You don't need to add a birth date for a user. Even if it was a reqirement, you could put whatever or patch the open source code to not require it yourself. This is nothing but legal shenanigans, so some ppl living in these cursed regions can still use Linux.
privacy
Big tech and governments are monitoring and recording your eating activities. c/Privacy provides tips and tricks to protect your privacy against global surveillance.
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The problem is where this is going, if you look down the road.
thing is, how the hell are they going to enforce it, even if it does become law?
piracy is illegal, but it's so widely circumvented that it's a waste of resources to enforce.
Linux is open source. How do they prevent forks? How do they prevent users from modifying the os?
Yes, that's the good news. But probably some of the forks or privately-modified OSs will therefore be by definition "illegal", just like in some countries the wine that you might make from the grapes in your garden is illegal.
I will break the law, with a smile.
The laws may become too wild to support those regions or they will get their own weird distro.
Another outcome is them understanding that it's lunacy and removing those laws, but I won't bet on it.
With the current state of all things, if my computer died tonight I would just not replace it. I quit trying to record music with Linux last year. The only fun I get out of it is modeling for my 3d printer which has been down for months and unmissed. I have enough phone stands. Hell I miss not having a cell phone. Going all analog again sounds nice.
No.
I don't understand the question? What law would you be breaking?