this post was submitted on 22 Mar 2026
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The latest changes implemented in the Systemd repo, related to or prompted by age-verification laws, have made many people unhappy (I suppose links about this aren't necessary). This has led to a surge in Systemd forks during the last days ("surge" because there have always been plenty of forks). Here are some forks that explicitly mention those changes as their reason for forking (rough time ordering taken from the fork page):

Hopefully the energy of this reaction won't be scattered among too many alternatives, although some amount of scattering is always good.

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[–] Mikina@programming.dev 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

They should make the API call for apps to query that value a per-system/boot randomly generated signature, so it's impossible to use while also complying with the law.

[–] pglpm@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Personally I do not want to comply with the law. It's a law that violates my basic rights as a human being, and any tools that favours it or try to comply with it become tools that commit the same violations. My laptop is mine, I decide what goes in it, and nobody has any right to force any software in it, no more than they have any right to put a camera in my house to check what I do. When "laws" violate human rights, what counts is not what's the "legal" thing to do, but what's the moral thing to do.

Today we would be in a Russia-like state if people had not actively resisted, broken, and refused to comply with unjust laws.