Only business that would require an ID/Age Verification check, but yeah. Except they don’t want to hold actual websites liable. They want to hold ISP’s liable.
There’s literally no way to know if the people using the VPN’s are located in Utah. So this law would be unenforceable against actual websites.
It might possibly be enforceable against ISP’s but the problem is, once you fire up a VPN your ISP can only see you entry point and maybe that there is a Volume of traffic going to and from your device. They can’t see what websites you visit (provided your VPN is properly configured).
I also don’t understand how this bill could effectively lay any blame against the websites for knowing you use a VPN because they also can’t see any of that information. They know that you visited and from a specific IP “located” in “place” and they can either assume that the use of a VPN means you’re in Utah (very unlikely), or they can assume you’re not (more likely given the population that lives outside Utah).
Wait, how long until literally any software business realizes what this is, and hard lobbies against it?
You basically must conduct all your business unencrypted in the state of Utah if this is to be understood.
Only business that would require an ID/Age Verification check, but yeah. Except they don’t want to hold actual websites liable. They want to hold ISP’s liable.
There’s literally no way to know if the people using the VPN’s are located in Utah. So this law would be unenforceable against actual websites.
It might possibly be enforceable against ISP’s but the problem is, once you fire up a VPN your ISP can only see you entry point and maybe that there is a Volume of traffic going to and from your device. They can’t see what websites you visit (provided your VPN is properly configured).
I also don’t understand how this bill could effectively lay any blame against the websites for knowing you use a VPN because they also can’t see any of that information. They know that you visited and from a specific IP “located” in “place” and they can either assume that the use of a VPN means you’re in Utah (very unlikely), or they can assume you’re not (more likely given the population that lives outside Utah).