FTC Clarifies COPPA Stance, Backs Age Verification Technologies for Platforms
26 de Fevereiro de 2026, 03:20
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FTC Encourages Adoption of Age Verification Technologies
The new FTC policy statement aims to remove regulatory uncertainty that has long discouraged platforms from implementing age verification technologies. Under the COPPA Rule, operators must obtain verifiable parental consent before collecting personal information from children under 13. However, determining whether a user is a child often requires collecting some form of personal data—creating a compliance dilemma for companies. By clarifying its enforcement stance, the FTC is effectively encouraging platforms to adopt stronger age verification technologies rather than relying on outdated self-reported age gates that are easy for children to bypass. “Age verification technologies are some of the most child-protective technologies to emerge in decades,” said Christopher Mufarrige, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “Our statement incentivizes operators to use these innovative tools, empowering parents to protect their children online.” The policy reflects the reality that children’s internet usage has dramatically expanded since COPPA was first enacted in 1998. Today’s digital ecosystem includes social platforms, gaming environments, streaming services, and AI-driven applications—many of which were unimaginable when the law was originally written.Why Age Verification Technologies Are Becoming Essential
The FTC’s position comes at a time when policymakers globally are questioning whether existing frameworks are sufficient to protect minors online. Several U.S. states have already begun introducing regulations requiring platforms to implement age verification technologies. The core issue is simple: platforms cannot protect children if they cannot reliably identify them. Traditional age-gating methods—such as asking users to enter their date of birth—have proven ineffective. More advanced age verification technologies now use biometric estimation, identity verification tools, or secure third-party validation systems to improve accuracy. However, these tools often require temporary collection of personal data, which previously raised concerns about COPPA violations. The FTC’s updated enforcement approach attempts to resolve this contradiction.Conditions Platforms Must Follow Under the FTC Policy
While the FTC is offering flexibility, the policy is far from a free pass. Platforms must comply with several strict conditions when using age verification technologies, including:- Using collected data strictly for age verification purposes
- Deleting the information promptly after verification
- Implementing strong security safeguards
- Providing clear transparency to parents and children
- Sharing data only with trusted third-party providers capable of maintaining confidentiality
- Ensuring the verification method produces reasonably accurate results
