The author is a technology policy senior fellow at the Cato Institute and adjunct professor at George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School.
In a recent ruling, the US Supreme Court upheld a Texas law mandating age verification for access to websites featuring adult content, joining the UK’s Online Safety Act and Australia’s ban on social media for under 16s in the effort to protect minors online.
While the intention behind these regulations is noble, they oversimplify a complex issue and introduce new privacy concerns.
Verifying age online necessitates proving that a user is over a certain age, extending beyond minors to impact adult internet users as well.
The Supreme Court’s decision, while attempting to narrow the scope of verification to specific content, fails to acknowledge crucial distinctions.
Unlike offline age verification, online methods like uploading a driver’s license entail a more enduring interaction and potential data storage, posing risks of privacy breaches and exposing individuals’ online behavior.
Moreover, individuals without government-issued IDs could be barred from accessing constitutionally protected online content, unlike offline restrictions on purchasing age-restricted items.
Alternative age estimation techniques such as biometrics or financial histories present their own privacy challenges and inaccuracies, particularly for certain demographic groups.
Despite the drawbacks, age verification proposals persist globally in response to concerns ranging from online exposure to inappropriate content to excessive screen time among young people.
While young individuals today have unprecedented access to information, worries persist over their exposure to harmful content online.
However, age verification requirements risk blocking more than just adult content, potentially limiting access to crucial sexual health information and compromising online safety for minors.
Ultimately, age verification laws, though well-intentioned, pose new privacy risks for all internet users.
Safeguarding young people online is best achieved through parental guidance, empowering them to make informed decisions and engage in open discussions about online safety.