Rohan Chaubey

If Reddit required face scans to prove you’re human… would you still use it?

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With AI bots getting harder to detect, there’s been growing discussion around platforms using biometric verification (like face scans) to confirm real users.

Cool in theory... Reddit is full of bots, fake accounts and garbage engagement. But let’s be real…

Reddit without anonymity isn’t Reddit.

The whole point of this platform is:

  • Saying things you wouldn’t say elsewhere

  • Being anonymous without consequences tied to your real identity

  • Having raw, unfiltered discussions

And now the proposed solution is… scan your face?

But what's the guarantee tech companies not to store or misuse biometric data.

Even if they promise they won’t store it:

  • No one believes that

  • Data leaks happen all the time

  • And once that line is crossed, there’s no going back

On one side, identity verification could:

  • Reduce bots and fake accounts

  • Improve trust in conversations

  • Clean up spam-heavy communities

On the other hand, Reddit has always been built on anonymity, and changes like this could shift how people use the platform entirely.

There are also alternative ideas being floated:

  • Zero-knowledge proof verification

  • Device-based authentication

  • Temporary “human verification” tokens

Two questions for the PH community here:

  • If you use Reddit, what would you want: fewer bots or actual anonymity?

  • Should Product Hunt apply the same verification to find and delete bots or fake accounts?

P.S. I am currently working on a pilot with Reddit's ex-CTO to test identity verification on my subreddit. I will check the sentiment of the community at my subreddit r/GrowthHacking and report back here.

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Daniel Dorne
Reddit is doomed, internet was supposed to be a cool place, not a prison guarded by 1000 guards
Rohan Chaubey

@daniel_dorne Maybe that's what happens when the social platforms want to become governments of the world virtually :D

Daniel Dorne
@rohanrecommends maybe, they need to chill down ...
Nika

Probably yes, my photos are anyway everywhere. And from my own experience, when I still faced bans because of being a bot, I would welcome this to remove other bots from the platform – to make it authentic.

Rohan Chaubey

@busmark_w_nika I second you, hence I am running a pilot with the ex-CTO of Reddit to test if redditors welcome identity verification or fight it.

Should Product Hunt apply the same verification to find and delete bots or fake accounts? What do you think?

Abdullah Mohamed

Great question, and I think it touches on a fundamental tension in how we build online communities.

As a developer, I'd lean heavily toward zero-knowledge proof verification or device-based authentication over biometric scans. The reason is simple: you can solve the bot problem without creating a new, arguably worse problem , a centralized biometric database that becomes a honeypot for attackers.

Face scans feel like using a sledgehammer to fix a leaky faucet. The real issue isn't identity , it's proof of humanness. Those are two very different things. You don't need to know WHO someone is to confirm they're not a bot.

Reddit's value has always been in the quality of ideas, not the identity behind them. Some of the best technical advice I've ever gotten came from throwaway accounts. Kill anonymity, and you kill that dynamic.

For Product Hunt specifically , I think lightweight verification (like email + device fingerprinting + behavioral signals) would go a long way without crossing into biometric territory. Bots have patterns that are detectable without ever scanning a face.

Curious to hear what comes out of the pilot with your subreddit. That's a bold experiment.

Robert Vassov

Everyone has bad experiences - Reddit is a place where angry old mods shut you down and threaten to ban your account. To me Reddit is like my old AMC Hornet, wanting to be a Tesla. All they did was add a fresh coat of paint and AI copilot in the back seat.

The IPO was Reddit walking into a Tesla dealership saying "value me like a tech company." Wall Street bought it but it's still a Hornet running on volunteer labor, tribal knowledge, and a constant threat from those angry mods and AI.

Wall Street bought their story, and now they're scrambling for new income streams. It feels they're lining as another control node for users.

jordan

I feel like people will eventually find ways to bypass face verification or hack the system, so I’m not sure if it’s something we can truly trust.
But at the same time, I do think fake messages generated by bots are a real problem.