Tech
Age Verification Is Reaching a Global Tipping Point. Is TikTok’s Strategy a Good Compromise?
Governments worldwide are moving to limit children’s access to social media as lawmakers question whether platforms are capable of enforcing their own minimum age requirements. TikTok recently became the latest tech giant to give in to regulatory pressure when it announced that it would implement a new age-detection system across Europe to keep kids under the age of 13 off the platform.
The system, which follows a yearlong pilot in the UK meant to proactively identify and remove underage users, relies on a combination of profile data, content analysis, and behavioral signals to evaluate whether an account possibly belongs to a minor. (TikTok requires users to be at least 13 to sign up). According to a statement from the company, its age-detection system does not automatically ban users. The system flags accounts it suspects are run by users under 13 and forwards those accounts to human moderators for review. TikTok did not respond to a request for comment.
The European rollout comes amid global conversation around the negative effects of social media on children, and as governments debate stricter age-based regulatory approaches. Australia last year became the first country to ban social media for children under 16, including the use of Instagram, YouTube, Snap, and TikTok. The European Parliament is also advocating for mandatory age limits, while Denmark and Malaysia are considering a ban for children under 16.
“We are in the middle of an experiment where American and Chinese tech giants have unlimited access to the attention of our children and young people for hours every single day almost entirely without oversight,” Christel Schaldemose, a Danish lawmaker and vice president of the European Parliament, said in November during parliamentary session that, according to Reuters, “called for an EU-wide ban on access for children under 16 to online platforms, video-sharing sites, and AI companions without parental consent and an outright ban for those younger than 13.”
Advocacy groups in Canada are similarly calling for the creation of a dedicated regulatory body to address online harms affecting young people following the flood of sexualized deepfakes on X by its AI chatbot Grok. ChatGPT recently announced that it was rolling out age prediction software to determine whether an account likely belongs to someone under 18 so the correct safeguards can be applied. In the US, 25 states have enacted some form of age-verification legislation.
“Legislatures in the US, just in the calendar year 2026, are likely to pass dozens or possibly hundreds of new laws requiring online age authentication,” says Eric Goldman, a law professor and associate dean at Santa Clara University who has argued that any “government-compelled censorship” should automatically be looked at as “constitutionally suspect.”
“Unless something dramatically changes,” Goldman says, “regulators around the globe are building a legal infrastructure that will require most websites and apps to be age-authenticated.”
As platforms act to properly address age verification, does TikTok’s strategy of monitoring users instead of banning kids outright seem like a good compromise? That depends on how you feel about digital surveillance.
“This is a fancy way of saying that TikTok will be surveilling its users’ activities and making inferences about them,” says Goldman. Because platform governance is often tied to political motives, and policy solutions sometimes expose children to more harm than help, Goldman refers to age verification mandates as “segregate-and-suppress laws.”
“Users probably aren’t thrilled about this extra surveillance, and any false positives—like incorrectly identifying an adult as a child—will have potentially major consequences for the wrongly identified user.” Goldman adds that even if this is the right approach for TikTok, most services don’t have enough data about their users to reliably guess peoples’ ages, so the approach is not really scalable across other platforms.
Tech
Tata Communications unveils self-healing network | Computer Weekly
Tata Communications has launched a self-healing network platform called IZO datacentre Dynamic Connectivity, which is designed to eliminate costly datacentre downtime and support the demands of an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven world.
In explaining the rationale for the launch, Tata Communications said that in the current digital economy, disruptions from cable cuts, route failures or sudden AI workload spikes can bring business to a standstill.
Specifically, that is every enterprise depends on the ability to always be connected with an uninterrupted data flow. From financial transactions, information technology-enabled services (IT-ITeS) and manufacturing to streaming platforms and online retail, the connections between datacentres keep the modern world running. Tata Communications added that when those connections are interrupted, businesses do not just slow down, they are brought to a complete standstill.
The company warned that the networks connecting many enterprise datacentres were built for a different era. Traditional datacentre (DC)-to-DC links were designed for predictable workloads and stable traffic patterns. It stressed that the current reality is far more dynamic. In this, enterprises operate across global locations and cloud environments, moving massive volumes of data in real time to support AI workloads and business needs.
