Discord will require a face scan or ID for full access next month

(theverge.com)

444 points | by x01 5 hours ago ago

307 comments

  • pibaker an hour ago ago

    It is a great irony that the heavy handed push for "protect da kids" is all happening while we learn, day by day, that the richest and most powerful members of our society have no problem hanging out with a convicted child sex trafficker.

    Rules for thee, free love for me.

    • alexfromapex 28 minutes ago ago

      People don't realize that all of our problems lately are stemming from lack of truly representative government. Until we find a way to ensure political candidates aren't corrupt and bought off, there will always be corruption, double standards, and lack of accountability from them.

      • psychoslave 12 minutes ago ago

        You can't find that because any concentration of power means the corruption forces have only very limited surface to pressure, and all the more that surface is actually easy to swap with one molded for even more corruption convenience.

        People ever rule through direct decisions or are enslaved into alien agendas on which they have no agency.

        • nicoburns 2 minutes ago ago

          In countries like the US and UK with FPTP voting systems, proportional representation would help a lot. As it would make it a lot more viable for candidates outside of the main two parties to stand (and actually have a chance of winning).

          (although in a UK context, it's looking highly likely that we'll have a "changing of the guard" in the next election with both Reform and Green party making significant inroads at the expense of the more established Conservative and Labour parties)

      • johnnyanmac 23 minutes ago ago

        That's a lot of work to do. It ultimately works off the issue that most voters are disengaged, while the most interested parties are very engaged.

        Corruption is happening out in the open and there's still so many people shrugging in response. One good push back from everyone all at once would fix a lot of things quickly. But that implies the people are united and not instead driven into manufactured conflict by said interested parties. It's basically enough that we're in a post truth era as of now. I don't know how we come back from that

        Anyways, repealing Citizens United would be a good first step.

        • 0_____0 a few seconds ago ago

          [warning/apology - this comment regards USpol specifically]

          Our media landscape has people focusing on basically everything except what we need to be. I am not sure that liberal democracy will survive the information age. So much effort goes into the process of argument, we aren't as a whole really thinking about how to solve our very real problems.

          China's technocratic rule, after some, shall we say, growing pains (hunger pains? Is it fair to say that when millions of people starved to death?), seems a lot better at creating a coherent strategy for economic growth and international soft power.

          One of my great fears is that democracy was the right model in the past decades and centuries, but that it won't keep up with the laser focused technocratic rule that a competent bureaucracy can potentially muster.

    • ActorNightly an hour ago ago

      What do you mean day by day.

      We have known this to be the case, for quite some time, yet majority of the public still thought that a convicted felon was good enough to be president.

      • dijit an hour ago ago

        I think that's the exact irony that the parent is eluding to.

        It's all about the kids, unless, idk, you're rich enough?

        • kelseyfrog 26 minutes ago ago

          Andrew Carnegie's The Gospel of Wealth[1] lies squarely in the center of the foundational belief that those who've acquired such means have done so because they reflect "the highest type of man, the best and most valuable of all that humanity has yet accomplished."

          It takes only a brief glimpse of the real world and its most wealthy to recognize that an abundance of virtue is not what's reflected in reality. In fact, the benevolence Carnegie describes, serves as a smoke screen for cruelty, degenerate acts, and the slaughterhouse of the soul. We've sold out every moral for a bait and switch and it's well past time to reneg on the social contract.

          1. https://www.carnegie.org/about/our-history/gospelofwealth/

          • rob74 a minute ago ago

            I think you've got that quote backwards. In full it reads:

            > Unequally or unjustly, perhaps, as these laws sometimes operate, and imperfect as they appear to the Idealist, they are, nevertheless, like the highest type of man, the best and most valuable of all that humanity has yet accomplished.

            Or (to shorten it a bit): "These laws (of capitalism) [...] are nevertheless [..] the best and most valuable of all that humanity has yet accomplished". So this is only an unlimited belief in the virtues of capitalism, not in the virtues of rich people.

            From the introduction:

            > Carnegie believed in giving wealth away during one’s lifetime, and this essay includes one of his most famous quotes, “The man who dies thus rich dies disgraced.” Carnegie’s message continues to resonate with and inspire leaders and philanthropists around the world.

            I really wonder what Carnegie would think about his successors dismantling USAID?

        • hn_acc1 16 minutes ago ago

          It's all about the kids when you need a certain segment of the population to vote a certain way.

        • echelon 5 minutes ago ago

          It's never about kids. If they cared about kids, they would have school lunch and wouldn't starve.

          It's about control and monitoring of civilians. And creating a dragnet to ensnare any new politicians and business leaders.

          Freedom of speech is insufficient. We need freedom of privacy and from monitoring and tracking.

    • volf_ an hour ago ago

      do as we say, not as we do

    • nickpinkston an hour ago ago

      I'm fine with the free love and debauchery, but just really keep it to adults and be safe.

      • RIMR an hour ago ago

        I'm just going to go ahead and say that "free love" is a terribly inappropriate way to refer to sex trafficking, regardless of the age of the victims, unless you're being facetious (e.g., The Onion's "Penis Goofin'" allegations against Epstein).

        • cgriswald 6 minutes ago ago

          I’m going to suggest re-reading the top level comment and the GP’s response. I don’t see anyone suggesting non-facetiously that free love and sex trafficking are synonymous nor that sex trafficking of adults is acceptable. I think the top level poster is being facetious; such a view is how these creeps might think. I think the respondent is, intentionally or mistakenly, ignoring that context and using the term at face value.

    • tux3 an hour ago ago

      I am not a native English speaker, I may be missing a cultural nuance, but I wouldn't call any of what they did love. That word enters nowhere in a sickening child abuse island.

    • ingohelpinger an hour ago ago

      and they keep protecting the pedos from prosecution. lol.

    • nickpsecurity 36 minutes ago ago

      Hanging out with? Many of the top liberals were going to Epstein's island themselves. That's on top of other revelations in the entertainment industry and Washington DC going way back.

      Voters in America stay electing self-centered, sick-minded people. God's Word (Bible) says pick people who follow God, have great character, take no bribes, and (less. important) are skilled for that position. If people will do that, we will see amazing things happen. So far, they elect pagans (Left) and Pharisees (Right) who always give them what they voted for.

      • spauldo 24 minutes ago ago

        I don't recall the Bible saying much about who to vote for, given that democracy wasn't much of a thing in the ancient middle east.

      • subscribed 17 minutes ago ago

        So you're saying people talking about some particular god are highly moral and not involved in crimes, including crimes on children?

    • zozbot234 44 minutes ago ago

      This is no worse than Discord just banning NSFW content wholesale throughout the platform (which they would be entirely within their rights to do). It's a big fat nothingburger.

      • RobotToaster 8 minutes ago ago

        I'm sure the owners of Tumblr thought the same.

        • Macha 5 minutes ago ago

          The owners of Tumblr thought being banned from the app store was certain death, but losing the nsfw content was only possible death.

      • Morromist 26 minutes ago ago

        It would be in their rights to do it.

        Its users who value their privacy will be in their rights to leave and we will.

      • johnnyanmac 19 minutes ago ago

        They have a right to ask for my passport and SSN. And I have a right to say "hell no" and delete my account in response.

      • danaris 30 minutes ago ago

        It's not a nothingburger; it's a massive collection of personally identifying information.

      • FireBeyond 30 minutes ago ago

        Except it is scarily easy to find servers which openly have minors selling NSFW content. Or BDSM servers targeted at "14-28 year olds".

    • oguz-ismail2 38 minutes ago ago

      It's a question of scale. Neither crime is less serious but far more children are groomed and abused over Discord than flown in via some super rich sicko's private jet for a 'costume party'.

      • johnnyanmac 20 minutes ago ago

        Making everyone "teens by default" fixes none of that, though. Roblox spaces aren't exactly 18+

    • johndhi 29 minutes ago ago

      he was convicted of soliciting prostitution (not of minors), right?

      why do we assume that the people he was hanging out with knew the details of what he did wrong?

      • anon84873628 20 minutes ago ago

        This article was on the front page recently: https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=9534

        So at least some lay people easily realized he wasn't worth getting involved with.

        • johndhi a minute ago ago

          good call! hadn't read that.

      • hardlianotion 12 minutes ago ago

        He was arrested for sex trafficking minors and convicted procuring a child for prostitution.

      • Finnucane 6 minutes ago ago

        He ran a sex-trafficking ring that involved hundreds of girls and women. Possibly over a thousand. He wasn't keeping it all to himself.

      • ibejoeb 17 minutes ago ago

        He pled to Procuring Person under 18 for Prostitution.

  • cheschire an hour ago ago

    I deleted my Facebook account in 2011. After finding out how much critical neighborhood information I have been missing, I finally registered a new Facebook account fifteen years later to follow my neighborhood groups.

    A month later, the account was suspended for supposedly breaking guidelines. I never posted a single message, never reacted to any posts.

    They then required me to upload a video scan of my face to prove I was a person.

    We aren’t quite at the end of the internet, but man I can really see the end of this journey coming sometime soon.

