this post was submitted on 25 Jul 2023
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This seems... wild.

Although, it's important to keep in mind that this is in the context of COPPA consent, which already required photo ID by the parent for children under the age of 13.

Still, I cannot see this truly going well. It's smarter than just a picture, sure. But it's done by a VC-funded private company and by Epic. I'd give it about 12 minutes until archives of thousands of uploaded mini-videos for verification appear on the net, probably public because someone forgot to properly patch the web server.

However to not go all crazy on it: This also opens up the can of "How do we do smarter online age verification, anyways?". AI-based facial recognition isn't a sensible one if you ask me, but we need a better way as other countries have already ruled that simply putting in your age or clicking an "i'm 18+"-button is not legally binding and hence cannot be used as verifiable age verification.

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[–] Katana314@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Bars all around cities ask for ID to drink liquor. Ideally, there could be some way we could “show” an ID, or even just the relevant portions, with no fear that the recipient is going to keep or copy it. But, such is not the current way of the world, and people have every reason to distrust data-collection mechanisms, especially by any large company.

Thinking along the line of hospitals - we do trust them with our data, usually because the data was generated there, because we visit them in person, and because doctors are essentially sacrificed at the stake if they breach HIPAA. I doubt any game company or online gambling site could ever be held to the same standard.