GrapheneOS user reported to authorities for using GrapheneOS

(discuss.grapheneos.org)

298 points | by Cider9986 2 hours ago

26 comments

  • antiloper 1 hour ago
    OI mate, you got a loicense for that operating system?

    The only surprising thing about this story is that the user didn't get a visit by the police to be charged with a "non-crime cybersecurity incident". The UK has become such a shithole.

    • Cider9986 1 hour ago
      Yep, police can simply ask anyone for their passwords and if you don't give it up they can put you in jail.

      I won't be visiting. Despite many flaws, the US has some damn good rights for its citizens compared to the rest of the world.

      • paulgdp 1 hour ago
        > Yep, police can simply ask anyone for their passwords and if you don't give it up they can put you in jail.

        This is precisely the reason why I don't want to visit the US at the moment.

        The USA immigration officers can ask me to forfeit my phone's password and look at all my photos, documents, messages, call logs etc, WITHOUT SUSPICION.

        Some of that data can even stay on their servers for decades, and who knows if it ends up on a CIA/NSA server.

        Of course, I can always refuse, but non-cooperation with CBP means immediate denial of entry and risks of lifelong headaches with future immigration checks.

        • rvnx 2 minutes ago
          It's the same in Europe, so not a reason to avoid the US.
        • Permik 12 minutes ago
          I haven't written up an article about it yet, but from a cursory look of the legal stuff this only affects private citizens and could be circumvented by setting up a shell company that owns your devices.

          Legally, you can't surrender these devices, access to them or their passwords, as they are company property.

        • josephg 39 minutes ago
          Me too. I’m going to wait a few more years before I visit again.

          I‘m also careful with what I say online. US CBP tracks what people post online, and has been known to deny entry to people for being critical critical of the current president. I don’t want to risk losing out on future opportunities in the land of the free.

          • GoblinSlayer 30 minutes ago
            Just don't visit USA and you will be fine.
            • IshKebab 15 minutes ago
              Not practical in many cases. I'm starting a new job soon and have to visit the US. No way am I saying no to that (way too good a job).

              I'll probably just buy a decoy phone for the border.

        • GoblinSlayer 27 minutes ago
          What happens if you send the phone by mail?
        • shevy-java 43 minutes ago
          Indeed, but the UK is in many ways words. At the least in the USA, often the constitution is upheld (give or take); in the UK you often don't even have such fundamental rights. The UK at present fits more to Russia than, e. g. European countries.
          • josephg 29 minutes ago
            > At the least in the USA, often the constitution is upheld

            Some of ICE’s detainees may have different opinions on that point.

            The UK may endow her citizens with fewer rights. But I have a lot more trust in British due process. British civil servants seem much less … capricious than Americans.

            I was almost denied entry to Hawaii once because I told the CBP agent I didn’t have any cash on me. (My money is in a bank account, obviously). He went on a big rant about how expensive Hawaii is. I think he was worried I’d end up homeless. (Even though my visit to hang out with my then employer.) Over the years I’ve heard so many stories from other Australian friends about wild and unfortunate encounters with US police and officials.

            By comparison, the British government seems far more civilised. If something happened while visiting the UK, I have much more confidence that everything would be resolved in a fair and reasonable manner.

          • ben_w 18 minutes ago
            UK has (for now) the Human Rights Act and is a (for now) subject to the jurisdiction of (by being a founding member of) the European Court of Human Rights.

            Which is not to excuse the errors, but to put it in context: it is a European country… albeit just like Turkey and Azerbaijan.

          • JdeBP 21 minutes ago
            Not having a written constitution is not the same as not having rights in everyday practice.
      • bborud 37 minutes ago
        You are aware of the fact that you essentially have no rights at border crossings, right? Even if you are a US citizen entering the US.

        This is why many companies have procedures for when employees visit certain countries, including the US. For instance that you are not allowed to bring your personal phone, your personal and work laptop or any medium that can hold sensitive or proprietary information.

        • seviu 1 minute ago
          Not sure if related but this is my story. I am Spanish. When leaving SF back to Europe from a Google IO, after control, waiting to scan my luggage, an officer stood besides me and started speaking in Spanish besides me.

          The first minute my brain didn’t register because though Spanish is my mother tongue, I guess it was not ready for that. The police officer started to get irritated. Eventually my brain switched, I had a chat with him and he left.

          I was totally freaked out the rest of the time, till the moment I boarded.

          Only then I realized how frail our rights are when you are abroad.

      • andrepd 2 minutes ago
        > Despite many flaws, the US has some damn good rights for its citizens

        The absolute gall of saying this, on this point in in particular, with all that has happened over the past 1.5 years in the US... Gobsmacked

      • trumpdong 33 minutes ago
        Isn't it exactly the same in the US right now?
        • wakaru44 9 minutes ago
          Pretty much. But ~95% of US citizens don't seem to be even aware. I'm guessing due to a mix of ignorance and copium.
        • mattmaroon 31 minutes ago
          No.
      • poirot2 44 minutes ago
        Americans perception of themselves always baffles me. You have police brutality regularly, ICE raids shooting protestors and deporting people (inc those with the right to be there) to El Salvador, people who write critical articles of Israel denied visas, servicemen dying in the Middle East, your president openly stealing from your government via slush funds and his sons, and so little accountability that the only people facing consequences for Epstein are in Britain. Your news is owned by oligarchs who openly buy it to divide you and push their agenda not yours, your views barely matter as your politics is bought and paid for, your elections are rigged by gerrymandering so few incumbents ever lose. Then call yourself a democracy.

        Absolute Mickey Mouse country singing itself propaganda about building the future whilst having a healthcare system that lets people die regularly for being too poor. Not exactly freedom if you’re dead is it?

        Then they come to London and realise it’s just a much cleaner, safer, nicer looking city than anywhere in the US and has more culture, food and diversity than all but a few American cities. But have to justify going back to a chicken coop country where they grind out the prime of their lives, get no maternity pay, and like 10 days of holiday.

