30 comments

  • Slow_Hand 1 hour ago
    If I’m not mistaken, Meta has been lobbying heavily for all of these age-verification bills lately.

    It seems their strategy is to externalize their responsibility to verify age themselves, and thus reduce their exposure to liabilities when child protection acts like COPPA are violated.

    • mgfist 50 minutes ago
      It should be externalized to a degree. Facebook shouldn't be the ones verifying age, but there should be a trusted 3rd party service that does that, which just tells facebook "yes this user is old enough to use your service" or "no they're not old enough".

      It abso-fucking-lutely should not be at the OS level though, for so many reasons. Even the implementation alone would be a nightmare. Do I need to input my ID to use a fridge or toaster oven? Ridiculous.

      • pianoben 45 minutes ago
        Or, and hear me out, _maybe our computers shouldn't spy on us in the first place_?
        • ToucanLoucan 10 minutes ago
          I'm reminded of a video essay I watched about AI once, which took a side tangent into surveillance capitalism:

          "Google's data harvesting operation became a load bearing piece of the Internet before the public understood digital privacy. And now we can't get rid of it."

          The public has been conditioned to expect web services free at point of use. Legitimately it's hard to monetize things like YouTube without ads, and I get that. But turning our entire ecosystem of tech into a massive surveillance mini-state seems like an astonishingly shitty idea compared to just... finding a way to do advertising that DOESN'T involve 30 shadowy ad companies knowing your resting blood pressure. My otherwise creative and amazing industry seems utterly unwilling to confront this.

        • jachee 41 minutes ago
          “Impossible to get a man to understand a thing, when his paycheck depends on his not understanding it.”
      • inetknght 15 minutes ago
        > It should be externalized to a degree.

        Why?

        We don't externalize age verification when buying alcohol or visiting the strip club. It's on the responsibility of those establishments to verify age.

        • sjsdaiuasgdia 7 minutes ago
          In those in-person contexts, the identification document is still externalized - they're checking a government-issued photo ID in the vast majority of situations.

          It works for the in-person context because it's a physical object, making it easier to control access to it. A high resolution picture of the same ID is a privacy problem as it can be copied, shared, transferred, etc without the knowledge of the ID holder.

        • pstuart 11 minutes ago
          Do we make contractors do age verification on their supplies when building a liquor store or strip club? The OS is a tool used by Meta, just like the utilities and the compute itself.

          Meta Apps can have age verification but it should be at the point of service, not the supply chain.

          And even if we were to agree to this, uploading your IDs to an untrusted third party is asking too much.

          • alistairSH 8 minutes ago
            uploading your IDs to an untrusted third party is asking too much.

            So have the government do it? They already know who we are and when we were born.

      • inkysigma 44 minutes ago
        Except none of these bills (California or the one in question) as currently written require an ID to actually be verified, merely that the user provide an age. This seems intentional as it's seems to solve the user journey where a parent is able to set a reasonable default by simply setting up an associated account age at account creation. It's effectively just standardizing parental controls.

        I think this is a reasonable balance without being invasive as there's now a defined path to do reasonable parenting without being a sysadmin and operators cannot claim ignorance because the user input a random birthday. The information leaked is also fairly minimal so even assuming ads are using that as signal, it doesn't add too many bits to tracking compared to everything else. I think the California bill needs a bit of work to clarify what exactly this applies to (e.g. exclude servers) but I also think this is a reasonable framework to satisfy this debate.

        I've seen the argument that this could lead to actual age verification but I think that's a line that's clearly definable and could be fought separately.

        • bink 41 minutes ago
          Kids aren't stupid. They'll just create another account when they're old enough to figure it out. They'll tell their friends how to do it and the rest of us will be stuck with these stupid prompts forever like it's a cookie banner.
          • inkysigma 34 minutes ago
            Actually given boot chain protection, this will probably get harder as time goes on but even assuming some kids are able to, this is clearly definable as a user error: the fault lies with the kid and as a parent you need to think about your threat model.

            Right now, it's not even clear how to create parental controls at a reasonable level so there's no clear path for what to do or how to respond.

          • lich_king 31 minutes ago
            So you're advocating for stronger and more invasive controls?...

            I think this is a sensible compromise. It gives parents more control than before without relying on shady third-party software or without turning every platform into a cop. Yeah, it also aligns with Meta's interests, but so what?

            The age attestation solutions pursued by the EU are far more invasive in this respect, even though they notionally protect identity. They mean that the "default" internet experience is going to be nerfed until you can present a cryptographic proof that you're worthy.

          • 1718627440 26 minutes ago
            I mean on a UNIX OS you could make it yet another group the user needs to be part of. Like the group for access to optical media or for changing network credentials. Whether the child gets root access is on the parent, but that is like with anything else. A child can get around this, but it means finding and exploiting a 0-day on the OS. If they are able to pull this of I would congratulate them.
        • enoint 8 minutes ago
          I don’t care if it’s part of the user setup, but make it an App Store dotfile. Don’t issue fines to Debian for offering a Docker image without a user setup script.
      • eecc 28 minutes ago
        I guess the point is: delegate to kernel, then “oh, people with root can bypass with modules? Secure Boot!”
      • FuckButtons 30 minutes ago
        And just which third party do you trust with your identity?
    • pear01 44 minutes ago
      He doesn't want to have to stand up, turn around and apologize to parents on behalf of an asleep at the wheel Congress again.

      At some level I don't blame him. It is also a bit strange how in that act alone he showed more accountability than most of the politicians that were questioning him, never mind most executives. I suppose Josh Hawley wants to be liable for personal lawsuits for his acts of Congress too... people cringe at his "robotic" demeanor but I can't remember the last time someone turned and faced people and apologized like this. Most people asked to do the same (even in front of the same body) never do.

      https://youtu.be/yUAfRod2xgI

    • SoftTalker 42 minutes ago
      Don't kid yourself, Meta already knows the age of all its users, at least within the broad categories that this bill defines.
      • maxrmk 16 minutes ago
        If a company relies on self reported ages, they don't "know" it well enough to satisfy COPPA. Probably. I'm not a lawyer but I do keep up with the latest in privacy enforcement and I think this is the way things are headed.

