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California law to require operating systems to check your age

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Last updated: 2 Mar 2026 at 12:12 pm UTC

The time of age assurance is upon us, and not just for social media - for operating systems too and that includes Linux as well of course.

News currently doing the rounds is California law AB-1043 "Age verification signals: software applications and online services" that comes into effect January 1, 2027 that will require operating systems and app stores to get your age and be able to somehow signal that age to applications when they request it.

From the bill:

This bill, beginning January 1, 2027, would require, among other things related to age verification with respect to software applications, an operating system provider, as defined, to provide an accessible interface at account setup that requires an account holder, as defined, to indicate the birth date, age, or both, of the user of that device for the purpose of providing a signal regarding the user’s age bracket to applications available in a covered application store and to provide a developer, as defined, who has requested a signal with respect to a particular user with a digital signal via a reasonably consistent real-time application programming interface regarding whether a user is in any of several age brackets, as prescribed. The bill would require a developer to request a signal with respect to a particular user from an operating system provider or a covered application store when the application is downloaded and launched.

This bill would prohibit an operating system provider or a covered application store from using data collected from a third party in an anticompetitive manner, as specified.

This bill would punish noncompliance with a civil penalty to be enforced by the Attorney General, as prescribed.

This bill would declare its provisions to be severable.

Reading through the bill details, it doesn't seem to demand any ID scanning or anything like that. The text makes it pretty clear they want "nonpersonally identifiable data" taken from your birth date to have you placed into age brackets like under 13, under 16 or at least 18.

This is very US / California specific of course but still applies worldwide to any operating system that has downloads available in California, and continues the trend we've seen elsewhere against social media platforms from various countries (like the unpopular changes with Discord). All in the name of protecting children. This in a way seems a lot more invasive though, considering this age checking is now making its way into your PC directly. It starts with asking for your birth date, but how long before they want more - and for other places to create similar laws? It's a slippery slope.

What we may end up seeing is the likes of GNOME, KDE Plasma and other deskop environments just add in a simple date picker for your age on account creation, or some kind of statement on their downloads page on how it's not to be used in California perhaps.

It would be interesting to see how this type of law could go after Linux distributions if they don't have any age checking at all in place, especially since accounts already created before July 2027 will need to have something in place so you can go back and add your age.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Misc
25 Likes
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67 comments
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Caldathras 20 hours ago
No offense to the parents on this forum (who are likely the exception), but from my experience, most children are better at navigating parental control features than their parents. So, of course, the kids will figure out how to circumvent them too.

But, then, as we've already established, it's not really about the kids after all ...
Cyba.Cowboy 18 hours ago
Apparently Canonical is proposing changes that would force ALL Linux users to verify their age during setup, too... I did post a link to a video discussing this last night; but it needed to be approved by Liam and from what I can see, it doesn't look like he's approved it.

Last edited by Cyba.Cowboy on 4 Mar 2026 at 7:37 pm UTC
Eike 5 hours ago
  • Supporter Plus
Quoting: Mountain Man
Quoting: Eike
Quoting: Mountain ManTo be fair, we're still far behind Europe where you can and will be arrested for posting "offensive" messages on social media.
You can be punished for say calling someone an a**hole. Not for stating an actual opinion. (You do not really believe that a person is a backside - it's not an opinion, it's all insult.) I fail to see a problem with that.
You clearly do not value freedom of speech.
I value the freedom to state your opinion.

I do not see any value in insulting people, no.

Quoting: Mountain ManAnd it's gotten rather extreme. There was one instance where a woman who texted a friend and called the man who raped her a dog received a harsher punishment than her rapist.
Well, obviously, nobody wants that. Would you link a source to read it up?
Eike 5 hours ago
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Quoting: CanadianBlueBeer
Quoting: Eike
Quoting: Mountain ManTo be fair, we're still far behind Europe where you can and will be arrested for posting "offensive" messages on social media.
You can be punished for say calling someone an a**hole. Not for stating an actual opinion. (You do not really believe that a person is a backside - it's not an opinion, it's all insult.) I fail to see a problem with that.
So it's an insult. It's also an opinion. (and insulting opinion?)
I may have difficulties to express that in English, but no, it is not an opinion. You don't actually, literally think that you are talking to/writing with a hole in a backside. That wouldn't be able to talk/write in the first place. The opinion would be that you're talking to a human being you severely dislike. And you're free to state that.

Quoting: CanadianBlueBeerNot something that should get one arrested.
That I agree with, but I never heard of such a case either. I don't know how severe the case needs to be for that to actually happen. People get a money fine for insulting. If there happens anything in the first place, the absolute vast majority is not getting anything for it at all, no matter if it's a real life insult or happening in the net.
Cybolic 2 hours ago
User Avatar
Quoting: Eike
Quoting: Mountain ManAnd it's gotten rather extreme. There was one instance where a woman who texted a friend and called the man who raped her a dog received a harsher punishment than her rapist.
Well, obviously, nobody wants that. Would you link a source to read it up?
I tried to find it as well, and the only thing that seems similar, is the German case of "Maja R.", who sent WhatsApp messages to a rapist from a widely publicised case. She did not know the rapist, the message contains insinuations of harm, and she "was sentenced to a weekend in jail after her comments because she had a previous conviction for theft and had not attending [sic] the court hearing for the case." - [Source](https://www.yahoo.com/news/german-woman-given-harsher-sentence-155055252.html).
If that's the actual source, then:
A) Yes, those laws have been rightly criticised.
B) That's a heavily manipulated version of events, seemingly given to back up a growing sentiment I'm seeing of trying to paint the EU as some kind of censorship hellscape, which is pretty far from the truth.
Liam Dawe 1 hour ago
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Quoting: Cyba.CowboyApparently Canonical is proposing changes that would force ALL Linux users to verify their age during setup, too... I did post a link to a video discussing this last night; but it needed to be approved by Liam and from what I can see, it doesn't look like he's approved it.
No, Canonical are not currently proposing that. They haven't made any decision, their statement is in the other article.
Cyba.Cowboy 1 hour ago
Quoting: Liam DaweNo, Canonical are not currently proposing that. They haven't made any decision, their statement is in the other article.
Yeah, you posted that right around the same time I made my comment.

I actually have the source article open in a tab to have a read personally on the weekend (it's pretty lengthy)... I skimmed it for now and it looks like some of their developers are proposing this level of integration; though as you rightly point out, it's not in an Official (Canonical-approved) capacity - for now.

Anyway, I'm open to Canonical implementing age gate stuff if they feel that it's legally required; but only because I can understand the potential consequences if they do not implement this. However, this shouldn't be mandatory for users where this legislation (law) has no bearing (i.e. so most users) and because of the "open" nature of Linux, it should be implemented in a way which users can completely disable or remove.

If Canonical - or any other Linux distro for that matter - can tick those boxes, I have no problem with them implementing these measures... If not, well I won't have very nice things to say about them.

Last edited by Cyba.Cowboy on 5 Mar 2026 at 12:49 pm UTC
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