        • arwineap 36 minutes ago
          That's all true, and I had a great time in London and many eu countries.

          Do immigrants have the same full rights as British citizens?

          Would I be willing to re evaluate my visa every X years? Will I be willing to be uprooted if it's denied?

          And how will childcare work when my elders are all here?

          I think your post was correct as far as the state of the US, but your final paragraph is reductive. It's not always easy for someone to drop everything and uproot their life, even if it's possible

        • expedition32 40 minutes ago
          I am an atheist and any country were a leader claims their country to be Christian is a no go for me. Is the separation of church and state a joke to Americans?

          It was pretty funny because right next to Trump they had a man/woman in a Easter bunny suit.

        • hparadiz 33 minutes ago
          Hilarious comment. Every dumbass America bad trope is here. Our salaries are like four times higher so while you're yelling about healthcare our actual expenditure is lower as a percentage of our income. Our outcomes are better and while you're yelling about days off I can retire at like 45 and have three times your net worth. Plus I don't have to fly anywhere. I'm already in a warm destination.

          I know plenty of people who immigrated from the UK and not one of them would ever go back.

          • trumpdong 31 minutes ago
            Fun fact: Americans pay more tax money towards healthcare than countries with universal tax-funded healthcare. How much healthcare does that spending get them? Zero. After overpaying tax for healthcare they also have to buy healthcare separately.
            • hparadiz 29 minutes ago
              Yea cause we throw more money at it. Our facilities are far superior. In California where I live though folks with little money get very subsidized healthcare that is cheaper than NHS taxes.
      • epolanski 9 minutes ago
        A friend of mine visiting the US as a tourist with family was expected by immigration to provide lots of digital information and full access to every device at JFK.

        They were held for more than 4 hours at the airport.

        But, to counter balance, I had multiple other friends traveling to the US (both on work visas and tourist ones) and it was smooth sailing.

        In any case, the story of my first friend is what made me cancel my US trip last summer and go to Japan instead.

      • exe34 47 minutes ago
        > the US has some damn good rights for its citizens

        Unless you turn up to a protest against the ICEtapo, with a holstered gun. Then you can be murdered and called a domestic terrorist.

        As a brown visitor to the US.... Well I won't be one. They can ask for access to my entire digital life without the slightest suspicion of any crimes.

      • lukan 1 hour ago
        Yet swatting, making police kick in the doors and shoot the dogs of someone who was victim of anonymous slander, isn't really a thing here in europe compared to the US.
        • graemep 1 hour ago
          The US has a good constitution but worse policing.
          • exe34 46 minutes ago
            What good is a piece of paper? I have nice toilet paper. It doesn't make me safer when visiting the US.
            • Xirdus 19 minutes ago
              Maybe you're not safer, but you can get rich quick. Recently someone got $100k compensation for fake DUI charges and resulting wrongful imprisonment.
            • graemep 25 minutes ago
              The entire point of a constitution is that, unlike toilet paper, it can be enforced by the courts.
              • sph 21 minutes ago
                The very politicized US courts that collude with and are completely in the pocket of whomever's running the country? More developed countries have a clear separation between the judiciary and the executive powers.
              • sofixa 17 minutes ago
                In theory, unless the supreme court is bought and paid for and decrees things like "immunity for official business".
              • exe34 12 minutes ago
                And which one are the courts enforcing at the moment in the US? Pretti? Good?
        • SpectreHat 1 hour ago
          The user you replied to was talking about UK, not Europe.
          • dom96 1 hour ago
            The UK is a part of Europe.
            • exe34 45 minutes ago
              Geographically, that's quite the zinger. Legally, no. Different laws.
              • cassianoleal 31 minutes ago
                Europe has many many different jurisdictions.

                Even if you take the European Union alone and ignore all the other European countries, the EU only legislates over a subset of things for member countries.

                • exe34 12 minutes ago
                  Much less the UK.
                  • cassianoleal 1 minute ago
                    I'm not sure how much less it is than, say, Bosnia, Serbia, Belarus, Kosovo...
          • Cider9986 1 hour ago
            My first two sentences were about the UK. The third was general.
      • Aldipower 1 hour ago
        Is this satire?
        • Arch-TK 14 minutes ago
          No, just the UK.

          I actually think it might be worse.

          You need to be able to hand over encryption keys too.

          Claiming to not know them is also not allowed, whether you actually know them or not.

          I am reasonably convinced that if you wipe the key slots on an encrypted drive but leave encrypted blocks around, they might be able to argue that you are obligates to store all the block keys for such an occasion. So using any kind of multi-tier encryption in the UK might be a massive liability unless you permanently store all the material required to derive any key that is used to encrypt anything.

          This also probably has impact on TLS now that I think about it.

          Now, real world criminal cases are likely to proceed differently than how they proceed in the mind of a programmer interpreting the law as a program. But, I am not too convinced such a farcical thing wouldn't happen, the UK government and police have engaged in much dumber things.

          Now that I think about it, storing randomness on a disk could probably be used to incriminate you in case that disk was seized. Since the police wouldn't be able to tell if it wasn't encrypted data.

        • colinb 52 minutes ago
          I think it’s true that declining to hand over a password in a criminal investigation is itself a criminal act in the UK. That said, I don’t know how often this actually occurs.

          As an outsider, it seems to me (big talk on the Internet! Amazeballs) that UK laws are written to be illiberal and gradually watered down to an acceptable degree. I think that happened with RIPA and later with the whole nazi saluting dog mess. Whether they can survive the rise of free speech double talkers like Farage remains to be seen. But the Blair/Brown years made it clear that even supposedly intelligent middle of the road leadership is capable of imposing surprisingly illiberal legislation. I don’t much care for the Tories but I don’t think they have much interest in my personal life.

        • NoboruWataya 21 minutes ago
        • manarth 1 hour ago
          [flagged]
    • somat 23 minutes ago
    • hparadiz 25 minutes ago
      Watching all UK folks in denial is too funny.
      • Arch-TK 11 minutes ago
        It's gaming communities too. There is a massive mindset overlap between gamers and average UK residents.

