Gaming: From Next Week, Australia Will Require Users To Verify Their Age To...

Gaming: From Next Week, Australia Will Require Users To Verify Their Age To...

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Australians attempting to access online games with an R18+ classification will soon need to prove their age, and if publishers don't comply they could face fines of nearly AU$50 million. The change applies to online games only—in other words, singleplayer, offline games with an R18+ rating, like Doom Eternal, don't need to worry—but it will affect GTA Online.

The new requirement, which comes in effect on Monday, will also affect pornography and "explicit" AI chatbots, according to SMH. It's all part of measures taken under the new Age-Restricted Material Codes which, according to a release from Australia's eSafety Commissioner, covers "most corners of the online ecosystem".

According to the same release, "A breach of a direction to comply with a code can result in penalties of up to AU$49.5 million per breach".

Age assurance technology takes a lot of forms. In Australia, where a social media ban has been imposed for children under 16, YouTube requires credit card details or a copy of a valid government ID to determine age. Instagram uses "facial age estimation technology" based on video footage uploaded by the user, as does TikTok, and both also accept government ID.

Overall, the method has to be much stronger than the simple self-declaration box we're all used to plugging a random DOB into. Last year images leaked of new age verification prompts in GTA Online, though these are yet to be implemented.

Take Roblox, for example, which Australia is keeping a close eye on at the moment. It uses Persona, an online identity verification company whose lead investor is a venture fund co-founded by Peter Thiel, also co-founder of ICE-friendly Palantir. Last month it emerged that Discord was testing the software, but after much outrage it severed its ties. Earlier this week, scientists warned of the risks posed by poorly conceived age verification systems.

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I've reached out to eSafety to learn more about its consultation with major publishers, including Rockstar, who I've also reached out to for comment.

eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant said to SMH that platforms need to have "accurate, robust, fair and reliable" age assurance methods. “We don’t allow children to walk into bars or bottle shops, adult stores or casinos, but when it comes to online spaces whe

Source: PC Gamer