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Home / Technology / App Stores: The New Gatekeepers for Online Access?

App Stores: The New Gatekeepers for Online Access?

11 Jan

•

Summary

  • Courts are reconsidering online age verification after decades.
  • App stores emerge as potential central points for age checks.
  • Legislation on app store age verification faces legal hurdles.
App Stores: The New Gatekeepers for Online Access?

The long-standing debate over online age verification is gaining new momentum, with a potential shift in legal interpretations. The Supreme Court's 2004 ruling in Ashcroft v. ACLU initially blocked mandated age verification for adult content due to less burdensome alternatives. However, a more recent decision suggests adults have no First Amendment right to avoid age verification, opening the door for reconsideration.

App stores, serving as the primary gateway to many online services, are now targeted as ideal checkpoints for age verification. Proponents argue this approach centralizes the process, reducing the burden on individual apps and potentially enhancing data security. Major tech companies like Meta, Snap, and X have backed this strategy, shifting responsibility towards app store operators.

Despite growing support and federal legislative proposals, age verification bills face considerable legal opposition. A federal judge in Texas recently blocked a state-mandated law, highlighting significant constitutional challenges. This legal friction, combined with ongoing congressional debates, leaves the future of internet age verification uncertain, with implications for both adult and minor 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.
Early US court rulings, like Ashcroft v. ACLU in 2004, blocked mandated online age verification, favoring less intrusive methods like parental controls.
App stores are seen as centralized, efficient points to implement age verification, reducing the burden on individual content providers.
New laws face constitutional challenges related to free speech, particularly when they restrict access for adults to legal content.

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