Discord Delays Global Age Verification Rollout After User Backlash
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Discord has postponed its planned global age verification rollout, originally set for March 1, following significant user backlash. The company now says enforcement will be pushed to the second half of 2026. Under the initial plan, users would have been placed into a “teen-by-default” setting that filters age-restricted content, with those wishing to opt out required to verify their age via ID or facial scan through third-party vendors. The announcement triggered strong criticism over privacy concerns, prompting some users to cancel Nitro subscriptions and explore alternatives.
Co-founder and CTO Stanislav Vishnevskiy acknowledged the company “missed the mark” in explaining how the system would work, emphasizing that over 90% of users would not need to verify their age unless they changed default safety settings. Moving forward, Discord says it will increase transparency by publishing reports on age assurance practices and clearly listing vendor partners. The platform also plans to require “on-device” verification solutions, offer multiple vendor choices if verification is required, and explore additional methods such as credit card checks — all as it attempts to rebuild trust after past data security concerns.
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“Teen-by-default” sounded fine until the facial scan part dropped.
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Age checks are one thing — biometric verification is another level.
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Transparency first, enforcement later is probably the only way forward.