10 (Not So) Hidden Dangers of Age Verification
from the it-causes-real-problems dept
It’s nearly the end of 2025, and half of the US and the UK now require you to upload your ID or scan your face to watch “sexual content.” A handful of states and Australia now have various requirements to verify your age before you can create a social media account.
Age-verification laws may sound straightforward to some: protect young people online by making everyone prove their age. But in reality, these mandates force users into one of two flawed systems—mandatory ID checks or biometric scans—and both are deeply discriminatory. These proposals burden everyone’s right to speak and access information online, and structurally excludes the very people who rely on the internet most. In short, although these laws are often passed with the intention to protect children from harm, the reality is that these laws harm both adults and children.
Here’s who gets hurt, and how:
1. Adults Without IDs Get Locked Out
Document-based verification assumes everyone has the right ID, in the right name, at the right address. About 15 million adult U.S. citizens don’t have a driver’s license, and 2.6 million lack any government-issued photo ID at all. Another 34.5 million adults don’t have a driver’s license or state ID with their current name and address.
- 18% of Black adults don’t have a driver’s license at all.
- Black and Hispanic Americans are disproportionately less likely to have current licenses.
- Undocumented immigrants often cannot obtain state IDs or driver’s licenses.
- People with disabilities are less likely to have current identification.
- Lower-income Americans face greater barriers to maintaining valid IDs.
Some laws allow platforms to ask for financial documents like credit cards or mortgage records instead. But they still overlook the fact that nearly 35% of U.S. adults also don’t own homes, and close to 20% of households don’t have credit cards. Immigrants, regardless of legal status, may also be unable to obtain credit cards or other financial documentation.
2. Communities of Color Face Higher Error Rates
Platforms that rely on AI-based age-estimation systems often use a webcam selfie to guess users’ ages. But these algorithms don’t work equally well for everyone. Research has consistently shown that they are less accurate for people with Black, Asian, Indigenous, and Southeast Asian backgrounds; that they often misclassify those adults as being under 18; and sometimes take longer to process, creating unequal access to online spaces. This mirrors the well-documented racial bias in facial recognition technologies. The result is that technology’s inherent biases can block people from speaking online or accessing others’ speech.
3. People with Disabilities Face More Barriers
Age-verification mandates most harshly affect people with disabilities. Facial recognition systems routinely fail to recognize faces with physical differences, affecting an estimated 100 million people worldwide who live with facial differences, and “liveness detection” can exclude folks with limited mobility. As these technologies become gatekeepers to online spaces, people with disabilities find themselves increasingly blocked from essential services and platforms with no specified appeals processes that account for disability.
Document-based systems also don’t solve this problem—as mentioned earlier, people with disabilities are also less likely to possess current driver’s licenses, so document-based age-gating technologies are equally exclusionary.
4. Transgender and Non-Binary People Are Put At Risk
Age-estimation technologies perform worse on transgender individuals and cannot classify non-binary genders at all. For the 43% of transgender Americans who lack identity documents that correctly reflect their name or gender, age verification creates an impossible choice: provide documents with dead names and incorrect gender markers, potentially outing themselves in the process, or lose access to online platforms entirely—a risk that no one should be forced to take just to use social media or access legal content.
5. Anonymity Becomes a Casualty
Age-verification systems are, at their core, surveillance systems. By requiring identity verification to access basic online services, we risk creating an internet where anonymity is a thing of the past. For people who rely on anonymity for safety, this is a serious issue. Domestic abuse survivors need to stay anonymous to hide from abusers who could track them through their online activities. Journalists, activists, and whistleblowers regularly use anonymity to protect sources and organize without facing retaliation or government surveillance. And in countries under authoritarian rule, anonymity is often the only way to access banned resources or share information without being silenced. Age-verification systems that demand government IDs or biometric data would strip away these protections, leaving the most vulnerable exposed.