        They both think that all the dystopia is for the greater good, is never abused, and if you fall victim to it, you must have been doing something dodgy to deserve it.

        • t0lo 3 minutes ago
          Communities like this have definitely been manipulated into complicity by establishment interests ie through media.
    • shevy-java 44 minutes ago
      > didn't get a visit by the police

      Don't give them ideas!

      After having watched too many videos on Auditing Britain, I can not trust the UK cops. In some ways they are worse than US cops, except for shooting down people, where US cops still lead negatively here. Also, UK cops use many more words than US cops, without those words really meaning much at all. The amount of flabbergast-inflated text length is insane.

    • graemep 1 hour ago
      Non-crime hate incidents 1) never lead to people being charged, and 2) recording of them has been greatly reformed following a court ruling and new legislation

      I agree there are a lot of problems (e.g. the online safety Act) but it look as though both the rest of Europe and the rest of the west is going the same way.

      I also assume this incident was not in the UK as the details were shared on imgur which blocks the UK. The authorities also do not seem to have taken any action. Anyone can report anything they want.

      • robk 54 minutes ago
        Yep but they live with you for life on a DBS check, and you know that we brought up in a court of law if anything else happens to be against your favor
        • graemep 26 minutes ago
          1. That is one reason why the rules were changed to reduce the level of recoding

          2. It would only be disclosed on an enhanced DBS check, not basic or standard. This also applies to all other information the police have on you, not just NCHIs. This is just like the rules for disclosing something like a caution issued to someone in your household, an aquittal, allegations made against you, parking and speeding tickets etc.

          "Non-crime information can be disclosed on an enhanced DBS check – which is limited to high-risk positions like teachers and carers – but only with the approval of a chief officer. The chief officer must have regard to statutory guidance issued by the Home Office and consider whether the applicant should be allowed to make representations before any information is disclosed."

          https://www.college.police.uk/article/protecting-freedom-exp...

          It is illegal to request a higher level of check than the guidance allows for a particular role.

          • avereveard 0 minutes ago
            The right level of recording of non crime is zero wdym reduced?
  • VariousPrograms 2 hours ago
    I'm done for once the authorities know I have an account on HACKER News.
    • mjlee 1 hour ago
      When I was in high school I brought in a copy of The Hacker's Dictionary to show a friend. A teacher saw it.

      A few weeks later there was a hacking incident! The shared spreadsheet of every pupil's grades that every teacher had full access to was modified, boosting the grades of some students (including me) and lowering the grades of others (including people I didn't get on with). I was immediately sent home during the investigation. Nothing came of it in the end.

      Years later my friend revealed the advanced technique of finding his music teacher's password (bassoon) on a post-it note under their keyboard.

      • bingo-bongo 54 minutes ago
        I started studying IT back in ‘99 and got a strict warning from the school my first year, because I had used the schools network to access the internet from my own laptop. I had “gained access” by plugging an ethernet cable into a random socket in the wall, and was doing some homework, when radom employee walked by. Since there wasn’t any rules (yet), that allowed nor disallowed it, I got of with only a warning ... from a school, that teaches IT :|
      • QuantumNomad_ 1 hour ago
        When I was in middle school I used to download keygens and cracks for programs from the school computer and take them with me home on a floppy disk because I didn’t have internet at home.

        One of the websites I downloaded keygens and cracks from was called TheBugs.WS. Another pupil saw that I was downloading keygens and stuff and tried to rat me out to one of the teachers saying like “hey look at his screen, he can’t use the computer for that”.

        The teacher had a brief glance at my monitor and read the title of the page TheBugs.WS and just said “nothing wrong about learning about insects” and then just walked away lololol. To this day I still don’t know if the teacher genuinely though the page was about insects just from the title, or if she just didn’t care as long as the briefest of glances at my screen didn’t show anything that seemed really out of place.

        Either which way, my situation was kind of the exact opposite of yours. And the inconspicuous name of the site was enough that I didn’t get in trouble even though I could have if a teacher looked closely.

      • kotaKat 1 hour ago
        I remember trying to argue with the IT folks at school because hackaday.com was blocked for "hacking"... damn, guess all those fun electronics projects people were doing is Super Evil And Only For Criminals.
      • TylerE 1 hour ago
        Hey, under the keyboard is an advanced technique. In those days it was usually on the monitor.
    • eesmith 1 hour ago
      I went to a hackathon in another country and was worried about explaining that name to the border guard. To my relief, the topic didn't come up.
      • VortexLain 19 minutes ago
        You could have told the guard you're going to a competitive programming contest.
  • kstenerud 6 minutes ago
    Looking more closely into the claim, the actual message from Yoti was:

    "Due to past security concerns, Yoti automatically flags multiple verification attempts and any devices running GrapheneOS. These instances are automatically reported to both the authorities and our security team."

    Then:

    "Unfortunately, as multiple attempts were made from this specific device, your account has been flagged for suspicious activity."

    So the "and" looks like a typo, otherwise their system wouldn't have allowed more than one attempt from a GrapheneOS device to begin with.

    i.e. multiple verification attempts from a GrapheneOS device will flag your account.

  • zx8080 55 minutes ago
    It's so surprising that despute so many screams "China" in western media in the last 15 years, it happens in the west, but in China it's free to use any OS without any negative consequences. Why? What's going on?
    • kubb 21 minutes ago
      Maybe because in 50 western countries nobody bothers you and the 1 exception, the UK did some weird stuff with online policing. The courts don’t sentence for that even in the UK, all you hear about are police actions.

      They’re also declining hard because of brexit and maybe fear public unrest.

      And in China for dissent you go to a reeducation camp. Or maybe the China incidents aren’t newsworthy, just expected.

    • sph 18 minutes ago
      Because it's never been as simple as 'West good, China bad.'

