Washington, Aug 28 (AP) As online age verification increases across the United States and globally, users are being asked for identification or face scans to certify that they are over certain age thresholds like 13, 18, or 21. Proponents argue this measure serves to shield children from adult websites and potentially harmful online material.
On the other hand, critics argue that these steps may lead to a less secure, private, and free internet, restricting access not just to explicit content but also to news, health information, and free speech.
"While many of these laws have good intentions," commented Jennifer Huddleston, a senior technology policy fellow at the Cato Institute, "we all aim to protect young users from harmful content prematurely." Over 20 states have enacted some form of age verification law, although many face legal disputes. While there is no federal mandate in the U.S., the Supreme Court recently upheld a Mississippi law for social media age checks, and a Texas law requiring age verification for adult content access. The court ruled that adults do not have a First Amendment right to access obscene material without age verification.
Internationally, the UK mandates age verification for adult websites. Apart from explicit content platforms, websites like Reddit, X, Telegram, and Bluesky are adopting age checks. In addition, France and several European Union countries are piloting a government-backed verification app.
Australia has prohibited social media access for users under 16. "The safety of our children is a priority," Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese stated, highlighting the platforms’ responsibility. They have a year to devise implementation strategies before facing penalties.
Critics like Huddleston raise significant privacy and freedom of speech concerns for all internet users. "Verifying under-18s implies verifying everyone’s age, affecting adults' free speech and privacy," she explained. State laws vary, with some like Louisiana and Texas mandating age verification if over 33% of content is adult-wise, while states like Wyoming and South Dakota regulate sites deemed obscene or harmful to minors.
Determining what’s harmful can be subjective, leading experts to believe these laws might breach the First Amendment, possibly necessitating age verification for services from Netflix to local blogs.
"Countries like Australia and the UK are creating an internet split, where age-verified users have different access," warned Jason Kelley from the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "That split is historically problematic." Various decision-makers, including politicians and tech firms, influence such regulations.
Many platforms comply, but verification can be burdensome, particularly for smaller ones. For example, Bluesky withdrew from Mississippi due to its broad age verification requirements affecting all users, not just those aiming to access adult material. The legislation also demands tracking minors, sparking free speech concerns.
Some assert age verification should rest with app stores like Apple and Google. However, these companies disagree, noting such measures might not cover shared devices or pre-installed apps.
In response to criticism and regulatory compliance, more tech companies are adopting verification processes. Google, for instance, is testing AI for age verification on YouTube based on watch history. Instagram, similarly, is testing AI to detect age misrepresentation. Roblox, having faced lawsuits over child protection, introduced photo ID and face scan verification for access to certain games and chat features.
While face scans may mitigate ID flaws, they too have issues: Can AI reliably differentiate a 17.5-year-old from an 18-year-old? "Accuracy varies, especially among women, ethnic groups, or particular physical traits, leading to intrusive checks," according to Huddleston.
Conventional IDs pose security concerns as well: What if companies retain the submitted files? A cautionary example is the recent data breach at Tea, an app meant for women to anonymously report on men. Supposedly temporary, the ID scans were improperly kept, allowing hackers access to images and messages. (AP)
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