In an environment shaped by increasing geopolitical constraints, cable outages, route failures or sudden spikes in demand, these can quickly cascade into service disruption and operational risk, leading to a costly downtime. In such scenarios, the response is often reactive and manual, consuming valuable time when business need certainty and speed.
The IZO datacentre Dynamic Connectivity platform is designed to address these issues by creating an intelligent network that covers key global datacentres across five continents.
Tata Communications, said that unlike conventional architectures, the new platform uses deterministic multi-path routing to deliver predictable latency and performance. It said this transforms resilience from a reactive process into an autonomous capability, changing how enterprises connect their datacentres in an increasing AI-driven and distributed world.
This means the platform is smart enough to automatically re-route traffic within seconds without manual intervention during disruptions. This is said to enable enterprises to achieve >99.99% service availability across mission-critical infrastructure that supports business-critical applications, “turning resilience from a contingency into a default state”.
The platform is also attributed with giving enterprises access over their connectivity. Through a unified digital interface and APIs, enterprises can monitor performance, receive proactive alerts and dynamically scale bandwidth as workloads evolve.
Tata Communications said the result is that business impact is a shift from crisis management to strategic growth with business leaders no longer having to guess their future needs or over-pay for “just in case” bandwidth. Instead, leaders have access to Al-driven predictive insights allowing them to forecast their capacity requirements in advance. If a sudden workload demands more capacity or choice of route, users can instantly scale their bandwidth or add route through self-service feature.
Tata Communications calculates that by moving to a flexible, consumption-based pricing model, enterprises can reduce the need for idle backup capacity and save up to 30% on operational costs. Enterprises can activate resilience and bandwidth when required, helping to optimise costs while maintaining deterministic performance across geographies.
“Datacentres are the core engines of today’s digital economy, and the connections between them must be as resilient as the networks that connect them,” said Genius Wong, chief technology officer and executive vice-president of core and next-gen connectivity services at Tata Communications. “They must be just as dynamic as the applications they support.
“With IZO DC Dynamic Connectivity, we are shifting resilience from a reactive process to an autonomous capability. By combining global reach, deterministic routing and intelligent automation, we are enabling enterprises to build a digital foundation that scales with confidence and operates without disruption.”
Tech
Can a Home Appliance Fix the Problem of Soft-Plastic Waste?
Soft plastics are notorious for jamming sorting machines, slipping through processing lines, and wreaking havoc on the environment. They’re also not accepted in most municipal curbside recycling programs.
Facilities for recycling these types of plastic exist, but getting waste to these locations clean and free of what some call “wishful recycling” items (compostable cups, plastic utensils) is such a challenge that the majority of soft plastics, even the bags recycled at the front of grocery stores, end up in the trash. The SPC is what Arbouzov calls a “pre-recycling device,” designed to simplify this stream and deliver plastic that’s contained, traceable, and more likely to make it through the system.
I tried to envision how the blocks would turn into patio furniture, as advertised, but didn’t learn exactly how until months later, when Arbouzov sent me a video of the blocks at their final destination—a facility in Frankfort, Indiana, that specializes in processing polyethylene and polypropylene films. The blocks get shredded into crumbles resembling, at least on video, handfuls of wet newspaper, which are then compressed into composite decking, chairs, garden edging, and more.
Courtesy of Clear Drop
Courtesy of Clear Drop
“The full cycle from mailing a block to it entering recycling processing typically takes a few weeks,” Arbouzov said, “depending on shipping time and batching schedules.” Right now, the Frankfort location is the only facility processing the blocks, but Arbouzov said he hopes this is only temporary.
“Our goal is to shift more of this processing closer to where the material is generated, so blocks can move in bulk through regional recycling infrastructure rather than through mail-based logistics,” he said. “The mail-back system is essentially a bridge that allows the material to be captured today while that larger infrastructure develops.”
Recycling, Rewired
I found that my household of three was able to produce a block every couple of weeks, which quickly outpaced the provided supply of mailers. As the blocks started piling up on the floor of my office, I found myself wishing the SPC made something useful for consumers. Spoons, straws, 3D-printing filament … anything that could be used at home.
