The terms “blindingly obvious,” “logical consequence,” and “that is not how it works” appear nowhere in the government handbook of internet legislation. In particular, the discovery that imposing age access controls on websites has pushed users to VPNs has come as a huge surprise to legislators in the UK, the EU, Canada, and Australia. Nobody here knows how old VPN users are, be they kids unwilling to lose access or adults unwilling to disgorge personally identifying data to who knows what.

As they recover from this shocking discovery, these fine people are looking at ways to control VPNs, whether by adding age verification here too or by some magical “digital age of consent” technology that somehow evades the paradox that demanding more personal information in the name of safety itself reduces safety. Yet here, as in so many ways, the rest of the world is lagging behind America – more specifically, the great state of Utah, which has just enacted an anti-VPN law.

This law makes it compulsory for any site that the state says needs age verification – porn, basically – to impose those checks on anyone physically in Utah whether or not they are using any VPN. Those would be the same VPNs whose sole purpose is to prevent the geolocation of their users. Which would seem, and is, another paradox.

I’d not go online without a VPN. There’s absolutely no reason my ISP needs my browsing history. And at about $6/month, it’s not exactly breaking the bank.

What I’d not use is any VPN provider that sponsors YouTube content. A free VPN has to make their money from somewhere.

  • Powderhorn@beehaw.orgOP
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    24 小时前

    I mean, I’m using Mullvad. I don’t have the hardware to host my own VPN in a van, so this is my best approach. Could I host Wireguard locally? Sure. With access to alternating-current power.

    • pcouy@lemmy.pierre-couy.fr
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      21 小时前

      When I said I host my own, I mean on cheap VPS that cost me way less than 6$/month.

      But yeah, mullvad is pretty much the only commercial VPN provider I’d trust more than my ISP

      • Powderhorn@beehaw.orgOP
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        21 小时前

        I would counter that I’m saving $1,500 a month by living in a van. As a cost, the VPN is a rounding error.

        • pcouy@lemmy.pierre-couy.fr
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          11 小时前

          My point was never about the cost anyway. It was about VPNs (commercial or hosted on a cheap VPS) still needing you to trust a third party, and also that the P in VPN does not mean “privacy”