04/28/2026
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I created a Facebook account in 2008 to stay in touch with friends. I only used it sporadically. It wasn’t until six years ago that I decided to start posting my content on this platform as well. What happened next? I described that in the article Facebook Censorship. Later, there was a false sense of relief, and Mr. Zuckerberg promised: “No more censorship!!” You can find the details here. That motto still holds true today, albeit in a slightly modified form: Never again without censorship!

My Facebook posts were severely restricted—more specifically, their reach. Due to shadowbanning, my new posts weren’t visible to my friends until several days later, or not at all. Despite these tactics, many people still managed to find my posts this way. The statistics showed that about 1% of my readers used this method. They used it because two months ago, I was asked to take a selfie to prove that I wasn’t a crocodile. I described this in the article Control Through Money.
So I set up another account under my real name, just like the previous one. After a month of publishing articles similar to before, a “technical” problem arose. Facebook requires a login, and every attempt ends in endless waiting. So I decided to stop fighting for access to this platform, which I’ve always considered a not particularly good app. That’s my subjective assessment. Nevertheless, it’s also the assessment of an expert.

I don’t even have the option to open links to Facebook. I could create a fake account, but I don’t want to. Please don’t get me wrong—I’m not criticizing those who hide their identity. There are plenty of reasons to do so.
If someone thinks I’m a dinosaur, I won’t hold it against them, provided it’s one of the more powerful prehistoric reptiles. A T-Rex, for example. That’s just a joke, of course. It’s not easy to offend me—you’d have to try really hard.
There is a certain inconsistency in my behavior: on the one hand, I use my real name and post photos of myself that I’ve selected myself; on the other hand, I don’t want to undergo verification via webcam. This can be explained by the voluntary nature of these actions. I value my freedom of choice highly—a freedom that many people would gladly trade for a bowl of rice or the use of a “free” app.
The introduction of digital ID is not technological progress. It is the installation of a checkpoint that each of us will have to pass through sooner or later. EU policy is paving the way for this and selling us the loss of our freedom as “security.” Anyone who believes that this infrastructure will only be used for age verification has failed to grasp the lessons of recent years. The digital prison is not built with walls—it is installed with convenient apps and “age-appropriate” certificates.
This quote is from an article that appeared yesterday on tkp.at: Digital Identity: Apple’s creeping introduction of the “digital ID” as a control instrument. Source.

And when are we finally going to jump out of this pot?
Author of the article: Marek Wojcik
Email: worldscam3@gmail.com
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