Kids Don’t Have IDs And Age-Estimation Tech Is Frequently Very Wrong
from the it-just-doesn't-work dept
Lawmakers continue to propose new bills that would require social media companies and app stores to segment users by age and obtain parental consent for minors. Laws like Utah’s new App Store Accountability Act and an identically named piece of federal legislation are being pushed across the country. Other bills, such as the Rhode Island Social Media Regulation Act, would require specific social media sites to verify user age.
The goal of these bills is to restrict minors’ use of social media and other apps by enabling parents to either consent to or revoke their child’s use of these services. Unfortunately, these proposals fail to account for the difficulty of verifying—or even estimating—a child’s age online.
No effective age-verification solutions for younger users currently exist, and there are real barriers to verifying parental consent. As in past posts from this series, we will examine these issues briefly and explain the main problems with each proposed solution.
Many children don’t have (and can’t get) government identification
The first issue is that many proposals attempt to age-gate social media by requiring users to upload government documents to prove their age. The laws themselves (or the accompanying regulations) often specify the need for a government ID card, and therein lies the first problem: Children generally don’t have government IDs and often can’t obtain them to begin with. For example, in Washington, D.C. only those aged 15 or older can acquire a limited purpose non-driver identification card; in New Jersey and Massachusetts, the minimum age is 14.
Additionally, fewer teens are choosing to get driver’s licenses. A study by the Congressional Research Service (CRS) found that just over 1 percent of 14- and 15-year-olds, 2 percent of 16-year-olds, 43 percent of 17-year-olds, and 60 percent of 18-year-olds have a driver’s license. The CRS was unable to find similar data for non-driver ID cards. This suggests that a significant number of young legal adults would be unable to access social media under these bills. And this is no small First Amendment problem—if the bills go into effect, millions of adults could be denied access to a popular medium for sharing and receiving speech.
Existing age-estimation technology is inaccurate
The second issue is that some proposals allow for age-estimation technology, which uses biometric means (e.g., face scans) to estimate user age. Unfortunately, these methods are plagued with inaccuracies, often failing particularly badly where it matters most: along the margins of age and age categories. Authors of an ongoing National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) study evaluating existing age-estimation algorithms go so far as to say, “[W]e do not have any evidence (yet) that an age-verification classifier can outperform a regression-like estimator on the same task.” (Regression-like estimators estimate user age broadly, whereas classifiers attempt to pinpoint an exact age—a key distinction between the two.)
Notably, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) voted unanimously to deny applications by the Entertainment Software Rating Board, Yoti, and SuperAwesome for use of a new verifiable parental consent mechanism under the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Rule. The FTC’s rejection letter specifically cites comments in the Federal Register that “raised concerns about privacy protections, accuracy, and deepfakes.”
Various legislation attempts to treat minors differently according to age—an approach that presents particular problems when it comes to age-estimation technology. While it’s important to recognize developmental differences between 10-year-olds and 17-year-olds, the algorithms will fail significantly when attempting to differentiate minors aged 18 and over from those aged 16 to 17, 13 to 15, and under 13. According to the NIST study, even Yoti—the best age-estimation software currently available—has an average error of 1.0 years, while other software options err by 3.1 years on average. Yoti demonstrates a true positive rate of 0.57 for children aged 13 to 16, which means it can correctly place someone in that age range slightly more than half the time—only somewhat better odds than flipping a coin.
This error is understandable in that the task isn’t an easy one—after all, we’re talking about differentiating between months (or even days) of life. But if age verification were required by law, 19- and 20-year-olds would routinely be classified as underage, requiring parental consent to use social media and/or other apps. Even as the technology evolves, a fraction of a percent of error can still amount to millions of people needing to use a different verification method.
Other proposed documents can’t accurately convey age, identity, or familial relationships
Legislators have also suggested using Social Security numbers (SSNs) to establish age and identity under these bills; however, SSNs can’t confirm identity, age, or familial relationships. The absence of photographs on Social Security cards means minors can easily use someone else’s SSN to access apps. Additionally, although SSNs are commonly used as identifiers absent the physical cards, they don’t actually convey identity—which is why synthetic identity fraud is not only possible, but extremely common.
None of these methods can effectively establish parental consent
Every one of these methods fails at providing parental consent for children to access social media or other apps. As already explored in this series, ensuring guardians and their children share last names is insufficient, as they may be different due to divorce, foster care, care by a non-parent family member, or something else. Four percent of children don’t even live with their parents. Because most children don’t have government photo IDs, age-estimation technology is flawed, and SSNs can be used fraudulently (and because none of these methods establish familial relationships), all are useless for the purpose of verifying parental consent.
Establishing familial relationships is important to verifying proper parental consent; in fact, the CRS explored the use of birth certificates for this purpose. However, there are two major issues with this method. First, several million Americans lack access to their birth certificate; second, birth certificates alone can’t prove identity because they don’t include a photograph. Unfortunately, there is no obvious way to combine birth certificates and face scans for children without a photo ID. This is a problem because verifying identity is crucial to determining the status of a child’s parent or guardian and ensuring minors can’t use other people’s identities to overcome age-gating.
Some bills, including the federal App Store Accountability Act, simply require that the parental account holder is at least 18 years of age and “affiliated with one or more account of a user or prospective user who is a minor.” While this approach would reduce burdens on everyone involved, it would also allow non-guardian adults to approve a child’s online behavior.
Conclusion
Much of the age verification and estimation debate fails to account for two simple truths: 1) children don’t have government identification; and 2) estimation tools are not quite where they need to be. Lawmakers must grapple with these realities in order to implement sound policy.
Republished with permission from R-Street. You can read the original here.
