Mandatory identity verification would turn Claude into yet another checkpoint.
Anthropic has announced that some Claude users may be required to verify their identity with a government document – passport, national ID or driving licence – and, in certain cases, with a biometric selfie. The measure, communicated through the company’s official support page, applies to specific consumer scenarios and is presented as a response to fraud, underage access and other policy violations. The stated rationale is regulatory compliance. The structural logic is something else.
For verification, Anthropic has chosen Persona Identities as its third-party partner. According to the company’s support materials, biometric data and documents are stored by Persona and not on Anthropic’s systems – though the company reserves access to records in the event of appeals or similar reviews. In practice: the data exists, it is accessible, and the chain of custody runs through a private third party operating under its own rules and jurisdictions.
Anthropic states that the process collects “the minimum information necessary” and that the data is not used to train its models. These are contractual guarantees, not structural ones. And contractual guarantees hold only as long as the conditions that make them convenient remain unchanged.