      That line of propaganda pushed by the US government worked well for the better part of a century, not any more.

    • minraws 46 minutes ago
      Not true the part about China, but yes Western countries do like to pretend they have a lot more freedom than they do.

      If you can't criticize or protest Xi in China, try criticize or protesting the laws in rest of the world. Especially the things they do in the name of privacy, I remember UK jailing folks for FB posts, that's stuff that happens in third world countries.

      Not that UK ever had much of a leg to stand on, US does the same now very scary.

      For trips to any of the countries first thing I check is my socials and delete stuff that might get checked on airports now. This was apparently not supposed to happen in the developed world.

      My friends still tell me it's not that bad, but it's just scary reading stuff on HN like this once a month, every month for the last few years.

      • eunos 15 minutes ago
        US now apparently asked your social media account including public access if you apply for a visa. Chinese don't care about that.
      • sofixa 11 minutes ago
        > I remember UK jailing folks for FB posts, that's stuff that happens in third world countries.

        The only cases this has happened has been over people actively calling for racial violence over an imagined scare - bunch of morons thought a muslim migrant killed someone, so they went on to riot, burn mosques, assault foreign looking people, etc; on day 2 it was revealed the perpetrator was a Britain born Christian son of foreign origins, but the morons didn't care, they had their excuse.

        I struggle to think of many countries where calling for immediate violence, on Facebook or in public with placards, is acceptable. Or any reason why it should be.

      • nextstep 33 minutes ago
        Do you have any sources for these claims about China?
  • JdeBP 1 hour ago
    That response looks like it is generated from boilerplate, so the 'reported to the authorities' part is as likely true as when sudo says the same thing.

    * https://postimg.cc/3kVXKzhk

    • cellardweller 42 minutes ago
      Sudo actually does that by default. I hate it when I get an email report of my own damn failed authentication attempt from my own damn machine.
    • Gander5739 1 hour ago
  • asdfsa32 1 hour ago
    A new age of piracy is ahead of us. When they come crying about "revenue", these days will be remembered.
    • sph 17 minutes ago
      Let's not call it piracy, please, it makes us sound like thieves.

      It's resistance against mass surveillance and a State that's grown cancerous. It's any citizen's duty, really.

    • Cider9986 1 hour ago
      What do you mean?
      • asdfsa32 17 minutes ago
        As the age verification and the dodgy businesses around them become more widespread, people will find the friction and risk of paying for "legitimate" access on par with pirating, and to boot, the later doesn't cost money.

        Remember, people use these services largely for convince more than qualms with paying for multinationals. So once they create friction, off we go to the bays again in large masses.

      • harvey9 42 minutes ago
        Sites like TPB don't try to verify your age.
        • trumpdong 28 minutes ago
          TPB is the worst piracy site now by the way. It's full of fake uploads should never be used. There are many others with better curation.
  • microflash 2 hours ago
    Might as well report all users of internet to authorities for using internet because internet can also be used to commit fraud.
    • zelphirkalt 42 minutes ago
      Actually, that makes me think, what will happen, if suddenly there is a flood of reports, too many for them to deal with? Let's say all GrapheneOS users installed that app to get reported and then some more bots/fakes are set up to do that too.
      • eunos 14 minutes ago
        For start you can strong arm or mandate bank to not make their app run on GrapheneOS device.

        Bank is highly regulated service and vital so there's strong incentive and ramp up here

    • theglenn88_ 2 hours ago
      Exactly, don't forget, if you own or drive a car you must be a criminal, because cars are used as getaway vehicles in serious crimes.
      • tiborsaas 1 hour ago
        You can also murder people with your car including children.
    • trumpdong 2 hours ago
      While most people who use an unbackdoored OS aren't frauds, presumably it's correct at a slightly higher rate than assuming someone is a fraud because they use the internet.
    • gib444 51 minutes ago
  • pogue 1 hour ago
    Someone in the comments of that post linked to a long FAQ section for GrapheneOS about how apps can identify it and so forth [1]. I don't understand why it doesn't just attempt to spoof that's it's stock Android/Google everywhere it possibly can?

    [1] https://grapheneos.org/faq#:~:text=Apps%20can%20detect%20tha...

    • devsda 25 minutes ago
      The goal is to normalize the usage of alternative OS. The moment you find workarounds and not question, you accept their position and eventually you'll run out of workarounds.

      'you can still do X through Y, they are not removing it' is a popular and often the top reply on posts related to companies tightening their walled gardens. It gives an immediate solution to the problem but it doesn't address the core issue. I wish that wasn't the case.

    • Cider9986 1 hour ago
      They are focused on making their users more private and secure, not trying to trick 0.01% of apps that give them problems.

      It's a cat and mouse game that would require significant investment and could make things look more suspicious, better to focus on adoption so it becomes harder for companies to make stupid decisions like this. I've seen a banking apps that have expressly added support for GrapheneOS with their hardware attestation after customers mentioned it.

      Even dedicated anti-detect browsers are constantly blocked and need patches. It's not something I would want GrapheneOS to focus on.

    • fph 1 hour ago
      Because that would be pointless. If you have use-after-free exploit mitigations active, apps can test for its presence by simply trying to use after free. The only way to make the mitigation unnoticeable would be disabling it.
    • nerdsniper 1 hour ago
      Superficial spoofing is pointless - any app that cares would just use the Play Integrity API (which can't be spoofed by GrapheneOS).

      0: https://developer.android.com/google/play/integrity/overview

      • asdfsa32 14 minutes ago
        And lets not forget how pointless Play Integrity is for what it is being touted to be for, when there is millions of "Certified" devices ready for us by shady people via clickfarms.
    • saint_yossarian 1 hour ago
      Because the GrapheneOS team takes security seriously, and spoofing would actually justify banning.

      From https://grapheneos.org/articles/attestation-compatibility-gu...:

      > GrapheneOS not only upholds the app security model but substantially reinforces it, so it cannot be justified with reasoning based on security, anti-fraud, etc.