    • elevation 37 minutes ago ago

      I helped an elderly woman create her first FB account. She'd just lost her husband and wanted to notify his friends about his upcoming memorial service. She knew their names but didn't have contact information.

      We created the account from an Apple device, registering from her home cable modem IP, giving FB her cellphone number and ISP issued email address — all strong signals of consumer authenticity. But after she added five of her relatives within half an hour, her account was locked for suspicious activity.

      There was an appeal button; she was asked to take a picture of her face from many angles and upload ID. She gave them everything they asked for, but when Facebook reviewed the appeal, they closed her account permanently.

      • retired 4 minutes ago ago

        It sure beats the Reddit system where you think you are interacting with people, only to find out a couple of days later that your fresh account is shadow-banned and nobody is seeing your comments and that none of your likes went through.

        At least Facebook tells you that you are banned.

        • kps a minute ago ago

          Reddit and HN.

      • alex1138 35 minutes ago ago

        Mark Zuckerberg, folks. It matters when his default philosophy is "They trust me dumb fucks". Copying Snapchat 9 times is more of a priority than account security. He wasn't "making a good point". He's a malicious asshole who deserved jail years ago

    • snohobro 39 minutes ago ago

      Ironically, this may be one of the many straws that breaks the proverbial internet camel’s back. We all wax and wane about the old internet, the pre-homogenized, non-corporate, Wild West internet.

      Perhaps these constant restrictions will finally spur us to create our own spaces again Our own little groups that exist independent of the corpo-sphere.

      The only reason ‘the way things used to be’ went away was because the new thing was convenient. Well, now it isn’t anymore. So let’s just go back to the old thing.

      • ssl-3 26 minutes ago ago

        I yearn for the days of yore when a few of us would co-lo some boxes at a small local ISP we were friendly with, where we'd get to take advantage of their always-on and (at the time) blazing-fast T1 connectivity. It was low-cost for everyone, and we'd host our own services for whatever was useful to us and our friend groups.

        On the other hand: It was kind of awful when even my dialup access would get screwed up because someone's IRC server got DDoS'd -- again -- and clogged up the pipes.

        ---

        These days, the local ISPs are mostly gone. But the pipes are bigger -- it's easy for many of us to get gigabit+ connections at home. Unfortunately, the botnets are also bigger.

        How do we get back to what we had?

    • erghjunk 13 minutes ago ago

      I have a similar story. I quit in like 2016 or so and 9ish years later I wanted to shop for a used car for my oldest kid. I know already, of course, that Facebook now holds a monopoly on peer to peer sales of goods like that so I tried to make a new Facebook account. I was denied at the creation and told I had to try again with a video of my face (which I begrudgingly did) at which point I was denied AGAIN and told there was no appeals process.

    • lp4v4n 26 minutes ago ago

      My friend has a restaurant and showed me the ad he wanted to promote on Instagram about a pizza coupon was suspended for breaking the guidelines, they mentioned gambling or something. I was quite impressed. When you see that one of the "magnificent 7" is dysfunctional to that level, it's hard not to think we're living the last decades of American economic hegemony, by now propelled mostly by inertial monopolies than anything else.

    • jacobsenscott an hour ago ago

      FB/Discord/etc were never the internet. They were walled gardens you could enter via the internet. This could be a revitalization of the internet - pushing people back to decentralized ways of communications.

      • cheschire 41 minutes ago ago

        Perhaps you may have not read about how Iran is moving to a whitelisted internet. Or perhaps you believe this will not happen in your country.

        However, “think of the children” will always result in more restriction in western countries, not less. We are watching countries prove that it works to isolate from each other. Europe is not isolating from America in exactly the same way, but is isolating business processes from American services.

        We are not on the cusp of the end of the internet, but the cliff sure seems in view to me.

        • owebmaster 7 minutes ago ago

          > Perhaps you may have not read about how Iran is moving to a whitelisted internet. Or perhaps you believe this will not happen in your country.

          I hope for it to happen in my country, with local companies and developers competing to create the new social networks. The current arrangement fine foreign entities too much power.

    • prophesi an hour ago ago

      Had a similar experience after rejoining a few years ago. My account wasn't suspended for breaking guidelines AFAIK, but rather flagged as a suspicious account that required an upload of my face and driver's license. I think the account still exists in this limbo state because I'd rather not upload all of that to Facebook, and yet still not able to login to request for the account to be deleted.

      • monksy 36 minutes ago ago

        That won't guarentee that you get your account back. Many times it's used to permaban you later.

    • johnnyanmac 17 minutes ago ago

      Yeah, same here. I tried logging in years back and they wanted my driver's license. My last comment must have been in 2013 or so.

      I don't see it as the journey's end. But it's gonna be a much quieter road if most people don't walk away from this stuff. Maybe that's for the best.

  • anon_cow1111 an hour ago ago

    It should go without saying but,

    *CANCEL YOUR NITRO SUBSCRIPTION NOW IF YOU'RE PAYING FOR ONE* (for whatever reason)

    This was just announced today and a flood of canceled payments within the next 24 hours are the easiest way to send a message. And also tell people on the servers you're on to do the same. It's not like they give you anything of real value for that money.

    • pipo234 34 minutes ago ago

      Not a subscriber, but I understand your call for retribution.

      I suppose the silver lining is that they are putting the responsibility for age verification adults. Which imo is better than requiring everyone; kids get a free pass to the kids stuff...

      • hahn-kev 7 minutes ago ago

        Yeah I agree. I actually see most of the stuff in the teens mode as a feature

  • accrual 5 hours ago ago

    Here's the October 2025 Discord data breach mentioned at the end of the article:

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c8jmzd972leo

    > Discord, a messaging platform popular with gamers, says official ID photos of around 70,000 users have potentially been leaked after a cyber-attack.

    However, their senior director states in this Verge article:

    > The ID is immediately deleted. We do not keep any information around like your name, the city that you live in, if you used a birth certificate or something else, any of that information.

    Why they didn't do that the first time?

    • pavel_lishin 4 hours ago ago

      > The ID is immediately deleted. We do not keep any information around like your name, the city that you live in, if you used a birth certificate or something else, any of that information.

      This is also contradicted by what Discord actually says:

      > Quick deletion: Identity documents submitted to our vendor partners are deleted quickly— in most cases, immediately after age confirmation.

      What are the non-most cases?

      • rsynnott 3 hours ago ago

        Also, _Discord_ deleting them is really only half the battle; random vendors deleting them remains an issue.

        • rockskon 2 hours ago ago

          Not to mention collecting them at all means those servers are a primo location for state actors to stage themselves to make copies of data before being deleted.

          To say nothing of insider threats of which likely exist across every major social media platform in service to foreign govs.

      • throw20251220 2 hours ago ago

        Since when the city one lives in is mentioned in the birth certificate?

        • smcin 41 minutes ago ago

          It was only one example they gave, and they accept multiple different types of ID; a driver's license or national ID card being other likely ones, and DLs do say where you live.

          • kvdveer 8 minutes ago ago

            None of those documents reliably state my city of residence. At best they document where I once lived, but not even that is guaranteed.

    • debo_ an hour ago ago

      I believe the original finding was that they were not deleting IDs that were involved in disputes.

    • wolvoleo 5 hours ago ago

      And do they really actually delete it this time?

    • Aurornis an hour ago ago

      They explained it in their announcement at https://discord.com/press-releases/update-on-security-incide...

      TL;DR: The IDs were used in age-related appeals. If someone's account was banned for being too young they have to submit an ID as part of the appeal. Appeals take time to process and review.

      Discord has 200,000,000 users and age verification happens a lot due to the number of young users and different countries.

      • plorg 18 minutes ago ago

        Why should we suspect the age verification and age-related appeals would involve different teams or processes?

    • observationist an hour ago ago

      They're a nonsense company, and trusting them with any information is foolish. They'll store everything and anything, because data is valuable, and won't delete anything unless legally compelled to and held accountable by third party independent verification. This is the default.

      The purpose of things is what they do. They're an adtech user data collection company, they're not a user information securing company.

    • _ink_ 27 minutes ago ago

      Compliance

    • varispeed an hour ago ago

      > The ID is immediately deleted.

      I call it bollocks. Likely they have to keep it for audit and other purposes.

      • subscribed 11 minutes ago ago

        They wouldn't _have to_, audit checks if you stick to law, your own policies and such, but I think they will.

        • varispeed 9 minutes ago ago

          So how do they prove they actually checked someone's age?

      • smaudet 43 minutes ago ago

        "delete" doesn't mean delete anymore, like you say, there are always audit logs, and there is "soft" deleting.

        Expect any claims that things are being deleted to be a bold faced lie.

    • Hikikomori 4 hours ago ago

      >Why they didn't do that the first time?

      The company they hired to do the support tickets archived them, including attachments, rather than deleting them.

      • engineeringwoke 2 hours ago ago

        Ah sorry our contractor did all that highly illegal stuff. Too bad we can't pierce the corporate veil anymore... shucks.

      • malfist 3 hours ago ago

        Ah, so it was the "staffer" excuse.

        • hn_acc1 5 minutes ago ago

          rogue engineer

      • joquarky 3 hours ago ago

        How convenient.

