• Troy@lemmy.ca
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    4 days ago

    So, I’m going to offer a dissenting opinion. Please hear me out before piling on.

    The anonymous internet is going to kill the internet. Without verification and attachment back to a real human, eventually the internet will just be flooded with bots, misinformation, and unverifiable information. The dead internet theory.

    So, yes, we all worry about “Chinese style social credit scores” or corporate ownership of ID or whatever other dystopian bullshit… But what if you just want to have a site where people can talk to one another and know that they’re people that actually have to take responsibility for what they say.

    Anyway, I suspect that this will start in isolation. Like when the internet was young and communities were forming with knots of small people… Forums with full verification requirements or similar. Then they will grow once their quality exceeds everything else.

    Discuss!

    • EngineerGaming@feddit.nl
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      2 days ago

      Is my fetish fiction something bad that I have to take accountability for? No, it’s harmless. Would I still post it attached to my real name? Never.

        • EngineerGaming@feddit.nl
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          2 days ago

          I haven’t lived before Internet was a big thing, so I don’t know just how likely it would be to have it published. Maybe would’ve sent it to an appropriate small magazine - under a pseudonym, of course.

    • labbbb2@thelemmy.club
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      2 days ago

      So you offer abolishing privacy to abolishing privacy? No, we don’t want it like it is in fascist Russia or fascist China. P.S. It sounds like some utopia like communism, socialism, anarchism and similar BS lol

    • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 days ago

      IRC and email isn’t dead and they are completely anonymous. Web ain’t gonna die. TCP and UDP ain’t ever gonna die. HTTP ain’t ever gonna die. HTML ain’t ever gonna die. JSON isn’t even part of the web but it de facto is now. At this rate JS ain’t ever gonna die unfortunately. The web is safe. The internet is safe. Everything is open and it can’t be taken away or killed.

      Think of it like climate change. The internet is going to be just fine. Its whoever is trying to benefit from digital IDs that will go extinct on it, and the internet will have healed itself from them.

    • tabular@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Why look to a (oversized) stick to deal with behavior by some people that may be brought on by lack of responsibility? Consider carrots: rewards for good behavior.

      The internet is probably not worth losing privacy, which protects your freedom, anyway.

    • Yprum@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      There’s two points of consideration here, let’s see if I can make my point without a wall of text, I’m prone to those…

      1. Anonimity: the fact that where you connect cannot know who exactly you are. This should be straightforward, anonimity should not be taken away, it is a core part of the internet in my opinion. It’s extremely important that we can express ourselves freely without fear of being persecuted. Despite the negative sides that it has, as those with ill intent will be harder to find (but not impossible). In this the common quote attributed to Franklin applies well in my opinion: Those who sacrifice liberty for security deserve neither.

      2. Proof of personhood: basically the difficult task of making sure that the other end of an internet connection has a real person, and together with that, proof that it is different than others, the ability to know you are you and not someone else.

      This is incredibly interesting as a technical problem to be solved, and I do agree with you that the internet as we know it is at risk if we don’t solve it properly. It is specially hard to solve if you try to guarantee anonimity (like I believe it should be).

      The wikipedia has an article about it that I think gives a good idea about the topic: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proof_of_personhood

      Personally I have been quite carefully interested into the whole World ID solution, using a device called orb with open specifications that captures some data from your iris that should be unique per person, storing only an encrypted piece of information in a blockchain and on your device locally so that you can use it to identify yourself as a real unique person and only once, but wherever you use it, cannot know anything about you except that. There’s a lot of possible criticism to such a system, but insofar as I have checked and can understand, it seems like a legit solution. But I leave here the link for anyone interested enough to check it themselves: https://world.org/world-id

    • lemmy_outta_here@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      A lot of the bad stuff that happens on the internet is directly related to perceived anonymity. If you want to bully, harass, make bigoted statements, disseminate propaganda, or shill for a corporation, it’s better to be anonymous. If a country gives its citizens the right to free speech and reasonable protections for privacy, a non-anonymous internet is better. Besides, anonymity on the internet is an illusion for about 99% of internet users. All of the big social media companies know who you are - their whole business depends on the data they collect on you, and that data is worth much less if it can’t be associated with an individual. They also have heavy incentives to share that information with the government. Try making an ‘anonymous’ threat against your country’s leader and see if any law-enforcement types decide to visit you.

      • Troy@lemmy.ca
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        4 days ago

        Would likely only work if federated only with other Lemmy instances with the same requirements, but yeah, I could imagine something like that evolving.

    • Jon Payne Sr@mstdn.social
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      4 days ago

      @troyunrau I agree. One reason social media is so toxic is the use of “handles” and “pseudonyms” instead of real, verified names. People will say things to you online that they would not say to your face. If you have a privacy issue with using your real identity, then you can choose not to use the platform.

      • oldfart@lemm.ee
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        4 days ago

        Facebook has shut down my pseudonymous account because i did not provide a photo of my ID. Try it, you should meet more like-minded people there than on Lemmy

    • MimicJar@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Even with verification the Internet will be full of misinformation.

