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Home / Technology / Louisiana Age Law Blocked: Judge Cites Privacy Risks

Louisiana Age Law Blocked: Judge Cites Privacy Risks

16 Dec

•

Summary

  • A judge blocked Louisiana's law requiring social media age verification.
  • The law aimed to verify user ages and implement parental controls.
  • The judge cited privacy risks and vague definitions as reasons for blocking.
Louisiana Age Law Blocked: Judge Cites Privacy Risks

A recently enacted Louisiana law designed to verify the ages of social media users has been halted by a judicial decision. The legislation, known as the Secure Online Child Interaction and Age Limitation Act, was intended to compel platforms such as Meta, Reddit, and YouTube to integrate robust age verification and parental control systems for their users.

The ruling by Judge John W. deGravelles came just days before the law's enforcement was scheduled to commence. The judge stated that the law's provisions for age verification and parental consent were both overly broad and too narrow, deeming its definition of a "social media platform" to be unclear and problematic.

This judicial intervention represents a significant victory for NetChoice, a trade association representing the tech industry, which has been actively challenging age verification mandates. The group contended that the Louisiana law infringed upon constitutional rights and created substantial safety and privacy vulnerabilities for users.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
A judge blocked the law citing it was unconstitutionally over- and under-inclusive and created significant privacy risks.
The law would have impacted platforms like Meta, Reddit, Snap, YouTube, and Discord.
NetChoice argued the law was unconstitutional, posed a privacy risk, and could chill free speech.

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