Online Age Verification: Government Legislation, Supplier Responsibilization, and Public Perceptions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Research Question 1 (RQ1): Do governments embrace a responsibilization strategy when it comes to age verification?
- Research Question 2 (RQ2): To what extent have different governments legislated age verification controls?
- Research Question 3 (RQ3): How does the UK public feel about online age verification legislation?
2. RQ1: Responsibilization
- Provision of advice—The UK’s Cyber Strategy [34] has charged the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) with supporting all sectors of society to ensure that they can protect themselves from online threats. This includes the responsibility of tailoring advice for the different sectors of society.
- Responsibilization—Responsibilization hinges on advice. Governments provide such advice, with the assumption that the advice will be followed and that consequences will be accepted if something goes awry [33].
- Infrastructural services—Governments act to reduce the number of threats and harms that individuals have to deal with. For example, the UK government provides a takedown service that removes potentially harmful online content and works with large technical companies and organisations to help them to improve their security offering. Governments also push technology companies to embed security functionality into the core of digital technology. For example, the UK government is spearheading ‘Secure by Design’ legislation called Product Security and Telecommunications Infrastructure (PSTI) Act to push towards more secure architectures for computer hardware.
- What Advice? The following should arguably be included [18]: (a) How to ensure Effectiveness—All solutions must have success requirements and a measurement strategy [35] to ensure that they do indeed act to keep children out of adult spaces. The government should provide guidance on the acceptable false positive and false negative percentages that indicate effectiveness. (b) How to verify Privacy Preservation—Reassurances from third party providers are seldom sufficient to ensure that privacy is preserved. There is a need for guidance in terms of how to ensure that the privacy of children using a mechanism is preserved if a third party supplier is used to provide age verification services. (c) Approved Age Verification Providers—Many online service providers, needing to deploy an age verification solution but not knowing how, will pay someone for their solution. The government could assist by providing a list of approved suppliers. Failing that, service providers could be certified to provide guidance to service providers choosing a third party to supply age verification.
- Advice Delivery: There is a need to measure the effectiveness of the advice being given to service providers. Ensuring the advice is effectively communicated, accessible to a range of reading abilities, and easily understood is critical for achieving success and a high level of compliance with the law. It is crucial to minimise the risk of varying interpretations, or the risk of ignorance, if advice does not reach all stakeholders.
- Online Service Providers: For those service providers and recipients of the advice, once it is understood what is required, there is then the issue of balancing compliance with business concerns such as affordability, effort, and expertise required. For some smaller businesses, balancing their current business models with the changing legal landscape can introduce fundamental dilemmas around how they can operate and remain profitable moving forward [18].
2.1. Current Practice in Child Protection
2.2. Synthesis of Findings
2.2.1. Child Safety
- Content—Exposure to inappropriate adult content online due to the general lack of robust online age verification mechanisms on websites, apps, and particularly on social media platforms [19] is a growing concern. More than half of the 11–16-year-olds surveyed by the NSPCC had seen explicit content online [42], and Ofcom reported that 33% of British children aged 12–15 have come across sexist, racist, or discriminatory content online [43]. Recent studies have found that the age verification mechanisms employed by social media companies when users try to sign up to use the platform are significantly lacking, with children being able to circumvent seven different popular social media apps age verification mechanisms [44].
- Conduct—When learning how to navigate the internet and online platforms, teens in particular can engage in risky online conduct [45]. Sexting is a rising concern [46], but a new type of scam called sextortion has seen tragic consequences with multiple teenage suicides [47,48]. Children are also increasingly exposed to online abuse or cyber bullying [49]. Ngai et al. found that social media has become a growing problem for youth since 2005, particularly when it comes to cyber bullying [50]. Social media is not the only environment where children are at risk, the gaming ecosystem poses similar harms [51].
- Contact—The International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children state that it can take as little as 18 min for an online predator to convince a child to meet them in person [52]. The pandemic has exacerbated online safety concerns, with child abuse cases more than doubling within the first four weeks of lockdown in the US [53]. However, the benefits of the internet and the push towards online learning, particularly during the pandemic, has resulted in a trade-off with online safety being compromised [54]. As technology advances and societal behaviours change, global legal systems have been unable to adapt at the speed necessary to offer the right level of protection [55].