6. Young People Lose Access to Essential Information
Because state-imposed age-verification rules either block young people from social media or require them to get parental permission before logging on, they can deprive minors of access to important information about their health, sexuality, and gender. Many U.S. states mandate “abstinence only” sexual health education, making the internet a key resource for education and self-discovery. But age-verification laws can end up blocking young people from accessing that critical information. And this isn’t just about porn, it’s about sex education, mental health resources, and even important literature. Some states and countries may start going after content they deem “harmful to minors,” which could include anything from books on sexual health to art, history, and even award-winning novels. And let’s be clear: these laws often get used to target anything that challenges certain political or cultural narratives, from diverse educational materials to media that simply includes themes of sexuality or gender diversity. What begins as a “protection” for kids could easily turn into a full-on censorship movement, blocking content that’s actually vital for minors’ development, education, and well-being.
This is also especially harmful to homeschoolers, who rely on the internet for research, online courses, and exams. For many, the internet is central to their education and social lives. The internet is also crucial for homeschoolers’ mental health, as many already struggle with isolation. Age-verification laws would restrict access to resources that are essential for their education and well-being.
7. LGBTQ+ Youth Are Denied Vital Lifelines
For many LGBTQ+ young people, especially those with unsupportive or abusive families, the internet can be a lifeline. For young people facing family rejection or violence due to their sexuality or gender identity, social media platforms often provide crucial access to support networks, mental health resources, and communities that affirm their identities. Age verification systems that require parental consent threaten to cut them from these crucial supports.
When parents must consent to or monitor their children’s social media accounts, LGBTQ+ youth who lack family support lose these vital connections. LGBTQ+ youth are also disproportionately likely to be unhoused and lack access to identification or parental consent, further marginalizing them.
8. Youth in Foster Care Systems Are Completely Left Out
Age verification bills that require parental consent fail to account for young people in foster care, particularly those in group homes without legal guardians who can provide consent, or with temporary foster parents who cannot prove guardianship. These systems effectively exclude some of the most vulnerable young people from accessing online platforms and resources they may desperately need.
9. All of Our Personal Data is Put at Risk
An age-verification system also creates acute privacy risks for adults and young people. Requiring users to upload sensitive personal information (like government-issued IDs or biometric data) to verify their age creates serious privacy and security risks. Under these laws, users would not just momentarily display their ID like one does when accessing a liquor store, for example. Instead, they’d submit their ID to third-party companies, raising major concerns over who receives, stores, and controls that data. Once uploaded, this personal information could be exposed, mishandled, or even breached, as we’ve seen with past data hacks. Age-verification systems are no strangers to being compromised—companies like AU10TIX and platforms like Discord have faced high-profile data breaches, exposing users’ most sensitive information for months or even years.
The more places personal data passes through, the higher the chances of it being misused or stolen. Users are left with little control over their own privacy once they hand over these immutable details, making this approach to age verification a serious risk for identity theft, blackmail, and other privacy violations. Children are already a major target for identity theft, and these mandates perversely increase the risk that they will be harmed.
10. All of Our Free Speech Rights Are Trampled
The internet is today’s public square—the main place where people come together to share ideas, organize, learn, and build community. Even the Supreme Court has recognized that social media platforms are among the most powerful tools ordinary people have to be heard.
Age-verification systems inevitably block some adults from accessing lawful speech and allow some young people under 18 users to slip through anyway. Because the systems are both over-inclusive (blocking adults) and under-inclusive (failing to block people under 18), they restrict lawful speech in ways that violate the First Amendment.
The Bottom Line
Age-verification mandates create barriers along lines of race, disability, gender identity, sexual orientation, immigration status, and socioeconomic class. While these requirements threaten everyone’s privacy and free-speech rights, they fall heaviest on communities already facing systemic obstacles.
The internet is essential to how people speak, learn, and participate in public life. When access depends on flawed technology or hard-to-obtain documents, we don’t just inconvenience users, we deepen existing inequalities and silence the people who most need these platforms. As outlined, every available method—facial age estimation, document checks, financial records, or parental consent—systematically excludes or harms marginalized people. The real question isn’t whether these systems discriminate, but how extensively.
