• Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    The law effectively only applies penalties to the parents.

    This applies penalties to far more than the parents. If I provide an operating system to a California parent, and my operating system does not include this “signal” apparatus, I can be fined $7500 every time a kid launches an application on my OS, for my deliberate decision not to implement their asinine horseshit.

    • Archr@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I mean yea. If you don’t make a good faith effort to implement this age attestation page and api to allow apps to pull from it. Then yes. You would be liable.

      You could of course decide to not provide to residents of California and Colorado. No one is forcing you to provide for either of these states.

      • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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        1 day ago

        And if I make a good faith effort, but it doesn’t work right, that’s a $2000 penalty. Every time that snot-nosed, unsupervised kid opens an app.

        You could of course decide to not provide to residents of California and Colorado.

        Yes, that’s exactly what Microsoft and Google want. They don’t want my FOSS OS competing with their commercial offerings.

        • Archr@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          No… The law literally says that if you make a good faith effort then you are not liable.

          An operating system provider or a covered application store that makes a good faith effort to comply with this title, taking into consideration available technology and any reasonable technical limitations or outages, shall not be liable for an erroneous signal indicating a user’s age range or any conduct by a developer that receives a signal indicating a user’s age range.

          Also the 2500$ is only for negligent violations.

          Look, I don’t want linux to leave Cali. I have primarily used linux for the past 8 years and have no desire to use windows anymore than I have to. But, as you said, the linux community throwing their hands up and deciding to exit Cali and Colorado is just playing right into Microsoft’s desires.

          • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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            1 day ago

            No… The law literally says that if you make a good faith effort then you are not liable.

            It used to be that my liability was to the people using my code. If I code badly, they won’t use it, and I might be blocked from contributing to a project. That was the worst penalty that I faced for providing bad code.

            Now, I might have to argue against a lawyer claiming my mistakes are negligence, and my efforts are in less than good faith, with financial penalties should they prevail.

            They merely need to point to my opposition to this law as evidence that I am not acting “in good faith” to support it.

            Throwing up our hands and exiting California and Colorado is playing into Microsoft’s desires. It is also the only rational response should this law go into effect as planned. Which means the proper course of action is to denounce this idiot law, not lend it our support or rationalize the harm it causes.

          • Katana314@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            Most practitioners of data security are aware of the severe dangers of fingerprinting users, and that is a hardline issue. Thus, in order to maintain their security practices, their only choice is to not collect this sort of info on users at any level. If they’re delivering a security product with a built-in vulnerability, they’re not delivering a security product. It’s much better to just surrender one state until it invents sanity.