- Commerce—Children are certainly targeted by advertisers [56]. Much of the advertising is deceptive [57] and/or not beneficial [58]. Researchers have raised concerns about the influence that adverts can exert on children when online [59]. There are grave concerns about some kinds of advertising such as for gambling [60] and unhealthy food [61,62].
2.2.2. Age Verification
3. Commercial Products
3.1. Responsibilization of Service Providers
3.2. Conclusion
4. RQ2: Global State of Play
4.1. Europe
4.2. Americas
4.3. Africa
4.4. Asia
4.5. Oceania
5. RQ3: General Public Perceptions and Sentiment
5.1. Reddit
- “Why walk at all? Continue giving the service, fully encrypted. At worst UK blocks it, which would still allow users to access via VPN”.
- “EXPLETIVE stupid Tory government. We’ve all got access to vpns anyway”.
- “Let me tell you, there’ll be a EXPLETIVE riot if they try to take away Wikipedia”.
5.2. YouTube
- “Won’t be able to say what you like, and won’t be a to protest about it if they get their way”.
- “Authoritarian goverment at his best, but the anglos where always kind of”.
- “ministry of truth brilliant”.
- “This bill is extremely dangerous and must be scrapped”.
- “The scope for abuse of this bill is vast. It is dangerous and must be scrapped”.
- “Is the post office now going to open everyone’s mail to check whether or not people are exchanging illegal pictures or saying dangerous things?”
- “Isn’t it the parent’s responsibility?!? Can I still write my opinion of Islam or will I go to jail now”?
- “Parents couldn’t control their kids, now the GOVERNMENT HAS TO BABYSIT US? Apps are the reason why I didn’t fall into depression”
- “Maybe the parents need to do some parenting”?
- “I mean the reality is that its up to the parents to keep their children protected, rather than an ever-growing list of stringent, restrictive changes to everyone elses life to compensate for it, which is ultimately what these things end up becoming”
6. Discussion
6.1. RQ1: Do Governments Embrace a Responsibilization Strategy When It Comes to Age Verification?
6.2. RQ2: To What Extent Have Different Governments Legislated Age Verification Controls?
6.3. RQ3: How Does the UK Public Feel About Online Age Verification Legislation?
6.4. Practical Implications
- Service Providers: Clearer guidance for service providers who are being impacted by the legislation. This is needed to prevent a fragmented approach to compliance. Although a risk-based approach can be appropriate, it is also crucial to give the context and structure by which these risks need to be evaluated to ensure consistency across Service Providers.
- Citizens: Sentiment analysis suggests that there are differing views and scepticism towards the new-age verification legislation. With this large stakeholder group, it is critical to ensure that the intentions of any new legislation and the wider benefits to society are effectively communicated and understood. However, scepticism towards the government is a wider societal issue which will not only affect the roll out of age verification regulations but fundamental societal change and thus must be addressed.
6.5. Limitations
7. Conclusions and Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Solution | Checks | Price |
---|---|---|
WHAT YOU KNOW | ||
Renaud and Maguire [19] | Knowledge and ability to identify photos of historical figures | N/A |
WHAT YOU ARE | ||
Yoti [85] | Picture (AI) | 25p per verification |
Verify my Age [86] | Video (AI) | 45p per verification (eBay) |
OneID [98] | Picture (AI) | from 16p per verification |
Veriff [87] | Picture (AI) | 80 cents per verification plus $49 monthly fee |
Ageify [89] | Picture (AI) | Basic plan $3.99 per month (Shopify) |
WHAT YOU HOLD | ||
Yoti [85] | Government ID | 25p per verification |
Phone Number | ||
Verify my Age [86] | Third Party Database Check | 45p per verification (eBay) |
Government ID | ||
Credit Card Check | ||
Phone Check | ||
VeriMe [92] | Phone Number Check (if using debit card) | Unknown |
OneID [98] | Online Banking | 16p per verification |
AgeChecker [91] | Third Party Database Check | $25 per month plus 50 cents per verified user |
Phone Number Check | ||
AgeChecked [93] | Driving Licence | Unknown |
Phone Number Check | ||
Social Media | ||
Payment Card | ||
Address Search | ||
Trullioo [96] | Government ID | Unknown |
Third Party Database Check | ||
