BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Death of Anonymity Online
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Fri, 24 Apr 2026 09:43:38 -0500
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Proton CEO warns global age verification push will mean "the death of 
anonymity online"

Date:
Thu, 23 Apr 2026 10:00:00 +0000

Description:
Proton CEO Andy Yen is sounding the alarm on the global push for age 
verification, warning that current proposals will strip away online anonymity 
for everyone while handing unprecedented surveillance power to Big Tech.

FULL STORY
"The global rush to
implement mandatory age checks across the internet is sleepwalking us into a 
surveillance nightmare." That's the stark warning from Andy Yen, the founder
and CEO of Proton, the company behind one of the best VPN services and 
encrypted email platforms on the market. 

As lawmakers in dozens of countries and nearly half of all US states scramble 
to regulate online spaces, Yen argues that the current approach to age 
verification is fundamentally flawed. He warns that while the desire to 
protect children is sincere, the execution is paving the way for 
unprecedented data collection. "Age verification as is currently being 
proposed in country after country would mean the death of anonymity online," 
Yen states, cautioning that we "simply cant afford to get this wrong."

The debate has already reshaped the digital landscape. With age verification 
changing the internet in 2025 , privacy advocates have repeatedly flagged the 
dangers of forcing users to hand over passports, government IDs, or biometric 
data just to browse the web. 

Now, Yen is joining the chorus of scientists calling for a halt to mandatory 
age verification .

When data gets collected, it eventually gets out        

The core of Proton's argument is that stockpiling 
sensitive identity documents creates an irresistible target for 
cybercriminals. Yen points to recent breaches as proof that third-party 
verification companies cannot guarantee data security. 

Last October, the gaming chat platform Discord admitted that hackers accessed 
the records of more than 70,000 users , including photos of government IDs, 
held by a third-party vendor hired to enforce age checks. 

Governments aren't faring any better. When the European Union launched an 
age-checking app, hackers claimed to have broken it in just two minutes . 

"The more sensitive data you stockpile in privately held databases, the 
bigger a target it becomes for criminals," Yen explains. A power grab by Big 
Tech Rather than solving the issue, Yen suggests that the tech giants 
responsible for the internet's current privacy woes are cynically exploiting 
parental fears.

Meta, for example, has heavily lobbied for age verification to shift the 
regulatory burden away from its own platforms, allowing it to keep targeting 
adults with what Yen calls "toxic products." 

The more sensitive data you stockpile in privately held databases, the bigger 
a target it becomes Andy Yen, Proton's Founder and CEO There are growing 
calls for operating system developers like Apple and Google to enforce 
device-level blocks. Indeed, Apple recently rolled out age verification in 
the UK , prompting significant backlash from privacy advocates. 

Yen warns that giving Big Tech the power to track and block users based on 
age is a slippery slope. 

"Once youre using these collected IDs to block access based on age, its a 
short leap to blocking access based on nationality or other factors as well," 
he notes, highlighting the risk to whistle-blowers and democratic 
accountability if true anonymity disappears. Is there a safe way to do it? 
Proton argues that tech companies should focus their design firepower on 
improving parental controls, putting the authority to protect children firmly 
back in the hands of parents rather than centralized corporate gatekeepers. 

However, if society decides that a narrowly drawn age verification system is 
inevitable, Yen says it must follow strict privacy-by-design principles. 
Checks must be conducted entirely on the user's device, relying on facial 
scans that are "instantly discarded once processed," rather than uploaded ID 
cards. 

Crucially, Yen insists that the resulting binary answer of whether a user is 
of age must be "fully anonymized, divorced from any identifying information, 
and transmitted entirely under end-to-end encryption ." Furthermore, the 
underlying code must be open-source to ensure public trust. 

Ultimately, Proton's stance is that the safest data is the data that doesn't 
exist. "The only way to guarantee that age-verification data will not be 
stolen, shared, or abused is to not collect it at all," said Yen. 

Beyond age verification, though, Yen believes that what's more pressing is 
"tackle the real root cause" of online harm. And that is, Yen explains, the 
advertising- and attention-based business model that pushes companies to 
track and keep both adults and kids hooked to their products. 

He said: "Given all the online threats out there, the desire to 'do 
something' to protect kids is understandable, even laudable. But with age 
verification, were at risk of locking in and reinforcing all the worst 
aspects of the internet. And the end of the road for all these good 
intentions is a hellish place indeed."

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/proton-ceo-warns-global-age
-verification-push-will-mean-the-death-of-anonymity-online

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