Verify

Verify and validate customers globally using their phone number.

Velocity

Discover the network provider for every mobile number globally.

Authenticate

Protect customers, accounts, and transactions within your app.

Live

Discover if a mobile number is assigned to a subscriber.

Score

A real time phone number credibility score.

TeleShield™

Identify if a number has the propensity to be used for fraud.

Banks and Financial Services
E-Commerce
Insurance
Mobile Messaging
Gaming & Gambling
Communication and Service Providers
Identity & Verification Providers
eBooks
News
Developers
Viteza
FAQ
About us
Events
Careers
Contact us
Articles

Age Verification: What Is It, Where Is It Under Scrutiny – And Why Do You Need To Know?

Fergal Parkinson

7 min read

The issue of who can access what online – and at what age – is one that has become an increasingly pressing problem for everyone from parents to prime ministers and presidents across the world. 

Here I want to look at some of the key issues, to explore where we are in this evolving sector – and finally to suggest some ways to make sure you are ahead of the curve.

Because those who don’t keep up in this fast-moving field could soon be hit with some gigantic penalties. 

Porn, poker and puffing vapes: what is age verification and why is it a hot topic?

It used to be a straightforward matter of facial appraisal. 

When a young person turned up at a shop’s till or cash desk, holding a bottle of whisky, a pornographic magazine or asking for cigarettes, the shopkeeper would take a look at their face and make an instant appraisal of their perceived age. If they clearly appeared old enough to pass the legal threshold required for that product – be that 16, 18 or 21 – the sale would go through. If they appeared clearly too young, they’d be sent packing, often with some abuse ringing in their ears. And if they looked like they might be either just old enough, or not quite there, then they would be asked to produce some proof of age: a driving licence or similar. 

This two-check system was basically how age verification worked everywhere until very recently. And, although crude, it was mostly accepted and relatively functional.

But in an increasingly online world, the question of what someone is or isn’t allowed to do and at what age – and how to assess that – has migrated from that old school, very human mechanism to one that is now overwhelmingly performed by tech.

The problem with age verification – it’s complicated 

That move from human to automated assessment of age has thrown up all kinds of issues around validation, security, compliance, regulation and the rest. 

Just think of any platforms with a global presence – this can be anyone from a social media giant like Facebook or TikTok, a retailer like Amazon or Gumtree, a gaming site like Roblox or Minecraft, or any number of others. Each will have their own general user age-related protocols and procedures – and, where appropriate, their preferred age verification tools. But they will also be subject to country-by-country legal requirements. And as well as being subject to frequent change, these are becoming ever more stringent in many jurisdictions.

How to verify age effectively and securely:  a truly global problem

The reason for this dynamic and even volatile landscape is that the issue of young people accessing certain sites – be it social media, gambling or even porn – is increasingly a political one.

Parents are voters and politicians need their votes. So ever-growing parental concerns about what their kids can access online is not something they can simply ignore.

But no two countries will agree on any single approach and that in turns makes the whole field an increasingly complex one. To illustrate that, let’s take a snapshot look at some of the countries currently grappling with these issues, where they are now – and where they may soon be going. 

In search of solutions to age verification dilemmas 

Australia is trialling a pilot scheme which is testing various age assurance products ahead of likely legislation. The various methodologies under scrutiny are expected to include document uploads or alternatively allowing independent entities like banks, credit card companies or mobile phone providers to verify user age status. Just this week prime minister Anthony Alabese said he’d like to see the age limit for social media use set as high as 16, saying: “I want to see kids off their devices and onto the footy fields and the swimming pools and the tennis courts.”

France is road testing an unusual and elaborate system that relies on the use of an intermediary to sign off an applicant’s access to age-sensitive material. This would occur via a gateway through the existing social security system. When a user wants to access a platform their nominated intermediary would be required to approve – but privacy concerns mean they won’t be told what the website is. Will that work? It would need to be implemented first and I’m not sure it ever will be. 

In Ireland a Protection of Children (Online Age Verification) bill is in the process of becoming law. It would place a legal obligation on pornograpy websites to keep under 18s out – and although it’s yet clear quite how they would be required to do this, the inference is that fines for breaches could be punitive. But it may never happen. Like France, Ireland is an European Union member state – and the EU is keen to have a joined up approach on age verification and so may yet block the bill before it takes effect.

Canada is also particularly concerned about access to pornography. An Online Harms Act has been drawn up but there is far from universal agreement on whether it should become law. Its champions say it’s urgently needed to keep youngsters off platforms like Pornhub – which can currently be accessed with a simple ‘yes I am over 18’ click. But opponents warn that its intention to rely on state-generated documentation to verify age will leave the system open to abuse from fake IDs potentially creating a black market and verification chaos.

India is also looking at enforcing mandatory age verification. It already has a data protection law which could place an obligation on platforms offering any contentious content to seek parental approval – but this is currently not enforced. Some in the socially conservative country insist it is the only way to protect young people. Others warn it would be practically unworkable, creating more problems than it would solve.

