Age verification tech could put children at greater risk, says think tank
7 hours ago
- #Privacy Risks
- #Online Safety
- #Age Verification
- Age verification mandates may not protect children from harmful content and addictive app designs, and could exclude vulnerable groups.
- Mandatory age verification could expose children to risks of blackmail, abuse, and data misuse, and may concentrate power with large tech platforms.
- The Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Act grants broad powers to regulate tech without parliamentary scrutiny, raising privacy and freedom of expression concerns.
- Age verification technologies, like biometric scans, can perform poorly for minority groups and increase risks of data theft or exclusion.
- Restrictions might push under-age users to riskier sites or strategies, such as buying fake credentials, without addressing harmful content dissemination.
- FIPR proposes a 'tagging and blocking' system, similar to film ratings, allowing customizable content filters instead of universal age verification.
- Age-checking systems can be bypassed via tools like VPNs or forged identities, and do not tackle core issues of toxic content moderation.
- UK plans for social media bans for under-16s and VPN restrictions could be implemented soon, following international trends like Australia's ban.