        For the record, I'm against age verification laws. But I think companies are pushing for them because of liabilities they face under other laws, not because they would actually like to have the data.

      • onlyrealcuzzo 17 minutes ago
        Legally, there's a difference between "knowing" and "accurate enough for loose cannon advertisers".
      • thesuitonym 16 minutes ago
        Yes, but they want to show children content that is not appropriate, then claim ignorance.
    • ezfe 24 minutes ago
      Is there a problem with this? Most users are using an iPhone and most iPhones already know the accurate age of their user
      • enoint 3 minutes ago
        I’ve heard Android is a more common OS. In any case, if your OS fails to ask a user their age, it’s banned.
    • Lerc 1 hour ago
      How should they do it? Surely they don't have a responsibility to do something that nobody knows how to do?

      There have been numerous cases in history where governments have attempted to legislate the outcome they want without regard to how that might be done or if it was possible in the first place. Obviously it can never deliver the results they want.

      It would be like passing a law to say every company must operate an office on the moon, and then saying that companies lobbying for an advanced NASA space program is them externalising their responsibility.

      • tyre 56 minutes ago
        They could require government ID to sign up and an adult sponsor to certify accounts for kids. Plus a limit on how many accounts an adult can sponsor.

        It would be a mess, but solve the problem. It’s not that we don’t have the technology, we just don’t want to because the friction would decimate user numbers and engagement; it would be much simpler to regulate (e.g. usage limits on minors); and minors are less monetizable, which would lead to lower CPM on ads.

        Then there’s the legal liability if you know someone is a minor and they’re sending nudes, for example. And the privacy concerns of tying that back to de-anonymized individuals.

        But obviously I wouldn’t believe that social media companies care about user privacy on behalf of people.

        • gruez 53 minutes ago
          >They could require government ID to sign up and an adult sponsor to certify accounts for kids. Plus a limit on how many accounts an adult can sponsor.

          Requiring all online account creation to go through some government vouching system sounds far worse for privacy than OS doing age verification.

          • intrasight 29 minutes ago
            OS-based age verification would also have to use a government ID. There is no alternatives to a government ID for such verification.
        • Aunche 43 minutes ago
          > They could require government ID to sign up and an adult sponsor to certify accounts for kids.

          Even if they used an open source zero knowledge proof, HN will still immediately dismiss it as an attempt to steal your data. The proposal here and the similar bill that passed in California doesn't require any validation that you enter you age correctly.

        • Lerc 52 minutes ago
          I think the public in general woul be happier with the office on the moon idea than compulsory Government ID requirements to use services.
          • intrasight 28 minutes ago
            It's only required for services that require it. The states are also regulating which services those are.
      • observationist 45 minutes ago
        It's up to parents to parent. It's not up to the government, and Facebook pushing this shit is evil.

        It's not about protecting children. It's about increasing adtech intrusion, protecting revenue from liability, pushing against anonymity, and for all the various apparatus of power, it's about increasing leverage and control over speech.

      • ehl0 52 minutes ago
        bad take man. these companies don't care about kids; they just want to take the responsivity off of themselves. they don't actually put any money towards child safety.
    • NotGMan 1 hour ago
      • Slow_Hand 1 hour ago
        Really, I’m surprised that for all of the discussions on HN around these individual statewide acts that I see so little discussion of Meta as a primary force pushing them.
        • pesus 1 hour ago
          There are probably many more people that would profit of it on HN.
        • hypeatei 1 hour ago
          Why does it matter specifically that Meta is doing it? This has long been a goal for intelligence apparatus and big tech: get rid of anonymity online to "fight terrorism" and sell ads respectively.

          Don't get me wrong, it's good to know but it's not earth shattering information.

          • gruez 55 minutes ago
            >Why does it matter specifically that Meta is doing it? This has long been a goal for intelligence apparatus and big tech: get rid of anonymity online to "fight terrorism" and sell ads respectively.

            How does getting the OS to do age verification "get rid of anonymity online" or help "sell ads"? Assuming the verification is implemented in a competent way (ie. it's not just providing an id scan for any app to read), it's probably one of the more privacy friendly ways to implement age verification, that's also more secure than an "are you over 18" prompt on every website.

            • hypeatei 42 minutes ago
              You've accepted the overton window shift that age verification is an inevitability and that we need to give up information to the operating system because any other way would violate our privacy! It's naive to see this internationally coordinated effort to "save the children" as anything other than the temperature in the pot being turned up.

              > implemented in a competent way (ie. it's not just providing an id scan for any app to read)

              What if there are vulnerabilities? You're inherently introducing more attack surface and providing more data than you would without these laws.

              • edgyquant 11 minutes ago
                I find it odd when people write off policies as using “save the children” or “protect women” as if this isn’t something people are really capable of thinking. You fail to understand why the Overton window has shifted because you fail to understand people really are worried about their children
              • gruez 35 minutes ago
                >You've accepted the overton window shift that age verification is an inevitability and that we need to give up information to the operating system because any other way would violate your privacy! It's naive to see this internationally coordinated effort to "save the children" as anything other than the temperature in the pot being turned up.

                If you're trying to imply Meta is behind the "overton window shift", that's plainly not the case. The popular sentiment that smartphones and social networks are harming kids (thereby necessitating bans/verification) has been boiling over for a while now (eg. "The Anxious Generation, 2024", and the recent social media bans in Australia), and meta is just trying to get ahead of this with laws that favor them.

                >What if there are vulnerabilities? You're inherently introducing more attack surface and providing more data than you would without these laws.

                Probably less likely to cause vulnerabilities than web usb or web bluetooth , both of which gets some pushback here but nowhere as much an API that returns a number.

