Discord has postponed the worldwide rollout of its age verification system following strong criticism from users who raised concerns about privacy and data security.
In a blog post published Tuesday, Discord Chief Technology Officer and co-founder Stanislav Vishnevskiy acknowledged the company had “missed the mark,” announcing that the global expansion of age checks will now be pushed back to the second half of 2026.
Vishnevskiy said many users fear the policy is another attempt by a major tech firm to collect more personal data. He said he understood that skepticism, noting it reflects broader mistrust of the technology industry, but insisted Discord is not seeking to introduce intrusive data practices.
The platform, which says it has more than 200 million active users, will still comply with legal requirements for age verification in certain jurisdictions. However, broader implementation will wait until the company revises the policy it first outlined in early February.
Earlier this month, Discord said it planned to introduce age verification in March, potentially requiring face scans or government ID uploads for users whose age could not be confirmed. The proposal sparked immediate backlash, particularly after users pointed to a recent data breach involving a third-party provider that exposed government ID images of up to 70,000 Discord users.
Addressing the breach, Vishnevskiy said Discord no longer works with the vendor involved and claimed the company applies strict privacy and security standards when selecting partners. He said all vendors undergo security and privacy reviews, with contractual limits on data use and tight data retention rules. Information submitted for age verification, he said, is stored only for the shortest time possible and often deleted immediately.
One vendor that failed to meet Discord’s requirements was Persona, which Discord tested on a limited basis in the United Kingdom in January. Vishnevskiy said Persona could not meet Discord’s standard that facial age estimation be carried out entirely on a user’s device, ensuring biometric data never leaves the phone.
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Discord later distanced itself from Persona amid online criticism of the company’s links to Founders Fund, run by Peter Thiel, a co-founder of Palantir Technologies. Palantir has faced scrutiny over its government surveillance work, including a recent agreement with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Vishnevskiy said that for more than 90 percent of users, the new system would not change their experience. Discord, he explained, can already estimate most users’ ages using account-level signals such as account history, payment methods, server participation and general activity patterns. He stressed that the company does not read messages or analyze conversations to determine age.
For users whose age cannot be identified through these signals, Discord is now developing additional verification options beyond facial scans and ID uploads, including credit card checks. The company said it will fully develop and expand these alternatives before introducing the revised system.
Users who decline to verify their age will still be able to keep their accounts, contacts, messages and voice chats, but they will lose access to age-restricted content and be unable to modify certain safety settings aimed at protecting teenagers.
Discord also promised greater transparency, saying it will publish a detailed explanation of how its automated age estimation works and provide public documentation of all verification vendors and their data practices.