  • areoform 36 minutes ago ago

    There's a special phenomenon that happens as startups grow large. They begin to drift away from the ground truth of their product, their users and how it's used. It's a drift away from users. And a drift towards internal politics. A lot like Rasmussen's drift towards danger, https://risk-engineering.org/concept/Rasmussen-practical-dri...

    As startups grow beyond a critical threshold, they start to attract a certain type of person who is more interested in mercenarily growing within the company / setting themselves up for future corporate rise than building a product. These people play to the company's internal court and create deeply bitter environments that leads to more mission-driven individuals leaving the company.

    Which is why we end up with decisions like OnlyFans hitting $1B / yr in revenue (with extreme profitability) off of porn and then deciding to ban porn, https://www.ft.com/content/5468f11b-cb98-4f72-8fb2-63b9623b7...

    Or, Digg deciding to kill its "bury" button and doing a radical "redesign" that made Reddit worth billions.

    Unity's decision to update its pricing. Sonos' app "redesign" etc etc.

    Decisions that kill the company. Or, in the best case, severely cripple it.

        .
    
    Congratulations Discord, y'all have made the list! :)
    • marcd35 13 minutes ago ago

      I think this decision is more defensive than "losing touch with their customers." The winds are shifting in other countries that are cracking down on social media use for children. Discord does not want to get caught in the shit storm of legal issues if they fail to comply. This is a proactive measure.

      • nemomarx 5 minutes ago ago

        This is the real issue, and it's why just cancelling your discord subs and moving to stoat or etc isn't a solid long-term strategy. If KOSA passes in the us basically every platform will have to do something like this.

      • Aerroon 7 minutes ago ago

        Yeah, this really seems like it's our politicians screwing us. The older I get the more harmful politicians seem to be.

    • canada_dry 14 minutes ago ago

      In pretty much all cases, the companies in question had peaked were experiencing declining growth and attempting to do a hail-Mary... and failed miserably.

      Compare Digg and slash. One completely died, the other has stuck with its formula and hasn't disappeared, but has just faded into irrelevance.

    • tyleo 27 minutes ago ago

      I don’t think this is a phenomenon. At the best places I’ve worked, I’ve seen success correlated with actual user value. You do find climbers at certain places but I tend to think it’s a large reason they fail.

      Also, I don’t think your OnlyFans analogy holds up. My understanding is that their threat to ban porn was a stunt. A pretty effective one.

      • tyre 16 minutes ago ago

        Do you have reading on it being a stunt? That seems like a huge gamble. You’re basically inviting competitors and pissing off your supply (content creators.)

        If they view you as unstable, unreliable, or adversely motivated, they will look for alternatives to at minimum diversify. It’s their livelihood.

    • guluarte 22 minutes ago ago

      that's true, guilds moved to discord because it was easier to use than teamspeak

  • mlsu a minute ago ago

    This is coming for all web-based services soon. Don't think for a second it's just Discord.

    It's just a small step ahead of "phone number required" auth.

  • bovermyer 2 hours ago ago

    Ignoring the implications of this for the moment, let me broach a related (and arguably more important) question: what do you do when you have multiple communities you interact with only on one platform, and suddenly that platform becomes intolerable for a subset of your community?

    • devsda an hour ago ago

      It is the same as what everyone did after the reddit fiasco i.e. protest, boycott, grudgingly use it while complaining and then finally accept the change.

      May be this discord episode will have better outcome for the masses.

      • Telaneo 14 minutes ago ago

        Reddit dropped a lot in quality after that. I suspect a lot of people stopped posting, even if they did continue using it in some capacity.

      • esseph 41 minutes ago ago

        That's not what happened with the X nonsense, a lot of people went to mastadon/bluesky.

    • AnthonyMouse an hour ago ago

      It seems like the answer is pretty obvious. That subset of the community stops using it and uses something else, and the others either follow them or don't.

      You, if you're not in the first group, can continue to use both to communicate with everyone, but some of them lose the ability to communicate with each other.

      The ideal outcome is for everyone to stop using the intolerable thing and switch to a tolerable thing. That's even what often happens over time, but not always immediately. Probably do anything you can to make it happen faster.

    • altruios an hour ago ago

      We start a new app. Opensource Discord, Self-hosted, federated. Serving that subsection that cares about privacy and security.

      Discord is a good design, and should be replicated rapidly with mutations from competitors galore.

      • debo_ an hour ago ago

        Revolt/stoat has existed for quite a while: https://itsfoss.com/revolt/

      • TechniKris an hour ago ago

        > Opensource Discord, Self-hosted, federated

        Sounds like you want https://matrix.org/

        > Discord is a good design

        Then the main, reference client https://element.io/ or https://fluffy.chat would work great for you.

        ... With the only caveat being that general experience of using Matrix is awful.

        I second the other commenter's suggestion of using https://stoat.chat/ or as it used to be called: Revolt, which matches the "Opensource Discord" requirement perfectly.

        • sneak 38 minutes ago ago

          Matrix is slow, buggy trash with bad clients.

          (Incidentally, this is also the incantation that will cause its primary maintainer to show up in the comment thread and tell me that I’m not using their seemingly annual complete new client rewrite that fixes all of the problems and makes it perfect now.)

    • bakugo an hour ago ago

      If this happened 15+ years ago, a huge chunk of the userbase likely would've migrated to alternatives, potentially resulting in Discord being replaced and falling into irrelevance.

      Today, though, no chance that happens. The current generation literally grew up with it, same for most of the other established social media apps. The concept of alternatives largely does not exist for them. And besides, they were probably already sending pictures of themselves and other personal data to each other through the app, so it's not like Discord doesn't already have all of that.

      • ziml77 an hour ago ago

        There's also people who have been through enough of these moves and community splits that they're incredibly tired of it all.

      • jackcviers3 an hour ago ago

        I mean, I grew up with AOL AIM, Yahoo Messenger, and IRC... yet I switched every time a new tech came out with more of my friends on it. Why do we think discord will be any more sticky than Digg or Slashdot, or any of the above?

        People will migrate, some will stay, and it will just be yet another noise machine they have to check in the list of snapchat, instagram, tiktok, reddit, twitter, twitch, discord, group texts, marco polo, tinder, hinge, roblox, minecraft servers, email, whatsapp and telegram, and slack/teams for work.

        Absolutely exhausting to be honest.

        • andrepd 34 minutes ago ago

          Kids today are alarmingly bad at technology. This is not a "kids these days" situation, this is absolutely true. They understand "tap on icon, open app, there's a feed and DMs".

          I mean it, the tech illiteracy of gen Z/alpha is out of this world, I did not expect a generation that grew up with technology to be so inept, but here we are. But they grew up with a 4x4 grid of app icons, not with a PC.

    • 3acctforcom 30 minutes ago ago

      Remember when Tumbler banned porn? People migrated to other platforms like Reddit, and it died.

      Musk being a Nazi made twitter lose big enough chunks of their community to start Bluesky. Not big enough to do any real damage to the platform, but it still provided critical mass to a fledgling app.

      WhatsApp having a sketchy relationship with the US government boosted Signal.

      Sooooo, what is a good discord replacement?

    • andrepd 42 minutes ago ago

      People tried warning that moving all your discussion forums into a proprietary, closed, unsearchable platform was a bad idea. And it was. But nobody cared.

    • noosphr an hour ago ago

      Shake your head and move on.

      It's not like we haven't seen closed source applications become hostile to their users before. And it's not like we didn't warn people about it.

    • quotemstr an hour ago ago

      One of the starkest social desirability biases in tech is between federated and centralized platforms. Most people, in public, say they support distributed, federated systems, but when push comes to shove, they all use centralized platforms anyway.

      • volf_ an hour ago ago

        atproto is a really good attempt at solving this issue

  • asveikau an hour ago ago

    I think she is a polarizing figure to some, but journalist Taylor Lorenz has been complaining about this sort of thing for a long time. She has been increasingly warning about a future in which we need to scan IDs for all of our online services, in the name of protecting kids. (With the obvious implications about that data leaking, governments using it to track dissidents, etc.)

    • AuthAuth 20 minutes ago ago

      Taylor Lorenz is a schizo who complains about all kinds of things. Her stance on digital ID is completely undermined by her support for authoritarian CCP style government control.

  • bramhaag 5 hours ago ago

    What realistic open source alternatives to Discord are there? I'm currently considering moving to one of these with my friend group:

    - Matrix

    - Stoat, previously revolt (https://stoat.chat/)

    - IRC + Mumble

    - Signal

    • jiffygist 4 minutes ago ago

      Discord's voice rooms with screen sharing is a very cool feature i depend on daily. I haven't seen opensource messenger that implemented this yet.

    • arkh 4 hours ago ago

      One thing most of those lack is an easy way to share screen.

      Now if anyone wants to differentiate their Discord alternative, they want to have most of discord functionalities and add the possibility to be in multiple voice chats (maybe with rights and a channel hierarchy + different push-to-talk binds). It's a missed feature when doing huge operations in games and using the Canary client is not always enough.

