> Sure, and in the meantime try to think and read about how privacy-preserving age verification actually works.
This requires you build a whole apparatus around controlling what people can see, say, and do.
The concept of "slippery slope" is often called a logical fallacy, but in reality it's more than often not a fallacy at all. It's the manner in which you boil the frog.
I think it's something like over 50% of adults do not have kids now. Why should we put the majority of people - for the majority of their lives - at risk for a mere 20% of the population to "not see boobs", when good parenting will suffice?
Let's not put a cage around our freedoms. Let's ask parents to be more responsible. In the edge cases where that isn't sufficient, is that really as bad as what could happen to all of our liberties should we go down that path?
We're burning down the whole village because someone saw a cockroach.
This requires you build a whole apparatus around controlling what people can see, say, and do.
The concept of "slippery slope" is often called a logical fallacy, but in reality it's more than often not a fallacy at all. It's the manner in which you boil the frog.
I think it's something like over 50% of adults do not have kids now. Why should we put the majority of people - for the majority of their lives - at risk for a mere 20% of the population to "not see boobs", when good parenting will suffice?
Let's not put a cage around our freedoms. Let's ask parents to be more responsible. In the edge cases where that isn't sufficient, is that really as bad as what could happen to all of our liberties should we go down that path?
We're burning down the whole village because someone saw a cockroach.