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Pornhub is now using Apple’s own age verification feature in the UK

I guess this is one “benefit” of the Apple ecosystem that won’t make it into a press release from the Cupertino company: Pornhub’s parent company has announced that it will be relying on Apple’s own age verification feature for its UK web visitors …

Apple age verification

Apple first launched its own age verification feature in the UK back in March, before rolling it out to other countries. The move is intended to comply with a growing trend for age verification legislation around the world for access to age-restricted websites and apps.

The company accidentally released it in an iOS beta, giving me an early chance to test it. In my case, it took just 30 seconds to confirm that I’d held an Apple account long enough to verify that I am at least 18 years old.

Once it officially launched, not everyone found the process as seamless, but Apple subsequently announced additional methods of verification.

Pornhub now using this

The UK’s Online Safety Act made it a legal requirement for adult websites to implement effective methods of age verification. This was intended to prevent those under 18 accessing age-inappropriate content, but of course in reality ensured only that teenagers knew how to use a VPN to spoof presence in another country.

Unsurprisingly, not many visitors to such websites wanted to provide credit card or photo ID details to verify their age, and Engadget reports that Pornhub parent company Aylo has is now accepting Apple’s own age verification status.

“In our view, Apple’s UK device-level age-verification update offers one of the strongest and hardest to circumvent protections currently available for helping prevent minors from accessing age-inappropriate content,” Aylo wrote. Now, age-verified iOS users in the UK “will be served a standard adult user experience” when they visit Pornhub. 

Apple has been a reluctant participant in the age verification process, but I have argued that I would far rather trust the iPhone maker to do this in a privacy-protecting manner than to have to rely on whatever processes random app developers choose to adopt.

Photo by Gilles Lambert on Unsplash

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Avatar for Ben Lovejoy Ben Lovejoy

Ben Lovejoy is a British technology writer and EU Editor for 9to5Mac. He’s known for his op-eds and diary pieces, exploring his experience of Apple products over time, for a more rounded review. He also writes fiction, with two technothriller novels, a couple of SF shorts and a rom-com!


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