                • hypeatei 10 minutes ago
                  > If you're trying to imply Meta is behind the "overton window shift", that's plainly not the case

                  No, I'm saying the exact opposite: Meta is just one player in a campaign from intelligence agencies and other tech companies who want to normalize mandated prompts in your OS that collect information. Right now it's "just a DOB field bro" turns into "well... people can lie with the DOB field, let's just add a ID check step in that dialog" and build on it from there. Of course the pot has been boiling for a while and it's not just Meta looking for regulatory capture.

                  > Probably less likely to cause vulnerabilities

                  I don't care about likelihoods, this "feature" inherently introduces more risk and for something I don't even want on my computer. Even a small chance that this can be abused is unacceptable.

          • JumpCrisscross 1 hour ago
            > Why does it matter specifically that Meta is doing it?

            Their entire top leadership has shown a multi-year tendency towards psychopathy and lying. Knowing Meta is pushing this bill makes me want to understand why my views and theirs randomly agree as well as carefully read the bill text for any signs Adam Mosseri was within 500 feet of it.

            • JCattheATM 54 minutes ago
              > my views and theirs randomly agree

              That's probably a sign that you should reevaluate your views.

        • iAMkenough 1 hour ago
          I wonder if Meta monitors their employees comments on HN?
          • alephnerd 32 minutes ago
            They don't but frankly no one who matters actually gives a s#it about HN anyhow.

            HN is also much less representative of the demographics within the American tech industry now as well - almost all the references I see on here are stuff only men in their late 30s to 50s would recognize, and an increasing amount of users appear to be based in Western and Central Europe.

            Heck, I'm on the younger end by HN standards (early/mid 30s) and when I introduced HN to my peers over a decade ago (this is my throwaway) even back then they complained that it was "toxic", "snooty", and "unhelpful". And it's reputation amongst the younger generation has only gotten worse.

            HN has "SlashDot"ified, because most people are either in private groupchats on signal/imessage/discord or meeting each other with Luma invites.

      • starkparker 1 hour ago
        I think? the most recent version of that post is https://web.archive.org/web/20260314074025/https://www.reddi..., which is "awaiting moderator approval"
        • Springtime 38 minutes ago
          I've seen skepticism about the veracity of the claims, in part as various sources cited in the git repo pointed to todo files not actual data[1] (in that example was only just hours ago a source file was added, when the project still claims part of the conclusions are based on data said to be contained there).

          Which has led some to suspect much is LLM generated and not properly human-reviewed, in addition to the very short timeframe from initial self-disclosed start of the research to publishing it online (mere 2-3 days) despite the confident tone the author uses.

          [1] https://web.archive.org/web/20260317184359/https://lobste.rs...

  • ottah 1 hour ago
    This coordinated state level attack on the legislative process is crazy. These people can't seem to be bothered to do the basics of governing, but they always find time to do this cross-state nightmare fuel.
  • firtoz 1 hour ago
    It's kinda convenient because every service needs to ask you for the age now because they can't serve under 13s in a lot of cases. Having it be a simple API would be a decent convenience, no?

    If you connect it with a permission system where you can choose whether to provide this information (e.g. >13 as a bool or age as an integer or the birthday as a date) that can't be too bad I guess?

    I haven't read the whole thing of course.

    • pull_my_finger 37 minutes ago
      It WOULD be nice if it only got used appropriately. But in 2026 its just one more metric to narrow down your profile for advertisers. Wouldn't it be convenient if you could just opt-out of tracking with a convenient API like the literal "do not track" header in browsers? It exists, but none of the people who SHOULD use it pay it any attention except as, ironically, another metric used to track people.

      Not to mention that computing is a global thing, and in order for this to be useful it would definitely have to be providing more specific information than just a bool. Maybe chats require 13+, but pornography requires 18+. Maybe those ages are different based on location. All advertisers would need to do is ping the various different checks to get your actual or at least very approximate age.

      This kind of thing is a slippery slope, and its ripe for abuse by doxxers, advertisers and big brother himself. Burn this with fire. I'm totally in agreement with the others that suggest stuff like this should b just get banned from getting introduced and reintroduced constantly trying to sneak it in as a rider or hidden provision. The people DON'T want it.

    • edgyquant 51 minutes ago
      What if someone else is using the computer/phone/etc?
  • glitchc 58 minutes ago
    The law as is written mainly targets social media platforms. For an OS to comply, all it needs to do is provide a field during account creation that records the user's date of birth as supplied by the user. There is no onus on the operator to confirm the veracity of this information, or even record it anywhere other than the local OS install itself. I think we're safe.
    • JCattheATM 54 minutes ago
      It's the start of a very slippery slope.
      • naikrovek 40 minutes ago
        Slippery slopes are a logical fallacy. Every single decision moving you down the slope is intentional. No sliding occurs if nothing actively pushes things down the slide.

        Accordingly, it is never too late to lobby against these things.

        • areoform 35 minutes ago
          Not if you're being pushed down the slope.

          It's not an accident that this appeared within a month or two of the California one. I would bet good money that there's someone shopping this bill around.

          If you do a frequency analysis of when these bills are being introduced, you'll notice an odd cluster internationally. Less charitably, they're coordinating / talking / being pushed by someone. More charitably, the "idea" is spreading.

          It's a very odd idea to spread though. Age "verification" isn't something people are truly passionate about.

          I suspect that, long-term, this is about surveillance. The powers that be would rather kill the golden genie that's general purpose compute than have teens and radical youth with compute.

          This is going to get bad.

        • 1718627440 23 minutes ago
          The problem with slippery slope is that every step can be defended as reasonable, but the overall result can't. Pointing out that something is means saying, I can't refute that single step and you know that, but I still am against it, because it is crucial to an harmful outcome that I really don't want. It argues against a policy by putting it into context.
        • nlitened 34 minutes ago
          > Slippery slopes are a logical fallacy

          How is this a counter-argument? I often read this, as if there's some international trusted organization of logical thinkers that has approved inclusion of slippery slope to a list of logical fallacies that must never be invoked in a conversation.

