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Baker's Take· 2 sources

Supreme Court Lets Texas Age-Verification Law Stand, Sparks Privacy Concerns

By

Mr Bagel

· 2d ago

The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to block a Texas law that would require app stores to verify users' ages and obtain parental consent before minors can download or make purchases, allowing the measure to take effect. The decision clears the way for the Texas App Store Accountability Act, which SiliconReport reported compels "app stores and developers to implement granular age gates and per-transaction parental consent for minors."

Supreme Court Lets Texas Age-Verification Law Stand, Sparks Privacy Concerns

Critics argue the law goes too far. The Internet Society, along with the Center for Democracy & Technology and New America's Open Technology Institute, filed an amicus brief in the related Fifth Circuit case CCIA v Paxton. The brief warns that the law could "potentially forcing users to provide government ID before downloading common apps like those for work, school, banking, or weather," according to internetsociety.org.

The coalition does not oppose all safety measures but insists that the current approach threatens fundamental rights. "The brief argues that such requirements threaten privacy, security, and free expression, advocating for safety measures over blanket bans or invasive verification," internetsociety.org reported. The filing frames the Texas law as an overreach that could set a dangerous precedent for how states regulate digital platforms.

Supporters of the law say it is necessary to protect children from harmful content and predatory behavior online. Texas legislators have positioned the measure as a consumer protection tool, requiring app stores to take responsibility for verifying the age of their youngest users before granting access to age-restricted material or processing transactions.

With the Supreme Court's refusal to intervene, the case now proceeds in the Fifth Circuit, where the broader constitutionality of the law will be tested. The outcome could influence similar proposals in other states, as lawmakers across the country weigh how to balance child safety with privacy and free expression online.

The reporting

2 outlets covered this story. Each links to the original.

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