mostly unthanked.
@simon_brooke @wwahammy what would be the most important module to protect in your opinion? I'll try and fork a version out to codeberg
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A small set of people are merging changes to various Linux components to make sure every application knows your birth date.
This is being done rapidly by people with questionable justifications and being merged with no youth and few marginalized people involved.
If I’m reading this PR correctly, it doesn’t comply with the California law, which requires the OS (some system component, such as systemd) to have the date of birth but provide only a 2-bit signal to the application and not their date of birth. The law is designed to provide a simple ‘user is over 18’ signal for all adults and to not permit apps to see their date of birth. There are issues if an app can poll the 2-bit signal over time, because then they can observe when it changes and infer the date of birth. But California already has a GDPR-like law that they would likely be infringing in this case (they do not have a need to that information and collecting it without consent would place them in violation).
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@wwahammy
Also this is most likely illegal under gdpr as collecting personal data that is not required for the system to work is illegal. Only necessary data should be collected. So they just made systemd illegal in Europe. Good job.@bohwaz @wwahammy It's actually worse than that. I've just been reading the UK #GDPR guidance regarding holding age data on children. It's bizarrely complex, but, essentially, children under 13 cannot legally give consent to their age data being held.
So yes, you can legally hold age data on adults, provided they consent; but you can't on children, unless their parent consents, and that can't just be 'someone who said they were the parent'.
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A small set of people are merging changes to various Linux components to make sure every application knows your birth date.
This is being done rapidly by people with questionable justifications and being merged with no youth and few marginalized people involved.
> Nobody is a fan of these laws, but not following the laws has huge implications in any project that would like to have any company contribute to it and puts the maintainers in a position where they are unnecessarily liable.
Ignoring laws is a key and vital part of living in society.
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In case anyone is unclear, since I hear he's also campaigning on this Linux age-gating trash:
Bryan Lunduke is a fascist hatemonger. He represents the absolute worst in free software and I believe he should be ostracized from any and all parts of our community. He wants software freedom for himself and in the abstract but despises individuals expressing their freedom. He believes in a software freedom that is hollowed out and missing love.
@wwahammy explain to me what did he do? he's against the stupid age verification shit too.
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@wwahammy unless people have ample proof on what he believes in I suggest that they moderate their tone. This looks like a hate campaign to me.
Some people only wanna implement/support laws they like. That's not how laws work.
The cyberspace is not independent.
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@wwahammy
Also this is most likely illegal under gdpr as collecting personal data that is not required for the system to work is illegal. Only necessary data should be collected. So they just made systemd illegal in Europe. Good job. -
@artemis @wwahammy this isn't complying in advance, it's complying with the law. Which passed unanimously through the California assembly and senate and was signed into law by Gavin Newsom in 2025. It's not going to be repealed.
Open source projects do not have the type of budget that allows them to merely ignore the law and shrug off fines and legal fees.
@smn it is only the law in California
projects should simply add a disclaimer "this product is not legal in regions that require OS level age verification" like they used to for the bundled codecs
the US isn't the entire world and people from there need to stop pushing their bullshit onto everyone else
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In case anyone is unclear, since I hear he's also campaigning on this Linux age-gating trash:
Bryan Lunduke is a fascist hatemonger. He represents the absolute worst in free software and I believe he should be ostracized from any and all parts of our community. He wants software freedom for himself and in the abstract but despises individuals expressing their freedom. He believes in a software freedom that is hollowed out and missing love.
@wwahammy also, linux is missing love too. accessibility stack lags behind even NVDA 2016.x
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How about targeting with revolts politicians and not opensource developers?
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A small set of people are merging changes to various Linux components to make sure every application knows your birth date.
This is being done rapidly by people with questionable justifications and being merged with no youth and few marginalized people involved.
@wwahammy I wish them scabies and arms too short to scratch themselves!
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@konomikitten the vast majority of people (over 95%!) do not live in the US
the US *is* an asinine overseas country passing bullshit laws
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A small set of people are merging changes to various Linux components to make sure every application knows your birth date.
This is being done rapidly by people with questionable justifications and being merged with no youth and few marginalized people involved.
@wwahammy How many youth were involved in the considerations you made when building YOUR opinion on the matter?
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