          Every single time five years later it turns out that the slope actually was slippery.

          • bombcar 22 minutes ago
            Everyone who rants about slippery slopes being a fallacy also loves the boiling frog analogy (which technically might be a bit closer to what they're going for).
          • rkomorn 18 minutes ago
            I don't think their comment was meant as a counter-argument.

            I read it as a call to action: things only go down the slope if they're pushed that way, so now is the time to try and prevent said push.

        • bs7280 9 minutes ago
          Calling everything a logical fallacy, is also a logical fallacy.

          We have already seen the federal government use facial recognition data to create an app that tells ICE goons who's legal. We should not tolerate the government forcing more data tracking and privacy violations just because you are not "sliding" today.

        • mattnewton 35 minutes ago
          Like gravity, there is some inexorably force drawing the state towards mass surveillance tools as it makes the job easier. Removing friction that fights against that force is real
        • 1shooner 16 minutes ago
          > it is never too late to lobby against these things.

          Putting aside the real possibility that the ability to lobby against certain things is already actively under attack, it isn't speech alone that is being addressed, it's political and cultural momentum.

          Would you call it a fallacy that making incremental rather than sudden movement in a specific direction makes it politically easier to accomplish?

        • BoredomIsFun 24 minutes ago
          > Slippery slopes are a logical fallacy. Every single decision moving you down the slope is intentional.

              First they came for the Communists
              And I did not speak out
              Because I was not a Communist
          
              Then they came for the Socialists
              And I did not speak out
              Because I was not a Socialist
          
              Then they came for the trade unionists
              And I did not speak out
              Because I was not a trade unionist
          
              Then they came for the Jews
              And I did not speak out
              Because I was not a Jew
          
              Then they came for me
              And there was no one left
              To speak out for me
    • cheschire 21 minutes ago
      And how will you use a library computer?
    • mattnewton 51 minutes ago
      Seems like a slippery slope. Now the infrastructure is there to ask apple, Google and microsoft to confirm identity with selfies over the internet.
      • ezfe 24 minutes ago
        That infrastructure is literally already there. It's done and live in some areas.
  • spullara 1 hour ago
    this is completely insane. we need some kind of constitutional amendment to get rid of all this kind legislation forever.
    • Aunche 52 minutes ago
      People are making way too big a deal of this IMO. This is basically the OS equivalent of that checkbox you click to enter a porn website that gets exposed to Meta, so they can claim that they did what they all the they could to protect children if they get sued by parents. Any determined kid would figure out a way around this, but I can see it stopping younger and less determined kids, and it's a useful tool for parents.
      • 0xbadcafebee 1 minute ago
        [delayed]
      • zardo 39 minutes ago
        Wouldn't a some kind of technical standard proposal be a more sensible way to do this than trying to pass OS laws state by state?
        • ezfe 23 minutes ago
          iOS (for example) already has that technical standard in place and usable.
    • jjtheblunt 1 hour ago
      it's entirely possible such nonsense is all show, and wouldn't be passed, however.

      i'm from illinois, worked in california, and no longer live in either. from afar, it seems that whatever california bureaucrats propose, after a short delay, gets proposed by their little sibling bureaucrats in illinois.

      • golbez9 42 minutes ago
        This is 100% true
      • dmitrygr 1 hour ago
        This. IL and MA follow whatever CA does with a few year lag. Considerations of sanity never enter into the discussion.
    • varispeed 59 minutes ago
      constitutional amendment to criminalise corporate lobbying with severe penalties - including capital punishment and confiscation of entire corporation.
    • ActorNightly 49 minutes ago
      I actually see the golden lining here

      >"Operating system provider" means a person or entity that develops, licenses, or controls the operating system software on a computer, mobile device, or any other general purpose computing device.

      I.e Linux will most likely to be immune, since its not tied to a particular computer.

      Which just means Linux stay winning. It already made big headway in the video game space, so its prime to take over personal computing too.

      • karmakaze 34 minutes ago
        Wouldn't that include using it on any cloud service that let's you pick it?
      • jmye 34 minutes ago
        > since its not tied to a particular computer.

        That's a really weird and nonsensical reading of "operating system software on a computer".

      • tokai 37 minutes ago
        All the distros are the providers here. The Linux kernel is not an operating system.
        • 1718627440 19 minutes ago
          Since GNU(or other)/Linux OSes allow the sysadmin to compose the OS out of parts and change them, the final OS is created by the sysadmin. That's what makes distributing binary software so annoying for maintainers, every installation can be it's own snowflake OS.
    • chronic20001 1 hour ago
      [flagged]
      • prophesi 1 hour ago
        > For the record, I don’t care enough about age verification. Whether the law passes or not, I don’t really care.

        Sounds like there actually would be some benefit commenting about it on HN.

        • alephnerd 1 hour ago
          No one who matters uses HN or cares about HN. The handful of us on HN who are in or near a position to affect change are basically here due to habit or $#itposting until we get banned.

          So they are right in that sense - commenting on HN is cathartic but ultimately useless.

          And the people who matter and are against this also don't use HN because they view this platform as toxic and reactionary.

          • prophesi 1 hour ago
            There are software engineers who directly work for the platforms lobbying for this whom post here.
            • alephnerd 1 hour ago
              ICs don't matter. I can fire one and hire 5, and increasingly, the demographics on HN don't align with those who work in those organizations.

              HN is basically slashdot now.

              • prophesi 56 minutes ago
                > and increasingly, the demographics on HN don't align with those who work in those organizations.

                People have been worried about that on HN for years, but I still see the same culture. There do seem to be more bots and astroturfing, but that's a systemic issue with all social media platforms today.

