Digital Identities and the Future of Age Verification in Europe
Deeplinks 2025-04-23
Summary:
This is the first part of a three-part series about age verification in the European Union. In this blog post, we give an overview of the political debate around age verification and explore the age verification proposal introduced by the European Commission, based on digital identities. Part two takes a closer look at the European Commission’s age verification app, and part three explores measures to keep all users safe that do not require age checks.
As governments across the world pass laws to “keep children safe online,” more times than not, notions of safety rest on the ability of platforms, websites, and online entities being able to discern users by age. This legislative trend has also arrived in the European Union, where online child safety is becoming one of the issues that will define European tech policy for years to come.
Like many policymakers elsewhere, European regulators are increasingly focused on a range of online harms they believe are associated with online platforms, such as compulsive design and the effects of social media consumption on children’s and teenagers’ mental health. Many of these concerns lack robust scientific evidence; studies have drawn a far more complex and nuanced picture about how social media and young people’s mental health interact. Still, calls for mandatory age verification have become as ubiquitous as they have become trendy. Heads of state in France and Denmark have recently called for banning under 15 year olds from social media Europe-wide, while Germany, Greece and Spain are working on their own age verification pilots.
EFF has been fighting age verification mandates because they undermine the free expression rights of adults and young people alike, create new barriers to internet access, and put at risk all internet users’ privacy, anonymity, and security. We do not think that requiring service providers to verify users’ age is the right approach to protecting people online.
Policy makers frame age verification as a necessary tool to prevent children from accessing content deemed unsuitable, to be able to design online services appropriate for children and teenagers, and to enable minors to participate online in age appropriate ways. Rarely is it acknowledged that age verification undermines the privacy and free expression rights of all users, routinely blocks access to resources that can be life saving, and undermines the development of media literacy. Rare, too, are critical conversations about the specific rights of young users: The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child clearly expresses that minors have rights to freedom of expression and access to information online, as well as the right to privacy. These rights are reflected in the European Charter of Fundamental Rights, which establishes the rights to privacy, data protection and free expression for all European citizens, including children. These rights would be steamrolled by age verification requirements. And rarer still are policy discussions of ways to improve these rights for young people.
Implicitly Mandatory Age Verification
Currently, there is no legal obligation to verify users’ age in the EU. However, different European legal acts that recently entered into force or are being discussed implicitly require providers to know users’ ages or suggest age assessments as a measure to mitigate risks for minors online. At EFF, we consider these proposals akin to mandates because there is often no alternative method to comply except to introduce age verif
Link:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/04/digital-identities-and-future-age-verification-europeFrom feeds:
Fair Use Tracker » DeeplinksCLS / ROC » Deeplinks