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Free Speech

The Age-Gated Internet Is Here

Goodbye, online anonymity.

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 7.28.2025 11:01 AM

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Man sitting with a laptop |  Photo by Erik Mclean on Unsplash
( Photo by Erik Mclean on Unsplash)

Beginning last week, the United Kingdom has started requiring purveyors of online porn to check IDs—and it's already reverberating beyond adult websites. For example, Bluesky—a general-interest social media platform and not what most people would call an "adult website" by any means—will begin requiring U.K. users to prove they're adults or otherwise find direct messaging and certain content inaccessible.

Platforms with U.K. users are now required to block minors from being able to see not just porn but "self-harm, suicide and eating disorder content," according to Ofcom, the U.K.'s communication regulatory agency. The requirement is part of the U.K.'s Online Safety Act of 2023. This far-reaching law imposes rules on an array of digital services, including social media platforms, search engines, video-sharing platforms, direct messaging tools, dating apps, message boards, and more. As a part of this bill, online platforms publishing content that authorities deem "harmful to children" must "introduce robust age checks."

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X, Reddit, Discord To Start Age Checks

The age-verification rule isn't aimed solely at sex sites, but at any digital entity where racy content or other "harmful" speech could be found.

In addition to Bluesky, Reddit, X, Discord, and Grinder "have now announced they will deploy age assurance" schemes, Ofcom says.

Services had until last week to start complying or face serious financial consequences.

On Bluesky, this means submitting credit card information or submitting to a facial scan.

Per Ofcom's rules, there are various ways that age checks can be done, including checking users' government issued IDs, employing some sort of online ID verification service, or utilizing bank, credit card, or phone information.

But letting users self-report that they are above age will no longer suffice.

It Will Happen Here

If you're in the U.S. and thinking, "What does this have to do with me?" Well, consider the U.K. a glimpse into our inevitable surveillance-mad future.

At least 20 states have already passed rules requiring age verification for adult content. And I think we can expect most, if not all, states to follow suit now that the Supreme Court has given it the OK.

A lot of these state laws regarding age checks and online porn have been written in ways to exclude platforms like X and Bluesky (for instance, by only applying to platforms where more than one-third of the content is adult-oriented).

But sex work is always the canary in the coal mine for free speech and privacy, and age-check requirements aren't stopping with online porn.

Already, some states are passing laws that necessitate social media platforms checking IDs or otherwise verifying user ages.

A federal appeals court recently gave the green light to Mississippi to start enforcing a social media age verification law.

A Global Attack on Anonymity and Privacy

"Around the world, a new wave of child protection laws are forcing a profound shift that could normalize rigorous age checks broadly across the web," note Matt Burgess and Lily Hay Newman at Wired. They point out that "Meanwhile, courts in France ruled last week that porn sites can check users' ages. Ireland implemented age checking laws for video websites this week. The European Commission is testing an age-verification app. And in December, Australia's strict social media ban for children under 16 will take effect, introducing checks for social media and people logged in to search engines."

"Age verification impedes people's ability to anonymously access information online," Stanford University researcher Riana Pfefferkorn told Wired. "That includes information that adults have every right to access but might not want anyone else knowing they're consuming—such as pornography—as well as information that kids want to access but that for political reasons gets deemed inappropriate for them, such as accurate information about sex, reproductive health information, and LGBTQ content."

The age of online anonymity being possible is rapidly vanishing. In its place, we get dubious "protection" measures that can be easily gamed by motivated parties, may send people to less regulated and less responsible platforms, put adults and children alike at risk of identity theft and other security violations, and make it much easier for authorities around the world to keep tabs on their citizens.


Follow-Ups: Canada Rejects Prostitution Law Challenge

"The Supreme Court of Canada has rejected a constitutional challenge of the criminal law on sex work, upholding the convictions of two men who argued its provisions are overly broad," reports The Canadian Press.

