The UK government’s much-hyped age verification system for social media has been reduced to a joke overnight – and the punchline is being delivered by schoolkids armed with makeup pencils and fake facial hair.
A damning new report from Internet Matters reveals that more than a third of UK children have already figured out how to dodge the latest “safeguards” imposed under the draconian Online Safety Act.
Methods include entering fake birthdays, borrowing logins, and – most hilariously – drawing on fake moustaches to fool facial age estimation tech. One parent admitted catching her son using an eyebrow pencil; the system promptly verified him.
The UK government’s age verification checks have been brought down by children wearing fake moustache’sBrilliantpic.twitter.com/FvSAiKaZ6r
This comes as ministers double down on plans to restrict or outright ban social media access for under-16s. Just days ago, Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson and junior minister Olivia Bailey confirmed the government will impose “some form of age or functionality restrictions” regardless of whether a full ban is enacted.
A national consultation on the policy closes later this month, with pilots already running in hundreds of homes testing bans, time limits, and digital curfews.
But the farce unfolding in real time shows exactly why these measures were always doomed to fail – or, more cynically, why they weredesignedto fail.
I suspect it’s fake news so they can push for ID verifications
Either the architects of this scheme are completely incompetent, or this is a deliberate ploy to make the whole thing look ridiculous.
Why? To curtail resistance and downplay the inevitable next step: mandatory digital ID.
Source: modernity