EU Commission Rejects 'Internet Passport' Claims as 2026 Age-Check App Draws Scrutiny
Updated
Updated · Euronews · Jul 13
EU Commission Rejects 'Internet Passport' Claims as 2026 Age-Check App Draws Scrutiny
1 articles · Updated · Euronews · Jul 13
Summary
Brussels said viral posts falsely portray its planned age-verification app as an "internet passport" and wrongly claim the EU will ban VPNs.
By end-2026, the app is meant to let users prove they meet an age threshold after a one-time ID check, then share only age status—not names, birth dates or full identity.
Open-source code and integration through member states or national digital identity wallets are intended to support privacy, though critics say mandatory ID-based checks could still expand control over online access.
January research on VPNs triggered much of the ban narrative, but the Commission said the briefing was not policy and Tech Commissioner Henna Virkkunen later said the goal is harder-to-bypass safeguards, not a VPN crackdown.
The dispute lands amid broader debate over how effective EU online child-protection rules will be and how far age checks can go without undermining a free and open internet.