    • buovjaga 24 minutes ago ago

      For the latest in IRC tech, you can read my blog posts: https://www.ilmarilauhakangas.fi/irc_technology_news_from_th...

      I wrote the summaries with my own two hands, no LLMs involved.

    • ilikepi an hour ago ago

      This seems like a nice breakdown of some options:

      https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives/

      (Not affiliated)

      • 3acctforcom 20 minutes ago ago

        Honestly, this is HN and founders should pay attention to this. People don't want to host their own shit, they want a one-click easy switch. All of these alternatives have baggage.

        This is your chance to start Bluesky for discord. A competently built, VC backed competitor to exploit a misstep only caused by government overreach due to their colossal market share. 26 million daily active users is a nice guaranteed market to start whittling away at, with an effective marketing campaign to drive a wedge between "little gamers, and big corporate enshittification."

    • drzaiusx11 5 hours ago ago

      Does matrix have decent 1:N client desktop broadcasting with low latency (and high fps) yet? I use discord for "watch parties", video and tabletop gaming...

    • joquarky 3 hours ago ago

      Which of these has been around for over three decades?

      That would be my answer.

      • mrweasel 2 hours ago ago

        Same, depends on what you expect in terms of features and so on, but for chat, IRC works perfectly.

    • rickstanley 5 hours ago ago

      I wonder how Stoat will fare, and how it is currently maintained, in terms of "making money"; my fear is that it would steer into the direction of Discord itself.

      • OuterVale 3 minutes ago ago

        Currently financed on user donations. The future plan is to intoduce further features which are costly to provide behind a paywall to remain sustainable.

    • MYEUHD 2 hours ago ago

      Snikket (https://snikket.org ) with Monal as the iOS client

    • Schlagbohrer 5 hours ago ago

      I have found Element and Matrix to be totally unusable in iOS

      • rsynnott 5 hours ago ago

        Element’s awful, but I’ve found FluffyChat, another matrix client, to be a lot better, albeit with a very silly name.

    • ozlikethewizard 4 hours ago ago

      Last I checked Signal was not fully open source, which is iffy, believe their encryption protocol is still closed. That said its the best of a bad bunch for E2EE messaging. If you're on android I'd recommend doing what I do, which is installing from the APK on the site, manually verifying the sig locally (you can use termux for this), and then lagging ever so slightly behind on updates to avoid potential supply chain or hostile takeover attacks. This is probably over cautious for most threat profiles, but better safe than sorry imo. Also their server side stuff is close sourced, technically this isnt an issue though as long as the E2EE holds up to scrutiny though.

      Edit: My information may be out of date, I cannot find any sources saying any part of the app is closed source these days, do your own research ofc but comfortable saying its the most accessible secure platform.

    • vagrantstreet 2 hours ago ago

      Zulip?

    • lostmsu 5 hours ago ago

      Revolt's rename to stoat is probably worse than any rebranding MSFT done ever.

      • rickstanley 5 hours ago ago

        It's because of the trademark: https://stoat.chat/updates/long-live-stoat

        Nevertheless, I don't like the new name either, oh well...

        I like this comment though:

        Imagine you make a free software project and it runs into trademark issues because people have more money than you to register in more classes than your project.

        And then even though your project existed first, they still come after you anyway.

        And from that an even more expensive rebranding from this as well.

        from: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45626225, not sure how accurate it is, but it makes me want to revolt .

      • rsynnott 3 hours ago ago

        "[beaver emoji] Revolt is Stoat now"

        Argh. If there's no stoat emoji, petition the Unicode Consortium for one, don't just use a beaver. It's not even the right family; the badger emoji would be closer.

      • kibwen 4 hours ago ago

        It's open source, I'm tempted to fork it and do nothing other than change the branding.

    • x01 5 hours ago ago

      For me, the closest alternative to Discord is Stoat. Matrix with Element (or other clients) would be great, but it feels so slow on both desktop and mobile.

    • encom 4 hours ago ago

      IRC was here before Discord, and it will still be here after.

      I've never heard of Stoat. Looks like IRC but it's Electron. Total waste of time.

      • joks 4 hours ago ago

        IRC does not support group voice & video calls, which is one of the primary features of Discord (and previously Skype, from which everyone migrated to Discord in the first place)

        • ibejoeb 43 minutes ago ago

          It's a viable system for the many open source software projects that collaborate over chat. Expo, Typescript, and Effect are relatively large examples. I'll participate there if available and I get locked out. Otherwise, I'll just use the stuff without contributing, no problem.

        • joquarky 3 hours ago ago

          Kids these days...

          • ramon156 an hour ago ago

            Should be blame the majority of the users, or should we accept times change?

      • mvdtnz 2 hours ago ago

        For most Discord users IRC simply does not have the feature set that people need. Basics like simple drag and drop media sharing, threaded conversations, emoji reactions and voice comms, up to more complicated stuff like screen sharing and video calling.

  • Rooster61 5 hours ago ago

    The sad thing is that I think many people will en masse pony up their ID or snapshot without a second thought. I'm not sure if enough people will refuse to actually force Discord to back off this decision (unless their idea is to grab as much data as possible at once with the understanding that they are going to back off either way).

    • ntoskrnl_exe 4 hours ago ago

      I don't imagine this was a 100% their decision, it's more like a response to the epidemic of all the world's governments suddenly coming up with adult verification schemes. Discord has already required it in some countries, and it's definitely easier to get everybody to verify themselves than require it on a per-jurisdiction basis. The personal data they get is a cherry on top.

      Also, this is just the beginning, more social networks will require the same soon.

      • pavel_lishin 4 hours ago ago

        They don't have to comply in advance.

    • accrual 5 hours ago ago

      Especially if it's presented as a pop-up upon launching the app that suggests the user won't be able to talk to their friends/servers without showing ID. Carefully worded language would could spur some % of users to panic at losing years of history and immediately show ID. Folks with less privacy discernment hear "jump" and reply "how high".

      • joquarky 3 hours ago ago

        > panic at losing years of history

        I used to be like that. It was unsustainable and ultimately mentally unhealthy.

    • bsimpson an hour ago ago

      Sounds like when Netflix reneged on family accounts.

      I cancelled my account in protest, but their financials say they made money on the change (and thus all the execs are happy with it).

    • boca_honey 21 minutes ago ago

      I was planning to do that. My work chat is on Discord. I am an adult. Google and Netflix have my legal name and credit card number. I don't see how Discord having my ID is any worse.

    • wolvoleo 5 hours ago ago

      I have done that for stripchat which was also requiring it. Not happy with it but I'd rather use a selfie than a whole ID document which includes an image anyway.

      The thing is, what other option do I have?

      • pavel_lishin 4 hours ago ago

        I'll continue using Discord in teen mode, I guess. I'd rather not lose the current connections & servers I have on there, and I'm not optimistic about people migrating away, especially non-tech people.

    • superxpro12 4 hours ago ago

      I get the draconian side of things, but I am also tired of thousands of russian, indian, domestic-funded etc. bots flooding the zone with divisive propaganda.

      In theory, this seems like it would at least be a step in the direction of combating disinformation.

      I'm curious if there are any better ways to suppress these propaganda machines?

      • JuniperMesos 2 hours ago ago

        How do I know that this message isn't divisive propaganda posted by a bot?

        • Joker_vD an hour ago ago

          Because it's not posted by a Russian/Indian account, duh!

      • joks 4 hours ago ago

        I don't see how disallowing viewing "age-restricted" content through Discord without giving them your ID would have any impact on the spread of disinformation, outside of like, disinfo in the form or pornographic or gory images.

  • jonstaab 7 minutes ago ago

    FOSS, optionally self-hosted alternative built on nostr: https://flotilla.social/

  • dgxyz 11 minutes ago ago

    My social group are moving to a private IRC server already. This is probably the best outcome really. I don't think any of us are under 50. But we have relatives who remember when this would have resulted in some of us being killed. I wish I was sensationalising but I'm not.

  • rsynnott 3 hours ago ago

    It's kind of surprising that no-one has really come out with a proper privacy-preserving approach to this yet. It is clearly _possible_; there are reasonable-looking designs for this. But no-one's doing it; they're just collecting photos and IDs, and then leaking them all over the place.

    • triceratops 28 minutes ago ago

      Here's my solution: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46447282

      The problem is privacy activists and free speech activists (though there's some overlap between the two they aren't the same) oppose age verification by any means since it has the potential to infringe on both ever so slightly. Meanwhile age verification gates are being demanded and thrown up all over the Internet at a frightening pace. So we get only the maximal data collection solutions implemented by people who don't give a shit about privacy or free speech. And the mass surveillance cheerleaders egg them on.

      If privacy and free speech activists understood that a proactive, privacy-preserving approach to age verification is the best outcome we'd be better off.

    • AJ007 an hour ago ago

      It is only a matter of time before ID verification means the camera is always on watching the face of the person looking at the screen.

    • squeegmeister an hour ago ago

      https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2025/06/apple-expands-tools-t...

      What are your thoughts on Apple's approach? You still have to provide your birthdate to apple. But after that, it only only ever shares your age range with other companies that request it, not your birthdate.

    • Sohcahtoa82 an hour ago ago

      > It is clearly _possible_

      Is it?

