I haven’t seen SystemD actually do anything. May have missed it though. What I did see is one Canonical employee make a proposal(more like an example, not one they’d actually use) on a privacy friendly SystemD check, but I haven’t heard much past that, and someone else made systemd-censord as a joke.
The way I view it though, is that we can ditch things as long as we want, but unless we absolutely clog the in boxes and call logs of state legislators showing that people won’t stand for this, nothing is going to work. And we’ll eventually be trapped anyways. And even if SystemD made an age verification service, distros could just not ship it. But Linux and *BSD distros choosing not to comply is gonna do jack shit. Telling companies like System76 to block and not sell to people in affected states isn’t financially viable and states wouldn’t care in the slightest.
If these do get passed though, and wording is made so that all software HAS to implement age verification or follow some sort of standard, what then? Sure, companies and distros could block those states if it’s just one or two. It’d be stupid and risky, but they could. But what about 5 states? 10? 30? What about all of America? What about all of the EU? What then? We shouldn’t be getting mad or stop using these products because the orgs behind them are being smart and doing minimum compliance since they have to to stay alive. We should be directing all of our attention at the people writing these laws, and try to stop them.
Do keep in mind though, that while there are plenty of people outside the Linux and general FOSS community mad about these laws, we are a small minority inside a pretty significant echo chamber. The outrage over all of this seems way louder to us than it actually is. Sad to say that, but it’s true. The vast majority of people don’t care and are fine to live in a surveillance state.
Just my two cents. I just see too many people getting mad at the groups that have no choice to comply(and are thankfully doing it in the least invasive way they possible can) instead of the actual people in charge of these laws.
The OG OneShot Linux port is known to be extremely broken since it was really poorly developed. Even after applying a fix to get it to boot, it relies on old standards to do things like changing your wallpaper, so those features often won’t work.
I’d highly suggest getting OneShot Wold Machine Edition which a remake/remaster of the original which takes place in a fake PC with a fake desktop that allows all those features to work in an isolated environment. Doesn’t have a native Linux version, but the dev explicitly tested on Proton to make sure everything worked properly(specifically for the Steam Deck, but same difference).
There are so many little things I want to buy just to put Linux on them lol. I’ve been eyeing the Fairphone 5 because the creators merged all the drivers for it into the Linux kernel and it(along with the Fairphone 4 and hopefully 6 in the future) is fully supported by Ubuntu Touch, being one of the few phones where it has a 100% support rating. Well, excluding GPS and VoLTE(although they’re issues on all supported phones), but GPS just requires you to restart whatever app you’re using and then it works and VoLTE has a patch incoming to fix it.
It’d be so fun to daily drive a Linux phone, since all I do on my phone is call and text and maybe browse this place and Bsky, the last two can be covered by Waydroid, which is built into UBTouch.