With Australia’s under-16 social-media ban about to take effect, Snap Inc. has unveiled new verification tools to confirm the ages of Australian Snapchat users. The company announced that roughly 440,000 users aged 13–15 will be contacted and required to verify they are at least 16. Accounts that fail verification will be locked or removed ahead of the December deadline.
Key points:
- Snapchat users flagged as under 16 must verify or lose access.
- Verification options include bank-linked ConnectID or a selfie/ID upload via k-ID.
- Snap disputes being categorised as “social media” but is complying with the law.
- The bank-linked method returns only a yes/no answer—no full identity data is shared.
- The move signals wider global adoption of age-check infrastructure.
The bank-integration method, ConnectID, is attracting attention because of its privacy-protective design: it allows users to confirm age without exposing financial details. The alternative method, k-ID, uses a combination of government-ID data and biometric checks.
Snap has publicly expressed concern about being categorised the same as broadcast-style social networks, arguing that Snapchat functions primarily as a chat platform. Nonetheless, it has begun implementing the mandated measures to avoid penalties.
The rollout provides a preview of how large platforms may adopt scalable age-assurance systems in response to legal pressure globally. It also prompts questions for parents: what data is being collected, how long is it stored, and what happens if a teen is incorrectly flagged?
Sources: Reuters



