It does not absolve Meta from not doing due diligence. They have means to make an effort at it and plenty money to hire some experts. Kids under 13 upload their photos to FB publically and would likely be spotted as at least underage in normal conversation if Meta rep reached out to them.
Comment on At Meta, millions of underage users were an 'open secret,' show court filing
Zak@lemmy.world 11 months agoThat gives us a world where people can’t use social media anonymously, which has problematic implications for privacy and free expression for those whose governments do not guarantee that right.
misk@sopuli.xyz 11 months ago
realharo@lemm.ee 11 months ago
There’s still a difference between only the provider having your identity vs your identity being public (which is something Facebook’s real name policy mandates).
Klear@sh.itjust.works 11 months ago
Given the frequency of user data leaks pretty much everywhere, nah, practically no difference there.
realharo@lemm.ee 11 months ago
For age verification specifically, they are supposed to just set a “verified” flag in their database and remove the rest of the data within some amount of time (not more than a month I think).
I wouldn’t trust some random nobody to do this, but big companies should have processes that comply with privacy laws.