英国考虑禁止16岁以下使用社交媒体,同时加强在线身份验证。
UK Mulls Under‑16 Social Media Ban Amid Rising Online ID Push

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/uk-mulls-under-16-social-media-ban-amid-rising-online-id-push

英国正在考虑禁止16岁以下儿童使用社交媒体,效仿澳大利亚的新举措。此讨论源于《在线安全法案》,该法案要求平台采取更严格的年龄验证措施,以保护儿童免受有害内容侵害。虽然首相斯塔默现在“愿意”考虑禁令,此前曾表示保留意见,但一些议员强烈支持这一举动,甚至将其扩展到学校禁用手机。 这场辩论正值与X等平台因不遵守《在线安全法案》而产生冲突之际,监管机构已准备好处以巨额罚款。批评者警告称,此举可能对言论自由产生影响,而另一些人,如Sentinel公司首席执行官亚历山大·利特里夫,认为此类限制会扼杀数字素养,并与中国等国家看到的审查手段相呼应。 澳大利亚已经通过身份证件检查和安全过滤器实施年龄验证,而爱尔兰计划推动在整个欧盟范围内使用经过验证的帐户。这种对数字身份认证的更广泛关注可能会扩展到金融以外的领域,并可能影响加密货币领域的KYC实践。

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原文

Authored by Christina Comben via CoinTelegraph.com,

The United Kingdom is considering new restrictions that could bar children under 16 from using mainstream social media platforms.

The discussion builds on the Online Safety Act, which already requires services with minimum age limits to explain how they enforce them and to use “highly effective” age assurance measures where children are at risk of harmful content.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he is monitoring how Australia’s under‑16 ban works in practice and is “open” to an Australian‑style approach, despite previously expressing personal reservations about a blanket ban for teenagers.

Conservative Party Member of Parliament David Davis said in a post on X that banning social media for children was “the right move,” and added that “mobile phones don’t belong in schools either.”

Conservative MP argues for banning social media for children. Source: David Davis

X and Online Safety Act enforcement

The debate comes as UK ministers and regulators are already in conflict with Elon Musk’s X platform over compliance with the Online Safety Act (OSA) and takedown obligations for illegal or harmful content. 

Ofcom, the UK’s online safety regulator, is preparing enforcement powers that include large fines and potential access restrictions for services that fail to meet their child safety and illegal content duties.

Critics have warned that aggressive enforcement could have implications for freedom of expression, and Musk’s platform has said the OSA is at risk of “seriously infringing” on free speech.

Aleksandr Litreev, CEO of Sentinel, whose decentralized virtual private network (dVPN) provides censorship-resistant internet access, told Cointelegraph that the UK’s moves on digital freedoms were “concerning,” and echoed the “same failed route as China, Russia and Iran.”

He said that denying youth access to social media and the internet “stifles their ability to learn digital literacy and develop critical thinking,” leaving them “less prepared for adulthood in a connected world.”

Australia and Ireland tighten online ID

Similar moves are underway in other countries. Australia’s eSafety commissioner registered an industry code requiring major search engines to implement age assurance technologies for logged‑in users, with the rules taking effect on Dec. 27, 2025.

Providers such as Google and Microsoft now have to verify users’ ages using methods ranging from government IDs and biometrics to credit card checks, and apply the highest default safety filters to accounts identified as likely under 18.

Ireland, meanwhile, plans to use its upcoming presidency of the Council of the European Union in the second half of 2026 to push for identity-verified social media accounts across the bloc. 

In the UK, these developments coincided this week with a government decision to abandon plans for a single centralized digital ID system for right‑to‑work checks, which would have become mandatory in 2029. 

Implications for crypto KYC

Crypto exchanges and trading apps remain subject to existing Know Your Customer (KYC) and biometric verification rules, including checks that typically involve government ID uploads and live selfies or facial scans to verify users’ identities.

Policymakers’ focus on age and identity assurance in social media, search, and other consumer services suggests that similar verification technologies are increasingly being explored and deployed outside financial use cases.

Litreev commented, “If a government sells you something ‘for the sake of safety,’ it’s sure as hell not about safety in any way or form.”

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