Nanny state vs. Linux: show us your ID, kid
…Mazzullo, has declared that his distro "will NOT have any age checks and that they are not for use in regions with OS age verification laws." Meanwhile, David Heinemeier Hansson (DHH), creator…
These systems fail in predictable ways. False positives are common. Platforms identify minors as adults with youthful faces, or adults who are sharing family devices, or have otherwise unusual usage. They lock accounts, sometimes for days. False negatives also persist. Teenagers learn quickly how to evade checks by borrowing IDs, cycling accounts, or using VPNs. The appeal process itself creates new privacy risks. Platforms must store biometric data, ID images, and verification logs long enough to defend their decisions to regulators. So if an adult who is tired of submitting selfies to verify
The Age Verification TrapThis is where emerging age-restriction policy collides with existing privacy law. Modern data-protection regimes all rest on similar ideas: Collect only what you need, use it only for a defined purpose, and keep it only as long as necessary. Age enforcement undermines all three. To prove they are following age-verification rules, platforms must log verification attempts, retain evidence, and monitor users over time. When regulators or courts ask whether a platform took reasonable steps, “We collected less data” is rarely persuasive. For companies, defending themselves against accusations of ne
The Age Verification TrapMost age-restriction laws follow a familiar pattern. They set a minimum age and require platforms to take “reasonable steps” or “effective measures” to prevent underage access. What these laws rarely spell out is how platforms are supposed to tell who is actually over the line. At the technical level, companies have only two tools. The first is identity-based verification. Companies ask users to upload a government ID, link a digital identity, or provide documents that prove their age. Yet in many jurisdictions, 16-year-olds do not have IDs. In others, IDs exist but are not digital, not widely
The Age Verification TrapThis pattern is already visible on major platforms. Meta has deployed facial age estimation on Instagram in multiple markets, using video-selfie checks through third-party partners. When the system flags users as possibly underaged, it prompts them to record a short selfie video. An AI system estimates their age and, if it decides they are under the threshold, restricts or locks the account. Appeals often trigger additional checks, and misclassifications are common. TikTok has confirmed that it also scans public videos to infer users’ ages. Google and YouTube rely heavily on behavioral signals
The Age Verification Trap…Mazzullo, has declared that his distro "will NOT have any age checks and that they are not for use in regions with OS age verification laws." Meanwhile, David Heinemeier Hansson (DHH), creator…
…Existing Tools to Help Enhance Child Safety While Safeguarding Privacy The new features mentioned above build on trusted tools already available to help parents protect their kids : Age ratings, content restrictions, and…
…This tool, previously limited to select users, aims to enhance security and privacy amid rising AI-generated content threats. 0:00 / 3:18 Use left and right arrow keys to seek audio…
…what minors can access online and give parents the upper hand in digital access, it remains unclear whether the age-verification checks will affect privacy and data security with their methods. Right…
…app with initial support at TSA checkpoints. Recently, Apple expanded Digital ID to be used for age verification in select territories around the world. And now, Texas is the first place in…
…distros like Debian, Arch, Ubuntu, and Mint, a free pass. For context, AB 1043 is a law that legislators passed late last year to enforce age checks at the Operating System (OS…
…0:00 / --:-- Use left and right arrow keys to seek audio. Microsoft's AI-powered Recall feature is once again facing privacy and security concerns , despite a major redesign intended to address…
Your Computer May Soon Require an Age Check. And It Might Not Take ‘No’ for an Answer
In late 2025, Australia’s government rolled out the first complete ban on users under 16 from having social media accounts. In the United Kingdom, rules took effect in mid-2025 under the Online Safety Act that require al…
I built VerdictMail as a homelab project to explore whether combining classical email authentication signals with LLM reasoning produces better threat classification than either approach alone.It runs as a daemon on Ub…
Via Internet Matters, news via Independent UK: Research by Internet Matters indicates that over a third of children in the UK have successfully bypassed online age verification measures, which are mandated by the Online …
…online age verification by drawing on a fake mustache. Finally, we detailed Russia’s effort to create a local competitor to Starlink satellite internet service—with all the privacy and security concerns…
…That’s not all! Each week, we round up the security and privacy news we didn’t cover in depth ourselves. Click the headlines to read the full stories. And stay safe…
…the desire to share live moments instantly on social media, check real-time scores and stats, stream matches, or simply stay connected while traveling to venues. For many supporters, all of this…