Republished from the EFF’s Deeplinks blog.
Filed Under: access to information, age verification, anonymity, free speech, privacy
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Comments on “10 (Not So) Hidden Dangers of Age Verification”
I’ve hated age verification for as long as I can remember, but up until recently I haven’t really been able to put my finger (or paw) onto why.
Having thought about it…my first real foray into online communities ended really poorly and hurt my ability to socialize online for a long time. When I started to become more social again, it ended up being with deviant and adult groups.
That they were deviant and perverse and all that sort of thing was important, because I felt like I could speak openly of my thoughts, no matter what they were, without being judged. And I wasn’t pressed to reveal anything about myself, I could share only the details that I wanted to, to people I’d grown to trust. The kinkiest most perverted corner of the internet was also the most accepting of my boundaries and helped me to begin socializing again.
And then the social media ban for teens, and NSFW channels on Discord being blocked for me until I let them use my camera.
I ended up giving in, but I still feel like I was violated. My access to my friends held hostage. Forced to share information I didn’t want to share, even if it was (supposedly) never stored. It made me angry enough that I was seriously considering killing people.
And, I think…if something like this had been in place back then, if I wasn’t allowed to anonymously browse and chat about dirty things, if I had to wave an ID around, be forced to share details about myself and be judged before I had a chance to talk or look…I don’t think I could have done it. I wouldn’t have healed.
So once again, I hate age verification. Because it violates my personal boundaries by demanding information I’m not comfortable with sharing, and it sends the message that someone is making self-righteous judgements about what I am and what I’m doing.
Discrimination against the poor, minorities, women, LGBTQ folk, etc. is either an intention or a happy incidental bonus for policies like these. Pointing out the discrimination isn’t going to make the proponents back off. They’ll be happy that it’s working as planned. The cruelty and suppression is always intentional.
And if it’s supposedly just incompetence that results in functional cruelty, it is morally indistinguishable. If you can’t do something effectively without hurting people, you shouldn’t be doing anything at all.
Parents need dedicated “child” devices that identify themselves as such. Until that is an option you’re saying we have to let kids watch violent porn.
You just pretend that the fact there is no age gate on the Internet is not a problem. It is a problem and the status quo is not a solution. Give parents the tools they need to allow their kids to access all the good stuff you are talking about without allowing access to adult only spaces.
Something needs to change. The current legislation is not a solution but neither is doing nothing.
Re:
I’m sure a bunch of journalists and pro bono rights lawyers will get be able to get right on to Nerding Harder for a technical solution.
Re:
That’s a fair bit leaning into a bad take argument. The stance was never “saying we have to let kids watch violent porn”, it’s that tools already exist for this problem and many parents lack either the intuition or willingness to use them. Then the same parents refuse accountability from the resulting situation and decide it’s someone else’s problem.
Are the tools perfect? No. But those tools still lay groundwork for a solution that doesn’t affect the agency of people completely unrelated to the problem.
Re: If your kids are Finding Such
Then its Time to Talk to them.
If you think thats ALL the porn you will see and find. You are Way off.
As to Violent porn, you will see more of that in Neighbors Beating there Wives and Husbands, Children then on the net.
Reality Sucks, Hiding from it is even Worse, as you dont get a chance to Explain to your Child WHATS happening, and Why most of it is Bad.
It all comes back to the parents/responsible ADULTS(?). If you dont know what you kid is Doing/Watching, YOU cant help your Child understand.
ID to use your computer
And if the UK government gets its way you may even be required to show ID to disable filters built into your phone or computer’s operating system:
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/12/uk-to-encourage-apple-and-google-to-put-nudity-blocking-systems-on-phones/
Re: I can see it now.
Insert Drivers License HERE –>> <>out of order<<–
Re: Re: Markup
Works again..