Platforms have their own regulation views too – compliance cannot compromise performance 

That’s five different countries – with five different strategies and distinct national debates. Sure there’s some crossover between them in concerns and approaches but there is plenty of divergence too. And there are similar variable scenarios unfolding in most other countries. 

All these competing cases to be picked over and resolved makes age verification a global minefield.

And then the online platforms themselves have their own preferred pathways too. Unlike the politicians, however, they are in competition with other sites so for them anything which complicates or delays customer onboarding, or slows down customer purchasing is extremely unpopular. 

Some will be more robust than others certainly, but when the prospect of huge financial penalties for breaches are becoming real then the incentive is there to make them workable. 

The best age verification pathway is the middle one

The optimum route through this very complex map is, for me, the one in which the politicians confine themselves to demanding the outcomes they want – but leave the implementation to the websites. Because they are best placed to work out how best to deliver. In this scenario, governments can offer online enterprises the carrot of not letting people with no idea drag their businesses down – while the stick is the prospect of huge fines for failing to comply.  

Expertise is the key to age verification you can trust

The cumbersome ideas of some politicians on how to apply age verification would be potentially catastrophic for online commerce – as well as ineffectual. But they are not going to let that old ‘yes, I’m 18’ low bar standard exist much longer. 

The key to finding workable solutions is to use the expertise of those who know how to combine effective age verification checks with speed and convenience. 

There are a number of established experts in this sector – and, although I include TMT ID in that category, we are by no means unique in this. But expertise is certainly the key. Ours lies in offering a credible, reliable and – crucially – seamless verification function based on an applicant’s mobile device account status. Because it’s much easier to fake a driving licence than it is to fake a data history. In fact the latter is practically impossible. Others in the field, as I say, offer similar or slight variations. 

But whether it’s us or a rival, governments need to heed the experts – and turn to them for solutions. While businesses need to be up to speed on solutions and impending regulations. It’s not a subject to ignore.

Last updated on November 26, 2024

Contents

Related Articles

A smiling woman holding a smartphone with a graphic overlay announcing "tmt id - our new brand rebrand news release" with a call to action to "read now".

TMT ID – Our New Brand

A man in a hoodie looking at a laptop screen with a concerned expression, alongside a promotional graphic for an article about silent authentication.

Silent Authentication – Why It’s The Future And Why The Fraudsters Hate It

Promotional graphic featuring a smiling woman holding a credit card, highlighting mobile verification to keep customers secure online.

Keeping Customers Secure Using Mobile Verification


Try Our Age Assurance Solution

Age verification should be effortless. We can verify a user’s age and give assurance based on their live mobile account information. Use frictionless age verification which doesn’t require your customers to upload or scan documents.

Find out more
What Our Customers Are Saying

"Phone number verification plays a critical role in helping to detect and prevent online fraud. TMT ID’s TeleShield product provides easy access to global mobile data, enabling us to enhance the actionable results of our MaxMind minFraud® services."

MaxMind

"BTS (Business Telecommunications Services) is successfully using TMT’s Velocity and Live services to check the status of mobile numbers. This way we make sure we optimize the performance of the service offered to our customers and ensure the quality of terminating traffic to all countries.”

Business Telecommunications Services

"Working with TMT’s TeleShield service has expanded our ability to detect fraud and minimise the risk to our business. TeleShield brings peace of mind and the opportunity to stop fraud before it affects our customers’ bottom line or the service."

Six Degrees Labs

"LATRO relies on TMT’s TeleShield to provide the most up to date and reliable numbering qualification information within our fraud reporting tools, enabling us to protect our customer’s revenues and empowering them to defend themselves against fraudulent numbers."

LATRO

"TMT is a valued partner that enables us to manage our routing costs effectively. They proactively and continuously expand their operator and country coverage while delivering exceptional customer service. We can always count on them to achieve high-quality results and look forward to our continued collaboration."

Global Message Service

"TMT provides us with the most comprehensive numbering intelligence data through their fast and reliable Velocity and Live services. TMT is a trusted partner for us, their products ensure that we continue to optimise the best performance and service to our customers."

Global Voice

"TeleShield from TMT gives 42com the power to detect and target telephony fraud scams internationally, thereby protecting our company from the financial and customer experience impacts of telecommunications fraud."

Alberto Grunstein - CEO

"It has been a pleasure to work with the team at TMT. They have become an essential provider of accurate numbering data information and Number Portability services globally."

Luisa Sanchez - VP of SMS and Messaging Solutions, Identidad Technologies

"Deutsche Telekom Global Carrier uses TMT ID as one of their key suppliers for Mobile Number Portability Data services. Deutsche Telekom Global Carrier uses TMT ID’s Velocity MNP solution. This is an ultra-fast query service that optimises the routing of international voice calls and A2P messaging."

Deutsche Telekom Global Carrier

Ready to get started?

We provide the most comprehensive device, network and mobile numbering data available

Contact us > Chat to an expert >