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EU May See Identity-Linked Social Media Accounts as Ireland Targets Anonymous Trolls

Ireland plans to use its next term leading the European Union to push for ID-verified social media accounts across the bloc, aiming to curb anonymous abuse, limit bots and strengthen democratic stability. The plan also targets children’s access to platforms, tying account creation more closely to age checks and formal consent rules.

The agenda is likely to unsettle major Silicon Valley firms that base their European operations in Dublin, including Meta, Google and X. Any EU-wide rule on verified identities or tighter platform controls would directly affect these companies’ moderation systems, sign-up processes and data responsibilities across member states.

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Ireland intends to advocate for ID-verified social media accounts across the European Union during its next presidency, aiming to combat online abuse and protect elections, while also focusing on stricter age verification for children's access to platforms, potentially impacting companies like Meta and Google.

EU plans for ID-verified social media accounts and age checks

Outlining the strategy to Extra.ie, Tanaiste Simon Harris said Ireland would champion ID-verified social media accounts during its EU presidency, arguing that anonymity shields “keyboard warriors” and automated accounts that spread disinformation. Harris linked this to wider efforts to protect elections and public debate from hidden influence campaigns and targeted harassment.

Discussing child safety online, Harris backed stricter age enforcement and praised work by media minister Patrick O'Donovan. "Very exciting proposals are being brought forward by Patrick O'Donovan (Irish minister of media) around age verification, which I think is important, that we have a digital age of consent," he said. The minister added, "We have a digital age of consent in Ireland, which is 16, but it's simply not being enforced. And I think that's a really important move. And then I think there's the broader issue, which will require work that's not just at an Irish level, around the anonymous bots".

Global tension over ID-verified social media accounts and online rules

The plan lands amid growing friction between the United States and European regulators. The Trump administration recently announced visa bans on five European figures, including former EU commissioner Thierry Breton and UK-based researcher Imran Ahmed, accusing them of pushing "extraterritorial censorship" of American technology companies through stringent content and data rules.

Ireland’s stance follows a Dublin court case involving Sandra Barry, who received a six-month jail term for sending threats to Harris and Harris’s family. Harris said the drive for tougher rules is not about one incident, stating, "It's an issue in relation to our democracy... I mean democracy in the world," while insisting that big platforms have "the ability to do more, without the need for laws".

Key flashpoints are expected around how any new measures would interact with the existing EU Digital Services Act, which already sets content and transparency duties. Dublin says it wants "genuinely constructive engagement" with major platforms and repeats the principle that "what is illegal offline must be illegal online". Support from French President Emmanuel Macron and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer suggests Ireland will have significant allies as the debate on verified identities, anonymous accounts and child access moves into formal EU discussions.

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