As of today, about half of all U.S. states have some form of age verification law around. Nine of those were passed in 2025 alone, covering everything from adult content sites to social media platforms to app stores.

Right now, California’s Digital Age Assurance Act (AB 1043) is all the rage right now, which targets not only websites and apps but also operating systems. Come January 1, 2027, every OS provider must collect a user’s age at account setup and provide that data to app developers via a real-time API.

Colorado is also working on a near-identical bill, which we covered earlier.

The EFF’s year-end review put it more bluntly: 2025 was “the year states chose surveillance over safety.” The foundation’s concern, which I concur with, is, where does this stop? Self-reported birthday today, government ID tomorrow? There appears to be no limit to these laws’ overreach.

  • RedFrank24
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    195 hours ago

    Presumably even if Linux must provide a means of reporting an age, you can always modify that distro to always report the oldest age?

    • Kairos
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      114 hours ago

      Yes

      The California law is just "put this column in your DB and make a getAge() call.

      • P03 Locke
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        4 hours ago

        sysctl user.legal_bullshit.pretend_age_quote_verification_unquote=99

        Watch that land on distros everywhere.