                • alephnerd 52 minutes ago
                  > People have been worried about that on HN for years, but I still see the same culture...

                  And that's the crux of the issue - the industry and people have changed, but HN hasn't changed discourse wise and is growing increasingly disconnected demographically speaking.

                  A large portion of HNers are men in their late 30s to 50s, and no longer located in the Bay Area or NYC.

                  No one's who matters is having these kinds of conversations on HN - they're meeting IRL with Luma invites or in signal/imessage/discord group chats.

  • 0xbadcafebee 18 minutes ago

      > the Children's Social Media Safety Act
      > 
      > provide an accessible interface at account setup that requires an account holder to indicate the birth date, age, or both
    
    Thank goodness kids can't lie about their age!

      > provide an operator who has requested a signal with respect to a particular user a signal that identifies the user's age by category
    
    Wait - if this is just to pass a signal to an operator ("social media site"), why can't the "operator" just ask for the age themselves?

    Answer: they don't want to be liable and get fined $400 Million, like Meta got fined, for letting kids on social media. (https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/05/business/meta-children-da...)

    This is why Meta is forcing this legislation through nation-wide. They are forcing Google/Apple to take the liability, despite it not actually being Google or Apple that's providing the "harmful" social media. Meta are doing this state-by-state so nobody can track that it's them. Easier than pushing at a federal level, and raises fewer red flags from news media.

    Since Google and Apple won't want to accept this liability either, the next step is requiring digital IDs and third-party verification to prove the user is of age. Bills requiring this are already being passed at state and federal level.

  • longislandguido 4 minutes ago
    The most progressive states doing exactly what their constituents elected them to do. I don't understand why everyone is so surprised.
  • strongpigeon 1 hour ago
    People here seem very against this, but I don't really see it. This only require to have a form asking about your age and provide an API to read it, right?

    Surely I'm missing something? Is the backlash due to fear of a slippery slope?

    • bloppe 49 minutes ago
      There are basically 2 possibilities with the outcome of this law: It's rather so full of holes as to be meaningless, or it's so invasive as to force open source projects to try to geofence Illinois (which wouldn't be effective either, but might be the kind of compliance theatre we'll see from maintainers worried about liability).

      Linux distros always have a "root" user. Does that user have to be asked its age before being usable? What about docker containers, which often come with a non-root user? What about installation media, which is often a perfectly usable OS? It would either have to be so easy to get around this law that most kids could do it easily, or so overzealously enforced as to disrupt the entire cloud industry.

      • strongpigeon 42 minutes ago
        > It's rather so full of holes as to be meaningless, or it's so invasive as to force open source projects to try to geofence Illinois.

        My guess reading the law as linked is that it's much closer to the former than the latter. That being said, you're right that it does bring a bunch of headache alongside with it for little-to-no benefits.

    • al_borland 43 minutes ago
      People lie, so there would need to be some kind of proof provided, right? How much data will one need to give up to use a computer? Where/how is that data stored? What else will it be used for? What happens when it’s hacked? How will test systems or servers work? If I want a computer that isn’t linked to the rest of my ecosystem, can I still do that or will age verification require I login with a cloud account?

      There are so many ways for this to go badly or simply be annoying.

      I’m a guy in my 40s with no kids. I shouldn’t need to deal with all of this. Let the parents turn on parental controls for their kids; don’t force it on everyone.

      If Meta needs to find a way to verify age, then that is also their problem. They are trying to make it the world’s problem. I don’t use any Meta products, so again I would question why I need to care about this… why will it become my problem?

      The slippery slope then comes in addition to all of this.

      It seems Apple already implemented their age verification API. I got prompted for it when opening the MyChart app a few weeks ago. The API used in that case only sends a Boolean if the user is over 18 or not, this is the best of the bad options. However, they have other APIs to get other data from a digital ID. The user is at the whim of the API the developer chooses to use. They can say no, but then they can’t use the app. I’m not sure how Apple validated my age, as I hadn’t loaded an ID into my wallet, but my Apple account is nearly 18 years old, so that might be good enough? If I were to get a Mac and just want to use a local account, then what happens? Can I not verify my age? Will I be able to use the computer or be locked out of the browser? These are some of the fears I have if they take this too far. Maybe some of them are unfounded, but I guess time will tell.

    • nancyminusone 54 minutes ago
      I don't really see any good arguments in favor of it, so why do it? There's no reason my OS needs to know anything about me.
      • strongpigeon 49 minutes ago
        I guess I'm more surprised by the intensity of the backlash this generates here. I agree with you that mandating OS APIs like this doesn't seem necessary, but that alone wouldn't warrant the severe reaction this is getting right?
        • TrueDuality 28 minutes ago
          A big chunk of the problem with this kind of legislation for me is that it inherently indicates a failure to govern to me. I disagree with the premise of the solution, but even more so this is trying to legislate a specific engineering solution for our current systems rather than any form of financial, objective guidance, or have reasonably actionable and enforceable consequences.

          While laws that target engineering decisions are sometimes reasonable, they are always accompanied with specific guidance from a credible academic based institution (e.g. mechanical and civil engineering use private licensing bodies and develop specific curriculum and best practices).

          The only time this law will ever be enforced is punitively for other crimes against major actors who are extremely limited in number. It is unenforceable for Linux, trivial for Apple, Microsoft, and Google to add to their OS. Presumably easy to spoof, the law describes it as minimal but once again, there isn't a specification so who knows. Websites won't be liable, they're getting a sweetheart deal here.

          In practice what this law does is absolve abusive platforms an from any responsibility. It adds extra meaningless work and overhead for legitimate adult platforms while opening themselves up to new potential legal challenges, and ultimately doesn't replace the responsibility its removing.

          This doesn't make children safer. This doesn't make the internet safer. This kind of legislation makes it easier to abuse children online by removing responsibility from platforms that are known to be dangerous to them yet profit from their presence the most.