However, a 2023 Greenpeace report found that recycling plastic can actually make it even more toxic than it already is—heating it can not only cause existing chemicals to escape into the air and water supply, but even create new ones, like benzene. Would I want this in my house? Does recycled plastic actually belong in a circular economy? I asked Arbouzov what he thought.
Tech
Can Modular Phone Accessories Finally Evolve Beyond MagSafe?
Predating the launch of Moto Mods in 2016, the first batch of Jolla The Other Half concepts included back covers with an extra E Ink display, an infrared camera, and an Angry Birds tie-in that activated themes and ringtones. But probably the most popular was a Blackberry/Nokia Communicator-style slider keyboard made and sold by two entrepreneurs from the original Jolla community. That trend is back in—at CES 2026, accessory company Clicks showed off a magnetic keyboard accessory you can slap on the back of any Qi2 or MagSafe smartphone, though it uses Bluetooth for connectivity.
Quite a bit has changed in what’s achievable, not least more bandwidth, more capability, and more accessible, high-quality 3D printing. “We have seven pogo pins [on the Jolla Phone] which give you the capability to get power out and power in,” says Jolla CEO Sami Pienimäki. “So you can do maybe wireless charging, and you can power external circuit boards.” Pienimäki imagines E Ink interfaces or low-bandwidth radios on the back of its upcoming phone—it has an I3C interface, which delivers bit rates up to 12 megabits per second, allowing data to flow between the phone and the mod, enabling new kinds of smarter modular accessories.
Jolla has promised to release the final phone specifications by the end of the month, with shipping due for the first preorder customers at the end of June. Pienimäki teases that it’s “tempting” for him to release one of Jolla’s own internal concepts for a TOH back cover even earlier as “a showcase of what you can actually do.” (The Jolla Phone doesn’t have FCC approval in the US, but the company is considering a US launch in the future.)
With more than 10,000 preorders since December 2025, Jolla is back in business but still far from mainstream. So why, despite plenty of internet hype over the years, did truly modular phones never quite take off?
“During the LTE days, there was thinking that these devices would morph into ‘cloud phones,’ where the rest of the phone could be cost-optimized,” Fieldhack says. “Swappable parts and lower costs, as most of the compute would be done in the cloud.”
But things changed as flagship phones went from costing $350 to around $1,000. Both the camera and media production and consumption became much more important: “Great displays, great cameras, multiple cameras, more memory, better sound and mics, as well as more elegant and thin devices—this is not easily done on a modular smartphone,” Fieldhack says. “There are huge compromises, and phones are thicker and heavier with less performance. Then, agentic AI, on-device for lower costs and better security, made modular design even less optimal.”
Repairable Modules
One strong and emerging argument for true hardware modularity is repairability. Another European smartphone maker, Fairphone, has been making that case for over a decade. “It’s about thinking about how do we group the actual phone itself into modules?” says Fairphone chief technology officer Chandler Hatton. The latest FairPhone Gen 6 smartphone is made up of 12 modules. A customer sitting at the kitchen table with a single T5 screwdriver (included) and a guitar pick can repair the phone quickly, easily, and cheaply.
-
Entertainment1 week agoStrategic oil stocks to be released ‘immediately’ in Asia and Oceania: IEA
-
Tech7 days agoJustice Department Says Anthropic Can’t Be Trusted With Warfighting Systems
-
Sports1 week agoMen’s March Madness 2026 bracket: Get to know all 68 teams
-
Business1 week agoGas supply crunch a worry for AC makers ahead of peak season – The Times of India
-
Tech1 week agoEarly Deals From the Amazon Spring Sale That Passed Our BS Test
-
Sports6 days agoMarch Madness 2026 – How to watch in SA, start time, schedule, TV channel for NCAA championship basketball tournament
-
Fashion1 week agoTrump signs order to combat fraudulent ‘Made in America’ labels
-
Business1 week agoStocks To Watch: Tata Motors, IndiGo, Jindal Stainless, GMR Airports, Hindalco, And Others
