Steam now requires age verification for UK users purchasing mature games

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As part of the effects of the UK's Online Safety Act, Steam is now requiring proof and age verification for users in the UK, if they wish to purchase mature games. Before, users would simply input their date of birth, but now, it has to be proven. The steps to access mature games requires customers to be signed into a Steam account, go to their account settings, and opt-in to mature content games. Once you've opted in, you'll have to verify your age, by adding a credit card to your account. This will trigger a $0 charge to the card, and then allow access.

Why we use this process​

In the UK, Ofcom is the independent regulator for online safety. Ofcom’s guidance on the OSA states that one highly effective age assurance measure is credit card checks. This is because, in the UK, an individual must be at least 18 years of age to obtain a credit card, therefore credit card issuers are obliged to verify the age of an applicant before providing them with a credit card.

Having the credit card stored as a payment method acts as an additional deterrent against circumventing age verification by sharing a single Steam user account among multiple persons.

Privacy and security​

Among all age assurance mechanisms reviewed by Valve, this process preserves the maximum degree of user privacy.

The data processed in the verification process is identical to that of the millions of other Steam users who make purchases or store their payment details for convenience. The verification process therefore provides no information about a user's content preferences to payment providers or other third parties.

Valve handles the verification process using its own internal payment processing system, which is independently certified under the PCI-DSS standard.

To find out more about our privacy practices, please see our privacy policy

Contesting an incorrect age assurance status​

Should you be unable to register your credit card on Steam, please contact your local bank. Our data minimal approach means that we typically do not have insight into reasons why a given credit card use fails. However, should you not be able to resolve such an issue with your bank, please open a Steam Support ticket.

:arrow: Source
 
The country has been on a downward spiral for years at this point, and Online Safety Act is no exception. Steam's implementation is far less intrusive than most at least. Regardless, adults who aren't interested in spending money and would be perfectly content playing free 18+ games, or adults who use prepaid methods that can be purchased with cash (e.g. PaysafeCard) are losing out, which is a shame.

I guess you could argue that most adults in first world countries (UK included) have credit cards, but there's also the problem of debit cards not being eligible, and ignoring the minority is not cool. I feel for everyone who continues to boycott banks and rely on cash only.

I assume this also restricts their ability to disable filtering on 18+ community content as the two are related in Steam's implementation, so that's another blow. (Edit: Judging by the OP, it sure looks like it.)

Remember, even if you don't live in the UK, this is a wake-up call to push back against censorship laws and laws that require disclosing identity, when the Internet always had a level of anonymity to it that governments repeatedly tried hard to erode.
 
Last edited by lightwo,
I dont see anything wrong with confirming your age. It would be like entering a store and seller asks you for your age before selling you stuff that isnt meant for kids.
Steam already asked your age before then. The new legislation is more like going into a store, and the cashier scans your ID and takes a picture of you right in the store, but you have no way to confirm if the store employee is scanning it properly, or jsut taking all the pictures on their own personal phone.
 
you don't need to be 18 to have a debit card though
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but there's also the problem of debit cards not being eligible, and ignoring the minority is not cool.
I don't think they can detect it's a debit card not a credit card can they?

I only have a debit card. I applied for a credit card with a $2000NZD limit once to buy a camera and the bank turned me down so I borrowed the money from my dad and paid it back before the hypothetical credit card would've charged interest.
 
Thats a lot of imagination considering it was the previous government who wrote the entire process

Even if it wasn't the current one that mooted it, it's pretty clear that they heavily support it and have every intention of bringing it to fruition, and possibly even building on it further.

Yes, what I mentioned does sound hyperbolic in a way. But then again, nobody really expected the UK to be the one pushing for such a thing, yet here we are.
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I don't think they can detect it's a debit card not a credit card can they?

From what I have heard from others working in the financial sector, there are ways on the backend to tell the difference between the two. Supposedly one of them involves the way card numbers appear for either one, just like VISA and Master cards are identified based on the first few digits.

But for the purpose of the store selling you goods, there was never any real need to differentiate, other than during promotions for using particular cards (eg discount for using a certain bank's credit card). But in view of this new requirement, stores will likely have to pay attention to it, at least for UK customers. The store won't know per se but they will be informed by the payment processors (eg stripe) that they use.
 
Last edited by Lumpofcoal,
I just did a test.

I added one of my debit cards and the warning remained, it wasn't until I added an actual CC that the warning disappeared.