    • croes 1 hour ago
      I bet they would count that as a attempted fraud.
      • pogue 1 hour ago
        It depends on what you're trying to do with it, right? If I have my browser spoof it's useragent to say it's firefox when it's chrome, is that fraud? At what point are we saying something is fraud and at what point are we just trying to avoid needless fingerprinting in apps/operating systems/whatever else?

        If you're using any type of adblock in your browser, you're essentially spoofing countless systems just to have those ads not show up. But if I'm having my operating system tell an app that I'm not OS XYZ that's fraud?

        • trumpdong 26 minutes ago
          AIUI if they decide members of a category receive some tangible benefit, so you fake being in that category and get the benefit, it's technically criminal fraud.
      • nerdsniper 1 hour ago
        [dead]
  • sunaookami 44 minutes ago
    Seems like this company got fined recently for breaching GDPR: https://www.ictrecht.nl/en/blog/leeftijdsverificatie-online-...

    >The Spanish privacy regulator (hereinafter: AEPD) recently imposed a fine of €950,000 on age verification service YOTI

    >For the unlawful processing of biometric personal data in violation of Article 9 of the GDPR, YOTI was fined €500,000. In addition, a fine of €200,000 was imposed for obtaining invalid consent in violation of Article 7 of the GDPR. Finally, the company was fined €250,000 for exceeding retention periods in violation of Article 5 of the GDPR

    • asdfsa32 6 minutes ago
      About 3% of their revenue. In context, someone in UK using their phone while driving will be charged about £1000 pound or ~3% of the median income..
  • BLKNSLVR 3 minutes ago
    As time progresses, the more I feel like 'acceptance' by the majority is a signal of complete capitulation to the power of the mighty dollar at the expense of all else.

    That with which the authorities disagree is more than likely the morally, ethically, societally correct direction.

    I'm a proud GrapheneOS user.

    In the immortal words of Marvin: "I'm mine".

    Fuck y'all.

  • Onplana 10 minutes ago
    The question is which category of justice does it qualify?
  • uni_baconcat 1 hour ago
    This is not how authorities work.

    They need to prove people guilty, not flag all “suspicious activity” then let people prove they are innocent.

    • trumpdong 1 hour ago
      This actually is how authorities work. If you do anything unusual at all, you are flagged as suspicious. You will find yourself being denied services without explanation. There is no appeal process.
      • esperent 1 hour ago
        Not where I live. If it's happening where you live then it's a sign you need to start protesting/organizing/get involved in politics/using whatever skills you have to improve matters before they get worse.

        This happened in the UK, specifically, and from what we've all seen it's definitely sliding in a bad direction over the past decade. But it's also not in any way so far gone that you can't take action. If you're sitting here on HN complaining and yet doing nothing else, you're a part of the problem. Stop being complacent, take action before it's too late. You won't get thrown in jail for getting involved in politics there (yes, you'll find some specific examples of that happening but if you look deeper they'll all unravel and show there was a deeper reason that's being misrepresented, usually by tabloids/social media).

        • eunos 12 minutes ago
          Have you seen how bank work with Anti Money Laundering?
        • als0 1 hour ago
          If you show up to a protest then you automatically get put on a police database via facial recognition.
          • Cider9986 1 hour ago
            Or arrested if peacefully protesting because the UK govt named a organization a terrorist org.

            It shouldn't be about what they call you, it should be about your actions. Neonazis must be allowed to peacefully protest.

            • tjpnz 38 minutes ago
              Pretty sure the courts ruled it wasn't. But they're still arresting people for saying "I support Palestinian Action" in public.
              • asdfsa32 4 minutes ago
                In Queensland, Australia. Saying from a flow streaming of water to a large salty tidal body of water lands you a criminal record. Just the words. Same in Berlin.
    • Havoc 1 hour ago
      Not sure if you've read the news during the past couple of months but things are no longer normal
      • NooneAtAll3 1 hour ago
        watchlists existed for decades
        • sph 14 minutes ago
          Which watchlist was it again for using alternative operating systems?
    • skippyboxedhero 1 hour ago
      This isn't how the UK works. There is a vast ecosystem of pre-crime authorities and the police are able to investigate things which aren't crimes and add "non-crime" incidents to your criminal record. It may not surprise you to learn that almost all of the cases in which this is used are "social" crimes. In cases of actual crime, custodial sentences are sometimes not applied at all...again, usually for reasons of social order.

      Ironically, I also can't read most of the screenshots because all sharing sites are blocked in the UK because of the threat image sharing represents to the social order.

      • sirsinsalot 1 hour ago
        But get your car stolen in the UK and the police won't do a thing. Even if you know where it is via a tracker. Nothing. Outright refuse to take any action.
        • skippyboxedhero 32 minutes ago
          Tell the police that you believe a racist might have stolen it.
          • gib444 3 minutes ago
            [delayed]
      • jodrellblank 1 hour ago
        All sharing sites are not blocked, postimg and Reddit image hosting and Flickr and many more are not blocked.

        The uk didn’t block sharing sites because of a threat to the social order, sharing sites blocked uk viewers because they don’t want to comply with uk laws like “don’t gather children’s personal data”.

        https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c4gzxv5gy3qo

        • trumpdong 25 minutes ago
          I'm pretty sure it was in protest of a law saying they'd have to check everyone's ID. The BBC, being incredibly biased, obviously won't report this correctly.
        • skippyboxedhero 33 minutes ago
          "don't gather children's personal data"...wut?

          i love commenting on this stuff to get an insight into the mindset of people who support this...strident ignorance.

