After a 12-year-old boy slipped past Facebook and Instagram’s age gates with a drawn-on moustache, Meta is under renewed pressure from the European Commission overAfter a 12-year-old boy slipped past Facebook and Instagram’s age gates with a drawn-on moustache, Meta is under renewed pressure from the European Commission over

Mark Zuckerberg forced to overhaul his entire security after a 12-year-old tricked his AI with a mustache

2026/05/29 19:01
3 min read
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A 12-year-old with a marker and a sense of mischief just exposed how flimsy Meta’s age gates really are. The stunt, flagged by Wired and Internet Matters, lands as Brussels turns up the heat under the Digital Services Act and kids themselves report how easy these checks are to dodge. Meta rushed out AI-driven age screening on 5/5/2026, promising to suspend suspected under-13 accounts and ring-fence teens 13 to 15. Now the company is pushing for app store level verification, inviting a fresh fight over how to keep minors safe without vacuuming up even more sensitive data.

A 12-year-old’s trick exposes Meta’s vulnerability

Sometimes the smallest stunt can reveal a large weakness. A 12-year-old reportedly fooled age checks on Facebook and Instagram by sketching a mustache, sailing past safeguards meant to keep preteens off the platforms. The anecdote, surfaced by Wired via the nonprofit Internet Matters, lands at a tense moment for Meta, which is under pressure to prove its protections for minors actually work.

Mark Zuckerberg forced to overhaul his entire security after a 12-year-old tricked his AI with a mustache

Ineffective safeguards and recurring failures

Parents have seen this pattern before. Kids use tricks, workarounds and borrowed IDs to slip through. Per Wired and Internet Matters, 46% of 9, 16 year-olds say it is easy to evade age checks, and 32% admit they have done it. Those figures, if directionally right, raise basic questions about tools that ask for a birthday yet rarely verify it.

Meta’s AI-based age verification strategy

On May 5, 2026, Meta laid out a new plan. The company says it will use AI to infer ages from behavior signals and account data, not just self-declared birthdays. Accounts suspected of belonging to users under 13 will be suspended pending verification. In addition to that, Meta will place more 13, 15 year-olds into “protected accounts” by default, tightening messaging, discovery and parental controls.

Regulatory heat adds to Meta’s challenges

European officials have pressed Meta on youth safety, citing the Digital Services Act. The European Commission’s concerns mirror a broader global push. In the US, state attorneys general and the FTC have sharpened scrutiny around children’s online privacy and safety. No matter the venue, the core critique is similar: if age gates are porous, downstream protections are weaker.

Age verification remains a privacy balancing act

Some tech leaders argue age checks should move up the stack, to Apple and Google app stores or operating systems, so apps can rely on a single, privacy-preserving signal. It could cut duplication and reduce data collection across countless services. Yet stronger verification usually means more sensitive data. Where that line sits, and who draws it, will define the next phase of online youth safety.

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