      Let’s look at the recent 2024 Springfield pet-eating hoax. A woman, who I can lookup the name of, posted that she heard people in her neighborhood were eating cats and dogs. That misinformation quickly spread and was shouted at a US Presidential debate.

      While the woman who originally posted it apologized, no one who spread that misinformation did.

      While verification might help keep some people honest, it’s likely only going to keep those already honest, honest.

    • SayCyberOnceMore@feddit.uk
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      4 days ago

      There’s 2 different things here:

      • Anonymity
      • Truth (of people and / or info)

      You need both or you’re loosing freedom of speech.

      If the government is “nice“, then you won’t feel threatened by this and you’ll believe that it’s better because we can now find the “bad guys”.

      But what if the rules change and your thoughts / feelings / beliefs are now “bad”… how do you band together to make it better?

      And, the internet is already flooded by bots, well, at least 50%, but I’m guessing no-one’s noticed.

      • Naia@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 days ago

        As a queer person I’m being very careful about what I say in various spaces right now given the current context. Thinking about replacing accounts that are more tied to me and making some.

        Also thinking to use local LLMs to rephrase what I post so writing pattern detection won’t work.

    • Eril@feddit.org
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      4 days ago

      I agree. Not thought about it a lot, but there should be some way to use your ID for stuff like that without telling every service out there your full personal details.

    • x00z@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      I’m only partly ok with it if it comes with anonymization of my identity. It should be possible to authenticate yourself without anybody knowing who you are or knowing that you authenticated. Maybe we could use an ID card scanner that generates some sort of code that can be used for anonymous identity validation.

      We should also be a lot harder on social media companies that abuse our data. These companies should not be allowed to exist.

      • futatorius@lemm.ee
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        4 days ago

        I’m only partly ok with it if it comes with anonymization of my identity.

        It won’t.

        We should also be a lot harder on social media companies that abuse our data. These companies should not be allowed to exist.

        They’re already too powerful, even without a monopoly on authentication.

        • x00z@lemmy.world
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          4 days ago

          They’re already too powerful, even without a monopoly on authentication.

          Too powerful in what way? More power than they should have? Definitely. Too powerful to be stopped? I don’t think so.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Except this is not about ending anonymity in favor of John Buddy Smith, ID 1234-567890, this is about pseudonymity using cryptographic identities.

      And also, as you might have noticed, platforms are fine with their own bots or bots they’ve been paid to allow in.

      Which means that for any kind of real verification you need a transparent system, communities allowing or not allowing something are not enough, any such authority is a point of failure. Transparent like e-mail or e-news, except one can do better now.

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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      4 days ago

      One way around this is to nationalize social media companies. Use public funding to run the service instead of private companies and run the service in the same way as licensing a vehicle to drive on the highway.

      Social media has essentially become a public necessity that everyone wants and needs, it should be run and regulated like the public water system. It should be run, controlled, regulated and monitored by a system like the postal service where it isn’t designed to make money but instead concentrate all is activity into just providing a critical independent service to everyone.

      • futatorius@lemm.ee
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        4 days ago

        Then the state acquires the ability to spy on all your communications, and when the state is taken over by bad actors (as now), they can use that to blackmail, bully or worse.

        • lemmeBe@sh.itjust.works
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          4 days ago

          And they will spy on us, at some point, if this were to be allowed to pass. Not a question of “if” the government will abuse it, but “which” government will abuse it.

    • Tower@lemm.ee
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      4 days ago

      I tend to agree. Admittedly without having thought too deeply about how it would work, I kinda think there needs to be 2 internets: one that is anonymous and one that isn’t. The anonymous one is vital for people to be able to freely dissent from and protest their government, etc. The non-anonymous one would be, as you said, something that can assess responsibility back to specific people. Idk. I’m just spit balling. Fascism, through unchecked capitalism, is killing the Internet. 🫤

    • hypna@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      I think there’s a place for both. So long as none of it becomes mandatory, and online communities can freely choose to offer anonymous or verified identities, it’s an idea worth trying.

    • Zorque@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Plenty of verified people provide disinformation and trolling. There’s an entire American cable news channel dedicated to it. Several now, really.

      The problem isn’t that people spread disinformation, it’s that people believe it without verifying. We need to increase peoples ability to utilize critical thinking skills, not somehow stem the unending tide of bullshittery.

      There will always be snake oil salesman seeking to profit off the gullibility of the general public. The solution isn’t to kill all the salesman, it’s to teach people to be less gullible.

  • Hegar@fedia.io
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    4 days ago

    I imagine it would make fake-account-driven influence operations much harder, and it might drive down total online time.

    • Ibuthyr@lemmy.wtf
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      3 days ago

      If that’s the case for everyone, I fully approve of this. People need to stop using social media.

          • JoeKrogan@lemmy.world
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            4 days ago

            Ah my bad sorry. It was working the last time I tried it. I have had luck with brave browser too without an account and it blocks the ads

              • Grangle1@lemm.ee
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                4 days ago

                Try Grayjay. There’s an option on their YpuTube plugin to allow age-restricted videos. Just try the mobile app for now, though, their desktop version is still in alpha phase.