Discord to require video selfies or government IDs to verify all users’ ages
好的,我现在需要帮用户总结这篇文章的内容,控制在100字以内。首先,我得仔细阅读文章,抓住主要信息。 文章讲的是Discord宣布全球用户必须验证年龄,方法是分享视频自拍或提供政府ID。这个政策是为了应对越来越多的法律要求社交媒体平台进行年龄验证。Discord提到收集的数据会在验证后立即删除,并且不会离开设备。他们计划从3月初开始逐步实施,强调所有用户都将默认获得适合青少年的体验。 去年年底,Discord已经在英国和澳大利亚推出了类似措施。新政策是因为游戏行业对未成年人安全的压力增大,比如Roblox面临多起诉讼,指控其危害儿童在线安全。美国联邦贸易委员会也呼吁各行业加快采用年龄验证工具。 然而,Discord的新政策在网上游戏社区受到了广泛批评。去年10月的数据泄露事件暴露了约7万名用户的身份证图像,这些数据是上传用于客服原因的。用户担心上传政府ID到第三方服务会导致身份盗窃和隐私问题。 新政策下,默认设置会模糊所有未验证为成年的用户的敏感内容,并限制他们访问年龄受限的频道、服务器和应用命令。Discord的产品政策负责人表示,保护青少年的安全是他们的重点工作,并且允许验证为成年的用户有更多的灵活性。 此外,澳大利亚禁止16岁以下用户使用社交媒体,英国、荷兰、西班牙和法国也在考虑或实施类似禁令。不过Discord并不是传统社交媒体平台,而是游戏玩家互动的社区。 总结下来,主要信息包括:Discord实施全球年龄验证措施,方法包括视频自拍和政府ID;数据安全承诺;逐步实施计划;应对行业压力;引发用户批评尤其是数据泄露问题;以及新政策的具体内容和背景。 现在需要把这些信息浓缩到100字以内,确保涵盖关键点:宣布全球年龄验证、方法、数据处理、实施时间、背景(应对法律和行业压力)、批评原因(数据泄露)、以及新政策的影响。 </think> Discord宣布将要求全球用户通过视频自拍或政府ID验证年龄,并承诺立即删除数据且不离开设备。该政策从3月初开始逐步实施,默认为青少年提供适合的内容。此举因游戏行业对未成年人安全的压力而推出,但引发批评因去年数据泄露事件暴露了7万名用户的身份证信息。 2026-2-9 22:1:27 Author: therecord.media(查看原文) 阅读量:0 收藏

Discord on Monday announced it will require all users globally to verify their ages by sharing video selfies or providing government IDs, a move that comes at a time when laws requiring age verification on social media platforms are multiplying.

In a blog post, Discord said the data it gathers will be deleted immediately after a user’s age is verified and that it will never leave the device.

A “phased global rollout” will begin in early March, the blogpost said, emphasizing that all users will have a “teen-appropriate experience by default.”

Late last year, Discord introduced a similar teen-by-default measure — meaning all users are assumed to be minors until they prove otherwise — in the U.K. and Australia.

Discord’s new rules are a response to pressure on the gaming industry around safety for minors. Platforms like Roblox are facing numerous lawsuits for allegedly jeopardizing children’s online safety. On January 28, the Federal Trade Commission held an event at which its chair urged companies across industries to speedily adopt age verification tools.

The new Discord policy was widely criticized in online gaming communities, where many users noted that a data breach in October had exposed the images of IDs belonging to roughly 70,000 users that had been uploaded for customer service reasons. . That breach impacted a third-party service Discord used to manage data. 

“This is how Discord dies,” said one user on a subreddit thread devoted to gaming. “Seriously, uploading any kind of government ID to a 3rd party company is just asking for identity theft on a global scale, let alone the privacy problem.”

“Goodbye, Discord,” said another.

The new default settings will blur out sensitive content for all users who have not verified that they are adults; allow only users who are age-assured as adults to access age-restricted channels, servers and app commands; and block anyone who is not age-verified from accessing direct messages from people they may not know.

“Nowhere is our safety work more important than when it comes to teen users,” Discord head of product policy Savannah Badalich said in the blog post. “Rolling out teen-by-default settings globally builds on Discord’s existing safety architecture, giving teens strong protections while allowing verified adults flexibility.”

In December, Australia banned social media for all users under age 16. In recent weeks, officials in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Spain and France have said they are studying or will implement similar bans.

Discord is not a traditional social media platform, however, but a community where gamers can directly interact with each other.

Roblox, a game which allows similar direct engagement between users, is being sued by at least six state attorneys general for jeopardizing child safety. Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti has said the company is the “digital equivalent of a creepy cargo van lingering at the edge of a playground.”

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Suzanne Smalley

Suzanne Smalley

is a reporter covering digital privacy, surveillance technologies and cybersecurity policy for The Record. She was previously a cybersecurity reporter at CyberScoop. Earlier in her career Suzanne covered the Boston Police Department for the Boston Globe and two presidential campaign cycles for Newsweek. She lives in Washington with her husband and three children.


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