Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. News

Reddit wants to check if you’re using the iPhone’s Face ID camera

The company is considering new identity tools to tackle its growing bot problem

Add as a preferred source on Google
Reddit app on iPhone
appshunter.io / Unsplash

Reddit may soon ask users to prove they’re human, and it might involve your face. During a TBPN podcast, Reddit’s CEO, Steve Huffman, confirmed that the platform is exploring new identity verification methods, including using Face ID or Touch ID-style authentication, to tackle its growing bot problem.

RDDT requiring Face ID was not something I had on my bingo card but something has got to be done about all the fake / botted content — I just don’t know how to sell face-scanning to redditors or even lurkers. https://t.co/7e7K3Di4ip

— Alexis Ohanian 🗽 (@alexisohanian) March 21, 2026

The idea is simple: as AI-generated accounts become more convincing, Reddit wants stronger ways to confirm that users are real people and not bots pretending to be one.

Why is Reddit considering Face ID-style verification?

Unfortunately, bots are getting too good. Huffman has previously emphasized keeping the platform “human,” and this move fits right into that strategy. AI-generated content and automated accounts are becoming harder to detect, making moderation more challenging and threatening the authenticity of discussions.

As such, verification methods like Face ID or biometric checks could act as a quick way to confirm a real person is behind an account, without requiring traditional ID uploads. But of course, it’s not that simple.

So… are we really scanning faces now?

Reddit isn’t going full sci-fi just yet. The company is still “weighing” its options, which could mean optional verification for certain features, regions, or accounts rather than forcing everyone to scan their face. We’ve already seen a preview of this in places like the UK, where Reddit uses selfies or ID checks for age verification.

The next step could make things feel a lot more seamless and a bit more invasive. Instead of uploading IDs, Reddit may lean on device-level tools like Face ID to confirm you’re human, turning verification into something that happens in the background rather than a full process. Of course, that’s where things get messy.

Recommended Videos

Biometric checks raise big questions around privacy, data security, and consent, and users aren’t exactly thrilled about handing over their face to prove they’re not a bot. Reddit may be solving one problem, but it opens up another: how much verification is too much? Especially on a platform where anonymity is kind of the whole point?

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
Meta wants you to pay for WhatsApp now, and it’s already testing the waters
WhatsApp

WhatsApp has been free for over a decade, but Meta is starting to change that. The company is testing a paid subscription tier called WhatsApp Plus, and if you haven't heard about it yet, you probably will soon. The rollout was first spotted by WABetaInfo, and Meta's own Help Center page has since confirmed some of the details. 

So, what do you actually get?

Read more
Tinder wants to check your humanity by gazing into an orb. Yes, you read that right
Staring into an orb to prove you are human is no longer science fiction.
tinder-world-id-human-verification

Online dating is already a trust minefield, and now Tinder wants to add an eyeball scan to the mix. The popular dating app has announced a global partnership with World, the biometric identity company founded by OpenAI's Sam Altman. To prove you are a real human on Tinder, you will soon have the option to get your eyes scanned by a physical orb device.

What is World ID and how does Tinder's human verification work?

Read more
I didn’t expect food reels to help my diet – but they might
Scroll now, snack less later
Representative Image

A new study led by researchers at the University of Bristol has found that people trying to resist food cravings may be using social media content featuring indulgent meals as a substitute for actually eating them. The findings challenge the long-held assumption that exposure to tempting food imagery leads to overeating.

The research, conducted in collaboration with the University at Buffalo School of Management, explored how visual engagement with food content influences eating behaviour. Across three experiments involving 840 participants aged between 19 and 77, researchers combined online surveys with a controlled laboratory study to examine how people respond to food-related media.

Read more