this post was submitted on 22 Mar 2026
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The latest changes implemented in the Systemd repo, related to or prompted by age-verification laws, have made many people unhappy (I suppose links about this aren't necessary). This has led to a surge in Systemd forks during the last days ("surge" because there have always been plenty of forks). Here are some forks that explicitly mention those changes as their reason for forking (rough time ordering taken from the fork page):

Hopefully the energy of this reaction won't be scattered among too many alternatives, although some amount of scattering is always good.

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[–] rumba@lemmy.zip 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

You see that's the inches part.

No, we won't invade freedom

Well, we won't invade freedom, but we're just going to put this field in so that someone can comply easily if they want to

Well, not all the distros require you to log your age

Well, you can cheat or lie

History is absolutely full of people taking the temperature of the water they're in and going, well, it's not boiling yet....

[–] motogo@feddit.dk 0 points 2 days ago (1 children)

The road to hell is paved with good intentions, yes. And I agree this could become a slippery slope towards enabling something we, as privacy concerned citizens, despise. It could also turn into enabling Linux as a solution for governments that require this. So from my PoV the question is whether it's better that Linux will be prohibited for noncompliance or that SystemD enables a persistence layer for DoB to be used for yet to be clarified mechanisms? So far SystemD has been exceedingly good at designing this init system but maybe this is the exception and a wrong turn. I'm still curious to learn more arguments for exactly why they chose as they did.

[–] rumba@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

So from my PoV the question is whether it’s better that Linux will be prohibited for noncompliance

That's the same slope.

It it better that systemD add a column?

Is it better than ubuntu starts enforcing it?

Is it better that they just outlaw software that doesn't comply?

For me, that line starts back at the very beginning. There's no room for FOSS for Authoritarianism. I'm not interested in giving them a few inches of rope so that they can hang us with it later. If governments want to use Linux, they can, they can even fork it and make their own changes. They don't get to demand how our own software tracks us.

[–] motogo@feddit.dk 1 points 2 days ago

You're right. All PI data should be tokenised to ensure a proper abstraction between the user and their identity. And then a tool a bit like Flatseal to allow granular access to that data.