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CYBER-TECH | Age checks threaten online anonymity

Published Apr 29
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Efforts to make  the internet safer for children risk remaking it into a system of  universal identification, according to a new intervention by Proton, the  Swiss privacy firm. In a recent blog post, the company argues that the  global push for online age verification could undermine one of the  internet’s defining features: anonymity.

Age verification laws,  already spreading across Europe, America and elsewhere, typically  require users to prove their age using government-issued identification  or biometric checks. What is presented as a targeted safeguard for  minors could, in practice, extend to all users”forcing even adults to  verify their identity to access everyday online services.

The company  cautions that such systems risk creating vast repositories of sensitive  personal data. Even when platforms promise to delete identification  records after verification, the process may leave persistent digital  traces, linking online activity to real-world identities. This raises  concerns about data breaches, misuse and expanded surveillance by both  corporations and governments.

Proton also questions the effectiveness  of age checks. Determined users”particularly minors”often find ways to  bypass restrictions, while compliant users shoulder the privacy burden.  At the same time, centralised verification systems could entrench the  dominance of large technology firms, positioning them as gatekeepers of  digital identity infrastructure.

Instead, the firm advocates  privacy-preserving approaches, such as cryptographic age verification  methods that confirm eligibility without disclosing identity, alongside  broader reforms targeting platform incentives.

The debate reflects a  widening tension in digital policy: how to balance child safety with  civil liberties. If poorly implemented, age verification could shift the  internet from a largely anonymous space to one where identification  becomes the norm”reshaping how people access information and express  themselves online.

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