TechCrunch News 08月29日
密西西比州年龄验证法引发Bluesky与Mastodon关于去中心化解决方案的讨论
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密西西比州一项过于宽泛的年龄验证法律引发了关于哪种社交平台能更好地规避对互联网自由的限制的讨论。Bluesky因缺乏资源 compliance 而选择在密西西比州屏蔽服务,并对法律的广泛范围和隐私影响表示担忧。该法律要求平台对所有用户进行年龄验证,否则将面临高额罚款。Mastodon创始人则借此强调其真正去中心化的优势,认为没有人能决定联邦宇宙是否屏蔽特定地区。然而,关于去中心化平台如何应对此类法律的争论仍在继续,一些用户正通过VPN或第三方客户端尝试绕过限制。同时,其他州也在考虑类似的年龄验证法律。

⚖️ 密西西比州HB 1126年龄验证法案要求社交平台对所有用户进行年龄验证,否则将面临高达每用户10,000美元的罚款,这促使Bluesky选择在当地屏蔽服务,因为其团队资源有限,难以满足法律的技术要求,并对其隐私影响表示担忧。

🌐 Mastodon创始人Eugen Rochko借Bluesky的决定强调了真正去中心化的重要性,认为Mastodon的联邦宇宙(fediverse)由于其分布式特性,无法被单一实体决定屏蔽特定地区,避免了集中化平台的潜在风险。

💬 Bluesky董事会成员Mike Masnick对此回应称Rochko的说法可能具有误导性,指出即使是去中心化网络,大型实例(如Mastodon.social)也可能成为法律目标的攻击对象,需要考虑是否愿意承担潜在的罚款。

🔧 尽管面临法律挑战,密西西比州的用户正尝试通过VPN或第三方客户端(如Graysky、Skeets等)来访问Bluesky,部分第三方客户端开发者表示不计划根据用户地理位置屏蔽访问,为用户提供了绕过限制的途径。

🌍 密西西比州的立法并非孤例,亚利桑那州、怀俄明州、南达科他州和弗吉尼亚州等其他州也在推进类似的年龄验证或内容限制法律,这表明了互联网监管正在成为一个更广泛的趋势,尽管去中心化网络在一定程度上增加了执法的难度。

An overly broad age assurance law in Mississippi is leading to arguments about which platforms — Bluesky, Mastodon, or others — offer the best solution for avoiding crackdowns on internet freedoms.

The company that makes the Bluesky social app announced last week that it would block access to its service in the state of Mississippi, rather than comply with the new age verification law. In a blog post, the company explained that, as a small team, it lacked the resources to implement the substantial technical changes required by the law, and it raised concerns about the law’s broad scope and potential privacy implications.

The law, HB 1126, requires platforms to implement age verification for all users before they can access social networks like Bluesky. Recently, the Supreme Court justices decided to block an emergency appeal that would have prevented the law from going into effect as the legal challenges it faces played out in the courts. This forced Bluesky to make a decision of its own: either comply or risk hefty fines of up to $10,000 per user.

Users in Mississippi soon scrambled for a workaround, which tends to involve the use of VPNs.

However, others questioned why a VPN would be the necessary solution here. After all, decentralized social networking was meant to reduce the control and power the state — or any authority — would have over these social platforms.

Image Credits:Screenshot from Mastodon

On Mastodon, the decentralized social network running the ActivityPub protocol, founder Eugen Rochko responded to the announcement from Bluesky by taking a bit of a potshot at the rival social network.

“And this is why real decentralization matters,” he wrote. “There is nobody that can decide for the fediverse to block Mississippi.”

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This prompted a response from Techdirt founder and Bluesky board member Mike Masnick, who said Rochko’s statement was “potentially misleading.”

“Both because others can host their own views of the network,” he pointed out. “But also will the largest instances, which you run, be willing to pay the $10k/user fines in Mississippi? Because the state can still go after instances, no?” (He’s referring to the large instance, or server, called mastodon.social, which Rochko also runs.)

