
Plus: Kraft Heinz CEO pauses business split; outgoing Walmart CEO talks politics.
Discord’s recent age verification policy has stumbled into widespread user backlash and skepticism.
The new policy, announced earlier this week, stated that age verification would be required for existing and new users. People were not happy.
Critics and users across social media expressed concern over privacy and data security. People vowed to cancel their Nitro subscriptions or leave the platform altogether, prompting Discord to explain the change more thoroughly.
On Tuesday, Discord said the new policy change most users won’t need to submit sensitive information, as the platform will estimate age from existing account data. This was not information included in the original announcement.
They said: “We’ve seen some questions about our age assurance update and we want to share more clarity. We know how important these changes are to our community.
“Discord is not requiring everyone to complete a face scan or upload an ID to use Discord. The vast majority of people can continue using Discord exactly as they do today, without ever being asked to confirm their age.”
The statement went on to emphasize that more information would be available in the coming weeks through FAQs and more blog posts.
Over on Reddit, Discord took a more casual approach to the announcement and clarification with “Discord Zorkian” providing a TL;DR and adding, “I know that there is concern about privacy and data leaks…I can say confidently that the vast majority of people will never see age verification. I say this because we launched age assurance in the UK and Australia in 2025, and we have some pretty good data on this now…We’re doing what we can by working with our range of partners (who are different partners than the data leak you read about), and if it’s any help, we learned a lot internally from the last issue.”
They ended the post by asking for customer feedback and said they were reading every bit of input they received.
Why it matters: Discord’s major misstep was in the initial message. Nowhere in the announcement did people understand they may not have to go through the age verification process.
People, instead, heard “face scans” and “government ID,” sparking visions of data breaches and invasions of privacy.
When the clarification statement did come out, it appeared that the company was doing a 180-degree flip or backpedaling from what they originally stated. Or worse, not realizing they didn’t include critical information to begin with.
While Discord attempted to soothe users by reframing the change, clarification after backlash is harder to build from.
Comms teams need to treat major changes like community conversations, with FAQs, AMAs, creator outreach and repeated reassurance across channels.
Platforms increasingly must balance safety, AI tools and privacy safeguards in public view. The companies that do it well will explain why in plain language, acknowledge tradeoffs and show empathy.
Editor’s Top Reads:
- Kraft Heinz announced that it was pausing work on its plan to divide the company into two separate businesses. Instead of continuing with that long-planned restructure, new CEO Steve Cahillane said the company will focus on fixing its core business first. Cahillane said: “My number one priority is returning the business to profitable growth, which will require ensuring all resources are fully focused on the execution of our operating plan. As a result, we believe it is prudent to pause work related to the separation.” This surprised investors and caused the stock price to drop when the news came out, Cahillane went on to say that the company’s challenges were “fixable and within our control,” adding that “to turn this around, we are increasing investments in R&D by approximately 20% in 2026 compared to 2025.” People pay very close attention to how a CEO or company phrases things. It impacts outlook and perception. Specific words influence how markets and stakeholders react. Investors look for confidence or hesitation in language. If a leader sounds uncertain or vague, markets can interpret that as a lack of commitment to a strategy, which can have an effect on Wall Street. Tone and choice of words shape perception, expectations and trust, especially in big shifts that affect stakeholders. What Cahillane chose to emphasize, like fixing the business, redirecting resources, and what he didn’t say (timeline for the split?) sends signals about the company’s priorities and confidence in its own plans.
- In a recent WSJ podcast interview, Doug McMillon, Walmart’s outgoing CEO, talked in depth about the role CEOs play when politics overlap with business. He said there’s a recurring theme in recent corporate discourse, where CEOs are increasingly expected to address societal and political issues, but must carefully choose when to speak to avoid backlash or being misinterpreted. He said: “We don’t have to comment on everything, we shouldn’t comment on everything. We should live in a way that’s consistent with our values. In my case, I should be doing everything I can from a practical point of view to make people that work at Walmart feel heard and included. They’ve got to be happy or our customers won’t be happy, that is the primary focus…” Today’s audiences often expect leaders to take positions on public policy matters that intersect with their brand. But poorly considered statements can lead to reputational risk, polarization or customer pushback. What McMillon’s comments show is that comms teams must work even more closely with leadership to shape principled, yet sensible, public stances, anticipate audience reactions, and meld them into broader brand stories that support long-term trust rather than short-term headlines.
- Chappell Roan announced she’s leaving the Wasserman talent agency, the firm led by CEO Casey Wasserman, after newly released documents tied him to Jeffrey Epstein, Business Insider Roan said: “No artist, agent, or employee should ever be expected to defend or overlook actions that conflict so deeply with our own moral values.” Wasserman said after the release of documents: “I deeply regret my correspondence with Ghislaine Maxwell, which took place over two decades ago, long before her horrific crimes came to light. I never had a personal or business relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.” High-profile departures put pressure on Wasserman’s agency to determine if he’s the right person to continue leading. Despite showing regret over his ties to Epstein and publicly apologizing, there’s real concern over whether the organization can come back from this kind of reputational damage with Wasserman at the helm. Seemingly innocent ties to a person or organization with a marred past can create lasting damage, even years down the road.
Courtney Blackann is a communications reporter. Connect with her on LinkedIn or email her at courtneyb@ragan.com.
The post The Scoop: Discord clarifies age verification policy after privacy backlash appeared first on PR Daily.