      I don't think it is.

      I truly don't believe that there's any possible way to verify someone's age without collecting ID from them.

      • davidczech 41 minutes ago ago

        It would seem like a naive solution would be some arrangement where Discord would ask for a proof-of-age from an official service ran by the State (which issues your ID)

      • rcxdude 44 minutes ago ago

        It's possible to (cryptpgraphically verifiably) split up the age verification and the knowledge of what the verification is for.

      • 0x3f an hour ago ago

        Well you could have government-run cryptographically signed tokens. They're already in the business of holding ID data (i.e. they don't need to collect it and this wouldn't increase the attack surface).

        But assuming it has to be a private solution, you could do the same thing but make it a non-profit. Then at least _new_ services you wish to use don't need to collect your ID.

    • jeltz an hour ago ago

      They do not want to solve the problem, they want to collect our IDs. If they would have wanted to actually solve it they would not have done this on legislations where it is not a requirement.

    • orthogonal_cube an hour ago ago

      As others have said, it’s obvious that no real attempts have been made by anyone to create a privacy-focused solution because the end goal is to collect photo IDs.

      Occasionally in my free time I have been tinkering with a certificate-based solution that could fulfill this sort of need for age verification. It’s not the most robust idea but it’s simple enough using most of what we already have. Creating a minimal protocol which doesn’t share actual identifying information nor metadata of the site you’re accessing is trivial. If I can make an 80% solution in less than 100 hours of my free time then some groups with more money and intelligence could propose a dead-simple and easy-to-adopt solution just as easily.

    • Etheryte an hour ago ago

      No privacy is simpler and the simpler solution is cheaper. If there's no real incentive to go with another option, companies will go with the cheaper option.

  • diogenes_atx 3 hours ago ago

    To add context to the discussion, it is important to recall that Discord was reported to have recently filed paperwork with the SEC for an IPO [1]. Thus it seems likely that the real reason for the age verification (i.e., user identification) policy is to boost its perceived earnings potential among Wall Street investors. According to this theory, Discord is the new Facebook.

    [1] https://techcrunch.com/2026/01/07/discords-ipo-could-happen-...

  • haritha-j 5 hours ago ago

    > and will see content filters for any content Discord detects as graphic or sensitive.

    I didn't even realise discord scans all the images that i send and recieve.

    • pixl97 5 hours ago ago

      Really I've come to the conclusion that anything I send out of my LAN is probably kept on a server forever and ingested by LLMs, and indexed to be used against me in perpetuity at this point, regardless of what any terms or conditions of the site I'm using actually says.

      • kmfrk 5 hours ago ago

        Speaking of hosting, Discord used to be one of the biggest (inadvertent) image hosts, so they might have set up the system to reduce legal exposure than to monitor conversations per se.[1]

        A lot of the internet broke the day they flipped that switch off.

        Weren't external Tumblr hotlinks also a thing back in the day?

        [1]: https://www.reddit.com/r/discordapp/comments/16uy0an/not_sur...

      • palata 5 hours ago ago

        To be fair, the terms and conditions probably say that they can do whatever they want with that data :-).

      • Gud 5 hours ago ago

        Don’t forget all the government creeps snooping on the wires.

        • xnx 4 hours ago ago

          Until the current administration, I was much more bothered by private misuse/abuse of date than the government. Now I worry about both.

          • kmijyiyxfbklao 3 hours ago ago

            Good. Being OK with authoritarianism because they are on your side is never good.

          • raw_anon_1111 2 hours ago ago

            That was always the wrong threat model hierarchy. I have always been more concerned what the federal, my state and my local government can do when given more power/informstion than the federal government

          • Gud 4 hours ago ago

            Why? People who volunteer to work for these government drag nets must be total psychos.

            • pixl97 3 hours ago ago

              Volunteer? I mean they do get paid.

              The thing is it's a mix of both.

              You have the fervent that love recording everything "for the good of the people". But then you'll just have piles of people with separation of duties that do things with very little understanding of where they fit in the process and very little care to.

            • joquarky 3 hours ago ago

              We gave those brogrammers the keys to the machine when we made programming more accessible.

    • lpcvoid 15 minutes ago ago

      Well it's not E2EE, so what did you expect? Nothing you do on Discord is private, everything is screened, categorized and readable by third parties.

    • jsheard 5 hours ago ago

      Pretty much every non-E2EE platform is scanning every uploaded image for CSAM at least, that's a baseline ass-covering measure.

      • mapt 5 hours ago ago

        And E2EE platforms like Mega are now being censored on some platforms specifically because they're E2EE, and so the name itself must be treated as CSAM.

        As people who want to talk about words like "megabytes" or "megapixels" or "megaphones" or "Megaman" or "Megan" on Facebook are finding out.

    • RegnisGnaw 5 hours ago ago

      They have to at least for CSAM.

    • palata 5 hours ago ago

      Everything that is not end-to-end encrypted understandably has to do it.

  • Venn1 an hour ago ago

    I set up a forum when I started my site for Linux content creation. Discord had become a black hole for technical know-how on a scale IRC could never dream of, and finding answers to common questions was nigh impossible since the technology has changed and the modern way to solve problem X was never asked in a forum and never indexed by a search engine. Granted, Reddit provided a bit of a stopgap over the last decade, but the solutions in the comments these days are more often than not a confidently incorrect copy-pasta from GPT.

    I use Discord for chat and voice calls since that is what I expect from a chat app, but the amount of companies that have built their community / knowledge base / support system around Discord is worrying. You know they can just delete that, right?

    I'll continue to use Discord for chat until prompted to put my face in the hole :)

  • hollow-moe 3 minutes ago ago

    Glad I left months ago

  • eshack94 7 minutes ago ago

    Is this the final straw that kills their platform?

  • drzaiusx11 5 hours ago ago

    F** that, guess I'm leaving that platform too now...

    • boca_honey 18 minutes ago ago

      I think this will be the kneejerk reaction of many, but then you'll have to face the consequences (de facto social isolation) and probably acquiesce. I had the same reaction when platforms started asking for my cellphone number... after some years I just started giving it to them. Now I don't even think about it.

      • lpcvoid 10 minutes ago ago

        Then you decided to cave in and forego your privacy. Don't assume others will falter in the same fashion.

      • jesse_dot_id 11 minutes ago ago

        Your solution is subservience.

      • sneak 13 minutes ago ago

        I don’t sign up for those accounts, and I change my mobile number every 90 days.

  • bitbytebane an hour ago ago

    Discord has always been IRC with extra censorship and spying. Nothing really new, here. Just use IRC.

    • AuthAuth 6 minutes ago ago

      IRC sucks tho. It doesnt have half the features that make discord enjoyable.

    • jusgu an hour ago ago

      it’s not that simple. many (if not most) people would rather be where everyone already is, even if there’s less privacy

    • vkou an hour ago ago

      If you can't think of good reasons for why someone might use discord over IRC, you probably haven't thought about this enough.

  • m132 34 minutes ago ago

    There's a bright side to this. With people getting used to every website casually requiring a face scan and ID pic, setting up phishing campaigns and opening rogue bank accounts is going to become easier than ever.

  • nickstinemates an hour ago ago

    Key changes are

    - ID verification to see porn on Discord.

    - Also, some warnings to not befriend stangers.

    Not very heavy handed, you can google porn anytime. I am not sure who this serves.

    • WorldMaker 35 minutes ago ago

      It serves UK, EU, and various US States' regulations to "protect the kids".

      Discord is only the next biggest canary in the coal mine. These regulations are going to force a lot more websites and apps to do this, too.

      I wish these sorts of regulations had been written hand-in-hand with a more directly technically-minded approach. The world needs a better technical way to try to verify a person's estimated age cohort without a full ID check and/or AI-analyzed video face scan before we start regulating "every" website that may post "adult content" (however you choose to define that) starts to require such checks.

  • hiprob 5 hours ago ago

    Are they going to leak IDs of minors again like they did last time? Who does this protect exactly?

    • malfist 4 hours ago ago

      It protects the investors so they can IPO

  • serf 23 minutes ago ago

    to everyone that tried to persuade me to move my projects from forums to discord :

    phpBB never made me scan my face.

  • hoistbypetard 5 hours ago ago

    In case anyone else can’t read it: https://archive.is/PvpAx

  • hxegon 24 minutes ago ago

    Honestly I think this is necessary. I'm not sure how heavy handed their exact implementation of stuff like content filtering would be, but I've seen way too much sketchy stuff on discord servers. Predators, blackmail, harassment campaigns, it's not great and a lot of the servers I'm in already require ID verification by mods to even chat in general. It'd be great if this was opt-in on a server by server basis but I could see that being a problem too.

    I've seen way too many governments / companies use "protect the children" as a way to try and push overreaching garbage policy, however I think this one actually might help.

    That said, depends on exact details of how they want to do this. We'll see how it goes.

    • sneak 14 minutes ago ago

      Showing ID doesn’t stop crime or criminals, or stop fake accounts.

      I’m simply going to scan someone else’s ID to keep my account.