        • bloppe 45 minutes ago
          It's considered offensive to the strongly freedom-loving FOSS community, and it's basically legally-required tech debt, which is annoying to all maintainers
        • akersten 30 minutes ago
          Code is speech. Open source projects are an exercise in speaking publicly. This law mandates particular speech in your otherwise Free as in freedom code.

          How are you not outraged? People are missing the above forest for the "oh but it's a tiny little easy API and I don't see any downsides" trees.

        • tokai 41 minutes ago
          Seems pretty reasonable to get annoyed at a law that at best will be useless and at worse dangerous, while it will directly dictate features into the tools we all use everyday. All for no gain for anyone but maybe Meta and some other big companies.
    • jwitthuhn 49 minutes ago
      Why should an OS demand personal information from its users? It creates an unnecessary risk that the information will be leaked.
      • charcircuit 1 minute ago
        Laws exist that dictate what apps are allowed to do depending on the user's age. This means that in order to follow the law they must collect the user's age. If collecting the user's age is a common requirement of apps it makes sense for the operating system to expose an easy way to do that to make app development easier on that platform.
    • hypeatei 47 minutes ago
      What if I don't want my computer asking for my age and providing an API to give up that information? Why is the government mandating software devs to add bloat and privacy violating features to operating systems?

      The slippery slope isn't a fallacy in this case as we've seen the pot slowly come to a boil after 9/11 with various laws like the Patriot Act, FISA, etc. and classified programs within the NSA (and I'm sure all the three letters) which violate the rights of Americans everyday. Now it's a coordinated effort across multiple western countries all of a sudden to introduce laws around verifying your age. It's clear where this is going.

      • anthk 26 minutes ago
        Meanwhile Epstein and the pedo elite are untouchable and with no surveillance of course.
    • toomuchtodo 1 hour ago
      I am very pro social media regulation (with regards to age gating) due to the evidenced harm it causes, and which court cases have shown these companies are well aware of internally; with that said, this is an attempt by social media companies to shift liability to keep business as usual/status quo. This is no different than what oil companies have done, cigarette companies, chemical companies who have polluted at scale while knowing the harm, etc.

      Meta and TikTok (and YouTube shorts to an extent) are the new Sackler family and Purdue pharma. They will hold on to these profit and power engines as long and hard as possible. They will not stop causing the harm unless forced to with regulation.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sackler_family

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opioid_epidemic_in_the_United_...

      https://www.profgalloway.com/addiction-economy/

      • strongpigeon 59 minutes ago
        > This is an attempt by social media companies to shift liability to keep business as usual/status quo.

        Do you mind expanding on why that is? Is it because it allows them to say "well the API told us they're adults so we're all good"?

        • steviedotboston 47 minutes ago
          and the verification that the OS has to provide is minimal. the OS doesn't need to verify and ID or anything. Probably just a checkbox when you create the account that you're an adult, or child, etc. and then that's provided to the browser. So it effectively becomes meaningless if the goal is to get children off social media.
      • richwater 56 minutes ago
        Purdue sold less than 4% of the prescription opioid pain pills in the U.S. from 2006 to 2012. They were a scapegoat for pill farm doctors and an incredible lack of personal responsibility from prescribers, pharmacists and patients.
        • toomuchtodo 50 minutes ago
          Personal responsibility isn't a thing from a consumption perspective, it's primarily brain chemistry. See: GLP-1s [1] [2] (tldr they patch the brain's reward center against suboptimal reward chasing and demand)

          Let us not blame humans for suboptimal brain chemistry taken advantage of by malicious torment nexus threat actors. Fix the policy, bug fix the human, disempower the threat actors. Defend and empower the human.

          [1] Why Ozempic Beats Free Will - https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/hot-thought/202410/w... - October 4th, 2024

          [2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45907422 (additional citations)

          (think in systems)

      • akdev1l 54 minutes ago
        >keep business as usual/status quo.

        Umm isn’t that what we want? Or are you suggesting there should be some other legislation in place?

      • 2OEH8eoCRo0 46 minutes ago
        That's exactly how I see it. Verification should be on the social media platforms not your OS.
  • saityi 53 minutes ago
    Even if open source operating systems comply and add such a feature, what's to stop individual people from removing this and blocking the API requests before they install the OS? Or providing dummy responses? They're open source, after all.

    Is the government going to require some sort of automated checks that verify every person who connects to the internet has this API on their OS and go after individuals that aren't in compliance?

  • tracker1 1 hour ago
    I wonder how this will mix wit federal laws saying you aren't allowed to track users under the age of 13yo? Will this then be forced as a browser API/header passed to every server/request?
    • johnisgood 1 hour ago
      Yeah but if so, what does it have to do with the OS itself, i.e. outside the browser?
      • tracker1 50 minutes ago
        From articles I've seen, it's mostly Facebook lobbying to "pass the buck" upstream to the OS level to actually inquire... this of course will blead into the OS provided "store" interfaces most likely. And while, likely mostly targeting Apple and Google, MS/Windows and Linux are definitely going to be catching stray bullets. In particular vendors with Linux pre-installed... hence System 76 adding the feature to PopOS. Who knows if/how this will come about in practice or how consistently.
  • balozi 29 minutes ago
    What recourse would Illinois have against open-source operating systems? Anyone can roll their own Linux distro and share it with whomever they want.
    • icwtyjj 8 minutes ago
      > What recourse would Illinois (!) have against open-source operating systems?

