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New US Congress bill proposal requires all operating system providers to verify ages

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Last updated: 15 Apr 2026 at 10:50 am UTC

We've covered here before on individual US states setting up their own age verification laws, and now a new US Congress bill has been proposed for it. If passed, this would then potentially set it all up to be nation-wide across the entirety of the US.

The bill was introduced on April 13th and has been referred to the US House Committee on Energy and Commerce. It's being sponsored by the Democratic party's Josh Gottheimer, with it being co-sponsored by Republican Elise M. Stefanik so it has bipartisan support.

The current concerning thing - is that the actual bill text doesn't seem to have been provided yet. All we know is the main introduction title of: "To require operating system providers to verify the age of any user of an operating system, and for other purposes".

It could go either way with it simply asking for people to enter their date of birth or more concerning is actual proper verification using some form of ID. The other bit about it being for "other purposes" also leaves me with a rather uneasy feeling. These types of bills we've seen elsewhere are always a first step towards something worse. They all mean less privacy, less freedom, more tracking and a potential for more security problems when things inevitably get leaked somewhere.

This appears to be part of the "Parents Decide Act" announced earlier in April by Gottheimer, as just one step in the process. So expect a lot more to come. Some bullet point plans from it:

  • Require operating system developers like Apple and Google to verify users’ ages when setting up a new device, rather than relying on self-reported ages.
  • Allow parents to set age-appropriate content controls from the start, including limiting access to social media, apps, and AI platforms.
  • Ensure that age and parental settings securely flow to apps and AI platforms, so content is tailored appropriately for children.
  • Prevent children from accessing harmful or explicit content — including inappropriate AI chatbot interactions — by creating a consistent, trusted standard across platforms.

Currently, the bill is only in the introductory stage so it hasn't yet passed and become law, so if this is important to you in the US you may want to speak to your representatives.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Misc
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6 comments

hardpenguin 2 hours ago
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This is insane, impractical, and unenforceable under any normal circumstances. What, we want to prevent minors from using technology now? For what purpose? It doesn't make any sense at all.
Liam Dawe 57 minutes ago
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Updated to add more info.
tfk 51 minutes ago
This is not the job of a government. This is the job of the parents.

This has a very good chance of sliding into a 1984 scenario.
emphy 50 minutes ago
It could go either way with it simply asking for people to enter their date of birth ...
The pro and anti big government politicians in the us seem to have settled on bad government as a compromise.

Silly buggers.
Ehvis 27 minutes ago
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Quoting: tfkThis is not the job of a government. This is the job of the parents.
And the article mentions a "parents decide act", which I could theoretically get behind. I don't think it is outside of the governments job to make sure that information and tools are provided by companies to help parents actually parent their children.

Of course this one is .... problematic. It doesn't really take a realistic stance of what operating systems are, what user software is and how things work together. Also giving parents the tools and information is not the same trying to enforce it into everything where it will undoubtedly run into problems of what can technically be achieved.

So again this feels like it was designed by people who's idea of "operating systems" doesn't go beyond phones and tablets.
tmtvl 6 minutes ago
How do you verify a user's age in a way that doesn't run head-first into a user's human right to privacy? ...okay, I admit, that's a stupid question, infringing on the right to privacy is kind of the point of the bill.
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