  • stemlord an hour ago ago

    Curious how this will affect midjourney's earnings

    • dvngnt_ 27 minutes ago ago

      what is the relation?

      • codergautam 13 minutes ago ago

        Midjourney is primarily a Discord bot that generates images from text prompts within the Discord app. Now many paying Midjourney users could be forced to verify themselves.

  • elephanlemon 5 hours ago ago

    Great news, there’s finally going to be sufficient motivation for people to both build out and use open source alternatives.

  • psychoslave 19 minutes ago ago

    I'm so glad I always refused to accept this one.

    I don't know what people need as lesson. We already have so many FLOW options, and yet they are so many running after the last shiny ready for enshitification ready to go platform.

    Expect them to sell your whole life to whatever party with enough money to throw at their face.

  • sph 4 hours ago ago

    Good riddance Discord. Any alternative for the masses?

    They’re not gonna use Slack or phpBB.

    • apopapo 3 hours ago ago

      Why would Slack not be affected by the same stupid laws?

      • tavavex 3 hours ago ago

        If you're a Slack user, I don't think they need your ID to tell that you're an adult

        More seriously, it will become a problem on there is a significant user migration to there and a repeat of the mass hysteria. Due to being more niche, these smaller platforms are probably not in danger right now.

  • cbold an hour ago ago

    When the openclaw/moltbook fad dies, those Mac mini's could be repurposed for a p2p forum network.

  • 0x_rs 4 hours ago ago

    I predict out-of-the-box deepfake live-camera software will get a bump in popularity, there's already plenty solutions available that need minimal tinkering. It should be trivial to set up for the purpose of verification and I don't see those identity verification providers being able to do anything about it. Of course, that'll only mean stricter verification through ID only later on, much to the present-and-future surveillance state's benefit.

    https://github.com/hacksider/Deep-Live-Cam

  • jesse_dot_id 14 minutes ago ago

    No thanks

  • Insanity 5 hours ago ago

    To be honest it kinda sounds like a benefit for my use-case. I don’t engage with adult content on there and use it for one server with friends.

    And this will reduce spam from random accounts. Will see if it remains usable without uploading my Id.

  • palata 5 hours ago ago

    > Users who aren’t verified as adults will not be able to access age-restricted servers and channels

    I genuinely wonder which proportion of the users want access to age-restricted servers and channels...

    Feels like it should be just fine not to verify the age.

    • pteraspidomorph 5 hours ago ago

      Here's how Discord works. A third or so of its features, such as forum channels (EDIT: I think this specific example was wrong; stage and announcement channels, but not forum channels) or role self-assignment, are locked behind Community Mode. After enabling Community Mode, server owners are NOT ALLOWED to turn off content filtering anymore, meaning that by default, content in every channel may be filtered out by systems you cannot configure.

      The only way for the server owner to circumvent the filter is to mark a channel as "NSFW", which doesn't necessarily mean the channel actually contains any NSFW content.

      This change will not actually require ID for content confirmed to be NSFW. It will require ID for each and every "NSFW mode" (unfiltered) channel. The end result is that you have three choices:

      - Ditch Discord features implemented in recent years (or at least this is currently possible) - this prevents a server from being listed as public;

      - Require ID checks from all your users (per channel);

      - Have everything scanned from all your users (per channel).

      • palata 5 hours ago ago

        Are you saying that you can "mark" the channel as "NSFW", and Discord will stop scanning your content, possibly allowing you to share very illegal content through their servers?

        Sounds weird to me. Pretty sure that they legally have to make sure that they don't host illegal content. Or does "NSFW" enable some kind of end-to-end encryption?

        • pteraspidomorph 5 hours ago ago

          That has always been the case, yes, though I'm not sure what you mean by "illegal" content. There is only a small overlap between NSFW and illegal content, and the NSFW filter has never been concerned with, uh, violating photograph copyright or something.

          You don't have to take my word for it, just check it yourself, although it seems that this week, they renamed the NSFW setting to "Age-Restricted Channel" (in preparation for this change, no doubt). The verification-related portion of the behavior I described was implemented for the UK months ago.

          The description still contains: "Age-restricted channels are exempt from the explicit content filter."

          EDIT: IANAL (or american) but if Discord was policing content for legality rather than age-appropriateness, wouldn't they lose DMCA Safe Harbor protections?

          • palata 4 hours ago ago

            > The description still contains: "Age-restricted channels are exempt from the explicit content filter."

            Wait! This does not mean they do not scan it. What I understand from that statement is that they filter explicit content, as in they prevent it from appearing on the user's screen.

            When you enable the "NSFW" mode, you tell Discord "it's okay, don't filter out anything". But Discord probably still scans everything.

            So that makes sense to me: if you don't validate your age, then Discord will not allow you to join channels that disable the "adult" filtering. I can personally live without adult content on Discord...

            • pteraspidomorph 4 hours ago ago

              OK, but you're not the one making that decision and you don't know/can't control how that decision is being made.

              • palata 7 minutes ago ago

                Well you're not using Discord in the hope that they are censorship-resistant, are you? :-)

                They can read everything that you send already, if your problem is that they may filter something that they consider NSFW and you don't... well I am not sure how big of a problem that is.

    • mjr00 4 hours ago ago

      > I genuinely wonder which proportion of the users want access to age-restricted servers and channels...

      Way more than you think. There are tons of Discord servers that only exist to share pornography.

  • AbraKdabra 13 minutes ago ago

    Yeah good fucking luck with that. Time for the "discord alternatives" search on Google.

  • gloosx an hour ago ago

    can't wait to beat it with a face-swap or some random driving license found on the internet

  • instagib 3 hours ago ago

    Credit card verification not an option.

    Facial video estimates or submit an id card.

    Option 3: if we analyze all of your data we have and see you are not going to bed at 8pm for middle school, you get adult status.

  • palata 5 hours ago ago

    I wonder if Discord is legally forced to do that, or if they would rather do it themselves (and collect the data $$$) rather than wait to be imposed a solution they don't own.

    I feel like age verification will come, there is no way around it (unlike ChatControl and the likes, age verification seems reasonably feasible and has a lot of political traction right now).

    But I would rather have a privacy-preserving solution for that, e.g. from the government (which already knows my age).

    • WorldMaker 27 minutes ago ago

      Discord is just the next biggest canary in the coal mine of increasing regulatory pressure in the EU, UK (which has had this Discord verification for months now due to laws there), and various US states.

      I do wish that the lawmakers had worked more hand-in-hand with technical exports on more privacy-preserving solutions ahead of enforcing these laws. But Discord is doing this because enforcement has already started.

    • anonymousab 5 hours ago ago

      There are probably enough regions where it is required or will be required soon, that it makes sense to just get it over with.

      The Internet is more or less becoming a locked down, controlled and fully observed thing for end users and citizens, so adapting to that world sooner and working within it is just sensible future-proofing.

      This also lets them more safely target older users with ads, purchase requests, etc. and new integrations for gambling and other high ROI systems.

      • selfhoster11 an hour ago ago

        GeoIP this nonsense. Legal liability is solved as a "good-faith effort" and those living in jurisdictions where this doesn't apply (or use a VPN) don't need to be stripped of privacy.

    • plagiarist 2 hours ago ago

      Privacy preserving between you and the third party, but the implication is that the government now sees what you are using.

      • palata 12 minutes ago ago

        > but the implication is that the government now sees what you are using.

        No. The whole point of privacy preserving technology is that they don't.

        The idea is that the government checks your identity (they know who you are) and give you an anonymous cryptographic proof that you are above, say, 18. They don't know what you do with it.

        You give this cryptographic proof to Discord, and they know that if you have access to that proof, then you have access to someone who is above 18. They don't know who you are.

        Sure, you could ask an adult to give you a token. But you can also ask an adult to buy you alcohol or to do the age verification scan for you.

  • anonnon 22 minutes ago ago

    Thanks to all the OSS projects that adopted this in preference to mailing lists to better appeal to zoomers. (And note that while these projects often do still have mailing lists, most of the actual discussion now takes place on Discord, behind an authwall.)

  • kmnc 5 hours ago ago

    “We will find ways to bring people back” yeah because that usually works. I imagine this gets rolled back or siloed to only adult specific channels.

  • ballooney 24 minutes ago ago

    What are your favourite active irc channels for technical hobbies?

  • rdudek 5 hours ago ago

    Genuine question, what is stopping users from using AI to generate a fake face or ID to bypass this restriction?

    • anonymousab 5 hours ago ago

      There is a bit of an arms race between id verification systems and users bypassing them when AI gen. Which is really just ai generated images vs. AI generated image detection.

      In practice, nothing will stop it, the tooling will gradually get better at detecting prior fakes and banning those users while the newer fakes will go undetected for longer.

      Putting up the requirement satisfies their CYA requirements here. The race between AI fraud vs. detection is something they can just ignore and let happen on its own.

      • akersten 3 hours ago ago

        > prior fakes

        But they assured me my biometrics are deleted after uploading!

  • keithnz an hour ago ago

    lot of people complaining, but, seems like they rolled it out already in UK and Australia... no real complaints I know of, and I'm in NZ and are on NZ/Aussie discords. Also teen mode doesn't actually seem that restrictive. Seems an ok move to me. But for whatever reason people seem to froth at the mouth when it comes to discord on here.

