• A broad censorship regime

    From Mike Powell@1:2320/105 to All on Wed Oct 22 09:40:05 2025
    "A broad censorship regime" - Big Tech and students hit Texas age verification law with legal complaints

    Date:
    Tue, 21 Oct 2025 16:35:27 +0000

    Description:
    The Texas App Store Accountability Act is set to be enforced on January 1, 2026, requiring Big Tech to perform age checks on all users downloading apps
    in app stores.

    FULL STORY

    A student journalist, a high school debater, a student advocacy organization, and a consortium of Big Tech giants walk into a room. No, it isn't the beginning of a joke they are all trying to halt the Texas new age
    verification law from taking effect.

    Set to be enforced on January 1, 2026, the Texas App Store Accountability Act will require official app stores to perform mandatory age checks on anyone in the state before allowing them to download any mobile applications.

    Teenagers would also be banned from downloading any app or making an in-app purchase without parental consent. In turn, parents must verify their
    identity to provide consent for every download or purchase.

    According to the CCIA (Computer & Communications Industry Association),
    these requirements violate the First Amendment "by restricting app stores
    from offering lawful content, preventing users from seeing that content, and compelling app developers to speak of their offerings in a way pleasing to
    the state."

    The Students Engaged in Advancing Texas (SEAT) agrees with Big Tech on this
    and filed a similar lawsuit . "Students have just as much a right to access information as adults, and this law denies them that access," said Cameron Samuels, co-founder and Executive Director of SEAT.

    The Texas legislation is one of the many age verification laws being enforced across the US in the name of children's online safety. While mandatory age checks have pushed internet users to turn to the best VPN apps to avoid
    sharing their sensitive details, it isn't yet clear if using a VPN could be a viable option for Texans.

    How Texas age verification rules could affect citizens

    The CCIA, which represents the likes of Apple, Google, and Amazon, has described the proposed rules as a "misguided attempt to protect minors" that seeks to go a step further than today's parental control systems, since it requires everyone (not only minors) to prove their age before being able to
    do anything in the app stores.

    Users can do so by uploading a valid form of government-issued identification to the platform. Yet, building such a database of sensitive details raises
    data privacy and security concerns, experts warn, as it can become a target
    for hacking or abuse.

    That's not everything, though. "The Texas App Store Accountability Act
    imposes a broad censorship regime on the entire universe of mobile apps," the CCIA warns in its lawsuit .

    That's because the law goes far beyond social media apps or adult-only websites, which are the target of most age verification laws in the US. It
    will age-gate all sorts of applications, including educational, news, and creative apps such as Wikipedia, Coursera, Spotify, and The New York Times, potentially hindering minors' ability to learn, communicate, and express themselves.

    Yet, "The First Amendment does not permit the government to require teenagers to get their parents permission before accessing information, except in discrete categories like obscenity. The Constitution also forbids restricting adults access to speech in the name of protecting children," said Ambika
    Kumar, a lawyer for the students' organization SEAT.

    "This law imposes a system of prior restraint on protected expression that is presumptively unconstitutional," she added.

    Can a VPN help?

    As mandatory age verification spreads across the internet, people in the US
    and abroad are using VPN apps to bypass these checks.

    Whether they do so to protect their most sensitive personal data or they are minors looking to evade control, it's hard to know for sure most likely,
    it's a mix of both.

    What's important to know here is that a virtual private network (VPN) can
    spoof a user's IP address to make them appear as if they are browsing the internet from a completely different location in no time.

    As we have seen during the brief US TikTok ban , a VPN may not be a quick workaround when the restrictions are imposed on the App Store level. This
    would depend on how the restrictions will eventually be implemented.

    At that point, however, the question also remains if complaints will manage
    to knock down Texas's new age verification requirements before they
    officially take effect.

    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/a-broad-censorship-regime-b ig-tech-and-students-hit-texas-age-verification-law-with-legal-complaints

    $$
    --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105)