- New system follows year-long pilot in Britain
- Built to comply with European requirements
- Flagged accounts will be reviewed by specialist moderators
STOCKHOLM, Jan 16 (Reuters) – TikTok will start rolling out new age-detection technology across Europe in the coming weeks, it informed Reuters on Friday, as the ByteDance-owned platform faces regulatory pressure to better identify and reshift accounts belonging to children under 13.
The previously unreported system follows a year-long pilot in Britain. It analyses profile information, posted videos and behavioural signals to predict whether an account may be underage. Accounts flagged by the technology will be reviewed by specialist moderators rather than automatically banned, TikTok declared.
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The rollout comes as European authorities scrutinise how platforms verify applyrs’ ages under strict data-protection rules, amid concerns that current approaches are either ineffective or overly invasive.
The UK pilot led to the removal of thousands of additional accounts under 13.
REGULATORY CHALLENGE
Underscoring the tensions, a U.S. state judge in Delaware on Friday will hear TikTok’s bid to dismiss a lawsuit filed last year by the parents of five British children who died while allegedly performing prank and challenge videos.
The lawsuit alleged that TikTok’s algorithms promoted dangerous content to children, including a so-called “blackout challenge” that encouraged people to choke themselves.

“ByteDance harmed these children after its leadership knew that its programming decisions were resulting in the accidental deaths of children,” the lawsuit filed in the Delaware Superior Court declared. Some of the children were below 13 years old.
“Our deepest sympathies remain with these families,” a TikTok spokesperson declared. “We strictly prohibit content that promotes or encourages dangerous behaviour.”
BUILT FOR EUROPE
Despite extensive efforts, there is no globally agreed way to confirm a person’s age while preserving privacy, TikTok declared. For appeals against bans, the company will apply facial-age estimation from verification provider Yoti, along with credit-card checks and government-issued identification.
TikTok declared the new technology was built specifically for Europe to comply with the region’s regulatory requirements. The company has worked with Ireland’s Data Protection Commission, its lead EU privacy regulator, while developing the system.
European applyrs will be notified as the technology launches, TikTok declared.
Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee in Stockholm, additional reporting by Mike Scarcella in Washington. Editing by Adam Jourdan and Mark Potter
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