TechCrunch reached out to Mastodon to confirm whether it would comply with the law on the mastodon.social instance, and we didn’t hear back by time of publication. But the law was written in a way that a Mastodon instance could seemingly become a target — as could a “message board,” “chat room,” “landing page,” “video channel,” or “main feed,” it states.

Image Credits:Screenshot from Mastodon

Rochko and Masnick then engaged in a rather spicy back-and-forth, as others chimed in, with Rochko accusing Bluesky of having all its infrastructure run by one U.S. company — meaning Bluesky PBC, the company behind the Bluesky social app. He also said that it was “interesting” that this was the only time someone from Bluesky had said anything to him about “working together” — i.e. to fight such legislation — since Bluesky’s launch nearly two years ago.

“Well, I believe you have my e-mail address,” Rochko wrote.

The truth, as is often the case, lies somewhere in the middle.

Unlike Mastodon, which connects thousands of decentralized servers over the ActivityPub protocol, Bluesky uses a different protocol (AT Protocol or AT Proto for short), which focuses more on account portability and decentralized moderation. Instead of allowing people to run their own servers to create a community, Bluesky lets people run their own versions of the bits and pieces that make up its social networking infrastructure, like the PDS (personal data server), relay, moderation lists, or algorithm.

That said, Bluesky is still the largest entity to operate a PDS, given that the network is still fairly new. That means the majority of Bluesky’s users are relying on its own infrastructure. However, a community called Blacksky recently spun up its own PDS, so things are progressing on that front. And there are others, as well as independently run relays and appviews, which are portions of Bluesky infrastructure.

In the meantime, these turf battles don’t do anything to help the users of Mississippi who have been locked out of their preferred social networks.

Without using a VPN, some users in the state report they’ve been able to access Bluesky through third-party clients like Graysky, Skeets, Klearsky, TOKIMEKI, Flashes, or forked versions of the Bluesky app, like Deer.social or Zeppelin.

Rudy Fraser, Blacksky founder, confirmed to TechCrunch that his community doesn’t plan on blocking any users based on where they’re located, anywhere in the world.

There’s also a sideloaded version of Bluesky available, which was uploaded to the alternative app distribution platform AltStore. To sideload, first install AltStore on Mac or Windows with permissions and developer mode enabled. Then press the “+” button, type in “https://smanthasam.github.io/bskyms/alt.json” (without quotes), press the button next to “BlueskyMS,” and press add. This adds the source to your AltStore so you can browse to the sideloaded Bluesky app and install it.

For those in Mississippi in need of a read-only version of Bluesky, Anartia‘s search engine is available.

Still, these workarounds aren’t necessarily permanent solutions, as the makers of the apps and clients have to decide for themselves whether they want to risk becoming a popular alternative for users in Mississippi that could catch legislators’ attention. As it stands, the law broadly affects services that allow users to create profiles, post content, and interact with others on a social networking service — a broad definition.

If Bluesky client applications don’t run their own PDS to host user data, it may perhaps be considered to be only offering clients — and therefore should not be affected. But explaining the intricacies of how a PDS works to a judge might prove difficult, too.

Mississippi is not the only state looking to add an age assurance layer to the internet. Other laws are in various stages in Arizona, Wyoming, South Dakota, and Virginia. The latter is particularly challenging, as it includes a time limit for usage of social media sites.

In any event, the diaspora of social networking alternatives at least makes enforcement of this type of legislation a bit more difficult, compared with a traditionally centralized network like Facebook or Instagram. That’s a step in the right direction for decentralization, regardless of your network of choice.

But overly broad laws also advantage the larger centralized platforms, which easily have the resources to comply, while smaller services like Bluesky just have to opt out.

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密西西比州 年龄验证 Bluesky Mastodon 去中心化 互联网自由 HB 1126 Mississippi Age Verification Bluesky Mastodon Decentralization Internet Freedom HB 1126
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