Filed Under: age estimation, age verification, kids


Comments on “Kids Don’t Have IDs And Age-Estimation Tech Is Frequently Very Wrong”
As ever, the thing with these protocols is to gather biometric data and the bills to help enforce said gathering for further sale. If effective age-gating really was the point, we would’ve seen government efforts towards developing a system that actually works a long time ago. Call it optimistic, it might be, but I think if that was the actual (and sole) intent, we wouldn’t see people being forced to use tech that’s so… well, Flimsy.
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Stores Already Know
They solved this years ago with cigarettes. No card, no smokes.
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Cards don’t have photo IDs.
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TIL: Driver’s licenses aren’t cards.
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Smoking is not a first-amendment protected activity you idiot.
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Aren’t we lucky the GOP are gonna ensure adult material isn’t either?
But more related to this post: They’ll probably make it so posting on social media isn’t first amendment protected either unless you’re a nazi.
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So children can’t buy cigarettes from an unsupervised vending machine?
Do the vending machines check id? Is there a little gnome inside that determines it? Or is it machine telepathy were it reads the buyers mind to see if it is a child or not?
Perhaps you can explain to everyone here in very simple words how it works?
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So children can’t buy cigarettes from an unsupervised vending machine?
You’d be hard pressed to find a cigarette vending machine these days…
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Some states have outlawed them, but they are still around.
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Dude, they have vending machines for weed. They scan your ID.
Think…
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Weed is a controlled substance with a lot of more laws surrounding the sale of it, plus you can’t buy it online legally.
But the point is, in-person buying isn’t the same as getting something on the internet or through a machine. In a store you get carded by the clerk and that’s it.
Vending machines for cigarettes don’t scan ID’s, they are usually placed so a clerk or other personnel have control over who can enter the area where they are placed but as with everything it isn’t perfect so the machines are unsupervised at times.
The problem is that people like Koby to put forward the idea that this is a solved problem for the single reason that they want to be stupid and contrarian. Koby is the type of person who in their wrongness they just keep digging because admitting that they are wrong is a death sentence to the narrative they have built their whole personality around.
Anyway, if you want to equate the sale of weed to using the internet – go ahead, you are just playing the same stupid game Koby is.
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Oh look faces of meth is here to lecture people on addictive drugs.
Legislators don't care
These laws are performative. The legislators don’t care if it’s a solution to a real problem. Nerd harder! Think of the children!
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The entire cast graduated with honors from The School of The Performative Arts.
What does it matter? It’s all gonna pass anyway. SCOTUS is gonna allow it in june, just wait and see.
I’d be happy to be wrong but I don’t believe in a happy ending for the world or the internet anymore.
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You’re wrong. And stop your doom posting.
I don’t like this business of saying something obviously wrong, and then qualifying it later. Birth certificates are a type of government identification document that they generally have, or can get—with the help of parents, anyway. That they’re useless for the intended purpose doesn’t make the quoted statement any more true.
The linked story talks about several million potential voters. Who are, by definition, not children, and the story says nothing about whether children face a similar problem. (Also, it was a web and phone survey, and who but old people are gonna respond to those? I wouldn’t assume they got many people under 50 years of age, and the “For more on this study” link times out.)
No document can “prove” identity. It’s common for people to look significantly different from their ID photographs, so there’s always quite a bit of “wiggle room”. Doubly so for young people, unless they’re gonna be required to get photographed annually.
30 years ago, it was common knowledge among high school students that the best “fake ID” was the real ID of an older sibling of the same sex. The young sibling probably even knows the relevant birth date and middle name. (Likewise, if a parent needs to know their own credit card number or password, it might be fastest to ask the kid.)
Identity checks are mostly security theater, for the purpose of ass-covering. Nobody’s shown that there’s an actual problem that could be fixed by doing as proposed.
Wow, they waved their hands REALLY hard!
How do you verify a user is a child or adult? Stupid lawmakers are stupid, so they say, “we’ll tell you later, nerds!”
Malicious compliance will never feel so good!
Well there’s another legal challenge mounted against section 230 so pop the champagne
Verify the adults
Not that I support the need for age verification at all but just in terms of how it could be done: Why not require age verification for adult accounts and let them create child accounts? No need to verify the kids if it’s not them creating accounts.
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This still destroys privacy.
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For what child are they creating an account?
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This still runs afoul of all the usual problems. Kids can borrow or steal or just be given their parents’ info for verification. Parents can just leave themselves logged in or have a saved username and password in the browser. The more effective a verification system could be, the more intrusive it must be, and thus run afoul of constitutional and civil rights violations.
Alll in the END
Automate everything,
And you wont need humans anymore.
We will be Obsolete and the Robots will work 24/7, no Unions, and other robots to replace them when they break down.
Children Can't Get IDs
Only three jurisdictions were given as examples of the difficulty.
The California DMV issues ID cards to a persons of any age.
While I agree most children don’t have them, it is not always the case they cannot get one.
I work in a setting that often requires children to have some type of ID to use our services. I’ve heard many times “they are only 13, they can’t get one.” Then I go down the list of IDs we accept: passport, state ID, school ID, library card, original report card, etc. Admittedly, most of these do not have age on them.
Without an ID children can’t access these services, which is exactly what the law intends to make happen. This is a feature, not a bug.
That this means the poor and marginalized also can’t access these services is a happy extra benefit. As is distracting their supposed opponents into arguing about how feasible this is, instead of how evil it is.
Uh, parents' names don't always match
“As already explored in this series, ensuring guardians and their children share last names is insufficient, as they may be different due to divorce, foster care, care by a non-parent family member, or something else.”
In a world where we don’t obligate fathers to change their last names to match the name of the birth mother, with or without a marriage, there’s one other very obvious reason why a child might not match the last names of both parents.
I was once asked to explain this on a heath insurance form for my child with about an inch’s worth of line so I finally wrote, “We have different fathers.”