    • rwmj an hour ago ago

      I have a discord account that I use very rarely, and just tried it (from the UK) and it didn't ask me for any ID or face scan. If they do start doing that, I'll simply stop using the service.

  • montacir_AL 28 minutes ago ago

    no more discord GenZ

  • gigel82 36 minutes ago ago

    It's clear "age verification" is not something we'll get rid of, so I think instead we should push for a publicly verifiable double-blind (zero-knowledge proof) solution that can ensure it only gives the websites a boolean and doesn't allow correlation from either side.

    The alternative is having to give your ID to Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and all the other bad actors...

  • sheikhnbake 5 hours ago ago

    I foresee Discord receiving a lot of identification documents from the likes of Ben Dover

  • jszymborski 5 hours ago ago

    So my friend group has been looking for alternatives for a while now that feel like discord, works on mobile and desktop, and has voice chat.

    I use Signal but the UI is very different from Discord.

    I've had very mixed experiences with Element + Matrix, Element keeps crashing on mobile, and while voice chat kinda exists in Element it's not been great imho.

    I looked into hosting Rocket.chat, Zullip, and Mattermost but from what I recall voice + mobile were either missing or paywalled at a per-user price.

    Any recommendations?

    • tmtvl 5 hours ago ago

      I seem to recall Jitsi working pretty well.

      • jszymborski 5 hours ago ago

        Jitsi is great but the element integration felt clunky. Maybe I'll have to revisit it.

  • anon_anon12 4 hours ago ago

    Another company jumping on the bandwagon to data-farm in the pretext of safeguarding children. I really wonder if there's an actual method to actually safeguard children while also not holding on to data. Because, genuinely, you can't question this.. Companies would just say "we are trying to protect kids" and that'd be the end of the argument.

    • itsmorgantime 3 hours ago ago

      I really wonder if when this is fully implemented if they will have any safe guards against selling "adult verified" accounts. With AI being a possible work around for those who don't want to share an ID, selling accounts would be another big issue unless they check for IP addresses and block based on locations and logins. EDIT: I see in another comment that its against TOS to sell accounts, I doubt that has stopped anyone before though.

  • brushfoot 5 hours ago ago

    > Content Filters: Discord users will need to be age-assured as adults in order to unblur sensitive content or turn off the setting. [1]

    That presumably includes selfies?

    That means that to exchange racy photos on Discord, each person must first record a facial age estimation video or upload identification documents.

    That seems dystopian.

    1: https://discord.com/press-releases/discord-launches-teen-by-...

    • gjsman-1000 5 hours ago ago

      How do you know one party isn’t 15 when the other is 25?

      You’re never going to convince a parent or a lawmaker or even me that this is dystopian. Seems like a perfectly reasonable safeguard.

      • brushfoot 5 hours ago ago

        > How do you know one party isn’t 15 when the other is 25?

        You don't. That's why parents need to be involved in their children's lives.

        CSAM is the easy excuse, anyway. That's the one lawmakers use, and most people are against CSAM, myself included, so the excuse goes down easy. But the impetus they don't talk about is monitoring and control.

        The answer isn't to destroy privacy for everyone. The government and these corporations don't need to know what you're doing every second of the day.

        • gjsman-1000 2 hours ago ago

          > That's why parents need to be involved in their children's lives.

          Can't, aren't, look at iPad kids, won't. This is about as logical as saying people should just drive safely, so we don't need guardrails and seat belts. Or saying parents should always watch their children, so we don't need age verification at the alcohol store. Besides, it's not like the school library or the friends of friends don't have devices themselves you as a parent can't see.

          Parents should not need to be tech experts or helicopters to feel their kids are safe online. That's fundamentally unreasonable. In which case, privacy and child safety need to come to an unhappy compromise, just like any other conflicting interest.

          For that matter, I'm surprised that HN automatically always accepts the "slippery slope" fallacy while lambasting it everywhere else.

          • tavavex 40 minutes ago ago

            > This is about as logical as saying people should just drive safely, so we don't need guardrails and seat belts.

            This is a terrible analogy. Regulations related to driving only apply to drivers, if you're a pedestrian then you're not subject to basically any regulations that licensed drivers have to abide by. On the other hand, internet regulation like this punishes absolutely everyone to safeguard a small group, that being parents. It's like legally forcing pedestrians to wrap themselves in bubble wrap while outside so the careless drivers who couldn't behave don't dent their cars and get hurt when a pedestrian flies in their windshield, when they inevitably collide with one of them. Why is any of this their responsibility?

            The fact that there is absolutely zero effort in pursuing any non-punitive options (like forcing ISPs to put networks of clients with kids in child-friendly mode, where the adult has to enter a password to temporarily view the unrestricted internet on their network, which should cover 90%+ of cases; or doing any of the proposed non-identifying proofs of age, like a generic "I'm an adult" card you can buy at the convenience store) should tell you that this has very little to do with actual concern for children. They went out of their way to enact the least private, most invasive, most disruptive option, which will not even work better than any privacy-friendly options, unless you expect literally every website on the internet to be compliant. Teens are smart, they'll be able to find any holes in that system, just like the generations before them.

            > For that matter, I'm surprised that HN automatically always accepts the "slippery slope" fallacy while lambasting it everywhere else.

            Slippery slope arguments are not automatically a fallacy. They can be if the causative relationship is weak or if the slope is massively exaggerated. But if neither of these things are true, "slippery slopes" is just looking at the trends and expecting them to continue. You can't look at a linear graph and say "well, I think there's no most likely option from now on, it could go any way really" without an argument for why the trend would suddenly deviate. The internet had been tightening up and the walls have been closing in for a long time, why would that change?

      • Kim_Bruning 5 hours ago ago

        They'll now have kompromat associated with a name, address, and id number (be it social security, BSN, or whatever your country calls it)

  • stuffn an hour ago ago

    Finally I feel validated complaining for the last decade about the move away from IRC/teamspeak to centralized services. I've been called all kinds of names.

    Now those same people are complaining they're gonna have to submit their faces to discord. Which will eventually be used to prosecute or commit fraud. I'm left wondering if "tech enthusiasts" are ever actually correct.

  • ethin 5 hours ago ago

    You have got to be kidding me. What is it with these lawmakers and websites demanding people do all of this stuff using services that nobody has ever heard of? I myself (as someone who is blind) have never been able to do the face scanning thing because the information they provide (for, you know, getting my face focused) is just massively insufficient. And a lot of the ones I've seen also require me to (as an alternative) do some weird ID scanning with my camera instead of, you know, just allowing me to upload my ID or something? (Then again, I really wouldn't want to give my ID to some service nobody has ever heard of either, so there.) I also am concerned when tfa says "a photo of an identity document" what does this mean? If I have to scan my ID with my camera, that's not exactly going to be simple for me to pull off. I get that we need to protect kids, but this is not the way. Not when it is discrimination by another name for individuals with disabilities (as just one example).

  • josefritzishere 3 hours ago ago

    The CEO of Discord is Humam Sakhnini. He's from McKinsey. So that tracks.

  • malfist 4 hours ago ago

    This is just the latest in a long trend of increasing spying on users. Why bother having to guess who your user is, or fingerprint a browser if you can just force them to show you their national ID?

    This is transparently about spying on people, not "protecting children". The real world doesn't require you to show your ID to every business you frequent, or every advertiser you walk by. Someone can yell a swear word on the sidewalk, and not everyone within ear shot has to show ID.

  • sneak 18 minutes ago ago

    Reminder: “age verification” is just another way of spelling “every single user of the service must provide a government ID to use it”.

  • kmeisthax 5 hours ago ago

    Any age verification process that does not consider the age of the account as a verification option is a data trap, plain and simple.

    • mmlkrx 37 minutes ago ago

      They are planning on doing something similar:

      Discord is also rolling out an age inference model that analyzes metadata like the types of games a user plays, their activity on Discord, and behavioral signals like signs of working hours or the amount of time they spend on Discord.

      “If we have a high confidence that they are an adult, they will not have to go through the other age verification flows,”

      • varjolintu 30 minutes ago ago

        I'm curious to know what this "model" actually means. A real-time AI monitoring for conversations?

    • RupertSalt 5 hours ago ago

      How does anyone know whether a family is engaging in that time-honored tradition of passing down accounts from grandfather, to father, to son, to child, and their posterity, in perpetuity?

      Seriously though, unless you have positively identified the person who created the account in the first place, you have 0% chance of knowing whether it is the same person using it today.

      Gamers sell their high-level accounts all the time. It would be a simple matter of economics that the Discord users with the oldest accounts sell them to 12-year-olds. Likewise, accounts are shared willy-nilly, whether or not that violates the rules. And accounts can be stolen or compromised, if you're really hard up.

      • smrq 5 hours ago ago

        How often do you suppose they will be re-checking your ID? Once every... never?

        • AJ007 an hour ago ago

          They need to have an always-on camera looking at the person using the device. No camera, no discord.

