Discord announced it will default all accounts to a teen-appropriate experience starting in early March, requiring age verification to access adult content and restricted servers. The move aims to enhance child safety but has sparked backlash over privacy concerns following a recent data breach. Verification options include on-device facial estimation or submitting government IDs.
Discord, a communication platform with over 200 million monthly active users, revealed plans on Monday to shift all accounts to a default 'Teen' age category. This change, rolling out globally in early March, will blur sensitive content, route direct messages from unknowns to a separate inbox, add warnings to friend requests, and block access to age-restricted servers and Stage livestreaming for unverified users.
To regain full access, users must verify their age through one of two methods: a selfie video for on-device facial age estimation, which Discord says never leaves the device, or uploading a government ID to a verification partner, with documents deleted promptly after confirmation. Most users will need to verify only once, though some may require multiple methods. An age inference model will analyze metadata like gaming habits and activity patterns to automatically classify confident adult users without further checks.
The announcement follows increased scrutiny on online platforms' impact on children, with peers like YouTube and Roblox implementing similar measures. Discord's prior efforts include 2023 bans on teen dating channels and AI-generated child sexual abuse material, prompted by an NBC News report on 35 prosecutions involving the platform.
However, the policy has ignited user fury, especially after a October data breach exposed government IDs of 70,000 users from a third-party vendor in the UK and Australia. On Reddit, users decried the risks, with one stating, "Hell, Discord has already had one ID breach, why the fuck would anyone verify on it after that?" Others fear broader data harvesting, questioning partnerships like k-ID, used by Meta and Snap, and doubting on-device privacy claims.
Discord is partnering with k-ID and Privately for verification, emphasizing data minimization under GDPR principles—no biometrics stored, processing local to devices. A spokesperson for k-ID confirmed, "The Facial Age Estimation technology runs entirely on the user’s device... The only data to leave the device is a pass/fail."
To address youth perspectives, Discord launched a Teen Council of 10-12 members aged 13-17, open for applications until May 1, to advise on safety and connections. Company officials anticipate some user exodus but plan retention strategies, acknowledging imperfections like easy bypasses by minors using makeup or AI.