        • harvey9 39 minutes ago
          The outcome is the purpose.
    • the-mitr 48 minutes ago
      Guilty until proven innocent, and the process itself is the punishment. This is the post-truth world.
    • fmajid 1 hour ago
      That's in countries that have a constitution, a Bill of Rights that can't be revoked by a simple vote of the legislature, separation of powers and the rule of law. None of which applies to the UK.
      • tgv 1 hour ago
        3 of those factors are nothing more than bits of paper. Everything hinges on separation of powers, and the one you omitted: a thoroughly established sense of democracy. If either of those fails, any report to the authorities is a threat.
    • csomar 1 hour ago
      There is a whole set of things that can be done to you before you are proven guilty (detained, arrested, refused service, denied boarding, visit from the police, interrogated, etc..)
    • 243341286 1 hour ago
      [dead]
    • szundi 1 hour ago
      [dead]
  • dwedge 39 minutes ago
    This is totally unacceptable. But going to the hassle of running GrapheneOS and then using it to try and submit facial scans to combine your identity with your PSN account just seems so pointless.
    • Cider9986 34 minutes ago
      > But going to the hassle of running GrapheneOS and then using it to try and submit facial scans to combine your identity with your PSN account just seems so pointless. reply

      Totally disagree. Everyone has a different threat model. Some people may solely be interested in the exploit protections and not care about their privacy. Some people might just like that it's completely open source or that there's no AI or it's bloat free.

      I really dislike this maximalist, "ruin privacy" stance because it discourages people from making a small improvement if they can't be perfect. Changing to GrapheneOS is an insanely large privacy benefit compared to almost any other change and people might see this sort of sentiment and think there's no point if they use one privacy invasive app.

      • dwedge 12 minutes ago
        The thing is though that this kind of verification is going to be rife if we keep accepting it, and inconveniences like it not working (plus some banking apps) is almost the entire downside of GrapheneOS.

        If you don't use it for things like this you don't really see any disadvantage. Occasionally I get cloudflare or vercel blocked when trying to read a blog but that's all.

        So they're at a very strange intersection of using graphene but wanting to do exactly the kind of that is difficult on graphene. And just to be able to chat on PSN.

        You're right though, different threat model.

    • hsbauauvhabzb 9 minutes ago
      Not really, not all threat models are the same. Submitting face verification is different to Google knowing my location at all times.
  • gaiagraphia 1 hour ago
    It's really scary how society is being 'nudged' into using 'authorised devices' to participate in society (which we have to pay for, lol).

    I wonder if some ideology which believes in tech freedom will become the communism of the next age, and prompt a new wave of 'democracy' purity crusades.

  • elric 1 hour ago
    Any insights on what Yoti is or what might motivate them to take those moronic actions?
    • trumpdong 24 minutes ago
      Seems pretty obvious from the incident that it's a mass surveillance company.
  • Lucasoato 2 hours ago
    A friend of mine told me that Yoti is used as an age verification system in so many porn websites. That’s such an issue, this information should never be owned by private companies.
    • jiin 2 hours ago
      Or you could just choose not to use pornography. Then you don't have to verify your age to these websites.

      I get that some people have a behavioural addiction to this harmful content but perhaps the age verification is an opportunity to step back and reconsider.

      • trumpdong 1 hour ago
        Greetings stranger! Your comment has been shadowbanned. In order to prove you are a legal adult, please email a selfie, holding your username on a piece of paper, and your government ID to hn@ycombinator.com. Alternatively, you may use this opportunity to step back and reconsider whether you still wish to remain addicted to Hacker News.
      • ssl-3 1 hour ago
        Agreed. It's important to remain pure.

        I usually just use the Book of Mormon and that typically helps me get it done well-enough. But when that doesn't work, I allow myself some different material. The New Haven Code of 1656 is my reserve favorite and I have a laminated copy of the Comstock Act of 1873 on-hand for unusually-tricky edge cases.

      • IlikeMadison 1 hour ago
        So we shouldn't be using GrapheneOS neither nor any Sony products if we follow your logic right? Because obviously it means we are addicted to both.
      • Cider9986 1 hour ago
        Or they can be pushed to watch on less regulated platforms to avoid the age verification, which is far more likely and has negative consequences.
      • sunaookami 49 minutes ago
        Excellent bait, well done! Nearly fell for it!
      • microsoftedging 1 hour ago
        First they came for the porn watchers And I did not speak out Because I was not a porn watcher
  • trumpdong 2 hours ago
    I guess this user gets to sue Sony for a full refund.
  • kgwxd 29 minutes ago
    I don't like this post, it will be reported to the authorities and my mommy.
  • gib444 2 hours ago
    I would take "automatically reported to the authorities" with a pinch of salt (in this sphere, "nudging" people with lies is de rigueur [0]).

    Not that I'm arguing the UK isn't accelerating further into an authoritarian nightmare.

    [0] Kinda related https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioural_Insights_Team

  • throwfaraway135 1 hour ago
    - Heavy censorship

    - Two-tier justice system

    - This

    How did it come to this? The UK is arguably the country that has done the most for the cause of freedom, having led the way in abolishing slavery.

    • yubblegum 1 hour ago
      > the country that has done the most for the cause of freedom

      Need a history refresher. Let's skip the Magna Carta since that was really about giving power to feudal lords. Do you mean British empire being the unwitting and unwilling cause of United States?

      When, in God's green Earth, have the "lords" that lord it over the "subjects of crown" common people of that island have been vanguards of "freedom" when it did not serve their own class interests?

      • ffsm8 1 hour ago
        UKs ban on slavery across their territories was in 1830 I think?

        That should be a few decades before the civil war in the USA about the same issue.

        The US was actually pretty much the last Western civilization to abolish slavery from what I recall from history class.

        • sebastiennight 45 minutes ago
          But three decades after France abolished it (the first time)
      • croes 1 hour ago
        Have you read parent‘s comment until the end?

        > having led the way in abolishing slavery

        • yubblegum 1 hour ago
          Oh, I missed that "let us now, assembled noble lords, end this abominable institution through which we have become filthy rich. And my lords, what say ye regarding pushing drugs to the wretches of Asia?"

          As they like to say in England, bullocks!

