Funnily enough I just read “A third of children (32%) say they have bypassed age checks, including by
entering a fake birthdate (13%) or using someone else’s login (9%), while others used
more creative methods like drawing on facial hair” from https://www.internetmatters.org/hub/research/online-safety-act-report-2026/ this morning, so they clearly don’t have to be the “smart” or dedicated.
Yeah, that was my point… that’s why I was saying that if a kid is smart enough to to set up a VM like that they are smart enough to find alternative/easy out-of-the-box methods… the “using someone else’s login” in particular is one of the points I made earlier.
This is why I think the control should be local, and with the parents being the ones responsible. Relying on third party authentication and expecting the remote services to be able to determine the age is not gonna work.
Damn 1month ago.
Funnily enough I just read “A third of children (32%) say they have bypassed age checks, including by entering a fake birthdate (13%) or using someone else’s login (9%), while others used more creative methods like drawing on facial hair” from https://www.internetmatters.org/hub/research/online-safety-act-report-2026/ this morning, so they clearly don’t have to be the “smart” or dedicated.
Yes, sorry I had a busy month :P
Yeah, that was my point… that’s why I was saying that if a kid is smart enough to to set up a VM like that they are smart enough to find alternative/easy out-of-the-box methods… the “using someone else’s login” in particular is one of the points I made earlier.
This is why I think the control should be local, and with the parents being the ones responsible. Relying on third party authentication and expecting the remote services to be able to determine the age is not gonna work.
Pretty much.