Tech News
← Back to articles

Texas judge blocks state’s App Store age verification law

read original related products more articles

The decision comes just a few days before the Texas App Store Accountability Act (SB 2420) was set to take effect. Here are the details.

Blocked, but not dead

Last month, Apple released multiple API and sandbox tools to help developers comply with SB 2420, which would require platforms such as the App Store to verify users’ ages before downloading apps or accessing paid in-app content.

In a nutshell, the law would make Apple accountable for age verification on the App Store, a responsibility that Apple has been seeking to avoid.

Earlier this month, Tim Cook was spotted in Washington, where he met with members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce on Capitol Hill to discuss Apple’s privacy concerns.

That meeting happened after Apple’s global head of privacy, Hilary Ware, pushed back against SB 2420 in a letter addressed to the same committee, stating the following:

There are better proposals that help keep kids safe without requiring millions of people to turn over their personal information. (…) Apple’s age assurance feature is one such example of a more achievable, privacy-focused path forward… This privacy-preserving solution allows a parent to share their child’s age range with an app developer, without having to share sensitive, specific information like a birthdate or government ID.

Today, as reported by The Verge, Federal Judge Robert Pitman granted a preliminary injunction on SB 2420, stating that despite recognizing ”the importance of ongoing efforts to better safeguard children when they are on their devices,” SB 2420 “is more likely than not unconstitutional”.

That was in response to a motion filed by the Computer & Communications Industry Association, whose members include Amazon, Apple, and Google, all of which operate app stores.

From his decision:

... continue reading