    • youngNed 1 hour ago
      Eric Williams: “British historians write almost as if Britain had introduced Negro slavery solely for the satisfaction of abolishing it.
      • throwfaraway135 1 hour ago
        Totally agree, the British Empire has a lot of blood on its hand, but compared to its forebears and contemporaries it did abolish slavery, a tradition that has roots as old as humanity itself.
        • youngNed 1 hour ago
          Compared to its contemporaries, only Portugal transported more African slaves across to the America's.

          But hey, they stopped doing it, after a couple hundred years so let's everyone give Britain credit.

          • throwfaraway135 1 hour ago
            There were times when there were more slaves in Athens than citizens.

            The Arab led slave trade flourished for much longer, by some records it is alive even today.

            The words Slav and slave have the same root.

            There were times when 30-40% of the Korean population were slaves.

            The Mongols killed and enslaved half of the known world.

            • youngNed 1 hour ago
              I'm not sure what point you are trying to make here.

              My point is this, none of these people ever make a point of how much freedom they had, because after a couple hundred years they stopped, quite like the the brits like to.

              It's pretty baffling tbh.

              Anyone: criticises the British empire.

              Brits: after several hundred years of brutal trans Atlantic slave trade, we stopped. Hurrah!

              • jadamson 18 minutes ago
                > My point is this, none of these people ever make a point of how much freedom they had, because after a couple hundred years they stopped, quite like the the brits like to.

                The others he listed didn't stop voluntarily - their empires collapsed, lol. As he said, slavery was the default. The UK itself was getting raided by Barbary pirates just 200 years before the Slavery Abolition Act.

                Unlike the Romans or the Mongols, the UK made a choice to stop, and they did so, at massive cost, because their values changed. They actual made actual progress, and thus are hated by many calling themselves progressives.

    • wongarsu 1 hour ago
      There is a reason both 1984 and V for Vendetta are set in the UK

      Though the slide ever since Brexit is indeed astounding

      • fidotron 1 hour ago
        For whatever reason the British underappreciate Brave New World.
    • zelphirkalt 36 minutes ago
      The UK is historically a very bad example, especially as a colonizer. It has basically invented concentration camps before the Nazis, in Africa, and if we get to the opium war, the picture does not get much better either. Almost everywhere they went they engaged in hideous despicable crimes. If they have done most for the cause of freedom, then they have also done a much higher amount for non-freedom and slavery.
    • mmikeff 1 hour ago
      Can we stop it with this two tier justice system nonsense?
      • userbinator 1 hour ago
        Two words: Henry Nowak.
        • lwhi 1 hour ago
          You're spreading disinformation broadcast by the far right.
          • logicchains 1 hour ago
            The bodycam literally shows a police officer responding to a man who's been stabbed with "I don't think you have mate", just because his killer said the man was racist.
            • croes 1 hour ago
              That proves the police officer made a mistake and not a two tier justice system.

              Not the first mistake police made.

              Do you think the same people who protest now, also protested when the person who died was non-white?

            • lwhi 1 hour ago
              I'll make this simple for you.

              The behaviour of one officer does not mean that we should no longer live in a diverse society.

              This is one incident. The officer is question made a terrible call.

              The fact that people like you are using this as ammunition to further frankly racist aims, is an egregious afront to everyone living in the UK.

        • croes 1 hour ago
          Two words: Cherry picking

          In could say Jean Charles de Menezes

          And know?

      • fer 1 hour ago
        I wouldn't call it two-tier justice, because generally the courts do the right thing, but there's a shamefully obvious two-tier policing.

        From the Jay Report [0] showing crimes swept under the rug according to ethnic/socioeconomic background of perp and victim, to arresting people for opposing genocide (sorry: terrorism!) [1] to the recent case of Henry Nowak [2], it's really hard not to see a two-tier policing in the UK. And this very submission; caring about privacy is seen grounds for being reported and potentially investigated, by a private company! Which suggests it's something already internalized, too, for people who resist big corp surveillance.

        Back in the 90s and before, the two-tier heavily punished the minorities, and in an overshooting overcorrection, now it's the other way around. Nowak getting handcuffed by cops going "I don't think you have [been stabbed] mate!" says it all. Unless it's regarding opposing/supporting Israel, then the two-tier flips and people with basic human decency and actual antisemites are pigeonholed together, nevermind their background.

        [0] https://www.rotherham.gov.uk/downloads/file/279/independent-...

        [1] https://newint.org/action/2025/i-oppose-genocide-ok

        [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Henry_Nowak

        • foldr 47 minutes ago
          The Palestine Action ban was overturned by the courts. And putting this together with the Nowak case leads to an almost contradictory position. Whatever the issues with police handling of pro-Palestinian protestors, they're not instances of what the far right would call two-tier policing (i.e. the bogus claim that the police treat white people more harshly than other ethnic groups). For example, here is a poster who' all over this thread complaining about two-tier policing, but who supports the ban on PA: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48155504

          The more nuanced reality is that the police are extremely imperfect and treat all sorts of different groups of people unfairly in all sorts of different ways. That's indeed a problem, but it's not a political conspiracy.

          • trumpdong 22 minutes ago
            The police are ignoring the courts and still arresting people for protesting PA.
            • foldr 15 minutes ago
              That's because there's a pending appeal. It may take a while for the situation to fully resolve, legally speaking, but I think it's unlikely that the ban will be sustainable in the long term.
      • foldr 52 minutes ago
        There's a thought experiment in the philosophy of mind where your brain is gradually replaced, neuron by neuron, with artificial units that replicate the exact input and output mappings of the original neurons. The question, of course, is whether this change is accompanied by any change in your subjective conscious experience.

        I notice that a variant of this experiment is now playing out on HN in real time, with various commenters having their neuronal mappings gradually reshaped to match activation layers trained on Elon Musk's twitter feed.

        A few years ago it was possible to have conversations about the UK on HN. Now all you can really do is get into pointless arguments with biological instantiations of Grok.

