What I mean is I know that a lot of things done online in China are done with WeChat, including it being something that some apps run in. If the same is true for what’s being discussed here, then the Chinese government doesn’t need people to prove their ages first, because they already have that data.
WeChat seems to be invite-only, at least the last time I messed around with it.
You pretty much need to know someone to even sign up for a wechat account. Because supposedly, WeChat was infested with scammer accounts so this is one of the ways to minimize fraud, because you need an account in good standing to open another one, and if you do shady stuff, the investigators can just asked whoever invited you for your real identity. And of course, privacy intrusion is always one of the goals, anti-fraud is just one way to justify their policies.
SaraTonin@lemmy.world 1 day ago
What I mean is I know that a lot of things done online in China are done with WeChat, including it being something that some apps run in. If the same is true for what’s being discussed here, then the Chinese government doesn’t need people to prove their ages first, because they already have that data.
DeathByBigSad@sh.itjust.works 1 day ago
WeChat seems to be invite-only, at least the last time I messed around with it.
You pretty much need to know someone to even sign up for a wechat account. Because supposedly, WeChat was infested with scammer accounts so this is one of the ways to minimize fraud, because you need an account in good standing to open another one, and if you do shady stuff, the investigators can just asked whoever invited you for your real identity. And of course, privacy intrusion is always one of the goals, anti-fraud is just one way to justify their policies.