
The internet should not require ID.
Governments are moving toward mandatory age checks online. In practice, that can mean showing ID to read, create accounts, or take part online.

Governments are moving toward mandatory age checks online. In practice, that can mean showing ID to read, create accounts, or take part online.
This is not a distant idea. The EU is building tools, and countries around the world are already moving. What starts as child safety can become ID checks for more and more of the internet.
The Commission is pushing an EU age verification app, and the European Parliament has proposed a harmonised minimum age of 16 for social media.
The government is investigating an age limit for children’s use of social media. The Social Democrats have also proposed a strict 15-year limit with ID checks.
Children should be protected online. But the answer cannot be to make ID checks the key to reading, learning, creating, or joining communities.
Make it harder for children to access social media or content seen as unsuitable.
Age checks sound simple, but they often become identity checks. Private reading, account creation, and participation can start depending on ID.
Young people seeking support, learning, following culture, or building something. Also adults who do not want lawful content, private browsing, or political debate to require ID.
Target the harm directly: grooming, exploitation, fraud, harassment, poor moderation, and addictive or manipulative design. Give parents better tools to guide their own children online, without making ID checks a basic requirement for the internet.
An ID requirement sounds technical. In practice, it affects who can read, create, ask, debate, build, and belong.
Choose which decision-makers to contact. Send the draft as it is, or edit it freely so it says what you want to say.
Last checked: 15 May 2026
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