
Discord has been in the spotlight for the past few weeks due to its decision to implement an ID-based age verification program, which turned out to be considerably more contentious than most of us probably anticipated.
The formal postponement of its worldwide age verification implementation until the second half of 2026 in response to strong user opposition concerns data security and privacy.
Discord claims in a lengthy epistle on a blog post that it is delaying the initiative’s worldwide rollout while it works to enhance user transparency and verification choices. However, it’s not clear if this would satisfy its disgruntled user base.
Through the following “full transparency” methods, the platform hopes to address issues and improve its strategy during this delay:
- Increased Verification Options: Prior to the worldwide rollout, Discord will offer additional ways for users to verify their age, such as credit card verification, so they won’t be restricted to using ID uploads or facial scans.
- Vendor Disclosure: Discord has committed to recording the particular data management procedures of each third-party verification vendor it works with. Interestingly, they have already severed their relationship with Persona because it was unable to satisfy their new demand for face-age assessment that is fully on-device.
- Technical Methodology: To describe how their automated “age inference” methodology operates, using account signals like tenure and activity patterns instead of reading private messages, a thorough technical blog post will be released.
- Transparency Reports: Information about the number of users who were asked to verify and the techniques employed will be included in future reports.
- New “Spoiler Channels”: A new “spoiler channel” option is being created for groups who wish to conceal sensitive but not necessarily adult content (such as politics or plot reveals) in order to lessen the need for age-gating.
Stanislav Vishnevskiy, the CTO of Discord, provides a more thorough explanation of the company’s internal operations in the blog post, although he does not express regret for the program on The Verge.
The CTO, Vishnevskiy, further explains in simple terms what the team is actually trying to do after stating that the internet has a collective misunderstanding of both Discord’s requirements and stated aims. This isn’t necessarily the best way to start a pseudo-apology, but fine. The main objective is to provide “safeguards” for teens, who account for a much larger share of Discord’s user base now that the pandemic is over, while also enabling adult-orientated places to flourish without severe restrictions.
Discord gets to the heart of what will change, starting with the obvious, after restating its assertion that “90+%” of users either don’t use age-restricted spaces or that those who do can largely have their age determined without the need for a formal means like an ID via account age, payment methods, and activity patterns.
Looking at the local laws in the UK, Australia, and Brazil, they already demand either “facial age estimation or a formal means of which is the ID checks”, and Discord is unable to change those laws at this time, even while this step stops the global rollout.
Beyond that, however, there will be adjustments made for a potential worldwide launch. The company that was implicated in the data breach that occurred last autumn (5CA) is not mentioned in the document, but it does state that it will no longer be collaborating with Persona after a test period that lasted last month in the UK. Discord claims that in order to provide customers the freedom to choose who they give their data to, it wants complete openness from its partner suppliers and many vendors.
Also, the credit card will be a good form of verification, as it will be one of these techniques, and vendors who rely on age estimation must do so on-device.
To get around the current age-gating around non-adult spaces, Discord is committing to adding a spoiler channel option. In addition, before any actual rollout, the company will publish a “detailed” technical blog post explaining “how our automatic age determination systems work, including the signal categories and privacy constraints.”
These adjustments may be sufficient for some people to put their pitchforks and torches away. However, Discord claims that age verification is still planned, just postponed until the latter part of 2026.
Even though “mistakes” have been acknowledged, it’s uncertain if more vendor alternatives and transparency will be sufficient for people who don’t want to take the chance of giving their IDs to third parties completely. Time will tell.
Discord is advising its users to read the official update on the Discord Blog or see a summary of privacy protections in the Discord Support FAQ for more information about these changes.
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