Tag Archives: The Age-Gated Internet

The Age-Gated Internet Revisited: Identity, Trust and the Architecture of Control

This article responds to thirty-two questions posed in response to my earlier piece, “The Age-Gated Internet: Child Safety, Identity Infrastructure, and the Not So Quiet Re-Architecting of the Web”, where I explored how age verification and identity systems are beginning to reshape the internet. It examines the assumptions behind these developments and situates them within a broader architectural shift.

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The Age-Gated Internet: Child Safety, Identity Infrastructure, and the Not So Quiet Re-Architecting of the Web

Governments around the world are introducing age-verification and youth social-media laws, but these policies may be doing far more than protecting children. They are quietly pushing identity into operating systems, app stores, and the core infrastructure of the internet, shifting governance down the stack and creating new enforcement chokepoints. Along the way, they reshape platform power, favour large incumbents, and redefine how users access digital environments. As illustrated in “Evolution of Internet Architecture (1990–2035)”, this may signal a transition toward an “identity-mediated” web. This article documents those changes, drawing on historical precedents from UK identity systems (including the UK identity card programme) and US telecommunications, and comparative developments across multiple jurisdictions, to show how independent regulatory efforts are converging on a shared architectural shift.

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