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  1. OneNormalBloke on

    Children are drawing on moustaches and entering fake birthdays to bypass online age gates and access social media and gaming platforms, a new report has suggested.

    It found more than a third of children in the UK have found a way around age verification measures implemented as part of the Online Safety Act, which requires all pornographic sites, social media and online platforms likely to be accessed by children to check their age.

    Social media websites usually require children to be at least 13, and users of pornographic sites must be over 18.

    The new research suggests one in six parents have helped their child to get past age verification checks, with children reporting “tricking” platforms into thinking they are older.

    Parents also said they had caught their children drawing on facial hair in a bid to evade the technology. One mother said: “I did catch my son using an eyebrow pencil to draw a moustache on his face, and it verified him as 15 years old.”

    The report from online safety organisation Internet Matters found around half of children said they had recently been asked to verify their age on a social media or gaming platform.

    From a sample of 1,000 UK children, 46 per cent said they believed age checks are easy to bypass, while 32 per cent admitted to having done so.

    Researchers also found 49 per cent of children said they had encountered harmful content online recently.

    The report said changes suggest the Online Safety Act is “beginning to shape children’s online environments for the better”, but called on the government to hold regulators and platforms to account.

    “Children continue to encounter harmful content at unacceptable rates, while age verification measures are often ineffective in practice or easy to bypass,” it said.

    “Government must ensure existing legislation is properly enforced and hold both regulators and platforms to account where it is not. It must also address gaps in the law without delay.”

    It comes as the government consults over whether to introduce a wide range of age curbs and limitations on social media for under-16s.

    A Department for Science, Innovation and Technology spokesperson said the law is “crystal clear” in demanding platforms protect children from harmful content.

    “Companies must stop turning a blind eye while children are exposed to harm,” they added. “Ofcom has our full backing to use its enforcement powers against those who fail to comply with the law.”

    They said the government had also launched a consultation looking at “everything from age limits and safer design features” to a full social media ban, adding they will “act based on the latest evidence”.

    An Ofcom spokesperson said: “This report underlines why the Online Safety Act matters. Without protections like robust age checks, children have been routinely exposed to risks they didn’t choose, on services they can’t realistically avoid. Weak or easily bypassed age checks are not good enough.

    “In the UK, our rules make tech firms responsible for keeping the platforms children use safer. While progress is being made, we’re clear that there is still more to do.

    “We’ve challenged the biggest services in the world to do more to protect children, and won’t hesitate to act where they fall short.”

  2. RecentTwo544 on

    This is now straight out of Brasseye.

    Also note there’ll be nothing done about this, no concerns raised, as there haven’t been in the year these incredibly-easy-to-bypass age checks have been in place.

    Almost as if it was about surveillance and control, not protecting kids…

  3. AdditionalThinking on

    It’s tragic how parenting in this country has gotten so poor.

    As a parent it is YOUR responsibility to teach YOUR kids not to leak these workarounds to the government.

  4. wkavinsky on

    And for this, the government wants you to hand over all your ID to every company you deal with on the internet.

    For something that can be bypassed with a sharpie.

  5. Connor123x on

    Story next month.

    There is an increase in children seeking ways of removing permanent marker from their face.

  6. Incident-Putrid on

    I’d suggest buying stocks in very long trench coats immediately.

  7. Rich-Astronomer7937 on

    They probably just wanna be able to voice chat with their friends online while playing videogames which means they have to do stuff like this
    These kids have had a huge chunk of their lives ripped away by the online safety act; that’s what it has done
    What the online safety act does is not normal or fair

  8. ParsleySnack on

    I could buy a fake moustache and then draw on it, I don’t see how that would help bypass anything.

  9. Getafix69 on

    I honestly think it’s down to that Peter Thiel palintr guy and his obsession with the Antichrist, of course Governments are going to use it to crush any freedom of speech left and censor the hell out of everything that doesn’t meet their narratives.

  10. THPSJimbles on

    I’m in my late 20s and to verify my Discord I just pointed my phone camera at a video on YouTube that was literally just an Indian man opening and closing his mouth and turning his head side to side. I’ll have to find it because it was hilarious.

    I’m not giving random companies my ID or scans of my face.

    Edit: https://youtube.com/shorts/1lWcC9Wlg70?si=R2RSiBe2MopEGPBC

  11. CrispyDave on

    Headline has given me my biggest laugh of the day.

    Good on them.

  12. MalusandValus on

    It’s well known by now that simply using the photo mode of death stranding and putting Norman Reedus’ face in works against all of the face checkers, lol.

  13. Imreallyadonut on

    If this actually works then it just goes to show just how utterly useless the current checks are.

  14. zombik327 on

    Hmmm, wait.. If your data is not stored such as face id, how come they know that kids draw mustaches on their face? 🤔

  15. Neat_Table_563 on

    The online censorship in this country has gotten so bad that I don’t blame them.

    It doesn’t help that the children’s wellbeing and schools bill just passed, which has an amendment to give the secretary of state great power over restricting the internet.

    Within a year, we’ll likely be seeing mandatory age verification for social media and VPNs.

  16. Most_Dramatic_Injury on

    Where there’s a will there’s a way! There’s nothing more resourceful or creative than a teenager who wants something they can’t have. 

  17. Porn sites around the world wondering why Groucho Marx has suddenly become so active.

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