What Happened

Anthropic has updated its privacy policy to permit the collection of government-issued identificationโ€”such as passports or driver’s licensesโ€”to verify user age and identity. This shift allows the platform to move from anonymous usage to authenticated sessions under specific, undisclosed “circumstances.”

Why It Matters

First-order: This marks the transition of LLMs from open research tools to restricted, identity-gated enterprise platforms. By centralizing verification, Anthropic mitigates liability regarding child safety and regulatory non-compliance, effectively setting a compliance floor for competitors.

Second-order: We expect a rapid “KYC-ification” of the AI stack. As models are increasingly integrated into critical infrastructure, identity verification becomes a non-negotiable prerequisite for enterprise adoption. Expect this to trigger a surge in demand for AI-native identity-as-a-service (IDaaS) providers who can handle document verification without the massive overhead of manual data handling.

Third-order: This shift will bifurcate the market. “Public-square” models will remain unverified but strictly sandboxed, while “High-utility” models will require verified user identities to comply with evolving mandates like the proposed US GUARD Act. For operators, the friction of user onboarding for AI-enabled workflows is about to increase significantly.

What To Watch

  • Implementation Thresholds: Will verification be triggered by usage volume, specific high-stakes tool usage (e.g., code execution), or broad user demographics?
  • Enterprise Impact: Watch for B2B API customers to demand “Identity-Verified” model endpoints to satisfy internal compliance and data privacy requirements.
  • Regulatory Response: Monitor if other major AI labs adopt uniform verification standards to preempt legislation, effectively creating a self-regulated digital identity standard.