        Unfortunately, there are vastly more people outside the UK consuming this nonsense than there are British people who can flag it or correct it. So in contrast to conversations about the US, it is very hard for perspectives grounded in reality to break through. If you look into it, the vast majority of the users stirring things up in this thread aren't in Britain, and most likely have little to no first-hand knowledge of what the country is like.

      • 243341286 1 hour ago
        [dead]
      • GlacierFox 1 hour ago
        [flagged]
      • kaliqt 1 hour ago
        It’s an undeniable fact. So.
        • mmikeff 1 hour ago
          It's not a fact at all, it's a lie spread by people who want to stoke anger for their own benefit.
          • skippyboxedhero 1 hour ago
            • trumpdong 1 hour ago
              Are we just posting irrelevant links? https://thedailywtf.com/
            • croes 48 minutes ago
              And?

              Being against anti-black racism doesn’t mean pro-white racism.

              Have you looked up what all those claiming racism against white people said when the victim of a mistake of an police officer was non-white?

              • skippyboxedhero 34 minutes ago
                You haven't even begun to understand people who disagree with you.

                If you believe that what happened to George Floyd was bad, you would also believe that what happened to Nowak was bad. Saying that being appalled by police brutality towards a white person is "racism" misunderstands what people are saying complextely.

                You are arguing with phantoms in your head.

                The problem that people have is that whilst America was ripping itself apart with riots, British politicians were enthusiastically supporting this. Starmer made a statement saying he stood with the rioters. The same thing happened in the UK, there was a brief riot, and Starmer has taken the complete opposite position...and today, actually complained about people in other countries "stoking up division" (this is something that is getting said every few days).

                The UK has policing policies and laws which favour some groups in society, this event was the outcome of that. When this happened in the US, the same politicians were outraged, appalled, disgusted. When this happened in the UK, no issues with policing at all. The problem that people have is that this is obviously contradictatory...again, if you start from the basis that people should be treated equally (which many people in the UK do not).

        • unfitted2545 1 hour ago
          How many chief constables aren't white? Cognitive dissonance isn't a fact
          • skippyboxedhero 1 hour ago
            You will need to explain this in more detail so people without racial prejudice can understand why someone's race impacts their ability to do a certain job.

            If they were not white, you would still have to claim there is discrimination? Or do you believe that non whites are inherently better at policing? Unclear. Also, in the UK there has been central directives to discriminate in favour of ethnic minorities for nearly three decades, discrimination is part of policing policy, there is an extensive body of training given to police to effectuate that (and that extends beyond policing into the court system).

            • lwhi 1 hour ago
              It's really not that complicated.

              If we have fewer non-white police officers, our ability to keep the whole of our (gratefully diverse) population safe is at a disadvantage. We need a police force that accurately represents the full range of diversity in our country.

              Occasionally members of the police force will f*k up badly. This is a fact.

              In the case of Henry Nowak, a police officer made an incredibly bad call and this added to Novak's tragic passing.

              The misdemeanor associated with one person does not mean that our diverse society should be made less diverse.

              The very fact that people like you are calling for this type of change is ignorant, opportunistic and frankly wrong.

              I will not stand for it.

              • skippyboxedhero 28 minutes ago
                No-one cares about your opinion (or mine).

                You have misunderstood my point entirely.

                Being non-white does not mean they are able to do their job better. That is a racist belief.

                The police in this case were white. But they were acting on policies which require them to treat non-white members of the public differently. It is nothing to do with diversity. Unless you are a racist, diversity is not an end in itself. No-one is making self-important statements about changing society. They just want the police to do their job correctly. If someone is stabbed, they shouldn't arrest them because their policy dictates that non-whites are rarely suspects in crimes.

                The peak of luxury beliefs is to believe that people performing vital jobs that may involve life or death should perform that job in a way to achieve abstract social goals in order to make individuals feel better about "society".

                • lwhi 19 minutes ago
                  No.

                  You are incorrect.

                  There was no policy in place that made the officer behave in this way.

                  The police officer made a huge mistake. It's as simple as that.

                  Racist groups are using this ammunition to suggest we need to undo the progress that was put in place to create a fairer more equitable society.

                  You are furthering their aims.

                • foldr 18 minutes ago
                  >But they were acting on policies which require them to treat non-white members of the public differently.

                  There is no actual evidence of this. Some people apparently think they can read the minds of the officers on the scene. And, being serious for just a moment, even the most outré of the police policy documents that have been dug up following this event (allowing the dubious assumption that any serving police officer has ever read them) do not require the police to deny medical attention to white people who claim to have been stabbed.

                  The Nowak case is certainly a horrendous instance of police incompetence, but you have to marvel at the shamelessness of the people who are jumping to exploit it for nefarious political ends.

    • photios 1 hour ago
      > How did it come to this?

      Trying not to get my account banned...

      The British elite allied with non-British people and betrayed their own.

      • youngNed 1 hour ago
        Exactly this. But unfortunately this is all causing quite the distraction into those foreign crypto donations
  • Mangochutney27 34 minutes ago
    And now he's going to jail for using an alternative os or what?
  • userbinator 1 hour ago
    If anything, from an age-verification perspective those using GrapheneOS are probably more likely to be adults, mentally mature, or otherwise smarter than the average sheeple.
    • trumpdong 1 hour ago
      But it's not about checking age, it's about enforcing control.
  • iugtmkbdfil834 2 hours ago
    UK now, but that train is never late..
  • muyuu 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • BashagtBot 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • shevy-java 45 minutes ago
    People often critisize the USA - rightfully so, now as the orange king and his cronies rule over it - but the UK is in some ways worse. One of the best things that happened in the last years was BREXIT; that way the craziness from the UK can no longer taint other Europeans. And that's actually a good thing. Age sniffing is done for appeasement to corporate overlords; people should not buy into the propaganda that this is "to protect the kids". It is so obvious at this point in time - the amount of money spent by lobbyists must be insane, and the UK is the easiest to fall victim here, even before the USA. Evil companies such as Yoti need to be disbanded at once - either by the state, or by the people if the state has already been bribed into obedient submission to private, particular interests.