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https://www.techdirt.com/2025/09/08/uk-age-verification-data-confirms-what-critics-always-predicted-mass-migration-to-sketchier-sites/>
"New data from the UK’s age verification rollout provides hard evidence of what
internet governance experts have been warning about for years: these laws don’t
protect children—they systematically drive users from regulated, compliant
platforms to unregulated, non-compliant ones while accomplishing nothing except
creating a massive privacy surveillance apparatus.
The
Washington Post has done the legwork that regulators apparently couldn’t
be bothered with, analyzing traffic data from 90 major adult sites in the UK
since their age verification requirements kicked in. The results are exactly
what anyone with half a brain predicted:
To evaluate the early effectiveness of the law’s rollout, The Post
gathered U.K. visitor estimates over the past year for 90 of the largest
porn sites as ranked by the market intelligence firm Similarweb. The Post
then used a software tool known as a virtual private network, or VPN, to
appear online as a U.K. user and check whether the sites verified a
visitor’s age.
The analysis found that 14 sites didn’t do an age check, and that all 14 had
seen major boosts in their traffic from U.K. users. One explicit site saw
its U.K. visitor count double since last August, to more than 350,000 visits
this month.
As for the ones that actually went through complying with this poorly drafted
law?
The sites that complied — by mandating that users show their government IDs
or scan their faces through their webcams, so an algorithm could estimate
whether they were adults — saw visits from British internet addresses
collapse.
To recap: compliant sites hemorrhaged users while non-compliant sites
experienced massive growth. This represents a fundamental failure of regulatory
design—the law creates competitive advantages for the least responsible actors
while punishing those attempting to follow the rules.
The non-compliant sites aren’t just passively benefiting—they’re actively
instructing users in circumvention:
Other sites instructed users how to navigate around the age gate by, for
instance, using a special browser called Tor, which was built to browse
what’s known as the “dark web.” One site directed British users to sign a
petition urging Parliament to repeal the law alongside the comment, “Ur gov
is dumb.”
This represents the predictable endpoint of poorly designed internet
regulation: Instead of creating a safer online environment, the law has
systematically incentivized users to migrate toward less regulated, less safe
alternatives."
Cheers,
*** Xanni ***
--
mailto:xanni@xanadu.net Andrew Pam
http://xanadu.com.au/ Chief Scientist, Xanadu
https://glasswings.com.au/ Partner, Glass Wings
https://sericyb.com.au/ Manager, Serious Cybernetics
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