That's just stupid honestly. At least locally, a Debit Card has the same information as a Credit Card (they're also both either MasterCard or Visa).

Hm, was reading into it and it seems they just block debit cards since some can be issued for people under 18, whereas a Credit Card can't.
 
That's just stupid honestly. At least locally, a Debit Card has the same information as a Credit Card (they're also both either MasterCard or Visa).

Hm, was reading into it and it seems they just block debit cards since some can be issued for people under 18, whereas a Credit Card can't.

I'm guessing that they're just looking at whether it's a CC or not rather than getting actual data like DOB from the bank/issuer.

If they did the latter then they'd likely accept a DC.

Of course I won't be surprised to see a spike in kids 'borrowing' their parents cards.
 
Thought about suggesting Steam cards that you can buy in stores, but then realized this was purely for ID purposes.

Nevermind then, carry on.

Of course I won't be surprised to see a spike in kids 'borrowing' their parents cards.
Like they don't already?

Nevermind the dozens of stories of kids/young adults running up tens of thousands of dollars of debt on their parents' credit cards for FIFA lotteries (because even if you don't call it gambling it is) or Roblox fun bucks. Still remember a few about kids who would steal their parents' CCs for WoW subs back in the day.

At best this is a hold-over and keeps Steam from having to enact more drastic measures, which I guess is fine. It was never about "protecting the children" anyways, and anyone who thinks it ever was is blinder than Stevie Wonder and deafer than Helen Keller to reality.

And on top of that we have some no-name group out of Australia that get thousands of pr0n games (and other hot-button subjects) delisted & deleted from Steam & itch.io because the money holders said so...

This timeline is too weird. I demand a refund and a do-over.
 
Last edited by Hippocampus_Hamster,
It was never about "protecting the children" anyways, and anyone who thinks it ever was is blinder than Stevie Wonder and deafer than Helen Keller to reality.

I'm curious what you actually believe this to be about, is it about 'keeping people pure' like the Hays Code and making everyone not want to look at porn or more along the lines of government tracking?

For the record, I am against this law, I think anything to actually TRY and 'protect' children should be on a device or at best household level and involve actually monitoring the kids rather than relying on the wider system to 'protect' them.

Back when I was in school, bypassing the schools filters was always a cat and mouse game, the most effective solution our school introduced was a remote screen monitoring software, which was how someone was caught watching porn.
 
That's just stupid honestly. At least locally, a Debit Card has the same information as a Credit Card (they're also both either MasterCard or Visa).

Hm, was reading into it and it seems they just block debit cards since some can be issued for people under 18, whereas a Credit Card can't.
In the UK you can't get a credit card until you are 18 (legally an adult), however you can get a debit card at 11.

So you can assume anyone with a credit card is an adult, however the same can't be assumed for a debit card.
 
You dont handle any form of ID in this case so all your tinfoil hat nonsense is invalid.

Was talking about the OSA in general, not Steam's specific implementation of age check. Don't need every single site to ask for id either to normalise it, just need enough sites to go that way. Steam being credit card only for "privacy reasons" is an outlier. Discord, Reddit, Microsoft, twitter all offer the "id" method.

No need for a stick when you can slip it in optionally for now under "think of the children".
 
Last edited by Armadillo,
however you can get a debit card at 11.
Really?
Was talking about the OSA in general, not Steam's specific implementation of age check. Don't need every single site to ask for id either to normalise it, just need enough sites to go that way. Steam being credit card only for "privacy reasons" is an outlier. Discord, Reddit, Microsoft, twitter all offer the "id" method.

No need for a stick when you can slip it in optionally for now under "think of the children".
Utter nonsense and goalposts moving. Ive never encountered the requirement to provide id of any form and certainly neither passport or driving license.
This is a Marxist book. When I say "it's not a real thing" I mean in the same sense that communism working isn't a real thing either. Yes, I know it exists in books and theory as a term passed around among pseuds, it just doesn't exist in reality.
Pathetic goalposts moving. Also a "marxist book" lmao school is wasted on you.
 
Utter nonsense and goalposts moving. Ive never encountered the requirement to provide id of any form and certainly neither passport or driving license.

If you say so. I never moved the goalposts btw, my original post was never a specific comment about Steam's implementation, just that the law is not about protecting kids.

Go on Discord, go verify your age, you get the option of either take a photo and it will guess your age and of course pinky promise it's not linked to your account, if that fails, then photo id.

We clearly aren't going to agree, you think it's just about protecting kids and I don't. No point constantly going back and forth.
 

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