Or, the more often, a young adult I must admit. I worked (or have had to...)
some important traits, but basically being the same since I was 20/25
- I'm 63.
But anyway, this question is stupid.
I *DO hope* 13 years old kids can dream on LEGO or BrickLink Sets pages, BDP,
Mocs or wanted-lists: this Stitch Set is wonderful!!!
The fact they're allowed to actually pay is another problem. But nowadays
young people are on Internet well before they're 18 or 21 - LOL, ever heard
of Tik Tok?
Family friendly sites should allow anyone to visit - but only limit who can pay.
I'm sure it's all very complicated, development, laws, risk management
for the site, but limiting visits to a LEGO website to adults is... silly, IMHO.
I'm sure it's all very complicated, development, laws, risk management
for the site, but limiting visits to a LEGO website to adults is... silly, IMHO.
What I would do is try to find a way to hook the Lego builder app into BrickLink,
that way it can be locked down, kids could build wanted lists but not much else,
and have a similar check as with registering a set on the builder app.
I'm sure it's all very complicated, development, laws, risk management
for the site, but limiting visits to a LEGO website to adults is... silly, IMHO.
What I would do is try to find a way to hook the Lego builder app into BrickLink,
that way it can be locked down, kids could build wanted lists but not much else,
and have a similar check as with registering a set on the builder app.
Yeah, I’m sure you need to be at least 18 to be able to answer mathematical conundrums
like “6 × 9” or, gasp!, “10 × 1”!