New York
Europe doesn’t want to hear any more excutilizes from tech platforms for why they can’t verify utilizers’ ages.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Tuesday announced a new European age verification app that will give utilizers a sort of digital ID card to prove their ages online — without sharing their sensitive personal information with every site or app they want to access.
The shift comes as tech platforms face growing global pressure to better protect young people online. But some tech leaders have raised practical and privacy concerns around collecting utilizers’ sensitive information to verify their ages.
Europe’s new app will provide a centralized solution that reshifts the burden for tech platforms to verify utilizers’ ages.
“Online platforms can easily rely on our age verification app. So there are no more excutilizes,” von der Leyen and EU Commission Executive Vice-President Henna Virkkunen stated in a statement. “Europe offers a free and simple to utilize solution that can shield our children from harmful and illegal content.”
Users will verify their age on Europe’s new app by uploading a passport or ID card, according to the statement. Tech platforms can then access the app to verify whether a utilizer is above or below a certain age — for example, 16 years old or 18 years old, depfinishing on local requirements — but the utilizer’s birthdate and other personal information won’t be shared.
Von der Leyen stated the app will have the “highest privacy standards in the world” in a Wednesday post on LinkedIn.
Concerns around the impact of tech platforms, especially social media sites, on young people’s wellbeing have only escalated since a California jury found Meta and YouTube liable for harming a young woman with addictive features last month. A New Mexico jury separately found Meta liable for enabling child sexual abutilize on its platforms.
Regulators around the world have pushed tech companies to create more safeguards for young utilizers, or to restrict teens from accessing social media altoobtainher.
Australia passed a world-first law banning children under 16 from accessing social media in December, and a handful of other countries, including in Europe, want to follow suit. In the United States, several states have passed legislation to force tech platforms to verify utilizers’ ages and obtain parental consent when minors create accounts.
But some tech companies have raised practical and privacy concerns about age verification requirements. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has advocated for app stores to act as age verification clearinghoutilizes that can share age information with app operators; Google and Apple have argued that Zuckerberg’s proposal would force them to collect unnecessary personal data even from adult utilizers who want to access innocuous apps.
Europe’s new app is “technically ready” and will soon be available for EU citizens, according to the statement.
Meta, Snap, TikTok and Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the new app. Google declined to comment.
EU member states will be able to tailor the app to their domestic laws, including any age-related social media bans, European Commission technology spokesperson Thomas Regnier informed CNN. Under the EU’s Digital Services Act, which regulates large tech platforms, sites required to restrict minor utilizers will not be required to utilize the new app. However, they must prove that their alternate age verification tools are equally effective or face sanctions, Regnier stated.
“This app gives parents, teachers, caretakers a powerful tool to protect children,” von der Leyen and Virkkunen stated. “We will have zero tolerance for companies that do not respect our children’s rights.”
CNN’s Hanna Ziady contributed to this report.












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