      None but them corporations sure do. And with a little cash in the right place I'm sure they can push recourse onto people of power. We really need to end political lobbying one of these days

  • 1970-01-01 1 hour ago
    The "one weird trick" that all government hates? Stop forcing OSes to function with accounts. "User account" is an artifact of UNIX. You don't need an account to start a car, send and email, nor boot an operating system. I know it's hard to grasp, but it's true.
    • 1718627440 14 minutes ago
      The "User account" of the OS are the security contexts. You can say everything should be a single security context, and this is how a lot of people have been operating their MS Windows machines, logging in as admin constantly, but this is a stupid idea and comes with risks. Even when you say the OS can have a second root account, that the user never gets to use, you have two user accounts.
    • gruez 1 hour ago
      What's the "user account" for an iPhone? Sure you might have to sign into icloud, but that's not mandatory. It's effectively a single user system.
    • datsci_est_2015 52 minutes ago
      > You don't need an account to start a car, …

      Don’t say this too loud please, I don’t honestly think we’re too far from this reality, at least from an “Overton Window” point of view.

    • thoughtpalette 55 minutes ago
      Growing up, I vividly remember user accounts being important for our families personas on Windows XP. There's definitely a place for them, but there should be an option to not use one.

      Unless your specifically calling out accounts that require online registration for the OS. I'm vehemently against that requirement.

  • TheChaplain 1 hour ago
    Curious how OpenBSD or Haiku will comply.
    • prmoustache 58 minutes ago
      For what I understand, OpenBSD could just patch useradd so that the age category is mentionned in the comment field of /etc/passwd or a random text file in /etc.

      Haiku could just run an automatic dialog asking you if you are minor, in Illinois or California and write a text file with the corresponding age category of said person.

      These bills do not mandate that the user cannot modify that information AFAIK.

    • JCattheATM 53 minutes ago
      I can't imagine OpenBSD would be bothered by laws specific to a very small selection of US states.
    • dpe82 1 hour ago
      By adding a simple birthdate field to your account info and a system API of some sort for retrieving the account owner's age range, same as everyone else.
  • clcaev 35 minutes ago
    How will public libraries comply?
  • TutleCpt 42 minutes ago
  • albertsw 48 minutes ago
    How old is root?
  • fhn 25 minutes ago
    These people are just so clueless. All they will find is that everybody on the internet is an adult.
  • johnisgood 1 hour ago
    What is the reasoning behind this exactly? Yeah, I know Meta is behind it, but surely they will throw it out if it is absord, right... right?
  • SilverElfin 15 minutes ago
    Every single sponsor of this bill is a Democrat. Why is that? I would think they’re against the type of puritanical moralizing that is behind most age verification bills.
  • johndecktwo 12 minutes ago
    Agelesslinux
  • thrill 1 hour ago
    “Use of this computer is illegal in the state of Illinois - your friendly neighborhood SWAT team has been notified.”
  • exabrial 1 hour ago
    Why suddenly are all of the blue states doing this BS? What is going on and what control is this affording the government?
    • tadfisher 1 hour ago
      Lobbying from Meta. They do not want to do age-verification themselves (and pay for it).
    • RankingMember 1 hour ago
      See the actors behind this here (Meta is a big one): https://tboteproject.com/
    • Nijikokun 1 hour ago
      Meta is behind a huge amount of it, they have funded the majority of these
    • dzink 1 hour ago
      Meta is lobbying with millions for it.
    • anonym29 1 hour ago
      Blue states: paternalism over your property, liberty for your body

      Red states: paternalism over your body, liberty for your property

      • gruez 1 hour ago
        except for during covid, where there was a weird reversal.
        • anonym29 43 minutes ago
          I don't even know if that was much of a "reversal".

          Blue states were paternalistic over both your property (business and social gathering shutdowns) and your body (masking, social distancing enforcement), while red states (particularly Texas, Florida) were very laissez-faire for both.

          What's perplexing about this is that research has generally correlated higher amygdala activity (fear/worry) with political conservatism, and lower amygdala activity with political progressivism, but in this case, the effect seemed almost inverted.

  • wosined 51 minutes ago
    Karens making stupid bills. What is and what is not an OS?
  • fredgrott 38 minutes ago
    here is the date I will put out....

    1 10 0000

    or even better

    1 10 -2000

    This will turn into most useless set of laws ever

  • pengaru 1 hour ago
    i look forward to the police showing up and explaining to me how computing is a privilege, not a right
  • hypeatei 1 hour ago
    What are they going to do to enforce this? Take down open source projects that "operate" in Illinois because a user downloaded the software there? Absolute joke and everyone should treat it that way; advanced compliance here means implicit support for the surveillance state.
  • anthk 1 hour ago
    Read and share "Free Software, Free Society" now.

    Richard Stallman advised us about it long ago.

    Thank god Plan9 got relicensed into GPL. 9front might not totally free, but it's a step in case GNU+Linux gets utterly broken.

    And, yes, please, go try Trisquel (novice users), GUIX (experts) and Hyperbola (experts and protocol purists).

    Avoid every Google, Amazon, Facebook, Apple, Netflix service with nonfree JS.

    • k33n 0 minutes ago
      When I need to use my computer, I'm not thinking about someone else's crusade. I have crusades of my own to fail miserably at and I need all the help I can get from whatever products function best.
  • shablulman 1 hour ago
    [dead]
  • mikestorrent 1 hour ago
    I don't like this whole thing, but compared to what I was fearing would happen, this idea is nowhere near as bad.

    What I expected was that we'd end up with the OS vendors actually being mandated to really do age verification, and then submitting that using Web Credentials and Secure Attestation so that the far end could trust the whole thing, locking open-source OS's out of the mix and creating more of a walled garden online than we already have. I was guessing it would become a simple checkbox on e.g. Cloudflare - "[ ] allow adult users only" or whatever - and that it would end up with vast swathes of the internet going off limits for anyone not on closed-source systems.

    Now, it looks like this is just a way for parents to tell the OS "this is a kid account" and have it flow through to websites so they can easily proactively block kids from connecting without having to implement any of that crap. Yes, it's much potentially easier for a child to circumvent; but any kid who can get around that sort of thing from within an OS could probably just wipe/reinstall anyway, so who cares?

    As a parent whose kids are continually trying to see what trouble they can get into, I appreciate that I will get one more potential weapon in the fight.

