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RupertSaltyesterday at 2:49 PM5 repliesview on HN

How does anyone know whether a family is engaging in that time-honored tradition of passing down accounts from grandfather, to father, to son, to child, and their posterity, in perpetuity?

Seriously though, unless you have positively identified the person who created the account in the first place, you have 0% chance of knowing whether it is the same person using it today.

Gamers sell their high-level accounts all the time. It would be a simple matter of economics that the Discord users with the oldest accounts sell them to 12-year-olds. Likewise, accounts are shared willy-nilly, whether or not that violates the rules. And accounts can be stolen or compromised, if you're really hard up.


Replies

smrqyesterday at 2:55 PM

How often do you suppose they will be re-checking your ID? Once every... never?

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RegnisGnawyesterday at 2:53 PM

No law or regulation is ever 100% effective in real life. Income tax is not collected 100% effectively. Should we not do it? Criminals are not caught 100% of the time, should we not do it?

Of course this won't be 100% effective, maybe 80-90% effective. That's all they need and expect from this system.

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Quillbert182yesterday at 2:51 PM

But under that argument, you would have to prove your age on a regular basis, the plan right now appears to be that each account would only need to do so once.

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Ekarosyesterday at 3:16 PM

Just ban that in TOS. As we know TOS is inviolable. As such it is not possible to sell, gift or otherwise transfer an account. At least this should be considered how it works for age verification. If account transfer is found out account can be terminated thus closing the loop hole.

ncr100yesterday at 10:16 PM

So then it's REASONABLY not the corporation's fault if that user sees explicit content.