Best not to survey VPN companies, then.
www.pcgamer.com
"Two surveys conducted before and after the rules came into place, by a research and data analysis group, suggest that a significant portion of the British populace supports the new laws, but an equally large percentage also reckon that they're not very effective."
I think when it comes down to the purest form of this argument, it boils down to the fact that people absolutely do want to keep children safe online from viewing potentially harmful content and make it a safer space in general for children, but no one seems to know any other way to implement that. No one is arguing against providing measures to protect children online, but seemingly no one has a better solution than the ID verification method.
If there was a better method to protect children online that also respects the privacy of everyone else that uses the internet, we would have already seen it happen, or at the very least there will be a strong argument for a different method that people are rallying behind. Out of the seemingly countless posts, videos, opinions, and takes I've seen on this matter, not one single person proposed a different strategy. To make matters even worse, the ID verification method seems to be incredibly easy to bypass, making it not even very effective at the job it is supposed to be performing.
The larger implications of this are absolutely worrying and is without a doubt going to negatively affect the way everyone uses the internet. The worries about it creating a mass surveillance state are not to be undermined. Collecting any personal data of yourself and storing it on a server where you yourself do not have access to it is the recipe for disaster that we see countless times year after year after year. Just this past week there were reports of a women's dating app getting hacked with thousands of ID cards and other sensitive material leaking online.
It's very hard to figure out how I truly feel about this. On one hand, it really is for the greater good. I do not want to have children born into this world with the same unfettered, uncensored access to the entire internet like I did growing up. I think I have turned out mostly okay as an adult, but I cannot argue that the stuff I was viewing online as early as 8-9 years old did not have a negative impact on my mental wellbeing. No one around that age should ever have full access to BestGore, LiveLeak, countless porn websites, 4chan, SomethingAwful, and more like I did. I chalk it up to the internet still being relatively new around that time, so the impacts it had on children weren't as well-known as they are now. Raising a child in this day and age requires so much more restraint than when I was a child growing up.
But on the other hand, this is just another bit of our privacy gone and vanished completely without us ever getting it back. There are so many dystopian thoughts about the potential impacts of this, but it's hard to see them as being purely fiction. I hate to be this way, but unfortunately in this world there is no longer a sense of real privacy. You can do all you want to try to mask your actions online, but no matter what, there is still something identifying you. This is just going to make it a lot easier for the governments that implement this rule.