(Image: Getty / Use-heir-id.com)
“This will be funny when the Keir Starmer SIM leaks online,” said the Knight Team, the creator of use-right-id, a website that produces an ID from each member of parliament who sits in responding to the online safety law.
Type the postal code, and in just a few seconds you can get something that looks very real – photos, signatures, date of birth, home address.
Like the Prime Minister’s ID, everything is fake, of course – but people try to use it to cut out the audit of age verification online.
Use-their-id is a joke part, some protests against controversial law, which aims to stop children from seeing dangerous content related to suicide, self-injury, eating disorders and pornography.
Since the online safety law came into force last Friday, more than 100,000 driving licenses have been produced on the Knight website.
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Explain the idea behind it, 39 years says Metro That ‘cannot be avoided’ that sooner or later, there will be a leakage of the main data and British passports and driving licenses will be released online.
He added: ‘My intestinal reaction is, well, if the government will require me to send my ID to the internet to see whatever is considered “adult content”, it sounds like privacy and safety nightmares.
‘Websites that apply age verification examinations are given incentives to do so cheaply – which means outsourcing to third parties.
‘Then it just went to the cheapest bidder, right? And that means that this check will not be done safely and safely or thoroughly.
‘[The Online Safety Act] is a disaster for online privacy, but also security … it is a great outreach from the government. ‘
Leakage of personal information is not the only element of the process he is worried about.
Knight said that people ‘were cut off from good online resource choices’ because they were too worried about their privacy to upload their ID.
He pointed to websites like Spotify, who now forced the ID to check before its users can listen to music with explicit lyrics.
Wikimedia Foundation, who runs Wikipedia, said that except the website was released, it is likely to be prohibited based on laws.
“All types of websites – such as suicide prevention resources, so not porn sites discussed by the government – are building verification checks,” said the Creator.
“They suddenly had to build walls to prevent children. And we also see websites around the internet blocking British traffic at all.
“So we are only cut off from the choice of good resources on the internet.”
Not only Knight protested online safety laws. Only a week since it was upheld, nearly 500,000 people signed a petition that asked him to be revoked.
In response, the government said ‘there were no plans’ to cancel it. State Secretary for Science, Innovation and Technology, Peter Kyle, said that those who wanted it were lost were ‘on the predator’.
Like Knights, critics argue that the law is too blurred and far away.
What is the Online Safety Law?
Under the online safety law, the website must take action to protect children.
More specifically, they must:
- Remove the dangerous and illegal content of their platform
- Acting quickly to prevent children (but not adults) from seeing dangerous content
- Remove illegal content (for example content related to self -injury, abuse, suicide and eating disorders)
They face a big fine if they fail to obey the sweeping rules.
He added: ‘MPs members seem to have appeared with this law based on their feelings -and not really -really listening to experts.
‘The entire technology industry-and I do not only mean to the American social media company-all of which are at this time about how silly the law is.
“This has changed England to be a little laughter.”
Knight made Use-Their ID as a ‘joke’. He thought it would be ‘funny when inevitable data leaks occurred and MP ID cards appear’ online.
As a software engineer, he created a web application to make a living, so he was really ‘really’ knowing about the security side ‘.
In the last week, people praise their site, describing it as ‘the use of their skills very good’.
Comments from supporting ‘thank you very much’ and ‘thank you for caring’, with one of them saying: ‘Thank you very much for the website ID, it’s funny and a good idea.
‘Good luck if someone comes after you.’
A spokesman for the Department of Science, Innovation, and Technology tells Metro: The law is clear: the platform may not promote ways to avoid the requirements of law, and those who fail will face serious law enforcement acts.
“Ofcom has assessed the platform compliance to ensure that strong protection applies to preventing eating, and investigations are ongoing 37 sites.”
Contact our news team by sending an email to us on webnews@metro.co.uk.
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