• petrol_sniff_king@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    politicians must somehow know better.

    No, no, the accusation is that politicians are lying.

    Let’s phrase this another way. Asking every single website in existence to implement and maintain an ID database and monitoring system is expensive, yes? So, why wouldn’t private companies shift some of this responsibility off to a 3rd party who specializes specifically in this service?

    If I were google, I would:

    • One, be very excited about tying a user’s account analytics to their government personhood; can’t multiple-credit-cards your way out of that one.
    • And two, already be looking at my own 3rd-party user login service as a means of beating out all competition in this space.

    The only thing left to do is lobby. Politicians might not have this vision, but they do understand really expensive dinners.

    • FishFace@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      No, no, the accusation is that politicians are lying.

      In order to be lying, they must know better - that’s my point. You can’t have a nefarious plan without understanding the plan.

      The only thing left to do is lobby. Politicians might not have this vision, but they do understand really expensive dinners.

      That is more of an uphill battle in an environment like Europe or the UK where politicians are deeply skeptical of American big tech companies.

      • petrol_sniff_king@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 day ago

        The plan is that they like money, and they’ll say whatever they have to to get more money. Or power, maybe.

        I don’t really need to know what their motives are, though, anyway. If they were saying that spilling gasoline over a fire would put out the fire, I know that they’re either lying for some reason, or they’re really fucking stupid. Kind of a distinction without a difference.

        where politicians are deeply skeptical of American big tech companies.

        I could believe that people are. Especially after recent events. But… you really think your right wing isn’t in bed with capital? Google was just an example, you know.

        • FishFace@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          If the right wing were in bed with big tech, they would never have passed this Act, which all big tech companies hate because it imposes serious duties and costs on them.

          I don’t really need to know what their motives are, though, anyway.

          Then you shouldn’t pretend that you do.

          It’s perfectly reasonable to argue about how shit the law is, but it’s not reasonable to advance without evidence the view that politicians made the law for some underhanded purpose. Have you trawled the MPs’ Register of Interests to find whether its supporters were wined and dined by those companies? Do you have an explanation for why their request was supposedly “let us become age-verifiers” rather than “don’t force us to moderate our products more”?

          No; you and others don’t have any of this because you haven’t done that journalistic work (and because it probably doesn’t exist). You’re just pissing conspiracy theories into the pot.

          • Senal@programming.dev
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            23 hours ago

            By that rationale you world also need to prove that they are misunderstood upstanding citizens.

            Because both interpretations are deviations from the stated intent and outcome, why would yours not also need journalistic rigour?

            Just because yours is a slightly positive spin doesn’t mean its not conjecture against the provided facts.

            • FishFace@lemmy.world
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              22 hours ago

              You’ve probably heard “never attribute to malice what can adequately be explained by incompetence.” This is an example of that.

              Because both interpretations are deviations from the stated intent and outcome

              They are not. Both are deviations from stated outcome, but not stated intent.

              People on your side of this seem to think that, because politicians are saying that something will happen and you disagree with that, they must actually also believe that the outcome will be as you believe, but are lying about it.

              Not only is this poor reasoning, it’s really quite arrogant. When it comes to predicting outcomes, there is often genuine disagreement. I think you need a good reason to conclude that this can’t possibly be a case of politicians disagreeing about the outcome and no-one has come up with such a good reason - no-one has said, “actually, the minister for DCMS was reported to have met with the bosses of Google, Microsoft and Facebook and a source in the department said they lobbied for age-verification”. All anyone has given is the same argument I have been pointing out:

              1. age verification is bad
              2. politicians must know it’s bad OR politicians are corrupt
              3. therefore politicians supported this for corrupt reasons.

              Can I walk you again through how this argument does not work?

              • Senal@programming.dev
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                21 hours ago

                They are not. Both are deviations from stated outcome, but not stated intent.

                That’s fair, there is still an onus on proof of incompetence being the driver of the outcome rather than some other reason.

                People on your side of this seem to think that, because politicians are saying that something will happen and you disagree with that, they must actually also believe that the outcome will be as you believe, but are lying about it.

                That’s a bold and incorrect assumption, i do disagree with the act because it’s stupid and doesn’t do anything the might be even remotely constructive but i don’t hold them to an imaginary belief system that adheres directly with my own, as stated in the first response, my predictive analysis of what i expect to happen is based on their prior history and the outcomes of their previous decisions.

                It’s not “I believe this thing so it must be true”

                its

                “Their recent (and somewhat mid-term) track record points to them making decisions based on deception and self gain, so i would guess that trend will continue”.

                If you think past behaviour as a partial basis for predicting future behaviour is poor reasoning, I’m not sure we’re going to agree on much of anything here.

                I think you need a good reason to conclude that this can’t possibly be a case of politicians disagreeing about the outcome

                ** gestures vaguely at recent historical decisions in general and multiple attempts at this type of control specifically **

                and no-one has come up with such a good reason - no-one has said, “actually, the minister for DCMS was reported to have met with the bosses of Google, Microsoft and Facebook and a source in the department said they lobbied for age-verification”.

                I’ve specifically said i don’t think big tech is the emphasis here, so I’m not going to provide proof of a position I’m not taking.

                All anyone has given is the same argument I have been pointing out:

                age verification is bad

                politicians must know it’s bad OR politicians are corrupt

                therefore politicians supported this for corrupt reasons.

                I’ve done no such thing, I’ve specifically been talking about the prediction that politicians are generally untrustworthy (and also incompetent at it) based on past behaviour.

                Can I walk you again through how this argument does not work?

                If you want to spend time arguing a point i wasn’t actually contesting, feel free.

                I’m legitimately up for discussing this point instead, but I’m not sure it’ll be worth anyone’s time if we fundamentally disagree on what constitutes poor reasoning.