The case came before Canada's Supreme Court last November, and this newsletter covered it then:

The case is Kloubakov v. Canada. It was brought by two men—Mikhail Kloubakov and Hicham Moustaine—who were employed as drivers for women being paid for sex. Both men were found guilty of benefiting financially from, and helping to procure, people for sexual services.

In arguments before the court on November 12 and 13, lawyers for Kloubakov and Moustaine argued that certain provisions of Canada's current sex work laws violate the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees all people a right to life, liberty, and security of person.

In a unanimous ruling last week, Canada's Supreme Court rejected their argument.

The court said that "a third party who provides security to someone who sells sexual services could do so lawfully, the court said, as long as they do not encourage the person to sell sex and provided the benefit they receive is proportionate to the value of the services they provide," notes The Canadian Press. The court said it would be up to judges on a case-by-case basis to sort such things out.

I don't know enough about Canadian law to say for sure, but that sure sounds like it would still prevent sex workers from being able to legally pay people to be their drivers, security, etc. Who in their right mind would openly engage in such a pursuit if the only thing preventing their prosecution was a judge determining that they weren't charging too much for their services and were appropriately disapproving of the sex taking place?

And making it difficult or dangerous for third parties to be legally employed by sex workers only leaves more opportunity for third parties who will take the risk to be exploitative.

The 'Woke AI' Order

Last Wednesday's newsletter looked at the free speech risks posed by government crackdowns on artificial intelligence that they deem too woke, noting that President Donald Trump was supposed to soon release an order on the matter. That order—titled "Preventing Woke AI in the Federal Government"—is here. It states that the U.S. government shall:

Procure only those LLMs developed in accordance with the following two principles (Unbiased AI Principles):

(a) Truth-seeking. LLMs shall be truthful in responding to user prompts seeking factual information or analysis. LLMs shall prioritize historical accuracy, scientific inquiry, and objectivity, and shall acknowledge uncertainty where reliable information is incomplete or contradictory.

(b) Ideological Neutrality. LLMs shall be neutral, nonpartisan tools that do not manipulate responses in favor of ideological dogmas such as DEI. Developers shall not intentionally encode partisan or ideological judgments into an LLM's outputs unless those judgments are prompted by or otherwise readily accessible to the end user.

Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) president Greg Lukianoff notes that while "the culture war framing on all of this is obvious, and the executive order plays well with voters who are exhausted by perceived left-coded tech and institutional groupthink. But once you move beyond the political theater, the implications of this order become far more serious."

Related: Reason's Jack Nicastro looks at the Trump administration's AI Action Plan.


More Sex & Tech News

• The Guardian profiles Chilean photographer Paz Errázuriz:

Between 1982 and 1987, Errázuriz spent time photographing life in the brothels of Santiago, as trans sex workers fixed their hair, shifted their stockings, refined their makeup and killed time waiting for male clients. It was, she says, a "beautiful" experience. "We talked or we'd have a glass of wine or a coffee. They trusted me."

Such was her empathetic bond with her subjects, that she even developed a friendship with the mother of two brothers working in one of the brothels. "I dedicated the series to her." She titled the project Adam's Apple, and it characterised a career defined by an enduring love of outsiders.

Works from the series can now be seen in her first major solo UK exhibition, Paz Errázuriz: Dare to Look – Hidden Realities of Chile at MK Gallery in Milton Keynes. Other subjects of the 171 photographs on show include psychiatric patients, circus performers, boxers, political activists and the homeless, highlighting the humanity of those living under duress during the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.

• The Stopping Terrorists Online Presence and Holding Accountable Tech Entities (STOP HATE) Act "would make it mandatory for social media companies to work with the federal government" by requiring "companies to provide triennial reports on their moderation policies—and violations they catch—to the U.S. attorney general," notes Reason's Matthew Petti. At a press conference last week, Rep. Don Bacon (R–Neb.), one of the bill's two sponsors, "made it clear that the STOP HATE Act was meant to push social media companies to act even more like an arm of government censorship."