Melissa [145] | Address Check | Unknown |
Equifax [94] | Third Party Database Check | Unknown |
Experian [95] | Third Party Database Check | Unknown |
WHAT YOU HOLD & ARE | ||
AgeChecker [91] | Selfie with ID (AI) | $25 per month plus 50 cents per verified user |
Jumio [90] | Selfie with ID (AI) | Unknown |
Tencent [97] | ID Card + Facial Recognition | Unknown |
Author(s) | Title |
---|---|
Eric W.T. Ngai, Spencer S. C. Tao, Karen Ka-Leung Moon [50] | Social media research: Theories, constructs, and conceptual frameworks |
D. Andrews; S. Alathur; N. Chetty; V. Kumar [54] | Child Online Safety in Indian Context |
H. Pozniak [53] | The child safety protocol: In dark corners of the internet, there have been horrific consequences to children living more online during the coronavirus lockdown. Are tech giants doing enough to protect them? And will greater privacy measures allow abuse to go unchecked? |
B. E. Cartwright [55] | Cyberbullying and cyber law |
A. Faraz; J. Mounsef; A. Raza; S. Willis [51] | Child Safety and Protection in the Online Gaming Ecosystem |
O. Kovalchuk; M. Masonkova; S. Banakh [141] | The Dark Web Worldwide 2020: Anonymous vs Safety |
M. Gaborov; M. Kavalic; D. Karuovic; D. Glušac; M. Nikolic [49] | The Impact of Internet Usage on Pupils Internet Safety in Primary and Secondary School |
R. Farthing; K. Michael; R. Abbas; G. Smith-Nunes [40] | Age Appropriate Digital Services for Young People: Major Reforms |
L. Pasquale; P. Zippo; C. Curley; B. O’Neill; M. Mongiello [44] | Digital Age of Consent and Age Verification: Can They Protect Children? |
T. O’Dell; A. K. Ghosh [63] | Online Threats vs. Mitigation Efforts: Keeping Children Safe in the Era of Online Learning |
C. Doherty [64] | Responsibilising parents: the nudge towards shadow tutoring |
K. Renaud [33] | Is the responsibilization of the cyber security risk reasonable and judicious? |
M. Lister [21] | Citizens, doing it for themselves? The big society and government through community |
K. Renaud [31] | Cyber Security Responsibilization: An Evaluation of the Intervention Approaches Adopted by the Five Eyes Countries and China |
R. Williams [127] | Internet little cigar and cigarillo vendors: Surveillance of sales and marketing practices via website content analysis |
R.S. Williams [146] | Age verification and online sales of little cigars and cigarillos to minors |
C.J. Uittenbroek [27] | Everybody should contribute, but not too much: Perceptions of local governments on citizen responsibilisation in climate change adaptation in the Netherlands |
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Method | Explanation | Purpose | Breadth | Depth of Process |
---|---|---|---|---|
Systematic Review | Carried out to produce an overview of primary studies with a specific set of objectives. It is conducted in such a way that reproducibility is fostered | Summarise a body of research in a particular domain | Specific question | Meticulously documented in-depth searching for studies relevant to specified question |
Scoping Review | Overview of key concepts underpinning a particular research domain | Uncover research activity and reveal gaps in research | Broad Topic | Identify boundaries of research in a domain |
Evidence Mappinv | The systematic organisation and illustration of a broad field of research evidence | Making a body of research easily accessible | Broad Topic | Providing a description of the area being studied |
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Jarvie, C.; Renaud, K. Online Age Verification: Government Legislation, Supplier Responsibilization, and Public Perceptions. Children 2024, 11, 1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11091068
Jarvie C, Renaud K. Online Age Verification: Government Legislation, Supplier Responsibilization, and Public Perceptions. Children. 2024; 11(9):1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11091068
Chicago/Turabian StyleJarvie, Chelsea, and Karen Renaud. 2024. "Online Age Verification: Government Legislation, Supplier Responsibilization, and Public Perceptions" Children 11, no. 9: 1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11091068
APA StyleJarvie, C., & Renaud, K. (2024). Online Age Verification: Government Legislation, Supplier Responsibilization, and Public Perceptions. Children, 11(9), 1068. https://doi.org/10.3390/children11091068