Yeah as an Australian I thought this would be the case and I'd have to stop using Facebook etc (because there's no way I'm uploading ID or whatever to keep using it). Turns out because I created my account over 16 years ago they're happy to assume that I'm at least 16 years old. Which makes sense but I didn't anticipate it going that way.
Also what we see here in EU is that some sites (e.g. porn sites who already have to use age verification) demand it periodically, probably so you don't create one and give the credentials to a minor or something.
In fact it's becoming pretty insane here, even my bank and phone provider want me to come in and show my ID every few years. As if I suddenly became another person?? I kinda snapped at them last time because of these retarded processes and I felt bad then because I know it's not the employee's fault but it's just so ridiculous. I'm getting so sick of this pervasive tracking and monitoring in society with everything we do.
Can you give examples of what your friends had to do for each platform? No one I know has been affected, so it does seem “invisible” to me. However I’ve also been an adult for quite some time now. If you don’t mind me asking, are your friends young adults?
One is young adult (20-ish), graduate, another is 40-ish "professional".
They live in the opposite parts of the continent, have completely "normal" /mundane interests (we bonded over a specific book series and share one more hobby).
It did not affect them too much, but they had to use either their government issued id or consent to biometric scan (age estimate via camera).
Nothing particularly problematic, but nevertheless irritating and may become a deal breaker.
Stacking commits lets you do that without having to wait for each change to be reviewed/merged to the main branch before you iterate on top of those changes.
True. I find I rarely need it: standard rebase or merge do the trick. If they don't the review cycle or PR size may be too high. Super rare I need onto. So rare I look up how to do it when I do.
It's such a complicated way to work though, you start another set of changes then you go back addressing comments then you go back updating the stacked branch and you might need to do that few times...
Teams should focus on getting stuff merged in and not create massive PRs that live forever, life becomes so much easier.
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