• Will AI slop make people touch grass more?


Today's Image

Long Island | 2025 (ENB/Reason)

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NEXT: Tom Lehrer Satirized the National Security State From the Inside

Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

Free SpeechInternetPornographyUnited KingdomAnonymitySurveillancePrivacyFreedom
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  1. I, Woodchipper   4 months ago

    I'm not gonna lie, it is a little creepy that the only libertarian streak you seem to have is when it comes to anything at all that limits children's access to porn, or anything that might even remotely hamper a young woman's effort to be a professional whore.

    1. mad.casual   4 months ago

      The addition of Bluesky and the UK doesn't make things any better either.

      If the Muslim rape gangs in the UK want to share their exploits with the culturally-cucked, upper-class plutocrats on Bluesky anonymously, that's their right!

    2. Vernon Depner   4 months ago

      For many young American women, becoming a professional whore would be a step up.

    3. Fat Rush Limpcock (King of the Conservatives)   4 months ago

      It’s difficult for you. You Bush/Trump rednecks just don’t get the individual liberty perspective.

      All you care about is immigration and abortion.

      You’re just not very libertarian.

      1. Chumby   4 months ago

        What happened to your first account?

  2. Chumby   4 months ago

    Guess some had enough stroke to pull this off.

  3. Eeyore   4 months ago

    Good news - for hackers and identify theves. Good news.

    1. damikesc   4 months ago

      The hacking of the TEA app is borderline hilarious.

      1. Eeyore   4 months ago

        It might be one of the funniest crimes of the year.

        1. Chumby   4 months ago

          Finer Things Club hardest hit.

      2. mad.casual   4 months ago

        At this point they almost feel like psyops.

    2. Vernon Depner   4 months ago

      That problem is conspicuously absent from the article. It talks about privacy violations, but the main danger with online ID checks is that website providers will be able to collect and sell the personal information on ID cards. This is why online checks are different from Bubba looking at your license at the door to the tavern.

      1. Rick James   4 months ago

        Do you trust Reason with your bank and/or credit card details?

        1. Gaear Grimsrud   4 months ago

          Why would anyone give money to Reason?

        2. Vernon Depner   4 months ago

          No.

      2. Eeyore   4 months ago

        Porn sites are known for their amazing A+ security ratings.

      3. mad.casual   4 months ago

        website providers will be able to collect and sell the personal information on ID cards.

        Ctrl+f 'ID card': 0 results.

        Are you saying you would require cards with more information that the website providers would store (beyond the mountain they're already collecting) or are you saying that you would buy/sell the info? Do you worry about information being lost when libraries burn down and lose sleep over cameras stealing peoples' souls too?

        This is Same FUD, Different Day. Like carrying around a driver's license, social security card, insurance cards (health and auto), passport, and SIM card everywhere you go and worrying that Bubba, the bouncer at the local strip club or tavern, is the real threat to your anonymity because he saw your *whole* driver's license.

        One last question: If Bubba turns your license over to see if you're an organ donor, do you snatch your license away from him and shout "Invasion of privacy!" until help arrives?

  4. Earth-based Human Skeptic   4 months ago

    I blame women.

    1. Vernon Depner   4 months ago

      Should transwomen get blamed?

      1. Chumby   4 months ago

        Yes. Some might not get two teste about it.

        1. Gaear Grimsrud   4 months ago

          That's a ballsy prediction.

          1. Chumby   4 months ago

            Think it’s nuts?

  5. NoVaNick   4 months ago

    Good news I guess if you’re a fan of the good ol’ plastic-wrapped girly mags, and bad news if you’re into Only Fans, or are a tween who wants to learn about how to be trans.

    1. Gaear Grimsrud   4 months ago

      This all started when they put Penthouse behind the counter and you had to endure the disapproving stare of some old fat lady. Like most right thinking Americans I only bought it for the provocative journalism and I was lumped in with a bunch of perverts. Still bitter.

