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Americans, Be Warned: Lessons from Reddit's Chaotic UK Age Verification Rollout

15 days ago
  • #Digital Rights
  • #Age Verification
  • #Online Safety Act
  • The UK's Online Safety Act (OSA) mandates age verification for accessing 'harmful' content, sparking widespread criticism for privacy erosion and over-censorship.
  • Platforms like Reddit, Spotify, and YouTube are struggling to comply, with many smaller sites shutting down due to the law's vague and expensive requirements.
  • Reddit's implementation of age verification has locked out UK users from various forums, including LGBTQ+, public health, and even non-explicit communities, causing outrage.
  • The OSA's broad definition of 'harmful' content forces users to choose between submitting sensitive personal data or avoiding platforms entirely.
  • Age verification technology is flawed, with reports of bugs, VPN usage spikes, and loopholes like using face filters to bypass checks.
  • The OSA may push users, including minors, toward unmoderated and riskier parts of the internet, increasing harm rather than reducing it.
  • The US faces similar threats with proposed laws like KOSA, which could expand age verification beyond porn to censor LGBTQ+ content, sexual education, and more.
  • EFF urges opposition to age verification laws, advocating for digital rights, privacy, and free expression globally.