Discord Delays Global Age Assurance Rollout To 2H 2026 Following Community Backlash

Low Boon Shen
3 Min Read

To say that Discord’s recent announcement of kickstarting adult age verification has gone wrong is quite the understatement. Since that blog post went live, the whole internet raised so much metaphorical pitchforks that the voice chat giant has gave in and pushed back the rollout to β€œexpand verification options, increase vendor transparency, and publish detailed technical documentation.”

Discord Backtracks (For Now)

Discord made it extra clear this time that when the rollout begins later this year, more than 90% of users will not be asked to verify age at all, as the internal system dubbed β€œOsprey” can largely determine the user’s age group by relying on existing rules originally designed for maintain the platform’s safety systems. The company said it will publish technical documentation on these systems before global launch.

For the remainder that the system couldn’t reliably determine their age group, Discord says it’ll offer more options for verifications, with less invasive methods like credit card information planned in the future. For third-party options that involve face-scanning for verification, they are mandated to be processed strictly on-device; users will be informed of which provider Discord will use for its verification options.

Users can still choose not to verify at all if they wish to do so, though this means the user will lose access to restricted channels and some content safety settings. To that end, Discord acknowledges that some users utilize its NSFW channel feature for sensitive topics (i.e. politics) rather than anything explicit, so to avoid breaking this feature for this specific demographic, it’ll later introduce a β€œspoiler channel” that serves this specific purpose.

However, certain jurisdictions (i.e. United Kingdom and Australia, Brazil soon to follow) have age-gating laws in effect, and this usually involves mandatory government ID checks. In this regard, Discord confirmed that third-party vendors like k-ID are required for verification to comply with local laws, meaning that all of the age estimation stuff above are not applicable. For regions that has no age-gating laws right now, the new approach will be used with the intention to be minimally privacy-invasive wherever possible.

Pokdepinion: This is where the ZKP could’ve at least made the situation less problematic. I do wonder if Discord will use this approach though.

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