  6. Kemuel   4 months ago

    RE age verification there are dozens if not hundreds of apps that allow adults to limit their family members' access to objectionable content on managed devices. Most large platforms already have some sort of parental controls built in. Since the private sector has solved this problem, there being sufficient demand for parental controls on the open market, any government regulation in this area is redundant.

    1. Eeyore   4 months ago

      But then how are the political donors who own the mandated age verification platforms going to get their cut?

    2. See.More   4 months ago

      Since the private sector has solved this problem, there being sufficient demand for parental controls on the open market, any government regulation in this area is redundant.


      See, the problem is that not everyone is using those tools. Parents, left to their own devices, can't be trusted to do what
      I think is right, so I, through the police power of the state, have to make sure their children are only exposed to the content that I approve of!! How dare you or anyone else criticize me for making sure your children are safe! You're an utterly disgusting sub-human being that obviously wants to pedo-rape trans children!! Fuck off groomer!1!!1!!!1!

  7. jonnysage   4 months ago

    I dont like govt forcing businesses to control access to things not appropriate to kids (as defined by their parents), but whats the alternative? How do parents keep their kids from getting alchohol, drugs, pron when a business wont?

    1. SQRLSY   4 months ago

      Become Amish, and shun ALL even vaguely high-tech things? Keep them down on the farm? Or keep the kids locked up down in the basement?

      Trade-offs, trade-offs... Why can't I have freedom while telling everyone else twat to do and snot to do?

    2. MyPublicName   4 months ago

      No disrespect, but I don't understand your comment. Is it satire? Like many people in this thread already mentioned, the alternative is parents taking initiative and activating the already made and quite robust parental controls. Active parenting (being a good parent) solves this.

    3. Rossami   4 months ago

      1. Be a parent. Teach your values to your kids when they're young so they internalize those values and make good choices (however you define "good").

      2. Be a responsible parent and put filters on your kids' electronic devices. Pay attention to the other kids your kid is hanging around with, too. If things are going off the rails, intervene as a parent.

      1. Rick James   4 months ago

        3. Keep a very close eye on your kids' school and teachers.

    4. Chumby   4 months ago

      Stop seeing the child as an accessory that others must help fund and start being a responsible parent.

      1. mad.casual   4 months ago

        This is really beginning to feel 'bootleggers and baptists'. We are where we are because Karens and helicopter parents are ferreting out stragglers and/or (along with libertines/libertarians) ignoring 'that which is unseen' already created by COPPA.

  8. Vernon Depner   4 months ago

    Never forget who the aggressor was in the Culture War.

    1. SQRLSY   4 months ago

      Yes, the aggressors were the illegal sub-humans, trannies, accused “groomers”, abortionists, gays, heathens, infidels, unbelievers, vaxxers, mask-wearers, atheists, dirty hippies, commies, Jews, witches, or, the very WORST of them all, being one of those accused of STEALING THE ERECTIONS OF OUR DEAR LEADER, right, right-wing wrong-nuts? ANY methods are OK, so long as they are used against the CORRECT enemas, am I right, or am I right-wing?

  9. Vernon Depner   4 months ago

    The only porn children should have access to is that which is provided in the public schools. /jeffy

  10. Nobartium   4 months ago

    Your anonymity ended when the Internet was made profitable by advertising.

  11. Rick James   4 months ago

    It Will Happen Here
    If you're in the U.S. and thinking, "What does this have to do with me?" Well, consider the U.K. a glimpse into our inevitable surveillance-mad future.

    So what's happening in the UK vis a vis social media suddenly isn't too local?

    1. Rick James   4 months ago

      • Will AI slop make people touch grass more?

      Followup: Will the age requirement on Bluesky make journolismists touch grass more?

  12. Spiritus Mundi   4 months ago

    Online confessional for internet porn. Now the government knows all your sins.

  13. Rick James   4 months ago

    "The Supreme Court of Canada has rejected a constitutional challenge of the criminal law on sex work, upholding the convictions of two men who argued its provisions are overly broad,"

    There's a joke in here about women as prostitutes, but damn if I can find it.