      • Quillbert182 5 hours ago ago

        But under that argument, you would have to prove your age on a regular basis, the plan right now appears to be that each account would only need to do so once.

        • pixl97 5 hours ago ago

          Just remember that the Terms of Service you agreed to are about as firm as explosive diarrhea.

        • RupertSalt 5 hours ago ago

          You agree not to license, sell, lend, or transfer your account, Discord username, vanity URL, or other unique identifier without our prior written approval. We also reserve the right to delete, change, or reclaim your username, URL, or other identifier.

          If transfer of accounts is a policy violation, then Discord has legal cover to confidently assert that, once ID is verified, the ID'd person is the owner and controller of the account thereafter.

          Account selling, stealing, and sharing will certainly still happen, but that's grounds for banning, and not Discord's legal liability anymore.

          • Quillbert182 5 hours ago ago

            Then why could they not also legally get away with using account age as a proxy?

      • Ekaros 5 hours ago ago

        Just ban that in TOS. As we know TOS is inviolable. As such it is not possible to sell, gift or otherwise transfer an account. At least this should be considered how it works for age verification. If account transfer is found out account can be terminated thus closing the loop hole.

      • RegnisGnaw 5 hours ago ago

        No law or regulation is ever 100% effective in real life. Income tax is not collected 100% effectively. Should we not do it? Criminals are not caught 100% of the time, should we not do it?

        Of course this won't be 100% effective, maybe 80-90% effective. That's all they need and expect from this system.

        • gjsman-1000 5 hours ago ago

          Exactly.

          HN is constantly obsessed with is it perfectly effective?

          No law, none, is perfectly effective. Speed limits certainly aren’t self enforcing, but remove your neighborhood’s speed limits first if you truly believe laws must be demonstrated perfect.

    • wolvoleo 5 hours ago ago

      Has discord even been around for 18 years?

    • sigio 5 hours ago ago

      Yeah, my youtube/google account is almost as old as youtube itself is, but will constantly ask me to verify my age when clicking on something as marked 'not for kids'. Can we just get the leisure-suit-larry age-verification system ;)

    • mistrial9 5 hours ago ago

      Apple deleted many legacy mac-dot-com accounts without qualms, not long ago. It was the phone accounts, in so many ways, driving it .. IMHO

  • alex1138 an hour ago ago

    You can, of course, not do this (you meaning the company, Discord)

    You can choose to be respectful of people who have valid reasons for not providing ID

    But you want that sweet IPO money (as stated elsewhere in this thread). You don't actually care about the internet and how anonymity is a cool thing for certain vulnerable groups

    All these tech CEOs should face prison time and I'm not joking. They've displayed a complete laissez faire attitude to all of these concerns

  • ChrisArchitect 5 hours ago ago
  • foobarian 5 hours ago ago

    Looks like it might be opt-in by server.

  • cynicalsecurity 5 hours ago ago

    Alternative: run your own self-hosted messaging server for you, your family and friends. No company should ever get such sensitive data as private conversations.

    Use Discord with a throw-away account. Create a character in GTA 5 on your laptop and show its face (in "selfie" mode) to the web-camera on another computer with Discord open. All face scan checks so far gladly accept it. Instagram has been requiring occasional face checks for ages already.

  • Simulacra 5 hours ago ago

    No thanks. Discord, it has been fun, but I decline.

  • nananana9 5 hours ago ago

    Honestly they're probably big enough to get away with it.

    If it was only friend groups it would kill them for sure, we've seen that many times, but given the absurd amount many large online communities on Discord, I'd wager they can force it down and be relatively unscathed.

    They played the long game - they provided a good service for 10 years, and got REALLY big before they started the enshittification process.

  • ravenstine 5 hours ago ago

    Haven't cared about Discord in a long time. In fact I'm glad they're continuing to shoot themselves in the foot.

    During the pandemic, I was on a Discord server for folks to socialize and blow off steam about the whole situation. Yes, there were some anti-vaxx wackos, but overall the place was civil and balanced, and I met some interesting people through it. We cracked jokes and it was a little bit of fun in a tough time.

    One day I came to discover that Discord had banned the server for allegedly violating... something. I wish I had written down everyone's emails because I permanently lost contact with a bunch of friends in an instant.

    I never signed in to Discord again, in spite of times where some other social group wanted to use it. I vowed never to use Discord again. Fuck those guys and the Teslas they rode in on. I hope this ID verification thing is another big step towards their irrelevancy.

    • alex1138 an hour ago ago

      You should be more tolerant of the "anti-vaxx wackos". The covid 'vaccine' has a very large number of negative externalities, confirmed by scores of credentialed doctors and researchers

    • gjsman-1000 5 hours ago ago

      Discord has 150 million monthly active users.

      They’ll be fine. To them, this is just another internet boycott, with all that entails. Reddit survived a worse one and grew afterward.

      • ravenstine 4 hours ago ago

        The difference with Reddit is it has way more persistent value. Everything on Discord is throwaway, but valuable posts on Reddit from years past are easily retrievable. The two aren't so comparable.

        One of the unspoken reasons many people have for using Discord is they don't want what they say to easily be associated with them in perpetuity. Requiring ID really chips away at that, in spite of what Discord has to say about privacy around ID.

        By no means am I saying that Discord will go extinct. I just haven't observed anything about it that's irreplaceable. Reddit, on the other hand, has a wealth of discussion dating back to the mid-to-late 00's.

        • Terr_ 15 minutes ago ago

          > valuable posts on Reddit from years past are easily retrievable.

          Rant: Several years ago, everything I'd ever written for over a decade on Reddit vanished one morning for no discernible reason, including all nested replies from other people. I appealed, my appeal was "granted", and nothing changed, except the appeals page refused to work because it said my account was already in good standing.

          I dug up an ancient account I had used for resume feedback, asked around in the help subreddits, and it too was killed the same way.

        • encom 4 hours ago ago

          >valuable posts on Reddit

          [removed]

          [removed]

          [removed]

          [removed]

          [removed]

          • ravenstine 3 hours ago ago

            There's this thing called the Wayback Machine, but I lol'd at your response. It's not untrue. xD

  • verdverm 5 hours ago ago

    How many people are doing age restricted stuff on Discord (besides the specifically there for adult content and gooning crowd)

    All of my use is primarily professional and gaming and has no age concerns

    • stuffn an hour ago ago

      Does it matter? The problem is that everyone uses discord for everything. It's not an isolated platform, it's THE platform if you want to have friends.

    • sigio 5 hours ago ago

      Gaming certainly has age-concerns, many games are rated 13/15/16+ or 18+

      But yeah, leaving discord... they are not getting my ID/Photo

      • reorder9695 4 hours ago ago

        Ratings aren't legally binding though are they? I bought games older rated than I was, and it's totally up to people's parents what they're allowed to play. Are you suggesting a 15 year old should be allowed to play the 16 rated game but not discuss it?

        • verdverm 4 hours ago ago

          Can their parents also approve their discord usage?

          Are you saying they need parents to buy the game, but shouldn't to join chats about the same game?

      • verdverm 4 hours ago ago

        At least Google is pushing on zero-knowledge solutions

        Maybe they can force everyone's hand like they did for https

        https://blog.google/innovation-and-ai/technology/safety-secu...

  • seneca 5 hours ago ago

    Hard no. Reality is that this push is everywhere. Authoritarian governments are cracking down hard on dissent, they're not going to leave huge platforms for communication untouched. We'll need open source decentralized alternatives.

    • accrual 5 hours ago ago

      Indeed, the article basically says as much in more pacifying terms:

      > driven by an international legal push for age checks and stronger child safety measures

    • SoftTalker an hour ago ago

      HN: Social media is terrible and ruining kids' mental health.

      Also HN: Any attempt to limit access to verified adults is an "authoritarian crackdown" and totally unacceptable.

      • z0r an hour ago ago

        Children generally have these things called "parents" who are supposedly responsible for their well being. Oh hey, suddenly there isn't a contradiction.

        • SoftTalker an hour ago ago

          Right, helicopter parenting. Gets a lot of praise here, I forgot.

      • pseudalopex 18 minutes ago ago

        HN commenters are many. Not 1. And 1 person can believe 2 things are bad.

  • onetokeoverthe 5 hours ago ago

    another one bites the dust.

  • eur0pa 5 hours ago ago

    No thank you, get fucked

  • josefritzishere 5 hours ago ago

    This is not OK.

  • dchi04 an hour ago ago

    A lot of whining here about how this is an imperfect response to the issue of children being exploited on Discord / using the platform to engage with inappropriate content.

    Until someone offers up something better, I take these types of initiatives from social media platforms as huge wins. Ignoring the problem will not make it better. We've been ignoring it for about 20 years now, and it's only gotten worse.

    • OkayPhysicist 28 minutes ago ago

      The thing stopping kids from getting "exploited on Discord" ought to be the same thing that stops them from stabbing each other with pencils. Raise your kids better, and stop expecting everyone else to tolerate your failure to do so.

    • peterlk an hour ago ago

      The solution is parents! Stop making your bad parenting my problem!

    • pwndByDeath an hour ago ago

      Be responsible for your spawn and don't be a weenie about asserting boundaries for them.