!Friendica Developers
I am a business analyst that runs my own friendica instance focused around my friends and family..
Amoung them are some younger members who ae getting to the age where they will most likely start exploring social media.
For this reason I would really value the ability to create child accounts on friendica where their parents and/or I could retain a degree of control over what content they see.
Specifically I would like their parents as non admins to be able to:
See all the content they have access to.
Have the option of controlling which accounts they can follow and can follow them
Can limit their ability to post publically.
Limit their ability to create groups, pages etc.
Have notifications set for any follow requests they get
Control whether they can login or not (temporarily)
Have the ability to turn these controls on/off as they get older so they can retain the account as an adult.
I understand that these are a significant set of features.
I am wondering whether others have an interest in this kind of functionality amd would be interested in talkking more about it.
What would be the best way of supporting those with friendica coding skills who might like to implenent these kind of feature? How best could I contribute?
Andy HΞ3
in reply to abeorch • • •I have a ToC like this:
friendica.hubup.pro/tos
It includes a Privacy section; I tried to make it as accessible as possible. It also aims to manage expectations, helping users with what to expect.
abeorch
in reply to Andy HΞ3 • •Friendica Admins reshared this.
Andy HΞ3
in reply to abeorch • • •Yes, there is a minimum age requirement, but it's not verified. The terms make clear that this server is not intended for younger users that may need closer supervision; our moderators are not able to constantly monitor all public posts.
The server is situated in Asia-Pacific, where most of our users are based. The choice of Irish law is for pragmatic reasons, as some of the operators have connections to that country. The terms aim to set out a framework we intend to follow as a minimum standard. This does of course offer limited protection to the service provider if their assets and interests are elsewhere. It's still probably better than opting for a jurisdiction with draconian laws. Indeed, there are places in the world where people have served prison sentences merely for clicking "Like" on Facebook posts that were deemed illegal in that place.
On a more cheerful note, the terms are written to be accessible, intended to set clear expectations, so everyone can get the most out of and enjoy the service.
abeorch
in reply to Andy HΞ3 • •Yeah I mean its a helpful to have something. I wasn't sure about whether your choice of jurisdiction is something that you can elect but I can understand the thinking. You might want to check how enforcible that nomination is.
I can see that not too far from now I might be running into issues with New Zealand and Australian social media laws and it sounds like the UK is going that way as well.
Friendica Admins reshared this.
abeorch
in reply to abeorch • •