Communication platform Discord is under fire after its identity verification software, Persona Identities, was found to have front-end code accessible on the open internet and on government servers.
Nearly 2,500 accessible files were found sitting on a U.S. government-authorized endpoint, researchers pointed out on X. The files showed Persona conducted facial recognition checks against watchlists and screened users against lists of politically exposed persons.
In addition to verifying a user’s age, researchers found Persona performs 269 distinct verification checks, including screening for “adverse media” across 14 different categories such as terrorism and espionage. It then assigns risk and similarity scores to user information.
And the information was openly available. “We didn’t even have to write or perform a single exploit, the entire architecture was just on the doorstep,” wrote the researchers in their blog, adding they found 53 megabytes of data on a Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program (FedRAMP) government endpoint that also “tags reports with codenames from active intelligence programs.”
Discord has since announced it is cutting ties with Persona. The AI software, partially funded by Palantir cofounder Peter Thiel’s venture firm Founders Fund, continues to provide age verification services for OpenAI, Lime, and Roblox.
Both Persona and Discord confirmed to Fortune their partnership lasted for less than a month and has since dissolved. According to Discord, only a small number of users were part of this test, in which any information submitted could be stored for up to seven days before it would be deleted.
This isn’t the first time a third-party vendor has come under scrutiny for mishandling sensitive user information for Discord, which is popular among gamers, students, influencers, tech professionals, and other communities.
Last year, hackers accessed the government IDs of more than 70,000 who had complied with its age-verification requirements.
In a statement from Oct. 9, 2025, the company said the attack was “not a breach of Discord, but rather a breach of a third party service provider, 5CA.” Discord stated the breach affected only users who communicated with the company’s Customer Support or Trust and Safety teams.
“At Discord, protecting the privacy and security of our users is a top priority. That’s why it’s important to us that we’re transparent with them about events that impact their personal information,” the statement added. Affected users received an email if their government IDs, IP addresses, or limited billing and corporate data were leaked.
And earlier this month, Discord faced almost immediate backlash after announcing it would default all accounts to teen-safety settings. Users seeking access to additional features would be required to verify their age using Persona.
“Rolling out teen-by-default settings globally builds on Discord’s existing safety architecture,” Discord’s head of product policy Savannah Badalich said in the statement. The company “will continue working with safety experts, policymakers, and Discord users to support meaningful, long-term wellbeing.”
But after users quickly pointed out the October data hack, Discord amended the statement the following day to clarify that age verification would remain optional unless users wished to access age-restricted servers and channels.
Discord said it could determine the ages of most users using the “information we already have.” Most users would not have to upload government IDs and instead could opt for video selfies.
“We offer multiple privacy-forward options through trusted partners,” the addendum stated, adding “facial scans never leave your device. Discord and our vendor partners never receive it.”
Any identifying documents uploaded to Discord would be submitted to the platform’s third-party vendors and deleted quickly. “In most cases, immediately after age confirmation,” read the statement.
“IDs are used to get your age only and then deleted,” it continued. “Discord only receives your age—that’s it. Your identity is never associated with your account.”
However, a since-deleted version of Discord’s FAQ on age verification policies appears to contradict the company’s claims about how long government IDs are stored by the third-party vendor, in this case, Persona.
“Important: If you’re located in the UK, you may be part of an experiment where your information will be processed by an age-assurance vendor, Persona,” an archived version of the site reads. “The information you submit will be temporarily stored for up to 7 days, then deleted. For ID document verification, all details are blurred except your photo and date of birth, so only what’s truly needed for age verification is used.”
Persona CEO and cofounder Rick Song told Fortune that the files were not a vulnerability, but instead, publicly accessible front-end information. “What was found was uncompressed files of a front end that’s already on every single person’s device,” he said, adding the information is available on the company’s help center and API documentation. “I don’t think having uncompressed files online is good,” Song went on, but added the information found by the researcher is the uncompressed version of a company’s compressed source map online.
“I think this is one of these in which the contents of it seems scarier, but…internally, we didn’t consider this even a major vulnerability.”
Song still considers the partnership between Persona and Discord to be a success. “I think the performance of the product did incredibly well,” the CEO told Fortune. “The reason why we were able to say that all data was redacted immediately is because the data was redacted; it had already been redacted upon processing. It’s not like it was due to the termination of the contract that we delete the data. It’s deleted immediately after a verification of the individual.”
Song denied any ties to Palantir, ICE, or the government, but said the company is going through FedRAMP authorization. “We are trying to get FedRAMP and the goal of that is we do a lot of work for workforce security,” which uses a whole other set of information to confirm an employee is who they say they are, as compared to a user on a social media platform verifying their age.
In response to the 269 kinds of verification checks, these are all options Persona offers, said Song, but it does not necessarily mean a client would need all of them. In essence, the needs of a social media platform for age verification would not be the same as an employer conducting a background check.
Over the weekend, Song denied that Persona—which also offers know your customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) solutions—links facial biometrics to financial records or law enforcement databases. Song posted screenshots of an email exchange with the researcher “Celeste” on X, stating the researcher’s implication of some connection between Persona, Palantir, and ICE has led to threats against members of the company.
“We have no relationship whatsoever with ICE, Palantir,” Song’s screenshot of the email exchange read. The CEO added that some of the members of the company who have received backlash are new grads or people who have recently signed on. “I don’t think these people are the ones that the public’s ire should be directed at, and if anyone, it should be directed at me.”
Song was also attacked for his lack of personally identifiable information online. A user on X posted a screenshot of the CEO’s LinkedIn profile showing Song with a verified badge but lacking a profile photo. Persona handles LinkedIn’s identity verification requests.
In response, Song wrote, “I am verified. That’s the entire point. It’s dystopian that we want people to facedox themselves to everyone to be real online. It’s ironic that folks posting about privacy want me to facedox to everyone.”