The Telegram (St. John's)

Nova Scotia fixes online workaround of age requiremen­t for cannabis sales

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Nova Scotia’s government-owned cannabis retailer said it has successful­ly taken measures to prevent people from skirting the access code required as part of age verificati­on for online sales.

The problem popped up hours after the use of cannabis became legal, when someone posted a 77-second online video offering instructio­ns on how to get around using the required access cards.

Beverley Ware, spokeswoma­n for the Nova Scotia Liquor Corporatio­n, said late Thursday afternoon the Crown entity believes it has solved the issue.

“It involved moving data stored in a browser to a server,” she said in an email.

Earlier, Ware said the change the corporatio­n made “means that you won’t be able to bypass the access code anymore.”

She said Nova Scotia is one of two provinces that has a two-step age verificati­on process that involves inputting an access code and then confirming the customer is at least 19 years old.

In order to purchase cannabis products online in Nova Scotia, adults have to pick up an access code in person at the province’s liquor and cannabis stores, after showing proof of age. The access code is free and there is no personal informatio­n attached to it.

Ware said there is an additional step to ensure cannabis is not being purchased by minors.

“No matter how you place your order, when it’s shipped to the door the person who receives it still has to provide photo ID proving that they live at that address and proving that they are 19 years old,” Ware said.

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