  14. Rick James   4 months ago

    From ENBs Bluesky link:

    We’ll use Epic Games’ Kids Web Services (KWS) to give our UK community choices about how to verify their age. If you’re in the UK, you can choose between methods like credit card verification and face scans. (See here to learn more about how KWS safeguards user information.) For people who are under 18 or don’t want to go through this process, we’ll make adult-appropriate content inaccessible, and we’ll disable features like direct messaging.

    Sorry, but this doesn't quite align with the tone of ENBs article. While I'm certainly not for this UK law, it seems to me that Reason itself now uses a kind of age verification/no-anonymity system for its comment section. If it requires a subscription, you just nixed anonymity. Clicking on Reason's subscribe page, they take... a Credit Card or direct bank transfer.

    Secondly, you don't HAVE to do age verification at which point your content is scrubbed of the 'adult' stuff and direct messaging is disabled.

    When I was 11 years old, you had to show ID to buy Playboy at the local Sip-n-Save. If the tech-savvy UK kiddies want to see naughty content online, they can always get a VPN.

  15. Rick James   4 months ago

    "companies to provide triennial reports on their moderation policies—and violations they catch—to the U.S. attorney general," notes Reason's Matthew Petti. At a press conference last week, Rep. Don Bacon (R–Neb.), one of the bill's two sponsors, "made it clear that the STOP HATE Act was meant to push social media companies to act even more like an arm of government censorship."

    *cough*

    Governor Hochul Signs “Stop Hiding Hate” Act to Ensure Social Media Platforms are Transparent & Accountable

    New Law by Senator Hoylman-Sigal and Assembly Member Lee requires social media companies to publish policies and moderation practices to combat online hatred

  16. AT   4 months ago

    Goodbye, online anonymity. Well, consider the U.K. a glimpse into our inevitable surveillance-mad future.

    1) That future is already here.

    2) This harms no one. You are not beholden to using Bluesky or Twitter or Grinder or anything else. This is 100% voluntary, and requires informed consent.

    3) I don't really care even a little bit how this affects pornographers or their audiences. I especially don't care how it affects sex workers. There is no respect or goodness to be found in those trades, and as a society we should be actively discouraging them. I do, however, care - in a very positive and supportive way - that it frustrates those who would seek the exploitation of the unwilling, particularly when it comes to children. Why don't you?

    4) I especially especially don't care if it frustrates the ability of people to gain access to "sex, reproductive health information, and LGBTQ content." Meaning pornography, abortion, and pedo sex cult grooming materials. Because those are things that we should be vocally against as a society. Not, like ENB/Reason, constantly pretending to extol as virtuous simply because they're "freedoms" which is true ONLY in the sense that they are a thing a person is able to do. Just because you can, doesn't mean you should. And it doesn't mean that society should be at all tolerant of it.

    This is a win. Is it an overreach? Maybe. But I don't care. Take the win for now, and cross the next bridge when we arrive at it.

    1. Fu Manchu   4 months ago

      Libertarians for making it hard for others to have things I don't like.

      1. AT   4 months ago

        Yea, I'll admit it, I don't like child pornography. I despise it, actually - and everyone involved in it in any way shape or form. If I can make it difficult for you to have that, since you apparently want it so bad, then I'm quite happy to shove my middle finger right in your face when you protest.

        Libertarianism without morality is just anarchy. If anarchy is what you want, then just say that - don't hide behind some bastardized definition of "libertarianism" to express your love of kiddie porn.

  17. Incunabulum   4 months ago

    >But once you move beyond the political theater, the implications of this order become far more serious."

    Yes it does - it means it will be harder to use tech to indoctrinate.

    1. Bmk149   4 months ago

      So we use the power of government to prevent tech from indocrinating our kids BUT the government is still allowed to indocrinate. And yes, I'm talking about BOTH the left and right.

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