年龄限制出租车追踪?英国在线安全法案的荒谬后果
Age-Restricted Taxi Tracking? The Absurd Consequences Of Britain's Online Safety Act

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/age-restricted-taxi-tracking-absurd-consequences-britains-online-safety-act

英国最近一起出租车预订事件凸显了新的《在线安全法案》存在的问题。作者收到一个用于追踪出租车进度的链接,但他的移动运营商(沃达丰)将其屏蔽,认定为“不适宜未成年人内容”。 这一屏蔽引发了严重的安全性担忧。作者指出,需要出租车的17岁弱势青少年可能会被困住,并可能面临危险,无法访问追踪链接进行验证。他设想了一种情况,即掠夺者可能会利用这种情况,冒充出租车司机。 作者质疑该法案的过度干预,认为无害的链接被屏蔽,可能*增加*了年轻人的风险,而不是保护他们。他想知道还有哪些日常在线内容被不必要地限制,以及这些措施是否真的能提高安全性。

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原文

Authored by Philip Leith via DailySceptic.org,

I was recently travelling in the UK and, after a lot of sightseeing on foot, decided to order a taxi to go back to my hotel.

I searched the internet for a local taxi firm and found one with relative ease. I called the number and went through an automated process which worked well. I managed to book a taxi quickly. The computer-generated voice told me that my taxi was on its way. I was sent a link so that I could monitor the progress of my taxi. The message also said that I would know the taxi driver’s name and the type of vehicle and registration number that was on its way.

When I clicked on the link I was forwarded to this:

I can’t understand why anyone would consider a link to show you the progress of a taxi that you have ordered to be age-inappropriate content.

I can only assume that it is to do with the recent Online Safety Act, although coincidentally I had recently changed mobile providers, so it might purely have been that the mobile provider that I’d switched to had a different standard as to what was considered adult content.

I doubt this on the basis that the company I moved to, Talkmobile, is a wholly owned subsidiary of the company I had used previously, Vodafone, and, as you can see, the block was from Vodafone.

Whoever has decided that this link contains age-restricted content hasn’t necessarily thought this through.

Consider the scenario where a 17 year-old girl can’t get hold of her parents and it’s too far away or she does not want to walk home, so she orders a taxi through a reputable taxi service.

A link is sent to her so she can see the progress of the taxi that she has ordered.

Of course, she can’t open it because it’s considered age-inappropriate and, being only 17, she’s not in a position to prove that she’s over 18 and thus get the link to the taxi.

Thankfully it’s rare, but we do know that there are predators out there who will look for people who are vulnerable, and it’s not difficult to spot someone who’s waiting for somebody to pick them up or waiting for a taxi, because every time a car approaches the person will look up from whatever they’re doing to see if it’s the car that’s picking them up.

All it would take would be for a predator to be around at that time, pull the window down and say, “Did you call for a taxi?” and, of course, because she’s just ordered one, she believes this is her taxi, so she gets in, perhaps never to be seen again — all because some moron has decided that a link to follow the progress of a taxi is something you’re not allowed to see if you’re under the age of 18.

How many other innocuous things have been blocked because of this Online Safety Act, and by doing so, are children really any safer?

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