Australian online safety series
A spotlight on Australian regulation, specifically addressing online safety
As online safety regulation and enforcement has evolved, age verification mechanisms and policy has emerged as one of the key areas of focus for governments and regulators around the world.
As online service providers continue to come to grips with Australia’s evolving online safety regulation, recent developments in Australia’s regulation of online safety show that age verification has emerged as one of the tools of choice for regulators and legislators to protect children from online harm.
In this second instalment of our online safety series, we set out the current status of online age verification requirements in Australia and a snapshot of some of the key issues and the direction that regulation is heading towards.
Age verification usually only involves confirmation that a person is over a certain age. This is to be contrasted against identity verification, which is a more onerous process that involves confirmation that a person is who they say they are. Unless identity verification is required by law, age verification typically does not require a person’s identity to be verified.
The mechanisms currently available to verify the age of an end-user in an online context fall within a spectrum of intrusiveness from the perspective of an end-user, with some examples set out in the diagram below.
The Restricted Access Systems Declaration (Declaration) is the most significant age verification regulation in the online safety context. It sets out a technology-agnostic access control system for material that depicts realistically simulated sexual activity between adults or high impact nudity, violence, drug use or language (Restricted Material). The Declaration applies primarily to:
The Declaration requires these services to:
In addition, the social media service Industry Code recently accepted for registration by the eSafety Commissioner requires social media services to:
Age verification requirements are applicable in other online contexts, including:
In 2021, in response to the findings of previous inquiries, the government directed the eSafety Commissioner to develop a roadmap for implementing a mandatory age verification system for online pornographic material (Roadmap). The Commissioner submitted the Roadmap to the government in March 2023 following consultations with various stakeholders.
The government has not yet published the Roadmap, so it is not clear at this stage how the Roadmap may impact the Declaration or the social media service Industry Code. The Minister for Communications, Michelle Rowland, has publicly stated that the government is considering the Roadmap and examining how it fits within other government initiatives, including in relation to digital identifiers and the Privacy Act Review.
Stakeholders expressed concern during consultations on the Roadmap that:
The intrusiveness of any one technology from a privacy perspective can be impacted by its design. Feedback that has been received on the Roadmap referred to the need for mandatory standards relating to data minimisation to promote trust in age verification systems.
Some stakeholders also expressed concerns during consultations on the Roadmap that some age verification technologies can be easily circumvented (e.g. through the use of a virtual private network), highlighting the need for international harmonisation of age verification measures to ensure effectiveness.
In March 2023, legislation was passed in France’s National Assembly which required social media services to put in place technical solutions to verify the age of their users and to verify if users under the age of 15 have received parental consent. Several states in the US (including Louisiana, Utah and Arkansas) have also passed or introduced legislation that makes online service providers liable for distributing pornographic material to children, thereby requiring online ID verification to access pornographic material.
International standards on age verification systems are currently being developed by the International Organisation for Standardisation and the IEEE. Technical standards for age verification (PAS 1296) have already been developed by the British Standards Institute.
As we await the release of the Roadmap, online service providers should review any age verification systems they are required to have in place and brace for further regulation in this space. Although the Roadmap is focused on access to online pornography, there is the potential for stronger age verification systems to be required in future for other online contexts, including gaming.
A spotlight on Australian regulation, specifically addressing online safety
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
© Herbert Smith Freehills 2024
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