• @brisk@aussie.zoneOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    310 days ago

    Interestingly apart from effectively mandating “safe search” on by default, this doesn’t appear to attempt to restrict users who aren’t logged in.

    • Mark Whybird
      link
      fedilink
      310 days ago

      @brisk I thought the same, though also I presume you’d have to be logged in to turn safe search off.

      • @brisk@aussie.zoneOP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        110 days ago

        I don’t see anything in the document suggesting that, although there’s also nothing stopping companies from doing that.

        • Mark Whybird
          link
          fedilink
          110 days ago

          @brisk The article says “However, the code does preempt concerns that children might get around controls by simply not logging in to their accounts.”

          • @brisk@aussie.zoneOP
            link
            fedilink
            English
            1
            edit-2
            10 days ago

            The actual document is linked in the first paragraph. These are the only sections I can find that seem to care about account holding

    • @shads@lemy.lol
      link
      fedilink
      English
      210 days ago

      Seems like a case of a Industry lobby group getting out ahead of the government to try to push an agenda to me.

      Logged in users are worth more than logged out users as far as digital profiling and advertising so let’s conceal the juicy stuff behind a log in. Doing it this way makes the government the scapegoat. So I would guess 100% compliance isn’t anything too concerning, they just want to juice their numbers to make line go up.

      If Google & Microsoft have to degrade our privacy and freedoms to raise their Oceania region profitability by 0.00000001% that’s a price they are happy for us to pay.

      • @brisk@aussie.zoneOP
        link
        fedilink
        English
        110 days ago

        I don’t see anything in the document as written that would stop users who aren’t logged in from turning off safe search etc… Of course it’s in the company’s interest to interpret it that way, but I would think an honest interpretation based on the current document would dramatically reduce the user value of being logged in to a search engine.

        • @shads@lemy.lol
          link
          fedilink
          English
          210 days ago

          Sorry I just see a “In compliance with government regulation to provide you with a full set of search results you need to be logged in” prompt in the near future. If they can drive people to log in, or even better/worse make people who haven’t had an account create one, I see some big financial incentives for them to do so. Of course that is going to be offset by the potential cost of any breaches, but I can also see the silver lining on that of raising a bigger barrier to entry for any new competition that wants to get started in Australia, and a bit of supporting legislation that blocks “non-compliant” search engines from being accessed in Australia might actual serve to increase lock in. Maybe I am just being paranoid, but when I see an Industry aligned body co-authoring legislation I start to look for their angle.