    Can someone tell me whether I am being a fool by actually being a bit relieved it's going this way?

    • shit_game 1 hour ago
      > Can someone tell me whether I am being a fool by actually being a bit relieved it's going this way?

      You're being a fool by actually being a bit relieved it's going this way.

      These bills are meant to nudge the overton window[0] of digital politics in the direction of mandating realtime identity verification for all forms of computing. Advertisers want it, governments want it, _bad people and bad governments want it_. By pushing a very small and "weak" legally-required form of user identification on everything under the guise of "saving the kids", all involved parties can point at those who disagree and say "Look, if you disagree you must want to hurt children!" And so the bills pass, and a weak form of identity verification passes and is enforced. Then it'll be shown it doesn't work, and the proposed solution will be to make these identity verification laws more intrusive and more restrictive. Repeat ad-nauseum.

      0: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overton_window

      • pooooka 28 minutes ago
        LOL. Well said...Seems as if we're on some dystopian track that's eventually going to transform a RealID card into something like a Common Access Card (or worse).
      • LooseMarmoset 1 hour ago
        You shouldn't be downvoted for this, the problem is exactly as you described.
    • tracker1 1 hour ago
      What do you think comes after this? This is just a first step towards exactly requiring age verification at the OS/Store level... Then comes ever more restrictive and intrusive tracking and eliminating all anonymity as a final goal.

      Time to start throwing up hobby BBS sites... and I think in this case text mode interfaces over web might be an advantage.

    • Larrikin 1 hour ago
      Websites can send down a single header indicating adult content. The device, the parent setup to indicate the users age, can respect that. Legitimate adult websites will not show the content. There is no need for any verification beyond that or it's just government mandated surveillance.
      • jacobgkau 1 hour ago
        > There is no need for any verification beyond that or it's just government mandated surveillance.

        There is no verification beyond that in these sorts of bills (CA, CO, IL). It's the parent's responsibility to watch their kids when they set up an account.

        > Legitimate adult websites will not show the content.

        This is a big problem (that won't necessarily be solved by this particular legislation, granted). There are already voluntary rating HTML tags websites can add to indicate parental control software should block them, but they're voluntary and non-standardized. Websites can choose not to comply with no real-world consequences. And I don't think platforms like Reddit or X, which are ostensibly all-ages social media but also have an abundance of adult content, are properly set up to serve tags like that on NSFW posts but not other ones.

        It's a tricky problem to solve, and, imo, it's one the tech industry has demonstrated it doesn't have any desire to solve itself, hence legislation starting to get involved.

        > Websites can send down a single header indicating adult content.

        It sounds at first glance like a no-brainer that websites shouldn't have access to any information and the enforcement should be done at a local level (like the current voluntary HTML tags that locally installed parental control software can sometimes read). But some websites might want to display alternate content to minors-- e.g. a Wikipedia article with some images withheld, or Reddit sending a user back to an all-ages subreddit instead of just fully breaking or failing to load when the user stumbles upon something 18+. For anything like that, the website will need to know in some form that the user isn't able to see 18+ content.

    • jacobgkau 1 hour ago
      Yeah, the laws in CA, CO, and now IL are essentially just mandating generally available OS's implement a standardized, local parental control system.

      Detractors will say parents should just install existing parental control software, even though it's existed in its current form for decades and is obviously not effective. And they'll say it should be the parents' responsibility to enforce what their kids are doing with computers, while ignoring the fact that these laws provide tools allowing parents to do just that (the parents are the ones responsible for supervising their kids when they create accounts to ensure they're not lying about their age-- if the kids lie during setup, it's on the parents).

      Anyone with kids will probably acknowledge that it's much easier supervising your kid once when they first set up an account on a new device than it would be to supervise them 24/7 when they're using the internet. But for some reason, lots of people without kids are in a panic about having to type in any date older than 18 years ago. The arguments I've heard against it are almost all slippery-slope (e.g. "they're gonna do this first, and then add ID requirements next year, because that's what I fear will happen.")

      • LooseMarmoset 56 minutes ago
        > The arguments I've heard against it are almost all slippery-slope (e.g. "they're gonna do this first, and then add ID requirements next year, because that's what I fear will happen.")

        Because that's exactly what will happen. This is battlespace preparation for the destruction of anonymity on the internet, because politicians find this inconvenient.

      • dormento 56 minutes ago
        The parents can already do that. Its called "parenting". The fact that they won't even though there are (non-required!) tools they could be using to do so is baffling to me.

        > if the kids lie during setup, it's on the parents

        Pretty much a "Yes, and?" scenario. See above.

        > The arguments I've heard against it are almost all slippery-slope (e.g. "they're gonna do this first, and then add ID requirements next year, because that's what I fear will happen.")

        I get where you're going, but precisely this. These things always start slow... then fast. The old adage "first they came for x, then y" is not a joke or an exaggeration. It is pretty much historic observation. I've lived long enough to know that whenever someone invokes the "think of the children" defense, there's always a catch.

      • pianoben 39 minutes ago
        > while ignoring the fact that these laws provide tools allowing parents to do just that

        These tools are called "parental controls" and already exist - we don't need laws to compel their production.

        ...unless, of course, the true aim is to use this as a beachhead for further expansion of privacy-violating requirements.

        You write this off as a "slippery-slope" argument, but given that there are already quite a few tools that do what this law aims for, what's the point?

        • SoftTalker 34 minutes ago
          Because the tools don't work, and are too fragmentary and burdensome.

          Would you prefer to inform each movie theater in town which movies your child is permitted to watch? Or just rely on the rating system that applies to most movies and is honored by most theatres?

          Parents want one setting that says "this is a child" and then expect online platforms to respond appropriately. As we expect and mostly have in the real world.

      • jeffbee 36 minutes ago
        The argument about the California bill is not that it is a slippery slope, but that it was drafted by people with zero domain knowledge. It applies equally to toaster ovens as well as iPhones.